TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
Dumisani's Blog --Officially!
Dumisani's Blog --Officially!
« previous 25


Budgeting in Hyperinflation

i am trying to create a budget for my organization over the next year ... with year on year inflation figures at around 400%, it's a night mare. i have never dealt with this many 000s before!

if any one out there has good tips about business management in a hyperinflationary economy, send them to me please!


October 21, 2005 | 7:21 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Bush Teleconference With Soldiers Staged

i love how real democracy works... all scripted! every thing from what he says, to waht people say to him!

and i don't understand why people in america put up with it! okay, so there were demonstrations in DC last month. then everyone put away their picket signs and went home. and they get dooped the very next month. too bad there's no country out there with a government like, eeeeh, the united states of america has, to sponsor "public rebellion" against such rubbish! perhaps we would have a purple-orange-rose-red-white-and-blue revolution!

d.



http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051014/ap_on_go_pr_wh/bush_iraq


Bush Teleconference With Soldiers Staged
By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 51 minutes ago

It was billed as a conversation with U.S. troops, but the questions President Bush asked on a teleconference call Thursday were choreographed to match his goals for the war in Iraq and Saturday's vote on a new Iraqi constitution.

"This is an important time," Allison Barber, deputy assistant defense secretary, said, coaching the soldiers before Bush arrived. "The president is looking forward to having just a conversation with you."

Barber said the president was interested in three topics: the overall security situation in Iraq, security preparations for the weekend vote and efforts to train Iraqi troops.

As she spoke in Washington, a live shot of 10 soldiers from the Army's 42nd Infantry Division and one Iraqi soldier was beamed into the Eisenhower Executive Office Building from Tikrit — the birthplace of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

"I'm going to ask somebody to grab those two water bottles against the wall and move them out of the camera shot for me," Barber said.

A brief rehearsal ensued.

"OK, so let's just walk through this," Barber said. "Captain Kennedy, you answer the first question and you hand the mike to whom?"

"Captain Smith," Kennedy said.

"Captain. Smith? You take the mike and you hand it to whom?" she asked.

"Captain Kennedy," the soldier replied.

And so it went.

"If the question comes up about partnering — how often do we train with the Iraqi military — who does he go to?" Barber asked.

"That's going to go to Captain Pratt," one of the soldiers said.

"And then if we're going to talk a little bit about the folks in Tikrit — the hometown — and how they're handling the political process, who are we going to give that to?" she asked.

Before he took questions, Bush thanked the soldiers for serving and reassured them that the U.S. would not pull out of Iraq until the mission was complete.

"So long as I'm the president, we're never going to back down, we're never going to give in, we'll never accept anything less than total victory," Bush said.

The president told them twice that the American people were behind them.

"You've got tremendous support here at home," Bush said.

Less than 40 percent in an AP-Ipsos poll taken in October said they approved of the way Bush was handling Iraq. Just over half of the public now say the Iraq war was a mistake.

White House press secretary Scott McClellan said Thursday's event was coordinated with the Defense Department but that the troops were expressing their own thoughts. With satellite feeds, coordination often is needed to overcome technological challenges, such as delays, he said.

"I think all they were doing was talking to the troops and letting them know what to expect," he said, adding that the president wanted to talk with troops on the ground who have firsthand knowledge about the situation.

The soldiers all gave Bush an upbeat view of the situation.

The president also got praise from the Iraqi soldier who was part of the chat.

"Thank you very much for everything," he gushed. "I like you."

On preparations for the vote, 1st Lt. Gregg Murphy of Tennessee said: "Sir, we are prepared to do whatever it takes to make this thing a success. ... Back in January, when we were preparing for that election, we had to lead the way. We set up the coordination, we made the plan. We're really happy to see, during the preparation for this one, sir, they're doing everything."

On the training of Iraqi security forces, Master Sgt. Corine Lombardo from Scotia, N.Y., said to Bush: "I can tell you over the past 10 months, we've seen a tremendous increase in the capabilities and the confidences of our Iraqi security force partners. ... Over the next month, we anticipate seeing at least one-third of those Iraqi forces conducting independent operations."

Lombardo told the president that she was in New York City on Nov. 11, 2001, when Bush attended an event recognizing soldiers for their recovery and rescue efforts at Ground Zero. She said the troops began the fight against terrorism in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and were proud to continue it in Iraq.

"I thought you looked familiar," Bush said, and then joked: "I probably look familiar to you, too."

Paul Rieckhoff, director of the New York-based Operation Truth, an advocacy group for U.S. veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, denounced the event as a "carefully scripted publicity stunt." Five of the 10 U.S. troops involved were officers, he said.

"If he wants the real opinions of the troops, he can't do it in a nationally televised teleconference," Rieckhoff said. "He needs to be talking to the boots on the ground and that's not a bunch of captains."




October 14, 2005 | 3:42 AM Comments  1 comments

Tags:


development aid is not sustainable development ..

this article (below) in the NY Times is really frustrating! instead of using 'aid' money to invest in african agriculture to address the problems of hunger [and the money would go SO much further to really averting poverty], the US Congress road blocks the passage of a bill that would make buying food for aid from african farmers. i understand they have a farming industry they feel they need to protect, but obviously some people don't really understand the larger effects of such policy and legislation. or perhaps they do, but don't really care about sustainable development!


From - http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/12/international/africa/12memo.html?ex=1286769600&en=1bc36f245d786ce8&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

October 12, 2005
Poverty Memo
African Food for Africa's Starving Is Roadblocked in Congress

By CELIA W. DUGGER
It seemed like a no-brainer: changing the law to allow the federal government to buy food in Africa for Africans facing starvation instead of paying enormous sums to ship it from the American heartland, halfway around the world. Not only would the food get to the hungry in weeks instead of months, the government would save money and help African farmers at the same time.

The new approach had an impeccable sponsor in Republican-dominated Washington. The Bush administration, famous for its go-it-alone style, was trying to move the United States - by far the world's biggest food donor - into the international mainstream with a proposal to take a step in just this direction. A lot of rich countries had already done so, most recently Canada.

So why is this seemingly sensible, cost-effective proposal near death in Congress?

Fundamentally, because the proposal challenges the political bargain that has formed the basis for food aid over the past half century: that American generosity must be good not just for the world's hungry but also for American agriculture. That is why current law stipulates that all food aid provided by the United States Agency for International Development be grown by American farmers and mostly shipped on United States-flag vessels. More practically, however, it is because the administration's proposal has run into opposition from three interests some critics call the Iron Triangle of food aid: agribusiness, the shipping industry and charitable organizations.

Just four companies and their subsidiaries, led by Archer Daniels Midland and Cargill, sold more than half the $700 million in food commodities provided through the United States Agency for International Development's food aid program in 2004, government records show. Just five shipping companies received over half the more than $300 million spent to ship that food, records show.

Members of Congress often applaud the benefits of food aid for American farmers, but that is not really how it works, as Christopher B. Barrett, a Cornell University economist and co-author of "Food Aid After Fifty Years: Recasting its Role," noted. "It's the middlemen who enjoy most of the gains," he said, "not the farmers."

Mr. Barrett's research has established a third side to the triangle of interests with a deep stake in the status quo: nonprofit aid organizations. He and his co-author, Daniel Maxwell, a CARE official, found that at least seven of them, including Catholic Relief Services and CARE itself, depended on food aid for a quarter to half their budgets in 2001. Those groups distribute food in poor countries. But what is less well known is that they have also become grain traders, selling substantial amounts of the donated food on local markets in poor countries to generate tens of millions of dollars for their antipoverty programs. Given that at least 50 cents of each dollar's worth of food aid is spent on transport, storage and administrative costs, selling food to raise money in, say, Africa, is an exceedingly inefficient way to finance long-term development, Mr. Barrett said. Better to just give nonprofit groups the money directly.

Had the Agency for International Development had the authority to buy food in Ethiopia in the mid-1980's, when a million perished, or in 1999-2000 when 20,000 died, it could have saved many more lives, said its administrator, Andrew S. Natsios, who added, "Speed is everything in a famine response."

He pushed within the administration for a proposal that would allow up to a quarter of his agency's food aid budget to be spent in developing countries. President Bush approved the idea, he said, and it was included in the proposed 2006 budget introduced in February.

Ed Fox, the agency's assistant administrator for legislative and public affairs, said the issue was deliberately given a low profile. Little was to be gained from putting members of Congress in the position of choosing between agricultural constituencies and starving children, he said.

But if the proposal was little noticed by the general public, it did not escape the attention of groups representing the so-called Iron Triangle, who argued that cash used to buy food was more likely to be misused or stolen than were in-kind food donations. They maintained that the administration's proposal should not come at the expense of a program "upon which American producers, processors and shipping companies rely," as a statement from an ad hoc coalition of 17 companies and associations put it.

The Coalition for Food Aid, which represents 16 nonprofit groups, also opposed it. While supporting the idea of buying food in poor countries, said Ellen Levinson, the coalition's lobbyist, its members favored a more limited pilot program paid for only with additional appropriations, not money from the agency's core budget.

Ms. Levinson criticized the administration for failing to spell out how its plan would work, and said a carefully monitored pilot was needed to ensure that food bought in poor countries was safe and that the purchases did not drive up food prices for the poor. She also cautioned that food bought near a crisis would not necessarily be quicker to arrive, noting that the European Union has been very slow to release cash for food in some cases.

But Oxfam, which accepts no direct American food aid and is not part of the coalition, has actively supported the administration's proposal. In testimony submitted to Congress, it pointedly noted that the current system offered too many opportunities "for a variety of private interests to skim off benefits in the procurement, packaging, transportation and distribution of commodities."

And CARE, the second largest distributor of United States food aid and a member of the coalition, had a change of heart. It has now given unconditional support to food purchases in developing countries.

The food aid debate will flare again later this year as global trade talks approach, with the European Union proposing that rich countries give a growing portion of their food aid as cash. But, for now, the administration's proposal is going nowhere. Senator Mike DeWine, Republican of Ohio, still hopes Congress will ultimately allow up to 10 percent of food aid to be spent in poor countries. "It's a question of trying to save lives," he said.

But opposition remains strong. Bob Goodlatte, a Virginia Republican who heads the House Agriculture Committee, said even Mr. DeWine's modest compromise "would break a coalition that has resulted in one of the most successful food aid programs in world history."

In Canada this year, the politics of food aid has unfolded in a starkly different way, with the leading nonprofit group, the Canadian Foodgrains Bank, and the Canadian Federation of Agriculture, the country's main umbrella organization of farm groups, supporting a sharp reduction of the amount of food bought in Canada. "Canadian farmers are not going to say you have to source food in Canada regardless of whether starving people are waiting for it," said the federation's president, Robert Friesen.


Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company


October 12, 2005 | 11:13 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


« previous 25


Dumisani Nyoni's Profile

Dumisani Nyoni's Friends


Latest Posts
Zimbabwe Election Update
Ridiculous Global...
Update on the ZImbabwe...
Hypocrisy Democracy
The FaKebook...

Monthly Archive
August 2001
September 2001
November 2001
December 2001
January 2002
February 2002
May 2002
June 2002
September 2002
October 2002
February 2003
March 2003
April 2003
July 2003
October 2003
December 2003
January 2004
March 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
February 2005
March 2005
April 2005
May 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
February 2006
May 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
March 2007
April 2007
October 2007
March 2008
April 2008

Change Language


Tags Archive
democracy election elections escapism facebook fakebook mdc mugabe robertmugabe zanu zimbabwe

Filter By Type
Events
News
Travel
Topics

Friends
Abdallah Sobeih
alberto
Alex
Alex
Alexandra Govere
Augusto C
Benjamin Quinto
Bremley
Cam
Catherine
Damian Profeta
Denis Duggan
Derrick N. Ashong
edudzie
Eman Ebed
Emily Kumpel
Ezekiel Kevin Annan
Franziska Seel
Ha Thi Lan Anh
Hugh Switzer
Hye-Jin Lee
Jarra McGrath
Jennifer Corriero
John Renehan
Kaanaeli Kaale
Karis
Kelley
Lauren M. Coughlin
Leon Galindo
Lester Brian Bhana
Lisa M. Nieves
Liz Livelli
Malka Jampol
Margot Bloch
Martin Kuplens-Ewart
Maurisey
Melina Laboucan-Massimo
Michael Furdyk
Michael Newton-McLaughlin
michael phiri
mvuse
Nick Moraitis
Regina
Ron Mitchell
Sabrina Rouigui
Santansuperman
Sean Legassick
Shalala Oliver Sepiso
Simiso
Susheela
Terri Willard
Trevor Kellogg
Ursula Carrascal Vizarreta
Vanessa Currie
VITTORIA
Yasmary Mora
Ziga Vavpotic

Links
Earth Charter
Google News
New York Times
Ode Magazine
Pioneers of Change
Soulfege
Sweet Mother Tour (SMT)
Time Magazine AIDS Feature
YES Campaign
Zvakapressa


227734 views
Important Disclaimer