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Live 8
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Re: Live 8
Keep this on the page so others can see it
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Re: Live 8
I'm watching the concert now.
I wish I could be optimistic enough to believe that everything will change but there's so much corruption and so much doesn't get to those who really need it. I've been reading about the last 100 years or so in Africa and how the problems whch exist today have been created. So much needs to change. At least this has brought the problems more to our attention and one of the things I hope for is that this country doesn't deport people back to a certain death in Zimbabwe. I know that's only one African country but there is so much corruption that we probably don't even know about too. 20 years ago with Band Aid and Live Aid I was so full of optimism that the world was going to be changed and for a few it did. Did you see the young woman who was one of those starving babies who would otherwise not have survived? At least it changed for her, and hopefully many others yet there is still so much suffering and a great deal of it manmade from within Africa itself. Can that be changed? I really do want to hope so. |
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Help keep this on the active page.Others should be able to see this and I dont know how to do it, apart from keep posting
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ime all for cancelling the debt but where exactly is the money coming from to DOUBLE aid given to them , isnt what charities give and what the govenment give already enough if they are cancelling the debt
yeah ime a tight sod but we have problems in the uk that the govenment should be putting money into and not sending it abroad mind you if it stops the buggers coming here and bleeding the NHS dry ime all for it |
Re: Live 8
Keeping this active! could somebody sticky it to the top for a while????
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Re: Live 8
Before rushing, lemming-like, to sign up for the pious tripe peddled yesterday, perhaps members would like to read the following article.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...678543,00.html |
Re: Live 8
I know you've got a point and yesterday was a bit pious but I think it was right for it to happen. Before hearing about Live8 I knew very little about the G8 summit and wasn't really aware of the extent of the problems in Africa. Because of this event I do know more about it as do a lot of other people.
Bob Geldof and his cronies did manage to persuade the issue to be raised at the G8 summit and that can only be a good thing. I don't think the problems of Africa can be solved by a rock concert but I do think that it's impossible to solve a problem unless you know about it. The report that you linked to says that public opinion doesn't count but I was always under the impression that our politicians are supposed to represent us - therefore our opinion has to count. And public opinion is saying to our politicians that we must really work towards a solution. Whether that will happen or not, I don't know. |
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I dont think the main way they were trying to stop overty was by a rock concert but by showing the mass size of surport that people will give to the cause! and to tell the politicians that it is a concern of the Public and therefore needs dealing with on their agenda
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Cynics are welcome to sit on their arses in their ivory towers. What's the point of anything? Geldof is able to raise awareness of an issue through celebrity and music, you have Accy Web A-b. Vive la difference. P.S. thanks for this thread yesterday John, I hope people did sign if they wanted to. |
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Can still sign today.
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yeah (just keeping at the top) can somebody please sticky this for a week or so?
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lets be serious, people didnt turn up because they were distresed at the affairs of africa and want our govenment to act
they turned up to see a bargain concert full of world famous acts all on one stage in one day for the price of 1 ticket public opinion rarely matters to politions because by the time the next election comes up people are more interested in how much tax they are going to pay and not how much trouble africa is in if polotitions listened to public opinion accrington would not be in such a sorry state |
Re: Live 8
Please do not misunderstand, as I have said before in different threads, the problems of Africa and the poor of the world are the responsibility of the whole world. However I do not believe that debt relief and increased aid are the answer.
Why are we not united in our criticism of current government mis-spending? Why are we not writing to Cormack Murphy O'Connor demanding that instead of his mimsy support of a ridiculous march he actually does something to try and fill the shoes of his predecessor and tackle the Pope on the issue of Condoms and AIDS? Why are we allowing people like Mugabe of Zimbabwe to get away with impoverishing, starving and oppressing his own people? And while we are at it, do you really think a couple of choruses of "all you need is love" is going to do anything to influence the muslim government of the Sudan and persuade them that genocide is actually a bad idea? But no, what we have here is the usual socialist response to any problem - throw money at it. We won't concern ourselves with where the money goes or what it is spent on, just so long as it is an amount so obscenley large that it assuages our guilt for a while until the next crisis, or until Saint Geldoff and his chums need their next five minutes in the global limelight. The real problems are Bad Governance, Corruption, UN-fair trade and a vast population which, in many sections, is only a couple of generations removed from the stone age. Yesterday was just another excuse to demonstrate the national propensity for wallowing in mawkish sentimentality. We saw it when Diana died, when the Soham girls were murdered, when Ken Bigley was murdered, during the Tsunami Appeal, etc. etc. ad infinitum, ad bl**dy nauseam. The G8 Conference comunique, which was written last week, will have some very soothing words to say about the condition of the poor and that will be it. The sense of national guilt will be stroked into quiescence and put back in its box till next time. However, it was nice to see Pink Floyd playing together again, so perhaps the day was not a complete non-event. |
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It might interest you to know where the host of this years G8 Conference was today. Tony Blair was in Singapore to try and persuade members of the International Olympic Committee to allow us to spend hundreds of millions of pounds on two weeks of "Sport".
This is the man who only a couple of weeks ago told us that he was listening to the public. |
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Blimey! Change my tablets quick, l agree with a lot of what A-b just posted.;)
Yesterday was about awareness. We are talking about it now, just as people all over the world will be. Not just the music, but the political issues raised and if a conccert can or should be able to change policy towards third world debt. As for the reason why the super powers aren't too bothered about genocide and corruption is there's no money in it. The 'World Police' hat only seems to be donned when it suits, the rest of the time a blind eye is much the prefered and easiest option. Sooooooooooooo glad someone out there liked Pink Floyd, there's always one. :) |
Re: Live 8
There's two. I liked them as well.
I would like to think that Live 8 having drawn our attention to the various different situations in Africa will have done some good. I'd like to hope that changed will take place but I have to agree with A-b that throwing money at it isn't the answer. If the money goes into the pockets of the oppressors it simply makes some of those situations worse. On the one hand we have the almost ludicrous PC situation here where you daren't mention anyone else's religion or ethnic origins for fear of being branded a racist whilst elsewhere ethnic cleansing takes place and the rest of the world doesn't bat an eyelid. Makes you wonder somewhat about the sense of proportion doesn't it? I'm just watching a program about Rwanda and Sudan. Perhaps without Live 8 this program wouldn't have been shown. But will telling us about it actually help to change anything? I feel that we are fighting a losing battle and desperately wish we weren't. |
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While some may well have gone for a "free concert" it is like the 9p beans in the supermarket. A loss leader to attract attention to other items. So who could not go or watch on tv & not now know about the main issue of relieving third world debt. However one Mr G Bush has finally made a comment I do agree on. There is no point in relieving third world debt while corrupt politicians & governments are allowed to continue as they have, simply to end up back at stage one in another twenty years time. It must be written in & agreement obtained that these greedy obnoxious self centred officials must be dealt with & replaced with a system that will ensure that this does not happen again. Otherwise it will be as bad as casting pearls before swine. It will take more time than one days concert or a day or two at Gleneagles by eight influential men to achieve this. However the writing is now firmly on the wall & as we all know good graffitti is hard to remove.
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Some members have suggested tht the concerts were about "raising awareness".
Whose awareness? The problems of Africa and the poor of the world have consumed more acres of newsprint and miles of videotape than any other subject. Do we have such a short collective attention span that we need a handful of strutting poseurs to remind us of our obligations every twenty years or so? Or was it perhaps the awareness of politicians? Errmmm, weren't debt re-structuring and trade issues already on the agenda of the G8 conference before Saint Geldoff stuck his foul-mouthed oar in? Seen in this light Live8 is little more than a bandwagon for the self-satisfied and the sanctimonious, a vehicle for the political enthusiasms of people with more money than sense and more influence than is good in any democracy. |
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If you really wanted to show your support and solidarity with the poor of the world how about doing something to help them to help themselves. Our supermarkets now carry a range of fair trade products. If every one of us made a resolution to include just one of these products in our weekly shopping basket it would do more positive good than all of Saint Geldoff's rantings.
For those of you of a more radical disposition how about writing to the ambassadors of Zimbabwe or Sudan and telling them where you think their governments are going wrong and what a bunch corrupt murdering b*st*rds you think they are - in a loving and inclusive and politically correct way, of course. The only way things will change in Africa is if the people at the top are made to feel the disgust of the world at their abuses. Sanctions against South Africa changed the political climate there. The reason why Mugabe calls the British Government "Gay Gangsters" is because he fears the effect that sanctions will have on his own tenure. We don't need Saint Geldoff and his chums to be anything other than what they are, a pleasant distraction or aural wallpaper. The tools that will effect change in the world are in our own hands - they always have been! |
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But doesn't familiarity breed contempt Bob. Having the details 24/7 in our faces for years & it has no meaning. To get a wake up call is no bad thing. Aty the end of the day it is down to eight men on Wednesday who may or may not have set an agenda, but they are now aware of not just fellings of a few aging rockers but that of a global audience & I for one would not like to be in one of their seats on Wednesday & come away having done nothing.
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????? Errr. 'Raising awareness' was the stated aim of Live 8, as opposed to raising money back in '85 at the original Live Aid concert. So it wasn't any 'members' here who gave it that tag line. 'The problems of Africa and the poor of the world have consumed more acres of newsprint and miles of videotape than any other subject.' The above statement is just plain wrong. More than sport/soap operas/ even page 3 stunners? Try and keep your argument within the realms of some common sense. Also not forgetting that a lot of people have no idea of the shock that was felt when the Michael Buerk reports were first broadcast on the BBC back in 1984, which started the whole ball rolling. P.S. Just because l said in another thread that Pink Floyd were the musical equivalent of masterbation and you are the only person who said that they enjoyed them, don't get tetchy. |
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The concert on Saturday was about awareness on two levels - firstly making all the people of the UK (and around the world) aware of the problems in Africa (if Joss Stone and people of her generation didn't know before hand then they do now). Secondly, making world leaders aware of the strength of feeling of the people - I think they might just have got the point! I agree, Aid won't help (that's been proven as even Bob Geldof admitted that the situation was worse than it was 20 years ago), neither will wholesale wiping off the debt but giving African nations the tools to help themselves might just help a little. Yes, you're right we should be using fair trade products - let's see, did everyone know about them? - probably not, but they might now because we're aware of it, we're discussing it. |
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There is, at this moment, a plastic bag of 'Genunine Accy Air' for sale on ebay. I would assume that no one would be foolish enough to bid for such an item; common sense should tell you that it is someone having a laugh and trying to obtain a little bit of cheap publicity
Suppose, however,that logic and rationale are suddenly abandoned and a large part of the populace are overcome by a dire need to get a sniff of "Genuine Accy Air"; caution is thrown to the wind and financial prudence is forgot as there is a mad scramble to obtain an Accy bag. Hundreds of bags are made available and sold at no inconsiderable sum. Does this sound crazy? Well, think of all those idiots who are walking round with one pound rubber bands on their wrists, in aid of whatever wacky cause they personally espouse. Now increase this act of collective loonacy by a factor of 10 and place every one of these plonkers in Hyde Park, outside the Brandenburg Gate or by the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia and have them subject to half a day's worth of amplified noise created by some of the wealthiest people on the planet (and at one point addressed by the wealthiest man on the planet). What is the purpose of this exercise, you may ask? Well, the answer is most peculiar. Apparently, while we're all supposed to somehow enjoy this garbage, these characters want to relieve you of your money and give it to a place called Africa. 'Ah' you may say 'but we've been doing that for years' Yes, we have - and what difference has this aid made? The answer is, surprisingly,an awful lot. Once reasonably prosperous countries, with economies that worked and a bequethed democracy are now reduced to wastelands, fought over by savages while impoverised citizens lie around all day swatting flys and awaiting their next delivery of Red Cross Rice. Meanwhile, the aid industry is doing very well, thank you. I have no doubt as I am writing this there will be gleeful meetings occuring in the boardroms of Mercedes-Benz and Toyota as decisions are taken on the new car showrooms to be dotted round Africa. Bloated bureaucrats will plan their next cavalcade of the latest Merc models and umpteen more overpaid aid workers will dash from one meeting to another in the gas-guzzling 4X4's ( No offroading for them and one really does not want to think of the effect on global warming) All this is the result of aid. It is no different if you are giving it to an individual or a country; provide doles to a person long enough and he will rely on them;it will lock him and his family into a cycle of poverty in which there is little chance of escape. So if you're really concerned about Africa then stick two fingers up to Chancelor Brown, Geldof,and his rich cronies and spend your money wisely, like on a good bag of Accy air. |
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Live 8 was nothing to do with raising money for aid. I thought it was a free concert - someone correct me if I'm wrong.
So Tealeaf your whole point is moot. The concert was not to line anyone's pockets, it was to stick two fingers up at Brown, Blair and Bush and to say 'sort it out'. And I think it was mission accomplished. |
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except where did the money go which they charged you for texting in for the tickets???
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It is estimated by the World Bank, among others, that in the last four decades aid amounting to One Trillion Dollars has been poured into Africa. That is one thousand, thousand, million dollars. A staggering and unimaginable sum. written down it looks like this...
$ 1, 000, 000, 000, 000. 00 The bank also admits that as much as 70% of this stupendous amount has been spent by the aid agencies and Non governmental organisations on administration, salaries, and "jobs for the boys". The bank also estimates that an unknown but sizeable portion has also been siphoned off by corrupt government officials. A large-ish chunk of that one trillion dollars was your money that you earned by your hard work and which you were required to pay to the Inland Revenue in Taxes. Do you really need any further demonstration that AID does not work, that it creates a dependency culture, and that it fosters corruption, crime and increasing poverty? There was talk on the Jeremy Vine Show on R2 this afternoon that people in the UK should now be prepared to accept increases in taxation to pay for further western largesse where Africa is concerned - after all, where else do you think the money is going to come from? |
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What list !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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I was going to respond earlier to the "blanket bombing" idea and the happy thought that some of it reaches the people it intends to help. (I got waylaid with Mimi nailing something to the wall.)
Obviously some of the past aid reached someone as Bob Geldof showed us the young woman who would have starved to death as a baby but for Band Aid/Live Aid. Unfortunately for every little that does reach the intended target more reaches the corrupt leaders who cause the problems in their countries which lead to poverty and although on the surface it may appear that we have helped the people we have actually done them more harm than good. I think perhaps Sir Bob may have realised this to some extent and so we now have Live 8 designed to raise awareness rather than money. Yes he wanted third world debt to be cancelled and that I think was agreed before the concerts let alone before the G8 summit but that itself will not solve the problems. Africa is a continent of many countries whose borders were created by foreigners who had no understanding of the tribal culture of the people. When the countries were run by the colonisers things ran smoothly but when they pulled out and "gave Africa its freedom" the real problems started. If Live 8 has succeeded in something perhaps it is that more people are now aware if some of the underlying causes of the situations. And as Gayle so rightly said, before this there were many people who didn't even know there was a meeting in Edinburgh on Wednesday. In fact there were many people who hadn't a clue what G8 is. Perhaps they do now. |
I will probably get slated from here to eternity for this but it has to be said.
Members of the general public dug deep into their pockets to attend the Live 8 concerts and thus contributed CASH to the Africa Fund. Can I ask just exactly how much CASH did Geldof and the other performers contribute? Oh! They GAVE their valuable time did they? Bah! Humbug! Fits in nicely here! It wouldn’t surprise me to learn that the performers’ accommodation was either given free by the hoteliers or paid for by the concert organisers. I will even go further and offer 10% of my total wealth including the value of any property that I have if Geldof and Co will donate just 1% of theirs. Finally I would just like to add that if anyone deserved a knighthood it is the people who support the fund raising schemes with cash from their pockets not the organiser. If the people of Malta can be awarded the George Cross for the sacrifices during the war then surely the general public should get a similar collective award. |
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As l posted earlier there is terrible corruption in Africa, but because much of the wealth as already been plundered, G8 leaders don't seem to care as much in sorting out those dictarships as they do in the oil rich Middle East.
As for the days when these countries were once 'prosperous' to quote Tealeaf, l suppose you mean when these countries were part of various Empires, l don't recall the indigenous people eating much better than they do now. Contentration camps? Oh yeah, the first time they were introduced to the world stage wasn't by those naughty Nazis, it was the British in South Africa. |
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Yea ok there might be debt in africa but what about children in the uk i dont see no concerts goin for us to put more money into education and things like that we are the youth of the nation and there never goin to be out of debt its just going to keep rising and rising
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I think you'll find that they did. |
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Of course for those who travelled a long distance to the venue then it cost them something but none of that money went to Africa. This concert wasn't about raising money for Africa. The point seems to have been misunderstood by a lot of people and in fact Sir Bob himself almost lost the plot at one point when he accused those selling tickets on eBay of taking money fom the mouths of the starving. There was no way any sale of tickets on eBay affected Africa one way or the other. Unless you count the fact that the whole kerfuffle probably drew even more attention to the Live 8 concerts in which case it probably aided Sir Bob's cause. I'd be more impressed if the government decided not to send back Zimbabwean refugees. |
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GIVE A MAN A FISH & FEED HIM FOR A DAY.
TEACH A MAN HOW TO FISH & FEED HIM FOR LIFE. GIVE A CORRUPT POLITICIAN BAGS OF MONEY & HE WILL ROB YOU & HIS FELLOW COUNTRYMEN BLIND, TAKE THEIR FISH & KILL THEM WITH THEIR OWN TOOLS. SOUND FAMILIAR? |
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I wasn’t aware that entry to the concerts was free WillowTheWisp so thanks for the correction.
So what was the purpose of these shindigs? To raise public awareness of the African plight perhaps? Or was it, as many people seems to think, to raise awareness of the various performers and to boost their pseudo caring image? I, for one, am acutely aware of the Africans’ plight and I am already aware of a foul mouthed, scruffy lout. If Geldof and the rest were so concerned for the fate of Africans then they should use some of their substantial wealth to make a difference. I don’t mean chucking money into Africa, that would just be siphoned off to fill the already overfull coffers of the personal accounts of the various government members but arrange and pay for a hospital to be built and staffed for the next five years or a school or two. Buy and take a few tractors to the farmers. Use their influence to break down the trade barriers and give the African farmer a fair deal in the world markets. |
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http://www.306gti6.com/forum/showthr...d=31301&page=1
That link has an interesting rant about live8.. one part is as follows: "Perhaps the multi-millionaire Mr Geldof might want to have a quick word with the multi-millionaire Sir Elton John, the multi-millionaire Sir Paul McCartney, the multi-millionaire Sir Mr Sting and the multi-millionaire Sir Mr Bono and see what they might achieve simply by putting their own fecking hands in their own fecking pockets." The money needs to go direct to the people and not through the governments of these countrys. Even if they don't have oil, if we help them get up off their knees, it helps us in the long run when they can trade.. |
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My name has been added!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! goood site, thanks for putting it on.
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Where will l find they did? Read Wilfred Theisger's book about his travels in sub-Saharan Afica in the 20's. Starvation, drought and famine was still present then as it is today. Of course there was no corruption then as it was part of British and other nation's Empires. Also Ghandi writing about South African poverty in the early part of the twentieth century makes interesting reading. |
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Without quoting the all of Jambutty's post, it's a bit unfair of him and others to suggest what wealthy people do with their money. We don't know.
Just as poorer people may decide to support various causes quietly, so might the rich. Some of the wealtiest people in the country are footballers, the same critisism could be levelled at them. Then again it might interfere with their testimonials. |
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Tealeaf, l didn't mean the Ghandi that also visited the poorly paid and malnourished Lancashire weavers.
I was talking about the travelling acrobat Ernie Ghandi and the Ghandinettes, sorry for not being more specific. |
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I'll say it one more time - it was not about money it was about awareness.
Yes, the stars that were there got given goody bags - this was by corporate sponsors who wanted to get in on the act and yes, I think it was a bit tacky so I won't defend them on that. And yes, the phone companies might have made a few bob from the texts (let's hope they donate it to a good cause). But, the thing is that the sheer fact that we are discussing this means that it worked. There can be very few people in the country now who do not know about the G8 summit and who do not know about the Africans plight. From this website and others around the general concensus seems to be that aid won't work and that trade will - I'm pretty sure that the people around the table tomorrow will have read as many articles & website posts as possible and they too will see that that is what is needed. |
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About 20yrs ago when President Mugabe was ordering thousands of bottles of Johnnie Walker (Black Label) Scotch whisky. How was that helping 'his' country?
Dont get me wrong I agree with Live8 and the awareness that it has brought to a lot of people. Yes I joined and yes I voted online and yes my comments have been sent to our prime minister. But what will really make a difference? |
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"The Duce will have Ethiopia with or without Ethiopians," declared General Rodolfo Graziani, the bloodthirsty Italian governor general. Haile Selassie's plea for help to the League of Nations had been met with a stony response, particularly from the British government, which made a jubilant Mussolini laugh and gave Hitler the encouragement he needed to march across Europe without hindrance. "Such cynicism," says Thesiger, "beggars belief." Today he supports no political party. "Even those who talk of spreading peace to Africa", he says, "are busy selling corrupt governments arms behind the scenes; this spells death and starvation for the people of innocent tribes." Sounds like today doesn't it. |
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Not being pedantic, but naming a country and it's former name doesn't answer my question.
Is there anymore tangible evidence you can share that Africans were still not prone to famine or drought under Imperialism? From what I've read and seen for myself they aren't. The author l quoted is at least one mans account to back up my argument. I have others. |
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Sales of the back catalogue cds of Pink Floyd,Keane,Killers and the Who have rocketed since Live8 and those groups have pledged the earnings to the Live Aid charity.I think it's raised awareness and money;it was a very entertaining evening's viewing and l really don't understand what the whingeing is about;if you don't like the idea or don't approve of it....DON'T WATCH IT! There's always Big Brother :rolleyes: . PS I loved Pink Floyd;they totally stole the show! Makes the Spice Girls look a bit pants though;23 years of not talking to each other and Gilmore & Waters got it back together for Live8.....Mel B,are you listening? You look a total wally now!!:D
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