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Daily Archives: March 18, 2012
When freedom is 4,000 miles away
Posted: March 18, 2012 at 4:35 pm
Marieme, who escaped from slavery in Mauritania and arrived in America in 1997, lives a simple but joyful life in Cincinnati.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Editor's note: Mauritania was the last country to abolish slavery. This story is part of a special report, "Slavery's Last Stronghold."
Cincinnati (CNN) -- On a cul-de-sac behind a strip mall in an anonymous neighborhood of this Midwestern city is an incredible story of escape from slavery.
Marieme's neighbors don't know her history. She mostly keeps to herself in her modest stucco house, 4,000 miles from her native Mauritania. Her six children know their mother's story well. She rescued them from slavery, too.
They are living a life they never could have hoped for in Mauritania, where an estimated 10% to 20% of people are enslaved.
The horrors Marieme endured as a slave in West Africa still dominate her dreams and flood her eyes at unexpected moments. In her first attempt to escape, she ran for two days and two nights through the Sahara Desert, barefoot, only to arrive at the home of another slave owner, who returned her to her master.
"They did everything to keep me from running away. See, they branded me so I wouldn't walk any more," she says in French, lifting up her fuchsia dress to show large patches of scar tissue on her calves and knees, caused by a metal poker. "But it's God that helped me."
A CNN reporter and videographer visited Marieme, 55, shortly after traveling to Mauritania to document slavery in a place where it is arguably more prevalent and more ingrained than anywhere else in the world. After witnessing the bleak reality there, we wanted to hear from someone who had risen up against the odds -- who had escaped not only her master but her country.
How had she done it? Who helped her along the way? And how did she end up in Ohio? We hoped to uncover a sort of formula for freedom. Perhaps parts of it could be replicated by hundreds of thousands of others.
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When freedom is 4,000 miles away
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Liberty women seeking upset of top-seeded Irish today
Posted: at 4:34 pm
Libertys womens basketball players are well aware that history is stacked against them. The Flames, who are the No. 16 seed in the Raleigh Region of the NCAA Tournament, travel to top-seeded Notre Dame for a first-round game today. The only time the severe underdog has come out on top was in 1998, when Harvard stunned an injury-depleted Stanford team on the Cardinals home floor.
Notre Dame (30-3) has the resume (two wins over Connecticut) and the star power (point guard Skylar Diggins is a Wooden Award finalist). Liberty center Avery Warley said the key to the Flames staying in todays game is to, in her words, "tone down the hype."
"I dont think its so much the players," Warley said. "Theres just a lot of hype with it. I think if I can get my team to realize that its just hype, and that they put on their pants just the way we put on our pants, then I think well be OK.
"Were both [Division] I. Weve both been through battles."
The Flames (24-8) havent played anyone remotely close to the Irishs stature this season. Libertys top non-conference opponent was Oklahoma, which is a No. 6 seed in the tournament. The Sooners beat Liberty by 31 points in Nashville in November.
"We need to have a calm mind and an understanding that we need to play our very best A-game for 40 minutes," Flames coach Carey Green said. "There will be times that well play like that. But can we maintain that? We respect our opponent. Their balance even into their bench is outstanding.
"Theyre basically playing four guards with a very athletic center [Devereaux Peters]. That athletic center was the defensive player of the year in the Big East. Their leading scorer, and everybody knows Skylar Diggins, was the player of the year in the Big East. In between is all 5-foot-10, strong shooters.
"The encouraging thing is that we can play them 10 times. And they could beat us nine out of 10 times. We only need to win one."
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Liberty women seeking upset of top-seeded Irish today
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Liberty-Notre Dame Preview
Posted: at 4:34 pm
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Skylar Diggins was raring to go after a couple of days off. Notre Dame's star point guard, like the rest of her teammates, had been waiting for the NCAA tournament to come around since they were beaten in the finals last season.
After 30 wins, a regular-season Big East title and a disappointing loss in the conference tournament finals, the Irish have a No. 1 seed and now they're ready for what's ahead. Their NCAA trek starts Sunday at home against Liberty in the Raleigh region.
"We were able to rest our bodies and recover," Diggins said. "Now, everybody is so anxious to get back on the court that that is going to play into it. We're fine. We're prepared."
The Irish won their way into the NCAA championship game a year ago by beating Tennessee and UConn back-to-back with Diggins leading the way, averaging 19.3 points and nearly six assists in six tourney games. Then came a six-point loss to Texas A&M in the finals, a defeat that's been a motivating point all season.
Coach Muffet McGraw is convinced Diggins is even better than a year ago, studying film and expanding her game. She's averaged 17 points a game this season.
"She really managed the game better this year. Last year, she did a really good job and in the NCAA tournament, she really stepped forward," McGraw said.
"She knows when to pass and when to shoot. She is comfortable passing, and she isn't trying too hard to score or to make a pass. She takes what the defense gives her. ... Her ability to see the floor and go full speed with the ball makes us a dangerous team in transition."
During practice sessions since losing to UConn in the tournament finals March 6, the Irish have worked hard on rebounding, one of Liberty's strengths.
Liberty (24-8), the Big South champion, outrebounded opponents by an average of 16.4. And 6-3 center Avery Warley averaged 11.6 boards and 13.1 points per game. Devon Brown led the Flames with a 16.9 point average. Liberty must cut down on its turnovers - about 20 per game - and be able to handle Notre Dame's defense led by Diggins.
"It wasn't a shock. We kind of had an idea that we would be playing them," Brown said of facing the Irish.
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Liberty-Notre Dame Preview
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Rihanna And Chris Brown Back Together: Illuminati Conspiracy Explains Relationship
Posted: at 4:34 pm
Rihanna and Chris Brown's secret romance, rumors of a rapidly approaching wedding date, the Bajan singer's rapid rise to fame, and the fact that Chris Brown was never arrested for stealing a woman's iPhone in Florida last month can all be explained by a wacky conspiracy theory sparked by Rihanna's new tattoo, a slanted cross that appears to have been made by cutting out a slice of the flesh in her neck, rather than by injecting ink into the skin like a normal person.
Rihanna's crazy new tattoo may just be the clue that unravels the Illuminati conspiracy behind her rocky relationship with Chris Brown.
The slanted cross is actually a symbol of the Freemasons, who are believed by some to overlap or possibly even be under the control of the Illuminati, a supposed secret society consisting of some of the most powerful people in the world and bent on controlling global affairs through various governments and corporations with the goal of establishing a new world order.
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But how does the new tattoo and the Illuminati explain Rihanna and Chris Brown's on-again/off-again relationship? In The Word According 2 Heaven Hollywood, supposed ex-Illuminati member John Todd is quoted as once saying, "[N]ot only are their illuminati members but also there are Illuminati marriages." When asked to elaborate, Todd explained, "Fixed marriages. An Illuminati member is sworn to secrecy so what is the best way to keep what is going on a secret? [It] is to marry someone into the same thing [sic]."
With this somewhat nutty explanation in mind, Rihanna's defiant decision to reunite with the man who beat her face to a pulp just three years ago begins to make sense when you realize that it's not actually her decision. If their relationship is being dictated by Illuminati leaders, then the two hip-hop stars have no choice but to marry each other.
Still not convinced? In the music video for her hit single "S&M," the words "Princess of the Illuminati" flash on the screen two separate times. The song's lyrics are generally considered to be erotic and scandalous, but some have theorized that they may be hiding a second meaning referencing the conspiracy. Even if Rihanna isn't a part of the Illuminati, she seems to be enjoying the media buzz that comes with these wacky conspiracies.
Rihanna has denied conspiracy theories tying her to the Illuminati in the past, even calling an unexpected news conference to tell the press that the rumors were completely unfounded.
"It's ridiculous that this won't go away," Rihanna said in her statement. "The facts speak for themselves, and my talent speaks for itself. I'm not a party in any way to some all-powerful secret society somehow fixing the fate of the world behind closed doors for nefarious ends. That's just nonsense."
An anonymous source claiming close ties with the Illuminati told The Daily Quarterly that the Bajan singer is in fact involved with the secret society.
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Owen Holland's case shows the crackdown on dissent
Posted: at 4:33 pm
For daring to read a poem to David Willetts, the student has had his prospects ruined.
No combination in the world is more lethal than that of byzantine feudalism and gung-ho corporate technocracy. Cambridge PhD student Owen Holland ran afoul of it last December when he participated in a 'people's mic' where dozens of students and a handful of dons told the visiting minister for Universities and Science what they thought of his destructive policies.The group collectively recited at David Willetts: "You have professed your commitment/to the religion of choice/but you leave us with no choice . . . your gods have failed."
In the face of this poetic outburst, Willetts skipped class and flounced back to Westminster, his ego and, apparently, his right to free speech sadly injured.
While scores took part in the protest and were photographed doing so in a surveillance-heavy environment (another worrying development in this university), only Holland was charged with 'recklessly or intentionally' impeding free speech. He was brought before a University Court, the workings of which remain opaque to most dons and students.
His now internationally notorious sentence for reading aloud to the minister before he took the podium? "Rustication" for two and a half years. Back in the good old days, young Cambridge men were 'sent down' in disgrace to the family country pile to spend their suspension presumably shooting grouse and molesting the milkmaids. In Holland's case the intention is clearly to end his academic career.
The vindictiveness of this judgement in an institution of advanced learning is matched only by the familiar divide-and-rule crudity of singling out an individual for exemplary punishment in a collective peaceful protest. More than 70 students and dons turned themselves in and asked to be charged alongside Holland.
The sentence is absurd. But what should really concern us all is what this incident says about British democracy. It tells us that 'free speech' has become an inalienable right only for the powerful, for those who already have access to every newspaper and television outlet in the country. That citizens with fewer means should not find ways to express audible disagreement with the heavy-handed imposition of the profit principle across society at their own expense. That we are to worry about the abrogation of the rights of citizens only in countries we don't like.
What is shocking about the Cambridge decision is not that this sort of disproportionate use of judicial force is exceptional but that it is increasingly the norm. Ever since young people began to challenge this coalition's brazen marketisation and privatisation of everything from welfare and education to health and policing, the courts have sent out a single message: resist the relentless subordination of all aspects of human life and our society to the profit principle at your peril.
Apparently all clear and meaningful dissent is fundamentally unpatriotic: when not meek, young people are 'violent' and when they are actually peaceful -- it's difficult to imagine more calm forms of dissent than reading out a poem in a lecture hall -- then they are culpable of a 'reckless' violation of the rights of the powerful to impose their views and will on us all.
Our shock at Holland's treatment -- and that of many other principled protesters like Alfie Meadows, who comes up for trial next week -- should not obscure the issues they've been fighting to highlight: the deliberate transmutation of universities from spaces of debate which push the boundaries of knowledge into business-driven idea-free degree mills. As we metamorphose from citizens of a democracy into consumers in one large desolate supermarket, all of us are being disciplined. Resistance is not futile: it's the only option.
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Owen Holland's case shows the crackdown on dissent
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Young Patriots: Dont criminalize free speech Mr Presiden
Posted: at 4:33 pm
Politics of Sunday, 18 March 2012
Source: Joy Online
The Young Patriots of the New Patriotic Party has demanded the unconditional release of Mr Owusu Bempah, the Operations Director of FONKAR with immediate effect.
The group has in a statement accused President Mills of seeking to criminalize free speech by arresting and detaining Ghanaians of varying opinions to his governments policies and programmes since taking over the reins of power.
A government that superintends over gargantuan corruption, ineptitude, incompetence and mediocrity would not have lasted long in another political era. However, as Ghanaians, we have opted for democracy, and free speech is the best way to exercise that right.
The group said it found it hypocritical for a government which came to power on the back of free speech and propaganda to turn around and incarcerate its citizens for exercising their democratic right, citing for examples instances including NDC General Secretary Johnson Asiedu Nketias reference of all 17 persons who sought to lead the NPP as 2008 presidential candidate as thieves.
Madam Ama Beyinwa Doe referred to Nana Akufo Addo as a drug dealer and when she was asked to substantiate it, she said it was campaign talk during here vetting to become the Central Regional Minister.
The arrest and detention of Mr Owusu Bempeh for expressing his opinion on the disbursement of the Woyome money is simply against his constitutional right to free expression. The act is abominable and should be condemned in no uncertain terms and we the Young Patriots will consider further action should the President continue to have him detained.
Richard Nyamah Daniel Nii Kwartei Titus-Glover Hopson Adorye John Kumah **
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Young Patriots: Dont criminalize free speech Mr Presiden
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