Archive for the ‘Africa’ Category.

It’s Time to Stop Malaria Now

Having seen the ravages of that disease first hand in Tanzania, I am pleased to see the US gov’t reverse it’s anti-DDT policy (link).

I am also dismayed at the anti-DDT propaganda that became environmentalist dogma – at the cost of tens of millions of lives.


There never was any scientific evidence that DDT posed a risk to humans or wildlife. An EPA administrative law judge said as much after seven months and 9,000 pages of testimony about DDT in 1972. DDT wasn’t responsible for the decline in bald eagle populations, didn’t cause bird egg shell-thinning and didn’t cause cancer in humans, the judge determined.

DDT was nonethless banned in the U.S. when then-EPA administrator William Ruckleshaus reversed without explanation the decision of the judge who actually heard all the DDT testimony – Ruckleshaus heard none of it and never read any of the transcript. As it was later revealed, Ruckleshaus was a member of the Audubon Society and raised money for the Environmental Defense Fund – the two activist groups that led the charge for the DDT ban.

The fix was in for DDT, as environmental activists subsequently exported the ban to the rest of the world – with horrific consequences, including tens of millions killed and billions made ill by malaria over time.

Wife is Back from Tanzania

& the family is whole once more.
Happy birthday to me…

Chagaa girl, northern Tanzania

Tanzania

In 1994-95 I spent a year living in the Bush on the shores of Lake Tanganyika. Since that time I have often recommended that if you are offered the opportunity to visit East Africa, don’t think – just go. The reason is you will always find perfectly reasonable and rational reasons not to go, and talking yourself out of such a trip is a mistake.

Tanzania – and Kenya to a much lesser degree – is one of the true treasures of the world. In a country the size of France you will find hospitality that rivals that of the American South, a land teeming with truly wild animals of all sizes and shapes, and birds so beautiful that it almost hurts your eyes to see them.

Tanzania is one of the poorest countries on Earth and overcoming Western Guilt is a challenge, but doing so frees you to experience one of the sweetest and most vibrant cultures on the planet.

I mention this because The Wife was just presented with an opportunity to go back to Tanzania for 2 weeks this autumn, and even though I have serious, rational concerns (the trip will cost $3000 and where that money will come from I have no idea) I immediately offered my support for the trip. She will be visiting a rural clinic and one of the country’s largest hospitals, and Tanzania is one of the reasons why she went to med school.

It has been 10 years since I was there, and I have spent much of that time holding back my feelings and memories about that place since most people don’t want to hear my stories. Consequently it’s hard to feel the rush I once felt whenever I thought about Tanzania, but deep down it’s still there.

Na taka kuenda Tanzaniani. Na penda Watanzania .

On Liberia and the BBC

Thank you for your patience. It appears that the Summer news lull may be coming to an end. With President Bush’s “Bring ‘em on” comment last Wednesday and the “Flypaper” scenario gaining credance, we may finally have an alternative to the “quagmire” analogy that better fits the facts. Add to this the likelihood that we may sending troops into Liberia, terrorist attacks in Iraq, Pakistan and Russia BUT NOT THE USA and there is again much to write about.

Let’s start with Liberia. In my humble opinion, one of the greatest failures of the international community and the United States government in particular was to stop the genocide in Rwanda in 1994. At the time, there was plenty of excuses not to intervene – no American/international interests involved, “those people have to work it out themselves”-type excuses, the humanitarian F-UP in Somalia the previous Autumn – good solid, realistic reasons not to intervene. Too bad they were all wrong.

Rwanda wasn’t Vietnam. Hell, Rwanda wasn’t even Saigon or even Da Nang. Rwanda could have been saved by a small force of well armed American marines who would simply point their M-16s at people and tell them to “put the god-damned kitchenware down and go home”. Doing this could have saved 800,000 lives. The international community, especially the United Nations, France and yes, the United States all screwed up.

Whenever you hear Clinton get all “holier-than-Bush”. Whenever you hear “St. Jimmy” Carter talk about how the Republicans and President Bush in particular are screwing up the world, remember Rwanda. History will remember Clinton for three things: Impeachment, failure to take al-Qaeda seriously, and Rwanda.

President Bush sees the future in Liberia, and so he’s acting. The longer I look at the President, the more I like him. It is clear that he is a man of conviction, and sees the potential for a major catastrophe in Liberia. It’s not that hard, just look at the nearby nation of Sierra Leone – another failure of the Clinton Administration and France’s ami the United Nations.

Bush realizes the danger in Liberia, so he’s sending in the troops. Liberian President Charles Taylor has already stepped down. Rest assured that the first Marine to arrive in FreeTown will have his hands on Taylor’s belt, hustling him onto a chopper bound for Lagos.

It will be interesting to see how the anti-American Left spins this one.

Speaking of anti-American, it appears that the BBC is in deep trouble. Their charter is up for renewal in 2006, and the British are sharpening their knives. As a devout listener of the World Service, the opening “This… is London,” used to send shivers down my spine. Now it stirs me in the same was as does Deutschland uber alles. The Beeb has lost it completely. For proof of their bias, check out BBCWatch. For convenience I have cut a PDF file of the main indictment which can be downloaded here.