Saturday, January 31, 2015

Romney quits at third attempt. Should he take some lessons from Nigeria's (Africa's) politicians or vice versa?

Peter Hamby, Gloria Borger and Alexandra Jaffe of the CNN reports that three weeks to the day since he informed a group of Republican financiers in New York that he was serious about a third presidential bid, Romney on Friday finally pulled the plug on his long and sometimes agonizing political career, telling supporters that he would not mount a third bid for the US Republican presidential nomination in 2016.

"He decided he could be the nominee," said Tagg Romney, the oldest of Romney's five sons. "The fear was that in order to get there it was going to be so hard fought that he could not emerge from a position of strength." The family, he explained, "all said we would support him, although none of us was looking forward to the process. But no one said we won't go through this."

Romney's decision to forgo a run, made over the weekend in consultation with his family, came on the heels of what associates described as "frank" and "clinical" strategy session with his closest advisers in Boston last Friday at the offices of Solamere Capital, the financial firm run by Tagg Romney and Spencer Zwick, Romney's top fundraiser. Romney's announcement also came two days after David Kochel, one of Romney's closest confidantes since his days as Massachusetts governor, announced that he would join the likely campaign of Jeb Bush, Romney's top rival for support in the Republican establishment.

'Prime Evil,' South Africa's pro-apartheid assassin, granted parole - a lesson in repentance, love and forgiveness


After apartheid fell, he was put on trial and sentenced But de Kock showed remorse, meeting with victims' families, some of whom publicly forgave him, and helping the Missing Persons Task Force locate bodies, a fact noted by South African Justice and Correctional Services Minister Michael Masutha. When apartheid fell and the ANC gained control of the government, de Kock cooperated with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, established in 1994 to achieve full disclosure of apartheid-era misdeeds.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Nigerian Dagogo-Jack Named President of American Diabetes Association - Aim high, work hard

A report by Chineme Okafor in Thisday newspaper stated that Nigerian born Dagogo-Jack has been announced by the American Diabetes Association (ADA) as the new President of Medicine and Science of its Board of Directors

Dagogo-Jack, currently a professor of medicine and Director, Division of endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism, and Director, clinical research center at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, where he holds the A.C. Mullins endowed chair in translational research, will now lead the 75 years old association.

The association was founded in 1940 and is America’s largest voluntary health organisation leading the fight to stop diabetes.

A statement from the association which was obtained by THISDAY in Abuja explained that Dagogo-Jack current research which has been supported by the National Institutes of Health and a mentor-based award from the American Diabetes Association, focuses on diabetes prevention and prediction in multiethnic populations utilising several methodologies that track metabolic processes in humans.

Friday, January 9, 2015

An election like no other

The coming presidential election will sure be one like no other. It is both amazing and interesting how things are playing out.

My views are that sentimental people and those who sulk under exaggerated burdens usually want the porridge now, like Esau, and fail to see the bitter weeping that may lie ahead. To me, not to see anything good that the incumbent has done and to say it is F9 parallel for him is not only unfair but untrue. I actually feel that those who are supporting a take-over by another party are doing so not because they really love the flag-bearer (he was rejected many times before) but because they are fed up with the suffering and problems in the land - most of which were or are being catalyzed or indirectly supported by the same people accusing the present government of failure and some of which have been there like generational mountains. Many people grossly underestimate the intricacies of governance and political and regional undercurrents that mould the shape of things at the top in a fragmented nation like Nigeria. It is as if an angel of the devil poured an odious and foul smelling substance on one of the candidates while an angel of God poured a sweet smelling perfume on the other. Serious gaffe and shortcomings are underplayed or outrightly dismissed with a wave of the hand in the case of one while significant achievements and breakthroughs are underplayed and dismissed as non issues in the case of the other.

Those who think a messiah will come with a magic wand and turn things around overnight may be living in dreamland. And those who think the successful nations of today got to where they are without dark episodes in their national histories are wrong. But the problem with Nigeria is that we had the opportunity to put the dark phase behind us and ascend to the committee of respected nations but we flunked it. I am talking about the mid 70s to mid 80s. There was a time when money was not Nigeria's problem but how to spend it. The result of that missed opportunity is the elongation of our wilderness journey. Nigeria could easily have been any of the  present-day affluent nations but sadly we missed it or rather, we postponed the good day.

In case a new government emerges, it is like maybe a year and a half would be used to settle down and sweep previous "rubbish" away; another year may be used to draw a "master plan" or set up a think tank to delineate what to be done to move the nation forward and steer it away from the programmed direction of the previous "inept" government. Before long, another election would be around the corner. The new leader would need to rely heavily on advisers as it is clear he is out of touch with a lot of issues in governance and on the economy. This could create room for "remote control" effects but God could help him to do the right and needful as people pray and remain vigilant. 

Now, this how to campaign for your candidates

I am not campaigning but this insightful and well-articulated article is worth reading. It is available to the public on Facebook. How I wish candidates and supporters would refrain from mud slinging, name-calling, abuses, etc and conduct issue-based campaigns. How I wish we could be civil, stop calling someone clueless, useless or semi illiterate. And how I wish we could stop writing fictitious achievements and carefully crafted lies just to support our candidate. I will post any well-written article  similar to this on the other presidential candidate, Gen. Buhari. I am looking for one.

Read post titled "Why I Support Goodluck Jonathan" by Bayo Adeyinka here. Also see my previous post, "GJ or MB" here.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

GJ or MB?

Read this opinion by Al Jazeera English

Will Muhammadu Buhari be Nigeria's next president? - Opinion - Al Jazeera English

Thoughts For The New Year

Today is the first day of the rest of your life. No matter what a man's past may have been, his future is spotless.
"My presence shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest" (Exodus 33:14)