Walter Rodney, born in Guyana on 22nd of march in 1942, Pan-African, Marxist intellectual who was assassinated by the Guyanese government in 1980 at 38 years old.
Rodney attended the University College of the West Indies in 1960 and was awarded a first class honors degree in History in 1963. He later earned a PhD in African History in 1966 at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, England, at the age of 24.
Rodney traveled extensively and became well-known as an activist, scholar, and formidable orator. He taught at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania from 1966-67 and 1969-1974, and in 1968 at his alma mater University of the West Indies.
On October 15th, 1968, the government of Jamaica declared Rodney a “persona non grata” and banned him from the country. Following his dismissal by the University of the West Indies, students and poor people in West Kingston protested, leading to the “Rodney Riots”, which caused six deaths and millions of dollars in damages.
In 1972, Rodney published “How Europe Underdeveloped Africa”. Historian Melissa Turner describes the work this way: “A brutal critique of long-standing and persistent exploitation of Africa by Western powers, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa remains a powerful, popular, and controversial work in which Rodney argued that the early period of African contact with Europe, including the slave trade, sowed the seeds for continued African economic underdevelopment and had dramatically negative social and political consequences as well. He argued that, while the roots of Africa’s ailments rested with intentional underdevelopment and exploitation under European capitalist and colonial systems, the only way for true liberation to take place was for Africans to become cognizant of their own complicity in this exploitation and to take back the power they gave up to the exploiters.”
On June 13th, 1980, Rodney was killed in Georgetown, Guyana via a bomb given to him by Gregory Smith, a sergeant in the Guyana Defence Force, one month after returning Zimbabwe. In 2015, a “Commission of Inquiry” in Guyana that the country’s then president, Linden Forbes Burnham, was complicit in his murder.
“If there is to be any proving of our humanity it must be through revolutionary means.”
Walter Rodney
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
Decolonial Marxism Essays From The Pan African Revolution
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Fighting a one-man war against YouTube by clicking “don’t recommend this channel” whenever I see any type of click bait image
Horny emerald herald be like
Bearer suck suck breast
it is may 24 and stalin saved the world from fascism
It’s almost funny that all the modern chesterton fences being torn down are being torn down by the right. Vaccines, pasteurisation, food and drug regulation, dismantling the social safety nets and the welfare state, getting rid of financial regulations, getting rid of institutions of soft power. Etc. Etc. Etc. All solutions to problems they’ve forgotten. Sometimes shit that happened within living memory and yet they forgot.
Funniest shit happened at work today, but I’m gonna keep it to myself for now
You tease
From Conan to Fetterman: the rise and fall of the large American oaf
Damn, From Here To Eternity is actually a really good movie
spoilers: deep space 9 / s3
having trouble continuing to watch ds9 cause i’m a kira x odo hater and lately in every episode the pining has been non-stop with them. my breaking point is when the writers killed off bareil out of nowhere so they can make it happen. doomed to see a ship i hate become canon why can’t they just be friends
spoiler
Oh boy, I don’t want to spoil anything, but if you genuinely hate that ship, then you’ll be entering a world of pain during the next 4 seasons.
Thinking about how in Star Wars and virtually every sci-fi setting I can think of, planets are never more than just “one place” each. One city, one forest, one town, one military base. But most importantly, one biome. Planets are really, really large and the only inhabitable planet we know of has many different biomes! If we’re talking about scale alone, you could reasonably have every event that happens in Star Wars take place in different spots on the same planet. Hell, they could all take place on Earth.
I think that checks out though. Here on earth culture has been homogonized with the advent of travel and communications. I would expect a planet with globe spanning mass transit and communications to develop into a broadly homogeneous culture. Especially if you think of most planets being projects instead of natural developments.
It’s interesting that this has spread to a lot of games, too. Astroneer has a bit of diversity with different biomes in each planet, but they’re still basically a collage of 2 slightly different kinds of terrain. Dyson Sphere Program has only 1 biome per planet.
I’ve yet to play Outer Wilds or No Man’s Sky, not sure if those are any different.
KSP has different biomes on each planet and moon but the meaningful difference between biomes is less without any biological life to really differentiate stuff. Geological zones definitely would be different, like one ocean of Explodium (that’s what they’re apparently constituted of) vs a different one is gonna be at least a little different. The Mun like our Moon has some dark zones, some light zones, a bunch of fun craters. Duna like Mars has ice caps. Otherwise it’s all a bunch of dust and wind and void or atmosphere.
One of my favorite parts of Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars trilogy is the loving descriptions of the Martian landscape
10x the ICE funding and 20x the non citizen prison budget really driving home the sheer fascism of the republicans. Dunno why but it got my stomach to drop when I read it in ways that other ontologically evil policies have not.
Budgets are moral documents, as they say
We are all terrible nerds and the math his us in ways other things don’t
Watching Australian rules football. Are there always this many seagulls? Like are they a part of the sport?
No idea what’s happening but it’s very exciting
The referee gesture for a goal is finger guns, this is the greatest sport ever.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
weekly Dr Who rant
“That is not what tables are supposed to do!”
Some wish-fuckery has rewritten the nature of reality. While Ruby joins the resistance, Belinda and the Doctor stumble around aimlessly until Rogue from last series somehow Skypes the Doctor from hell.
Stuff I liked:
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set design on the weird HR Geiger, bone castle. It was a good merging of the aesthetic sensibilities of both classic and new Dr Who.
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the plot device with the mugs dropping through tables was executed pretty well.
Stuff I didn’t like:
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the return of Omega. Can Dr Who please stop recycling one off villains. Especially considering how particularly final Omega’s previous death was.
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this new version of the Ranni. They took a character with a specific vibe and MO and made her a secondary backup Master.
Overall:
A common pitfall with these two part finale episodes is spending the entire first part on setup, leaving it to feel like kinda an empty episode. I think this episode has fallen into that pitfall. Hopefully next week’s is worth all this build up, but I’m not confident.
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too many kids today talking about the Ballad of Ho Chi Minh and not enough kids talking about the Ballot of H. R. C.
sunshine feels so fucking good