What Africa Really Needs To Fight Ebola
Lasrick writes Laura Kahn, a physician on the research staff of Princeton University's Program on Science and Global Security, writes that the high tech solutions being promoted to help fight Ebola in Africa will make no difference. What Africa really needs is anti-corruption efforts, now. "A case in point is Liberia, which has received billions of dollars in international aid for over a decade, with little to show for it. The country ranks near the bottom of the United Nation's Human Development Index and near the bottom of Transparency International's Global Corruption Barometer. And while international aid groups and non-governmental organizations such as Doctors Without Borders and the International Medical Corps provide important humanitarian assistance and medical care, they also inadvertently absolve African political leaders from developing medical and public health infrastructures."
Try not to choke on that Coolade my man.
Shifting corruption from "shake of the hand" to lawyers and contracts doesn't change who's pulling the strings.
As I said, the world is a pretty flat monetary system at this point. All those details you refer to are "lipstike on a pig."
You'd have to be blind as Lady Liberty to think we're somehow less corrupt. Just call a spade a spade, mate. Move on with life, untethered to fairy tails.