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Can anyone give me a summary of this article and how would it effect history?

Question by joepaulino: Can anyone give me a summary of this article and how would it effect history?
Over the weekend, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma—the most important interlocutor during her 11-day, seven-nation tour of Africa—professed their mutual regard. Clinton vowed “to put meat on the bone” of U.S.-South African relations; Zuma said that he, too, wants to take them to “a higher level.” Washington was perpetually stymied by Zuma’s predecessor, Thabo Mbeki, who questioned the link between HIV and AIDS (a disastrous posture that Harvardresearchers think led to nearly 400,000 preventable deaths) and defended President Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe. So the United States hopes Zuma, who often tussled with Mbeki and has promised a more transparent governing style, can be the sort of leader who will fulfill South Africa’s role as the political, economic, and military anchor of the continent.
It doesn’t look like he will. Just four months in office, Zuma has done so much worthy of obloquy that’s it’s a small miracle Clinton would even meet with him. He is peddling arms to police states and terrorist havens (in deals that were revealed just a week before Clinton’s arrival); continuing, as Mbeki did, to prop up the despotic Mugabe; and even doing China’s bidding to keep trade relations intact. Not long ago, South Africa stood as beacon for morality among the nations. (“Human rights will be the light that guides our foreign affairs,” Nelson Mandela wrote in 1993.) Today, it conducts a foreign policy closer to that of a rogue state.
Earlier this month, a senior leader of South Africa’s official opposition party (the shadow minister for defense) revealed that the country’s National Conventional Arms Control Committee had authorized the sale of high-tech weaponry to Libya, Syria, and Venezuela. According to the opposition Democratic Alliance, the armaments included “bombs that could be used to deliver nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons” (Libya), “grenade launchers” (Syria), and “thousands of multiple grenade launchers and upgraded assault rifles” (Venezuela). The panel is also considering the sale of military equipment to Iran and Zimbabwe, and it has authorized a South African defense contractor to deliver a demonstration of a radar-warning system to officials in North Korea. While the government initially claimed that the opposition was spreading “gossip and rumor,” it has yet to refute the allegations. Instead, it has accused the opposition politician who divulged the “illegally obtained information” of having “stolen it” and has threatened to investigate him, implying that what has thus far been revealed is accurate.
South Africa’s support for totalitarians extends to diplomacy, too: it recently ended a two-year rotation on the United Nations Security Council, where it opposed resolutions that would have increased pressure on Zimbabwe, Belarus, Cuba, North Korea, and Uzbekistan. On the council, it also fought attempts to toughen sanctions on the Burmese junta and Iran. (In these votes, it kept the company of authoritarian powers like Russia and China.)
Before it entered power in 1994, the African National Congress (ANC), Zuma’s ruling party, took money and orders from Moscow during the Cold War. Today, it has found a new patron in Beijing. Over the past several years, China has surpassed the United States as Africa’s largest trading partner, and nowhere on the continent is it more heavily invested than in South Africa. So deep is Chinese influence over Pretoria that, in March, South Africa denied a visa request from the Dalai Lama to visit Cape Town for a peace conference. “We would not do anything to upset the relationship we have with China,” an unnamed government official told South Africa’s Business Day. In April 2008, a Chinese ship carrying weapons for Zimbabwe—then in the midst of brutal post-election violence being carried out by Mugabe’s thugs—was prevented from docking in South Africa only after a court intervened and dockworkers refused to unload its deadly cargo.
Given the ANC’s own history as a national liberation movement fighting the apartheid regime, you might expect that—once in power—it would sympathize with oppressed people rather than oppressive governments. That has not been true in recent years. The reason for this bias is both practical and ideological. For one, many of these governments—like Cuba and Libya—actively supported the ANC while it was in exile. No less a moral authority than Mandela defended South Africa’s unseemly alliances: when he was released from prison in 1990 and triumphantly met in succession with Fidel Castro, Yasir Arafat, and Muammar Kaddafi, Mandela told skeptics that, “Our attitude toward any country is determined by the attitude of that country to our struggle. Yasir Arafat, Colonel Kaddafi, Fidel Castro support our struggle to the hilt.” Those tyrants may have jailed their own Mandelas, but according to the ANC chief, “We have no time to be looking into the internal affairs of other countries.” That wasn’t th

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Answer by Common Sense
Too long, too tired, I’ll pass.

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I have some “play money” to invest/trade. Does anyone have any ideas?…?

I am not talking about going to a casino or playing the lottery. I want to “day trade”, which I know is risky, or do some short term type of fooling around. Does anyone know where I can get some commentary and ideas on this? I am thinking of some kind of blog, or some type of club or something. I want this to be fun, too.

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can anyone give me an advice on how to start investing in stocks or how to day trade?

Is there a website that I can learn from?

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    SOUTHEAST OHIO, Anyone have spare car/truck they’d trade for experienced Building Services/Maintenance or Art?

    A few months ago I was laid off my job as an Art Director. On the same day my wife was coming to get me (had to give up company car), she was 1st car hit in high speed 4 car pile up, she was fine a month later but our Jeep was totaled, insurance paid off Jeep but left us with-out extra vehicle. My wife uses our only car to get to work. We live in a rural area, zero jobs, no public transportation; my unemployment is quickly running out, we need another car quickly. I WANT TO WORK!

    I have 22 yrs experience in plumbing, carpentry, electrical, drywall & painting! Have done many remodels. If you have a good running spare vehicle and need some work done it would be a win win situation for us all. Of course you’d buy materials for any building needs and I’d provide labor in trade for good running vehicle. This is not an ad. I am not selling, I am looking to buy with my labor. Thank you!

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    Does anyone know anything useful about E-Trade that they could teach me?

    I remember hearing a convo between friends a long time ago about buying, trading and selling stock online. It was supposed to be a 24hr thing. You had to make sure you sold everything by the end of the day. I’m sure not all places work that way, but, it caught my attention. However, I don’t know anything about it. I am completely illiterate when it comes to stock, bonds, and the buying, selling and trading of. Can anyone help with what they know?
    Believe it or not, I appreciate Scottsoffen’s answer. Though I do not believe it to be the best of this series of answers, it is honest. That much I appreciate. However, the reason I have posted this question is because it is only my first step in a long process of information gathering. Later I will try to find a friend with an MBA. Thanks Scottsoffen

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