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In reply to the discussion: KONY 2012 [View all]KoKo
(84,711 posts)16. Leo...after I replied to you, I found this.
There's a video at site if you go to the link. These are comments by an activist in the area.
Can Kony 2012 Make a Difference for Ugandan Youth?
March 12, 2012 · By Emira Woods
The "Kony 2012" campaign went viral, while making a call for military to support for a failed regime in Uganda. Watch this discussion on social media and African politics in PBS NewsHour.
The "Stop Kony" campaign that's gone viral in recent days aims to spotlight the atrocities of warlord Joseph Kony in Uganda. Margaret Warner discussed the nonprofit Invisible Children's popular "Kony 2012" video and its ensuing criticism with the Institute for Policy Studies' Emira Woods and Porter Novelli's Dawn Arteaga.
"We have to keep in mind Joseph Kony came into power around the same time as Museveni, the president of Uganda, who has been around since the 1980s now.
And it was really a quest for political power couched in, again, Lord's Resistance Army, a lot of language around religion and around rights of people. But what we have seen is a real deterioration of rights, the abduction of children, as is, quite frankly, well-documented in the video.
I think what is not shown in the video is the other part of this picture, which is a Ugandan military that has also been tremendously abusive in terms of the rights of its own people."
Because of this dangerous and corrupt relationship, Woods said viewers should be careful to support any campaigns that might be perceived as support for the type of military intervention that has already been tried and failed:
"It was tried before back in 2008. It was called Operation Lightning Thunder, reported well in The New York Times and elsewhere, where the U.S., using military forces, went in, and what we -- working with the Ugandan military.
What we saw essentially was Ugandan civilians caught in the crossfire, huge escalation in deaths at that time, a military operation that, in fact, failed, was never reviewed, never scrutinized, and now a call for essentially young people to go all out and essentially support yet another attempt at a military intervention".
http://www.ips-dc.org/media/can_kony_2012_make_a_difference_for_ugandan_youth
On Edit:
The Max Keiser report I mentioned is here on DU's front page in the Video's Section. It's worth the watch about Gold/Oil and the Koney Video.
Here's the Link: http://www.democraticunderground.com/101716176#post1
Our AFRICOM Military Base in Italy has people involved in Uganda, already. I know because friend's son is there...and it's the next Theater for US involvment.. (remember PNAC) now that we've "helped out Libya and Yemen." We are there along with the French, it seems and also China. Just saying...I'd hate to see Religious Fundamentalists pushing videos to get more troops in there than we already have....plus using a video to whip up support from good intentioned young folks who might not be aware of the whole picture behind the video. Just saying...
Can Kony 2012 Make a Difference for Ugandan Youth?
March 12, 2012 · By Emira Woods
The "Kony 2012" campaign went viral, while making a call for military to support for a failed regime in Uganda. Watch this discussion on social media and African politics in PBS NewsHour.
The "Stop Kony" campaign that's gone viral in recent days aims to spotlight the atrocities of warlord Joseph Kony in Uganda. Margaret Warner discussed the nonprofit Invisible Children's popular "Kony 2012" video and its ensuing criticism with the Institute for Policy Studies' Emira Woods and Porter Novelli's Dawn Arteaga.
"We have to keep in mind Joseph Kony came into power around the same time as Museveni, the president of Uganda, who has been around since the 1980s now.
And it was really a quest for political power couched in, again, Lord's Resistance Army, a lot of language around religion and around rights of people. But what we have seen is a real deterioration of rights, the abduction of children, as is, quite frankly, well-documented in the video.
I think what is not shown in the video is the other part of this picture, which is a Ugandan military that has also been tremendously abusive in terms of the rights of its own people."
Because of this dangerous and corrupt relationship, Woods said viewers should be careful to support any campaigns that might be perceived as support for the type of military intervention that has already been tried and failed:
"It was tried before back in 2008. It was called Operation Lightning Thunder, reported well in The New York Times and elsewhere, where the U.S., using military forces, went in, and what we -- working with the Ugandan military.
What we saw essentially was Ugandan civilians caught in the crossfire, huge escalation in deaths at that time, a military operation that, in fact, failed, was never reviewed, never scrutinized, and now a call for essentially young people to go all out and essentially support yet another attempt at a military intervention".
http://www.ips-dc.org/media/can_kony_2012_make_a_difference_for_ugandan_youth
On Edit:
The Max Keiser report I mentioned is here on DU's front page in the Video's Section. It's worth the watch about Gold/Oil and the Koney Video.
Here's the Link: http://www.democraticunderground.com/101716176#post1
Our AFRICOM Military Base in Italy has people involved in Uganda, already. I know because friend's son is there...and it's the next Theater for US involvment.. (remember PNAC) now that we've "helped out Libya and Yemen." We are there along with the French, it seems and also China. Just saying...I'd hate to see Religious Fundamentalists pushing videos to get more troops in there than we already have....plus using a video to whip up support from good intentioned young folks who might not be aware of the whole picture behind the video. Just saying...
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It's a deliberate attempt to educate people on the Internet. The video itself makes clear
Leopolds Ghost
Mar 2012
#7
You think they didn't bother to watch the video and are just retagging it?
Leopolds Ghost
Mar 2012
#9
The problem is, the only reason for the video is to make people aware of Kony and the LRA.
Leopolds Ghost
Mar 2012
#15
I've been away but when I came back a speaker had visited the school and made a presentation...
NYC_SKP
Mar 2012
#23
Yeah, I agree with the first part, but the author is biased in the last sentence
Leopolds Ghost
Mar 2012
#27
Leo...she goes on in the article about the "tribal differences..North of Nile, South of Nile
KoKo
Mar 2012
#28
KoKo, here's a book everyone must read: The Scramble For Africa by Pakenham
Leopolds Ghost
Mar 2012
#34