MJoTAtalks

Dr Susanna's guide to

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Dr Susanna loves the countries and the peoples of Africa
 
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Medical Writing Institute
prepares professionals for careers in the international health and pharmaceutical industries click here

Nelson Mandela click here
Kenyan elections 2013 click here
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Congo pleads for help click here
Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court lawsuit #96MD2013: demand to stop school closings filed Feb 28, 2013click here
Dr Patience click here
Dr Michael click here
Kenya counts the votes; Miriam Makeba click here
Fully recovered after being declared dead click here
Sojourner Truth click here
High Chief MC Orji click here
William Shakespeare click here

French Military in Mali click here

Halt school closures in Philadelphia: the school board has been derelict in its duties and needs to resign click here
Decency in Nigerian professionals click here

MJoTAtalks News Portal

Release James Kazongo click here
Rules for humans and organizations and countries MJoTA 2013 v6n1 p0506

I love rules because they tell me what to do, how to behave.

In the small institute I direct, Medical Writing Institute, students and faculty are bounded by rules. We teach the rules that guide document writing, and the rules that guide getting jobs and contracts, and the rules that guide setting up companies.

I travel a lot. I have since my brothers and I were plucked out of Clayton Street Infants School in Manchester and put on a boat across the Irish Sea, landing in Belfast in plenty of time to gaze up at the heavens at Sputnik, the first human-manufactured object in space. Oh my! The stars exist so we can dream. So we can know that the impossible is possible. What a lesson to have learned at 6.

I am often asked where I would live if I could live anywhere. My  answer: in the house that has been my base 30 years this week. In New Jersey, midway between New York City and Washington DC. Close to Philadelphia International airport.

Across the Delaware River from Philadelphia. Across the river from where the Declaration of Independence was made; across the river from where the American Constitution was written during a long hot summer gathering of the American intelligentsia.

The American Constitution lays down rules to live by. Highly workable, which is an impossible accomplishment considering racial and sexual apartheid was in full force when it was written, and continued for more than a century afterwards.

I live in a country with rules of law, rules of behavior, rules of accountability.

These rules translate into my having 4 children who are healthy, responsible adults, into the lights being on and into the absolute truth that anyone of strong physical and mental health with skills, drive and the ability to work, can do so.

Either by finding an employer and following the rules of employment, or starting a business and setting up its own set of rules. How many immigrant women from Africa and the Caribbean have I seen do this successfully. I am a member of an organization in Brooklyn, CACCI, which celebrates Caribbean achievements and works for prosperity in the Caribbean community daily. CACCI does what it says it does, follows the rules it set for itself 28 years ago.

Occasionally, often, rules are unworkable and countries and organizations fail.

I have been part of organizations where the rules strangle any movement, any attempt to do good.

I am currently in an organization which had user-friendly bylaws, which were inexplicably replaced 5 years ago, adding an additional executive group and additional officers with duplicate duties. The organization's officers have tripped over each other, resulting in polite backing away so that it has stopped being an advocacy group, and turned into a group that spends its time complaining about any initiative by its members. It is now a women's supper club.

Changing the rules in countries or organizations can be good for its citizens or members. This happens when the original rules are invalidated by a dramatic change in understanding of the rights, and limits, of each individual.

Apr 27, 1994 was the first election in South Africa when adults of all races and both sexes were permitted to vote and is widely understood to be the date when racial apartheid ended in South Africa and South Africa started in a path to economic prosperity.

On that day, I was watching the lines to vote on television in my house as I was preparing for the birth of my 4th child, my only daughter. And this was in the middle of those dreadful weeks when we were hearing about the genocide in Rwanda that was turning the rivers red.

Nineteen years later, my daughter is happier and healthier and doing better than I had any right to expect; South Africa has a constitution they are justly proud of; Rwanda shook off its official language (French) and its terrible past with Claudine speaking on behalf of Rwandan orphans to everyone who will listen who passes through New York, and I know that I live in the best part of the best country in the world.

Because we have rules. And we have activists in New York like Councilmember Jumaane D Williams and District Leader Rodneyse Bichotte and Congresswoman Yvette Clarke and Congressman Hakim Jeffries. In Philadelphia we have Dr Alethea Hankins and Anne Gemmell. In South Jersey we have Eric Kipnis. In North Carolina we have the Rev William Barber.

So many good citizens doing everything they can to make sure the rules are followed, or changed if they do not work for all of us.
James Kasongo makes the best chips in the world click here
A school for girl geniuses in Sydney click here
Muslims creating peace click here
Chechnya click here
Congress failed we the people click here
I want a hippopotamus for Christmas click here
Keeping it real with Adeola click here
Pearl Harbor and the Day of Infamy click here
News about health click here
News from countries with communities of sons and daughters of Africa click here.
News from the countries of Africa click here
News from the countries of the Caribbean click here
Haddonfield, Camden County, New Jersey: a town which since May 1983 has had a single murder by gunshot. A Sicilian woman shot dead her husband after he had decided to move her out of her home and replace her with another woman. Goals to make every town and city into a Haddonfield  click here.
Free Dental Screenings Underserved Pennsylvanians

 

Free Dental Clinics in Liacouras Center

1776 North Broad Street

Philadelphia, PA 19121

 

May 31st to Jun 1st, 2013

 

MOM-n-PA provides dental care for the relief of pain to thousands of the most needy, many from working families who do not have access or cannot afford dental insurance.

 

During our mission, more than 800 volunteers, including 120

dentists will treat around 2,000 patients.

 

Services will Include: fillings, cleanings, extractions, and more.

 

No eligibility or income requirements. Children and Adults.

 

Doors Open at 6 am

 

On Saturday April 20th from 9-2pm: job fair at Enon Baptist Church at 2800 W. Cheltenham Ave, Philadelphia

Americans need federal laws restricting who can buy guns, where they can take them, and how many bullets they can load click here
Bullets kill more than guns click here
Stop and frisk click here
One gun death is one too many click here
DDT by Andrew Reinhart click here
Sidique Wai click here
Bed Stuy Vollies click here
Slaving for slaveowners in New York City click here
Shirley Chisholm click here
Sylvanie Joseph honored by Bed Stuy Volllies click here
Jan 21 2013 in DC celebrating the inauguration of the US president, the faith and hope of fighters for civil rights, and the birthday of the Prophet Mohammed click here

Honoring sons and daughters of Africa who are and were veterans of wars click here
I am woman click here
How to fly through college and graduate school click here
Dr Althea Hankins set up the Aces Museum educational foundation and permanent exhibition for WW2 veterans. Listen to Dr Althea Hankins speak click here
CACCI at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York click here
Inappropriate behavior for assemblyman click here
Kenya prepares for elections click here
New York State Black Caucus Weekend in Albany click here.
Marble Collegiate Church click here
Philadelphia Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell click here.
African communities in Philadelphia click here
Macharia Waruingi click here
Walmart and President Clinton click here
Sylvanie Donne Joseph click here
MJoTA Boomerangs click here
Fiscal cliff click here
Malicious, vicious and fraudulent. Macharia Waruingi. Janet Ogundipe Fashakin. Lookman Sulaimon click here
News feeds. Over 150 real-time news feeds are included on this site. Sometimes news feeds stop working for a few hours or a few days, and then work again. Sometimes the RSS link needs to be updated. We try our best.

The goal of the news feeds is to hear the voice of the country profiled, or the experts in global warming and health. First hand news from first hand sources.

Our main second-hand source is Wikipedia, which is an extraordinary grass-roots operation striving for truth in instant and ancient reporting.