Wednesday, September 28, 2011

The Times Zeroes In Sanctimoniously On Uncomfortable Conditions In Niger

As thousands of north africans continue to stream into Europe through Lampedusa, the New York Times takes little notice, even when those immigrants burn down the welcome center  built for them by a benevolent but overwhelmed Italian government.

But when a few hundred african migrants make their way back to Niger from their adoptive Libya and run into hardship galore, the Times is over it like stink on HuffPost.

"As Thousands Leave Libya, And Jobs, Niger Feels Impact"

From the article :


It seems that wherever on the planet they are, africans seem to be on life support by white people, but for the equal-outcome One-Worlders at the New York Times, this is not good enough.

When the unacceptable spectacle of blacks not living as comfortably as other people comes into view, charges of racism must be made, and the heartstrings of whitey's biological do-gooderism must be pulled.

From the article :


Even though the population of Africa is many times more than it would have been without all the guilt-fueled Western food aid flown in since colonial independence, the delusional reality contortionists at Amerika's newspaper of record are on a crusade to ensure that nothing stands in the way of African Uplift No Matter What (AUNMW).

For the pointy-headed psychopathetics with pencils at the Times, the trends outlined in the population graph below simply aren't progressing fast enough :


And as we've seen before, when confronted with typical african demands of Gibs muh Dat and threats to join Al Qeada and move to Europe should Gibs muh Dat not be forthcoming,  the New York Times, quivers like a frightened school girl. 

From the article : 



The New York Times: AUNMW Since 1965

1 comment:

  1. hope you read this..its now november
    found posting on bboard at santa monica college

    Hunger Walk in Rochester, NY, organized by teens in the Mary's Place ...
    immigrants from africa asking for $$$..to send back to africa

    Church World Service : CWS Impact

    ... Daniel, Deu and Awal, among young participants in the October 16 CROP
    Hunger Walk in Rochester, NY, organized by teens in the Mary's Place ...
    www.churchworldservice.org/newcwsimpact - 26k


    Church World Service : Email - CWS Impact: 'Til the whole ...

    ...

    ReplyDelete