
Political R&B
“Before they lay your body down / you got to change the world before you six feet under the ground.”
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Paul Milchik is a pseudonym for the author of this piece. His name has been changed due to his status as an international student in the US during the second Trump administration, in a context where foreign students have been targeted for detention and deportation as a result of expressing pro-Palestinian views.

“Before they lay your body down / you got to change the world before you six feet under the ground.”

Nelson and Winnie Mandela’s descendants fought apartheid for the right to make a reality TV show and South Africans fought for the right see it.

Equatorial Guinea’s longtime head of state, Teodoro Obiang, wants to buy legitimacy internationally. Will he succeed?

Afrikaans has its roots as a Dutch Creole, spoken by slaves, slave masters and workers of the Dutch East India Company at the Cape. A South African theater company took the play to The Netherlands.

Maathai, who died this week, stood up to the dictatorship of Daniel Arap Moi, and the global regimes of the IMF, the World Bank and all the rest.

“Law and Order,” opened its 13th season with a very transparent plot based on the Dominique Strauss Kahn rape case. It is not very good.

Islam first came to North America with slavery, yet no major studio film has centered on the life of a Muslim American slave. Ibn Said’s remarkable life could be a start.

You fill out a form on a Dutch NGO’s website and it “gets a bunch of Africans to protest for you.” It is not a joke.




The mainstream is waking to the prescience of the old man’s ideas.

Cote d’Ivoire’s newly-appointed commission counts 11 members, with footballer Didier Drogba one of them, representing the country’s diaspora.

Cote d’Ivoire is Africa’s best team at the moment. FIFA says so. Egypt, the current African champions, are second.