Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Huge Amounts Of Cervical Mucus

Thomas Jefferson "But let's leave the One Love ..." The big cock of the wonders

Only in recent days, the Italian media have begun to address the tragic situation prevailing in the pearl of the Caribbean: Jamaica.

The island, in fact, is now beset by crisis, social, economic and ultimately military also put a strain on the population, which is already plagued by a poverty that has its roots in previous decades.

The economic crisis in Jamaica continues, practically since the seventies, when he began to open its market to products from the USA and the countries of South America. Agriculture became the island in order to adapt to the requirements of importing countries, but in doing so sacrificed food self-sufficiency, the government began importing staple foods and began to do to accumulate foreign debt, since at that time was a convenient practice.
With the oil crises that followed in the '70s and '80s, interest rates on the debt accumulated by the establishment Jamaican became intolerable, and since then the population lives in conditions of near poverty.


The images that the world knows, an island that moves in time with the reggae, the white beaches, clear blue sea and lush forests are the snapshots taken from that which is the Jamaica Tourist holiday resorts. In poor neighborhoods and suburbs of large cities, primarily in Kingston, the situation of civil war.
On average, every day, they are committed nine murders sul'isola. More than 3000 deaths per year.
The gangs vie for the market of selling cocaine and marijuana. Corruption is rampant, and many authorities are enslaved to their drug lords.

This is where the international media began to turn the spotlight: in the capital, Kingston, the government declared a state of emergency. The men of the drug dealer Christopher "Dudus" Coke, have begun a riot to prevent the arrest and extradition of their "leader" in the United States. A police station was burned, while 5 others were attacked. The army took to the streets and impose curfews.

what was once the home of the One Love sung by Robert Nesta Marley, is turning into a dystopia, ruled by street gangs.
even reggae artists have been spared the wave of violence that rages every day: O'Neil Edwards, voice of the trio Voicemail, was hit by seven shots and the fight between life and death. Unfortunately, we can expect retaliation for this tragic event, which will only feed the spiral of violence.

0 comments:

Post a Comment