Sunday 27 April 2014

Cashless Society with Time Banking

After looking at Time Banking for quite a while now, I've come to the conclusion that there is no better way to address the ailments of society today and at the same time fight the Cabal in their money grabbing.



1. It does put all people on the same level, equalizing their worth, lifting up  those who have been marginalized and and debased for too long. Why should doctors, attorneys and politicians be paid more per hour of their time than artisans, secretaries and gardeners? 

2. It does put everyone in a position to afford necessary services which normally are beyond their means. 

3. It does build strong self-supporting communities in a world where everyone has been living for himself up till now, just looking after his/her own profit and well being or living on the dole.

4. It will alleviate the problem of unemployment we struggle with almost everywhere and give our youth new hope and purpose in life. 

5. The Cabal will no longer be able to suck us dry with income taxes. 

Too many more points to mention here. 

And so I am contemplating opening the first Time Bank in Africa, where  it seems none exist yet. I know it will cost hard work to first introduce and the promote the concept here in Namibia. So I am asking my Namibian readers to please comment and share where ever they can and start following my blog for updates. Thank you. 


Saturday 26 April 2014

Easy Steps to Freedom from Slavery

Most of us are slaving away daily to keep up with certain standards promoted by advertisements, promotions and news stories in Mainstream Media. Thus we loose our personal freedom and indeed become slaves to other peoples dictates. 

How many times have you bought something because it was advertised as being absolutely necessary for either your health, security or public image? So often we spend money on things we don't really need for a happy, carefree life. As prices increase from day to day, we then struggle to keep up with monthly payments for those things.

I could give many examples, but want to highlight one here, which may or may not be country specific: Security. Specifically in Southern Africa personal security has become a main issue, which is extensively used by snake salesmen of corporations to draw money from our pockets and literally make us live willingly in our private prisons, with iron bars in front of all windows and doors, electrified fences around our houses and infrared movement detectors or other electric monitoring systems in all rooms. We willingly imprison ourselves and pay dearly for constant surveillance.  

Ironically, homes with the most security have become the preferred targets of criminals, who cannot be deterred from entering by any means and now have total freedom of movement, whereas we have to slave away at our jobs to pay for it all.

When this reality dawned on me, I rebelled. Yes, one can live safely without all of that, even in Southern Africa. If you want to be free, you can be. It's easy. The choice is yours and yours alone. 

"The Cabal exists, because - you let it. Freedom is infringed- because we allow it."

Here  you can find some easy steps to implement immediately to free yourself from being a slave to those, who are busy sucking us dry by indoctrinating us with their clever lies on a daily basis.




 

Thursday 24 April 2014

Planet Earth is You and Needs You Now

This video was shared on OneWorldofNations where we, the people of this world can gather to share our concerns and start working together to revers what 1% of our species are busy breaking down completely. 

Please become part of this worldwide effort to save our planet and its people, by likewise sharing it wherever you can.




Monday 21 April 2014

Has the Namibian Constitution been abandoned?

Just 24 short years after Namibia's independence the Constitution seems to have been abandoned. The conditions in the pretrial detention facility in Okahandja are a grim reminder of the dark ages with their dungeons.

The following facts were related to me by four recent inmates.

The cells:
are totally over filled. Half of the inmates have to sleep in the open, roofless section of cells. There is only one working toilet in the cell, which by the way, is totally open and double serves as the only chair available. There is no washbasin and only a hole in the wall next to the toilet serving as shower.  There are no beds, no chairs, nor a table. Each inmate is supplied with 3-5mm thin "mattress" plus one greasy blanket infested with lice, placed on the bare cement floor. Furthermore the cell(average of 28 inmates) is supplied with 2 bars of soap plus 3 rolls of toilet paper once a week. If inmates don't have friends outside to bring them other necessary toiletries, they just have to do without them. Lights stay on day and night. Inspections are done at various times during the night to intimidate inmates even more,

The Food:
Mornings: 5 slices of brown bread with one teaspoon of either jam or peanut butter on one slice, if available,  + half a cup of coffee/tee mix per inmate
Lunch: maize porridge(no sugar,no salt) + a cup of instant soup. 
Dinner: same as lunch. 
Special: Wednesday and Sunday: chicken or meat or fish bones+ cup of juice
Depending on officer on duty, inmates may get a fruit on Wednesdays.
Inmates are supplied with a plastic plate and cup, no cutlery, which have to be pushed through the door bars at mealtimes to be filled.
Meal times depend on the whim of the kitchen personnel.

Once you are inside this facility, you are totally cut off from the outside world and treated like a rabid animal, even though the Constitution guarantees that human dignity may not be violated. Depending on the whim of the controlling officer, inmates may or may not see visitors on Sundays for 5 minutes. 
Pretrial periods vary from 2 months to up to four years.  

Above conditions stand in stark contrast to Article 8 of the Constitution of Namibia, which states:

(1) The dignity of all persons shall be inviolable.
(2) (a) In any judicial proceedings or in other proceedings before any organ of the State, and during the enforcement of a penalty, respect for human dignity shall be guaranteed.
(b) No persons shall be subject to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

And so one must ask: has the Government of Namibia abandoned the Constitution? Or are our governors just careless in the performance of their duties, employing totally incompetent people in positions of authority? 







 

Sunday 20 April 2014

Is the Namibian Police incompetent or biased?

Details of the case:
On Tuesday 15 April 2014 somebody stole the pet parrot of Sakkie, my helper, out of it's cage in Sakkies house in Nau-Aib, Okahandja. After talking to his neighbors Sakkie found out who had stolen the parrot. So on Wednesday morning he went to the Okahandja police station to open a case of theft against the thief, who is employed in the Namibian army in a nearby camp. He was told to come back in two hours.
Coming to work late, he told me about his predicament, attended to his job and was back at the police station two hours later, only to find out that nothing had happened in the meantime. He did not turn up for work on Thursday, as the police had told him to wait there, since they had no car available to drive to the army camp. 

When he turned up for work on Friday, a public Holiday, I found out that no case had been opened and still nothing had been done to apprehend the thief. So I decided to accompany him to the police in order to get more details about why nothing had been done yet.

Five officers where behind the counter. All of them began to verbally attack Sakkie, telling him he hadn't made a case, only a report and he hadn't waited there as told and hadn't informed them when he left to get some lunch. I said we were here to now open a case, not report. Upon that we were again told to wait. 
After waiting for about 20 minutes, the traffic cop with the car came in to tell me I should drive ahead, he would catch up with me along the road as he was driving very fast. I did as I was told, waiting somewhere along the road again for half an hour, as the car wasn't coming as expected. Eventually they sped past me hooting and I followed them to the army camp.

On arrival at the camp, the traffic cop and police officer walked to the barracks accompanied by an army officer, then returned to tell us the guy wasn't there since it was a Public Holiday. Another army officer came up to us to get the story, then walked to their hospital, where the guy was supposed to work, but he wasn't there either. 

The police officer told the army officer that we were going to open a case and then he would just have to take the guy into custody. We came here to give the guy a chance to state his side and give back the stolen bird. The army officer then took our telephone numbers and said he would come back to us.

We then returned home, while the police and traffic cop drove off in a different direction. Right up to today, Sunday 20 April 2014, the case is wrapped in silence.

Analysis:
1. A theft was reported, but no criminal docket was opened.

2. The plaintiff was not informed of procedures to be followed.
3. The plaintiff was put on hold for 2 days.
   
This is a clear case of not taking complaints seriously, thereby promoting criminality in Namibia. 

4. Plaintiff is openly portrayed as the guilty partner in this case for not  having followed instructions from police to wait.

This is a clear indication of a guilty conscience for not following proper procedures in a criminal case.

5. Without any official docket a trip of 30km was undertaken on public cost.
6. This trip was undertaken on a Public Holiday, meaning double pay.

This is a clear case of misuse of public funds. 

7. The time delay gave the alleged criminal ample opportunity to get rid of any evidence.

This is a clear case of complicity with suspect and bias toward other officials.  

8. This case still has not been officially docketed. 

Conclusion:
The Namibian police in Okahandja are not only incompetent but also abetting criminality in the country by their flat refusal to record complaints properly. 

This is further mentioned by LAC as reported by Refworld.


Update 6 May: According to Sakkie, the alleged thief in the meantime paid him the price of the bird plus an additional amount for Sakkies emotional hurt, after Sakkie had put his case before the military police at Ozona.   

Saturday 19 April 2014

Enforce Your Right in Court and Win.

Most of us may try to stay out of court during our lifetime, yet there is no guarantee to our being successful at that. It therefore is important to prepare yourself ahead of time in order to handle such a situation to your benefit. Being prepared is half the battle won already. I know of at least one person who would have been able to avoid being incarcerated if he had been prepared properly.

The video below explains how you can learn to enforce your right in a fair hearing in court. Never give the court jurisdiction over you by entering a plea.

  

Even though the above video was made for Americans, the procedure can be applied in any country where human rights are enshrined in a constitution. Thus a knowledge of ones constitutional rights is a prerequisite.

In Namibia the right to a fair trial is enshrined in Article 12 of the Namibian Constitution.

Thursday 17 April 2014

Letter to the Government of Namibia

The following letter was sent to 'parliament@parliament.gov.na' on the 4th of April 2014. It's receipt was not acknowledged. 


Subject: You might be interested in this link...


http://www.parliament.gov.na/national_council/nc_adopted_archive.php




Via a Google search I happened to stumble upon this website, which I found highly interesting. As I looked deeper, however, I realized that it has not been updated since 2011. That fact negates the whole purpose of the site as stated on the index page, namely to ” make Parliament truly representative of the Namibian people.”
I do not know who is responsible for updates, but obviously that person or department has grossly neglected his/her/its duty. This negligence :
1.      puts the Namibian Government in a very bad light internationally as people can’t find any current information here;
2.      currently bars the people of Namibia of actively taking part in their present government;
3.      is thus a waste of precious resources in its maintenance, in violation of our constitution.
As a Namibian I therefore move a request to have the site updated regularly to properly reflect current matters, thereby promoting Namibia in a favorable light to the outside world.

Concerned Namibian
my name

Now I ask:is it too much work to just acknowledge receipt of an email at the time you receive it?




Saturday 12 April 2014

How can we the people call our Government to order?

Freedom is no freedom as long as we allow a minority to rule every aspect of our lives. 

For many years we were ruled by South Africa. Namibians then fought for freedom from that oppression. In 1990 Namibia became independent. We were given a Constitution written up by the United Nations. The people of Namibia accepted that Constitution, though they had no say in it and most do not even know what it says, even after 24 years.

It now becomes evident we have only exchanged tyrants and tyrannies.  

Corruption is rife in ruling circles and that even after the 2nd Amendment. Self-enrichment is the order of the day in Government.
Incompetence is blatantly acknowledged.
Poverty has not been addressed yet.
Our Government has turned out a UN puppet.
The Madness of our Government is apparent in the 2014/15 budget.


How can we, the people of Namibia, call our Government to order?

Elections are supposed to be the foremost way to express our wishes.Yet we all know that elections are rigged right from voter registrations to vote counting to maintain the Status Quo. This was discussed in an article in another one of our local Newspapers recently.



Going to court with complaints is an option enshrined in Article25 (2) of our constitution. Seeing that our judges are appointed by our “employees”, they are biased toward their employers. We also know how many months it takes to process cases, let alone the costs involved. So that is not a viable option.


There WAS another little known option, paid for by we the people: http://www.parliament.gov.na/ . This option, however, was hijacked by not being updated since 2011 and therefore became useless. Written complaints concerning this are flatly ignored by our government.   


The news media thus is our last resort. The Namibian is being used more and more for this purpose in the hope it will be read and taken to heart by those in our service. Yet even the Namibian only publishes certain articles. Once an article gets too critical and outspoken, it is ignored like any complaint addressed to Government. Freedom of speech? In reality there is none.



We have effectively been robbed of our constitutional right to call our Government to order. Our Government has separated itself from the people to follow the agenda of those in whose service it stands, the UN.  We, the people of Namibia, have never really attained Freedom from our oppressors, they just changed faces.