I hear that the darker Zim natives taste like chicken...and are easier to catch.
I’ve been to East Africa as well as southern Africa and am a huge supporter of saving their wildlife (and no,I’m not “animal rights”).Leave it to the Chinese to do this.They live in a huge cesspool themselves but that’s not enough...they have to destroy far off lands.
China invests in China. If there is no $$$ or natural resources in it for them (+potential customers) they are not interested in that other country.
The US invests in war torn hell-holes asking nothing in return from the people that hate us there and eventually abandoning them anyway after spending lots of $$$.
Which strategy you think will pay off the most in the long run?
I knew dogs would be in there somewhere.
mmmmm.....Zebra Lo Mein......
What’s news about Godless heathens acting like animals?
“Addio Africa” was a mondo-explotation film (from the makers of “Mondo Cane”).
Filmed right as colonial rule was being devolved to the locals, it has sickening footage of massive zebra & elephant slaughter as the locals went wild.
Sad, and sickening.
...Massive dams are being built, flooding nature reserves. The land is scarred with giant Chinese mines, with 'slave' labourers paid less than £1 a day to extract ore and minerals.Pristine forests are being destroyed, with China taking up to 70 per cent of all timber from Africa.
All over this great continent, the Chinese presence is swelling into a flood. Angola has its own 'Chinatown', as do great African cities such as Dar es Salaam and Nairobi. Exclusive, gated compounds, serving only Chinese food, and where no blacks are allowed, are being built all over the continent. 'African cloths' sold in markets on the continent are now almost always imported, bearing the legend: 'Made in China'.
From Nigeria in the north, to Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Angola in the west, across Chad and Sudan in the east, and south through Zambia, Zimbabwe and Mozambique, China has seized a vice-like grip on a continent which officials have decided is crucial to the superpower's long-term survival. 'The Chinese are all over the place,' says Trevor Ncube, a prominent African businessman with publishing interests around the continent. 'If the British were our masters yesterday, the Chinese have taken their place.'
They kill lots of human babies, too.