Rhodesia and South Africa used to feed all of the neighboring countries - some five to seven in all - they produced far more food than they could consume. The three major difficulties that Africa faces are extreme overpopulation - when I was in East Africa the average woman had six whildren who managed to live after birth; War - Angola, Somalia, Mozambique, Sudan, Chad, and now Kenya etc have been in turmoil for years, and the fact that Africans simply have never made the leap from tribalism to self governance - and likely never will. You have to have lived there to fully understand what that means. The US poured food into Somalia when we made the mistake of sending troops in the early 1990's. The Warlords took the food and held it hostage over the people who needed it and much of it rotted When the UN decided to fix the problem by sending tons more than the Warlords could manipulate - it put some local farmers out of business - people were getting it free - so why go to the market? Rhodesia used to be a paradise and after the white Rhodesians were driven out, and wealth and land was redistributed, it went right down the tubes because the people who seized it were without a clue as to how to be productive farmers - just look at it now. I would defer to whatever humanitarian organizations are in-country now as to where the most need is - and most importantly - how we can strictly control the distribution of it - because just sending money and supplies to Africa in this day and age - without a smart, disciplined infrastructure (people) is the same as pouring money down a rathole. We will be taking care of Africa for the next few generations.









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