Re: AMERICAN FINANCED CHILD SOLDIERS OF TIGRAY IN PICTURES
Susan Rice may have thought she got the silver bullet to undo Ethiopia with child soldiers and a satellite image. I guess, these ivy league brats need to go back to a drawing board again.
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Abe Abraham
- Senior Member
- Posts: 14414
- Joined: 05 Jun 2013, 13:00
Re: AMERICAN FINANCED CHILD SOLDIERS OF TIGRAY IN PICTURES
The Americans are crazy and extremely dangerous because everything for them is like a game even rearranging countries. One of their crazy plans for instance is to divide Saudi Arabia in to four entities.
TGAA:
Susan Rice may have thought she got the silver bullet to undo Ethiopia with child soldiers and a satellite image. I guess, these ivy league brats need to go back to a drawing board again.

Re: AMERICAN FINANCED CHILD SOLDIERS OF TIGRAY IN PICTURES
The terrorist junta Tedros Adhanom tweeted he feels "pride" watching child soldiers dying in Tigray, while his own children are living a very opulent lifestyle abroad.

Re: AMERICAN FINANCED CHILD SOLDIERS OF TIGRAY IN PICTURES
It is amazing how these black Caribbean concubines of TPLF thugs hijacked America policy for Africa! Marcus Garvey gave Menelik II a pure gold pistol following the Adwa victory. Garvey was a Afro-Caribbean. The African Caribbean diaspora gave us folks like Frantz Fanon and Bob Marley. The Caribbean also gave us colonial water carriers like Rice & co.
Wiki
"Afro-Caribbean people or African-Caribbean people are Caribbean people who trace their full or partial ancestry to Africa. The majority of the modern Afro-Caribbeans descend from Africans taken as slaves to colonial Caribbean via the trans-Atlantic slave trade between the 15th and 19th centuries to work primarily on various sugar plantations and in domestic households. Other names for the ethnic group include Black Caribbean, Afro or Black West Indian or Afro or Black Antillean. The term Afro-Caribbean was not coined by Caribbean people themselves but was first used by European Americans in the late 1960s.[5]
People of Afro-Caribbean descent today mainly have between 60-100% African ancestry with their remaining DNA being of non-African ancestry, such as those of European and South Asian or native Caribbean descent, as there has been extensive intermarriage and unions among the peoples over the centuries.
Although most Afro-Caribbean people today live in English, French and Spanish-speaking Caribbean nations and territories, there are also significant diaspora populations throughout the Western world—especially in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, France and the Netherlands. African-Caribbeans have maintained their African culture and heritage, and traditional African religions, like Santeria (a mix of Catholicism and Yoruba Orishas) are still being practiced. For this reason, in some Caribbean countries, African languages are being spoken, like Igbo and Yoruba in Cuba, and Brazil (South America) . Both the home and diaspora populations have produced a number of individuals who have had a notable influence on modern African, Caribbean and Western societies; they include political activists such as Marcus Garvey and C. L. R. James; writers and theorists such as Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon; US military leader and statesman Colin Powell; and musicians Bob Marley, Nicki Minaj and Rihanna."
Wiki
"Afro-Caribbean people or African-Caribbean people are Caribbean people who trace their full or partial ancestry to Africa. The majority of the modern Afro-Caribbeans descend from Africans taken as slaves to colonial Caribbean via the trans-Atlantic slave trade between the 15th and 19th centuries to work primarily on various sugar plantations and in domestic households. Other names for the ethnic group include Black Caribbean, Afro or Black West Indian or Afro or Black Antillean. The term Afro-Caribbean was not coined by Caribbean people themselves but was first used by European Americans in the late 1960s.[5]
People of Afro-Caribbean descent today mainly have between 60-100% African ancestry with their remaining DNA being of non-African ancestry, such as those of European and South Asian or native Caribbean descent, as there has been extensive intermarriage and unions among the peoples over the centuries.
Although most Afro-Caribbean people today live in English, French and Spanish-speaking Caribbean nations and territories, there are also significant diaspora populations throughout the Western world—especially in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, France and the Netherlands. African-Caribbeans have maintained their African culture and heritage, and traditional African religions, like Santeria (a mix of Catholicism and Yoruba Orishas) are still being practiced. For this reason, in some Caribbean countries, African languages are being spoken, like Igbo and Yoruba in Cuba, and Brazil (South America) . Both the home and diaspora populations have produced a number of individuals who have had a notable influence on modern African, Caribbean and Western societies; they include political activists such as Marcus Garvey and C. L. R. James; writers and theorists such as Aimé Césaire and Frantz Fanon; US military leader and statesman Colin Powell; and musicians Bob Marley, Nicki Minaj and Rihanna."
Re: AMERICAN FINANCED CHILD SOLDIERS OF TIGRAY IN PICTURES
THE FUTURE OF TIGRAY CHILDREN, THANKS TO AMERICA FED AND BACKED TPLF TERRORISTS
Re: AMERICAN FINANCED CHILD SOLDIERS OF TIGRAY IN PICTURES
Most of Tigray youth have either fled the country, or died fighting TPLF's war, and Tigray children are now forcibly conscripted to die for the remaining few TPLF terrorist leaders cowering in caves. Tigray without children is like a farmer without seeds to grow crops: doomed to extinction.
