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Before DIY protests, research what's really going on? + Janah's DIY poverty remedy

#1
C C Offline
Or is it more the result of beforehand a group attributing a conspiracy of nefarious motives to some trash cleanup campaigns?

Why is Antifa protesting a trash cleanup?
https://twitter.com/ElijahSchaffer/statu...840576?s=2

INTRO: Radical left wing protestors accidentally mistook the San Francisco trash cleanup as a “homeless removal campaign”. While volunteers cleaned the city, protestors called them racists & fascists.


https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/FrFFAlEeU-0



Leila Janah, entrepreneur who hired the poor, is dead 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/30/busin...-dead.html

INTRO: A child of Indian immigrants, she created digital jobs that pay a living wage to thousands in Africa and India, believing that the intellect of the poor was “the biggest untapped resource” in the world. Leila Janah, a social entrepreneur who employed thousands of desperately poor people in Africa and India in the fervent belief that jobs, not handouts, offered the best escape from poverty, died on Jan. 24 in Manhattan. She was 37. Samasource, one of her companies, said the cause was epithelioid sarcoma, a rare soft-tissue cancer.

A child of Indian immigrants, Ms. Janah traveled to Mumbai, India, in about 2005 as a management consultant to help take an outsourcing company public. Riding through the city by auto rickshaw, she passed an enormous slum. But after arriving at the outsourcing center, she found a staff of educated middle-class workers. Few, if any, of the nearby poor were employed there.

“Couldn’t the people from the slums do some of this work?” she recalled thinking, in an interview with Wired magazine in 2015. It proved to be a galvanizing moment for Ms. Janah, who called the intellect of the poorest people in the world “the biggest untapped resource” in the global economy.

She went on to start Samasource in Nairobi, Kenya, in 2008 — “sama” means “equal” in Sanskrit — with the aim of employing poor people, for a living wage, in digital jobs like photo tagging and image annotation at what she called delivery centers in Kenya, Uganda and India. The workers generate data that is used for projects as diverse as self-driving cars, video game technology and software that helps park rangers in sub-Saharan Africa prevent elephant poaching.

At least half the people hired by Samasource are women, the company says. “Leila had a vision about bringing the dignity of work and the promise of a living wage to the world’s most vulnerable,” Kennedy Odede, the founder and chief executive of Shining Hope for Communities, a grass-roots organization in Kenya that has worked with Samasource, said by email. Through her work, he added, “young people began to see different possibilities for their futures.” (MORE)
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#2
Syne Offline
If you want to see what a Democrat with a fairly clear view of his own party looks like, check out Tim Pool.
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