Showcasing the true sense of Africans 
Rueben is Dead-A Poem
Pen Brutish Rueben is dead, cold blooded, and dumb
 
We shall not mourn,
 
Our first born scribe now buried in their ruins, as many of his likes
 
Weep not comrades,
 
Will he speak for himself?
 
Not again,
The rejoinder master lies on the laps of Delilah’s whom he once denounced
 
He shook hands with the devil and died
 
Ruben was not killed with their barrels when he ought to have been dead
 
He gave himself up willingly
 
And threw reputation to the mire
 
The columns of contradicted life condemns conscience
 
Disparaged pages of Jewish fated hypocrisies
 
Public circulated ranting at the Rutam House for advantage
 
Only reprobates, dares to defend these, justifying them in rejoinders
 
The obvious, we lost him
 
A consenting silence, the booing of legislators, the shock of commoners
 
No rejoinders, none till the expiration of his mingle after four years,
 
If it comes,
 
It will be weak, supportive of the evil he once decries
 
We lost him.
 
A rare obituary for comrade’s compromise
 
In honour, dishonoured
 
Gather yourselves together to the head counts
One man is missing again, amongst scrawl’s giants    
His price was paid, fully paid
 His dignity mellowed for pomp
Ruben,
Trapped by ganger wigs to the tricks of the Pol
Silence demeaning an age long chevron,
Now bowed to the “Yes-man-ship” of intelligential 
Is this the manner of a fall?
“Unelected” Ruben,
Scoop the motives when deeds are done
Now, in reiterates, a kiss of betrayal
For $, £, #
Bring us no more juice of their scandals, wrapped around your neck
Reputation!
“Oft got without merit, lost without deserving”
And like the morsel of Esau,
Or the heel of Achilles
He fell headlong to his secret desired lust,
The motivation of his wittiness, “gain”
“Use to be”, delectable most read columnar
The guardian of innocent brave Negro clone,
A tutor to unsoiled zealous journalist
Until his price was determined in the closet of crafters
And as Judas, sold his master and friends the masses
And like the morsel of Esau,
Or the heel of Achilles
He fell headlong to his secret desired lust,
The motivation of his wittiness, “gain”
“Use to be”, delectable most read columnar
The guardian of innocent brave Negro clone,
A tutor to unsoiled zealous journalist
Until his price was determined in the closet of crafters
And as Judas, sold his master and friends the masses
Besmirched Ruben,
Farewell,
From the table of our pride and denouncement,
From the honour of untainted degrees,
From the circle of few men loyal to conscience,
From the gathering of consistent morality,
We bid you farewell,
When the roll call is renewed after this ruin, “sell-outs” shall not be there
Farewell Ruben, enjoy the loots
Farewell
http://www.poemhunter.com/members/mpoems/default.asp?show=poem&poem=2958...Farewell,
From the table of our pride and denouncement,
From the honour of untainted degrees,
From the circle of few men loyal to conscience,
From the gathering of consistent morality,
We bid you farewell,
When the roll call is renewed after this ruin, “sell-outs” shall not be there
Farewell Ruben, enjoy the loots
Farewell
Whitney: She could not have the kiss forever
The  death of pop legend, Whitney Houston, three days to the Valentine’s  Festival,evokes the ironies of her life, marriage and career, write AKEEM LASISI and GBENGA ADENIJI
At a Valentine season like this, Whitney  Houston was a source of joy and inspiration to many lovers. Such people  and other fans of beautiful music found many of her songs very relevant  to the celebration of the love festival. But her sudden death on  Saturday, three days to the 2012 edition of Valentine’s Day, has cast a  sorrowful cloud on the sky of many of her numerous admirers.
While some may be consoled that her  departure in this season appears to have reinforced her life of love,  others will sourly recall that the woman who worshipped romance with her  honey-sweet tongue eventually fell casualty of the phenomenon called  love. Her failed relationship with R&B singer, Bobby Brown,  frustrated her into drugs, which marred her life and even her career,  until she eternally fell a day to the 54th edition of the Grammy Awards.
Thus, unlike what was projected in her  popular songs  like Saving  All My Love For You, Nobody Loves Me Like You Do, Love Will Save The  Day, I Wanna Dance With Somebody, Could I have This Kiss Forever, You  Light Up My Life, Greatest Love of All, My Love Is Your Love, I was Made  To Love Him and Where Do Broken Heart Go,  Houston could simply not have the kiss forever.
With the proximity to the Grammy too, the death of  the artiste, who was captured in the Guinness Book of Records  in 2009 as the ‘most awarded’ female act,  invokes more coincidences.   Her demise on the eve of the awards can also be interpreted to indicate  her passion for the industry, and a certain love to be part of the game  till death.  Unfortunately, however,  the timing brings circumstances of  her death closer to those of other fallen popular stars, especially  like Michael Jackson.
MJ – as Michael Jackson is popularly  called – and Houston were pop legends, even if the latter was not as  phenomenal as Jackson.  Also, while Houston died a day to the beginning  of the Grammy, MJ died on June 25, 2009, three days to the year’s  edition of the BET awards.  Jackson was 50 while Houston was 48
The American actress, singer and model  was so successful that she got two Emmy Awards, six Grammy awards, 30  Billboard Music Awards and 22 American Music Awards.  Indeed, online  sources noted that she earned a total of 415 career awards in 2010.  
The world is saddened by her death, but no one can deny the fact that she was a giant star. The Mail Online indicates this much in a critical tribute it pays to it. 
In some of the tributes that industry stars have been paying to her:
R&B act,  Akon,  wrote on his  Twitter handle, ‘We’ve lost another Legend. RIP WHITNEY HOUSTON. I’m  honoured to have had the chance to work with such an amazing human  being.’
His colleague,  Usher Raymond, says she was a star and “a true icon of our time. Gone too soon.”
The CEO of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, is  not left out as he tweetes, “R.I.P.,  Whitney Houston. Thank you for  the amazing music you brought into the world.’‘
Celebrated act, Dolly Parton, equally  says, “Mine is only one of the millions of heartbroken over the death of  Whitney Houston. I will always be grateful and in awe of the wonderful  performance she did on my song and I can truly say from the bottom of my  heart, Whitney, I will always love you.!”
Mariah Carey notes, ‘‘She will never be  forgotten as one of the greatest voices to ever grace the earth. My  heartfelt condolences to Whitney’s family and all her millions of fans  throughout the world.’’
Houston was born to a middle class  family in Newark, New Jersey in 1963. She was the third and youngest  child of Army serviceman and entertainment executive John Russell  Houston, Jr., who passed away in 2003, and gospel singer, Cissy Houston.
The Mail adds that she first  became interested in being in the music industry after frequently  accompanying her mother Cissy who often performed in nightclubs.
“Sometimes the teen would even take to the stage herself and perform,” the newspaper adds.
Houston was offered her very first  recording contract at the age of 14 by Michael Zanger, after she wowed  him with her back-up singing on a record for his group, Michael Zanger  band.
But she was forced to turn it down as  her mother determined that she should instead finish school. However, in  the years that followed she lent her voice to albums of both American  soul, jazz, and blues singer Lou Rawls and Michael Jackson’s father,  Jermaine Jackson.
Naturally stunningly beautiful, Houston  began dabbling in modelling after being spotted by a fashion  photographer whilst she was performing with her mother.  She went on to  become the first ever woman of colour to appear in a fashion magazine  after gracing the pages of 17 magazines in the early Eighties.
Subsequently she appeared in Glamour, Cosmopolitan and Young Miss  magazines, and also in a TV advertisement for Canada Dry soft drink. It  was around that time when music mogul Clive Davis first heard Houston  perform.
“The time that I first saw her singing  in her mother’s act in a club … it was such a stunning impact,’ the  American record producer told Good Morning America. To hear this young  girl breathe such fire into this song. I mean, it really sent the  proverbial tingles up my spine.”
Houston, who also starred in some films, especially The Bodyguard made her album debut in 1985 with the self-titled record Whitney Houston.
It sold millions and spawned hit after hit including Saving All My Love for You, which won her her first Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal.
Other tracks such as How Will I Know,  You Give Good Love and The Greatest Love of All also went on to become  giant hits. Another multi-platinum album, Whitney, came out in 1987 and  included hits like Where Do Broken Hearts Go and I Wanna Dance With Somebody.
Houston would blame her rocky marriage, which included a charge of domestic abuse on Brown. They divorced in 2007.
Houston would go to rehab twice before  she would declare herself drug-free to Oprah Winfrey in 2010.  But in  the interim, there were missed concert dates, a stop at an airport due  to drugs, and public meltdowns.
She was so startlingly thin during a  2001 Michael Jackson tribute concert that rumours spread she had died  the next day. Her crude behaviour and jittery appearance on Brown’s  reality show, Being Bobby Brown, was an example of her sad decline.
Why the World Needs America
Foreign-policy pundits increasingly argue that democracy and free markets could thrive without U.S. predominance. If this sounds too good to be true, writes Robert Kagan, that's because it is.
History shows that world orders, including our own, are transient. They rise and fall, and the institutions they erect, the beliefs and "norms" that guide them, the economic systems they support—they rise and fall, too. The downfall of the Roman Empire brought an end not just to Roman rule but to Roman government and law and to an entire economic system stretching from Northern Europe to North Africa. Culture, the arts, even progress in science and technology, were set back for centuries.
Modern history  has followed a similar pattern. After the Napoleonic Wars of the early  19th century, British control of the seas and the balance of great  powers on the European continent provided relative security and  stability. Prosperity grew, personal freedoms expanded, and the world  was knit more closely together by revolutions in commerce and  communication.
With the outbreak of World War I, the  age of settled peace and advancing liberalism—of European civilization  approaching its pinnacle—collapsed into an age of hyper-nationalism,  despotism and economic calamity. The once-promising spread of democracy  and liberalism halted and then reversed course, leaving a handful of  outnumbered and besieged democracies living nervously in the shadow of  fascist and totalitarian neighbors. The collapse of the British and  European orders in the 20th century did not produce a new dark  age—though if Nazi Germany and imperial Japan had prevailed, it might  have—but the horrific conflict that it produced was, in its own way,  just as devastating. 
Would  the end of the present American-dominated order have less dire  consequences? A surprising number of American intellectuals, politicians  and policy makers greet the prospect with equanimity. There is a  general sense that the end of the era of American pre-eminence, if and  when it comes, need not mean the end of the present international order,  with its widespread freedom, unprecedented global prosperity (even amid  the current economic crisis) and absence of war among the great powers.  
American power may diminish, the  political scientist G. John Ikenberry argues, but "the underlying  foundations of the liberal international order will survive and thrive."  The commentator Fareed Zakaria believes that even as the balance shifts  against the U.S., rising powers like China "will continue to live  within the framework of the current international system." And there are  elements across the political spectrum—Republicans who call for  retrenchment, Democrats who put their faith in international law and  institutions—who don't imagine that a "post-American world" would look  very different from the American world.
If all  of this sounds too good to be true, it is. The present world order was  largely shaped by American power and reflects American interests and  preferences. If the balance of power shifts in the direction of other  nations, the world order will change to suit their interests and  preferences. Nor can we assume that all the great powers in a  post-American world would agree on the benefits of preserving the  present order, or have the capacity to preserve it, even if they wanted  to. 
Take the issue of democracy. For  several decades, the balance of power in the world has favored  democratic governments. In a genuinely post-American world, the balance  would shift toward the great-power autocracies. Both Beijing and Moscow  already protect dictators like Syria's Bashar al-Assad. If they gain  greater relative influence in the future, we will see fewer democratic  transitions and more autocrats hanging on to power. The balance in a  new, multipolar world might be more favorable to democracy if some of  the rising democracies—Brazil, India, Turkey, South Africa—picked up the  slack from a declining U.S. Yet not all of them have the desire or the  capacity to do it.
What about the economic order of free  markets and free trade? People assume that China and other rising powers  that have benefited so much from the present system would have a stake  in preserving it. They wouldn't kill the goose that lays the golden  eggs. 
A Romney Adviser Read by Democrats
Robert Kagan's new book, "The World America Made," is finding an eager readership in the nation's capital, among prominent members of both political parties.Around the time of President Barack Obama's Jan. 24 State of the Union Address, Washington was abuzz with reports that the president had discussed a portion of the book with a group of news anchors.
Mr. Kagan serves on the Foreign Policy Advisory Board of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, but more notably, in this election season, he is a foreign policy adviser to the presidential campaign of Mitt Romney.
The president's speech touched upon the debate over whether America is in decline, a central theme of Mr. Kagan's book. "America is back," he declared, referring to a range of recent U.S. actions on the world stage. "Anyone who tells you otherwise, anyone who tells you that America is in decline or that our influence has waned, doesn't know what they're talking about," he continued. "America remains the one indispensable nation in world affairs—and as long as I'm president, I intend to keep it that way."
Says Mr. Kagan: "No president wants to preside over American decline, and it's good to see him repudiate the idea that his policy is built on the idea that American influence must fade."
Unfortunately,  they might not be able to help themselves. The creation and survival of a  liberal economic order has depended, historically, on great powers that  are both willing and able to support open trade and free markets, often  with naval power. If a declining America is unable to maintain its  long-standing hegemony on the high seas, would other nations take on the  burdens and the expense of sustaining navies to fill in the gaps? 
Even if they did, would this produce  an open global commons—or rising tension? China and India are building  bigger navies, but the result so far has been greater competition, not  greater security. As Mohan Malik has noted in this newspaper, their  "maritime rivalry could spill into the open in a decade or two," when  India deploys an aircraft carrier in the Pacific Ocean and China deploys  one in the Indian Ocean. The move from American-dominated oceans to  collective policing by several great powers could be a recipe for  competition and conflict rather than for a liberal economic order.
And do the Chinese really value an  open economic system? The Chinese economy soon may become the largest in  the world, but it will be far from the richest. Its size is a product  of the country's enormous population, but in per capita terms, China  remains relatively poor. The U.S., Germany and Japan have a per capita  GDP of over $40,000. China's is a little over $4,000, putting it at the  same level as Angola, Algeria and Belize. Even if optimistic forecasts  are correct, China's per capita GDP by 2030 would still only be half  that of the U.S., putting it roughly where Slovenia and Greece are  today.
As  Arvind Subramanian and other economists have pointed out, this will make  for a historically unique situation. In the past, the largest and most  dominant economies in the world have also been the richest. Nations  whose peoples are such obvious winners in a relatively unfettered  economic system have less temptation to pursue protectionist measures  and have more of an incentive to keep the system open. 
China's leaders, presiding over a  poorer and still developing country, may prove less willing to open  their economy. They have already begun closing some sectors to foreign  competition and are likely to close others in the future. Even optimists  like Mr. Subramanian believe that the liberal economic order will  require "some insurance" against a scenario in which "China exercises  its dominance by either reversing its previous policies or failing to  open areas of the economy that are now highly protected." American  economic dominance has been welcomed by much of the world because, like  the mobster Hyman Roth in "The Godfather," the U.S. has always made  money for its partners. Chinese economic dominance may get a different  reception.
Another problem is that China's form  of capitalism is heavily dominated by the state, with the ultimate goal  of preserving the rule of the Communist Party. Unlike the eras of  British and American pre-eminence, when the leading economic powers were  dominated largely by private individuals or companies, China's system  is more like the mercantilist arrangements of previous centuries. The  government amasses wealth in order to secure its continued rule and to  pay for armies and navies to compete with other great powers. 
Although  the Chinese have been beneficiaries of an open international economic  order, they could end up undermining it simply because, as an autocratic  society, their priority is to preserve the state's control of wealth  and the power that it brings. They might kill the goose that lays the  golden eggs because they can't figure out how to keep both it and  themselves alive.
Finally, what about the long peace  that has held among the great powers for the better part of six decades?  Would it survive in a post-American world? 
Most commentators who welcome this  scenario imagine that American predominance would be replaced by some  kind of multipolar harmony. But multipolar systems have historically  been neither particularly stable nor particularly peaceful. Rough parity  among powerful nations is a source of uncertainty that leads to  miscalculation. Conflicts erupt as a result of fluctuations in the  delicate power equation. 
War among the great powers was a  common, if not constant, occurrence in the long periods of multipolarity  from the 16th to the 18th centuries, culminating in the series of  enormously destructive Europe-wide wars that followed the French  Revolution and ended with Napoleon's defeat in 1815. 
The 19th century was notable for two  stretches of great-power peace of roughly four decades each, punctuated  by major conflicts. The Crimean War (1853-1856) was a mini-world war  involving well over a million Russian, French, British and Turkish  troops, as well as forces from nine other nations; it produced almost a  half-million dead combatants and many more wounded. In the  Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), the two nations together fielded close  to two million troops, of whom nearly a half-million were killed or  wounded. 
The peace that followed these  conflicts was characterized by increasing tension and competition,  numerous war scares and massive increases in armaments on both land and  sea. Its climax was World War I, the most destructive and deadly  conflict that mankind had known up to that point. As the political  scientist Robert W. Tucker has observed, "Such stability and moderation  as the balance brought rested ultimately on the threat or use of force.  War remained the essential means for maintaining the balance of power."
There is little reason to believe that  a return to multipolarity in the 21st century would bring greater peace  and stability than it has in the past. The era of American predominance  has shown that there is no better recipe for great-power peace than  certainty about who holds the upper hand.
President Bill Clinton left office  believing that the key task for America was to "create the world we  would like to live in when we are no longer the world's only  superpower," to prepare for "a time when we would have to share the  stage." It is an eminently sensible-sounding proposal. But can it be  done? For particularly in matters of security, the rules and  institutions of international order rarely survive the decline of the  nations that erected them. They are like scaffolding around a building:  They don't hold the building up; the building holds them up. 
Many  foreign-policy experts see the present international order as the  inevitable result of human progress, a combination of advancing science  and technology, an increasingly global economy, strengthening  international institutions, evolving "norms" of international behavior  and the gradual but inevitable triumph of liberal democracy over other  forms of government—forces of change that transcend the actions of men  and nations. 
Americans certainly like to believe  that our preferred order survives because it is right and just—not only  for us but for everyone. We assume that the triumph of democracy is the  triumph of a better idea, and the victory of market capitalism is the  victory of a better system, and that both are irreversible. That is why  Francis Fukuyama's thesis about "the end of history" was so attractive  at the end of the Cold War and retains its appeal even now, after it has  been discredited by events. The idea of inevitable evolution means that  there is no requirement to impose a decent order. It will merely  happen. 
But international order is not an  evolution; it is an imposition. It is the domination of one vision over  others—in America's case, the domination of free-market and democratic  principles, together with an international system that supports them.  The present order will last only as long as those who favor it and  benefit from it retain the will and capacity to defend it. 
There was nothing inevitable about the  world that was created after World War II. No divine providence or  unfolding Hegelian dialectic required the triumph of democracy and  capitalism, and there is no guarantee that their success will outlast  the powerful nations that have fought for them. Democratic progress and  liberal economics have been and can be reversed and undone. The ancient  democracies of Greece and the republics of Rome and Venice all fell to  more powerful forces or through their own failings. The evolving liberal  economic order of Europe collapsed in the 1920s and 1930s. The better  idea doesn't have to win just because it is a better idea. It requires  great powers to champion it.
If and when American power declines, the institutions and norms that  American power has supported will decline, too. Or more likely, if  history is a guide, they may collapse altogether as we make a transition  to another kind of world order, or to disorder. We may discover then  that the U.S. was essential to keeping the present world order together  and that the alternative to American power was not peace and harmony but  chaos and catastrophe—which is what the world looked like right before  the American order came into being.