Badvocacy alert!
With due apologies to the eminent economist and journalist.
Invisible Children’s Kony 2012 publicity push is generating some backlash. Here is quoting Under the Banyan:
Critics of the Invisible Children campaign say that while it is well-intentioned and while Kony deserves international condemnation, there are questions about the organisation’s methods, money and support for military action that need to be answered. Others are revulsed (sic) by the idea of foreigners thinking they can solve an entrenched and complex problem with goodwill alone.
More on this here. And for those interested in the complexity of the issue click here.
I am still learning to block out all the misguided interventions by the members do-gooder industrial complex of our time. Sometimes I wish I could wave a magic wand and make the tenants of State Houses across the Continent to also ignore the prophets of this axis of distraction-from-the-real-problems.
Also, I only discovered Invisible Children after the latest brouhaha but it turns out that Blattman was already in their case three years ago.
H/T A View from the Cave.
Filed under: africa Tagged: a view from the cave, Alice Lakwena, Central African Republic, Chad, Evangelist, Foreign Policy, foreign policy magazine, Joseph Kony, Joshua Keating, Kampala, Kony 2012, lord's resistance army, Michael Wilkerson, national resistance movement, sudan, Tom Murphy, UDF, Uganda, Uganda Defense Forces
