This is an ongoing problem in Africa and the Middle East and with Trump sucking up all the attention like he does, these people have a good chance of dying from the vacuum of attention on them here in the U.S. So, this is another way Trump is killing people worldwide. The numbers who will also die by Trump will also die by Global Warming in the U.S. and around the world. Others dying because of Trump will be killed by Nazis, White supremacists and others also "allowed" to do this because of Trump's and Sessions Rhetoric. So, millions of unwanted and uncounted people are now dying by Trump worldwide already And though this likely will reduce worldwide population worldwide, still it is a fact that mostly healthy people are dying now along with their children at least in part because of the actions Trump has taken and will take as president and this will and is happening not only around the world but in the U.S. as well.
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The Humanitarian Crisis Unfolding Abroad46:22
Play
With guest host Jane Clayson.
Famine. 20 million people now on the brink in Africa and the Middle East. We’ve got reporters on the frontlines.
Right
now, today, the largest humanitarian crisis since World War II is
unfolding from Yemen to Nigeria. 20 million people on the edge of
famine. But most Americans don’t know it. Three reporters from the
Christian Science Monitor went to see the crisis first-hand. In
Madagascar, Ethiopia and Somaliland. They join us. This hour On Point:
Drought and hunger now in the Middle East and Africa. -- Jane Clayson
Guests
Peter Ford, global affairs correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor. (@peterfordcsm)
Ryan Lenora Brown, Africa correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor. (@ryanlenorabrown)
Scott Peterson, Middle East correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor. (@peterson__scott)
Geoffrey Dabelko,
director of the Environmental Studies Program at Ohio University’s
School of Leadership and Public Affairs. Co-editor of, "Green Planet
Blues: Critical Perspectives on Global Environmental Politics." (@geoffdabelko)
From The Reading List
Christian Science Monitor: How a 20-million-person crisis goes unseen
— "The world is facing its worst humanitarian crisis since World War
II, with 20 million people on the brink of famine, and hardly anybody
knows about it. Out of the media spotlight, the droughts and civil
conflicts that are pushing the Horn of Africa, Yemen, and Nigeria into
starvation are going unnoticed. And the humanitarian agencies trying to
help are struggling to collect the money they need to help."
Christian Science Monitor: Can famine be checked as Africa faces its worst crisis since the 1980s?
— "From Madagascar to Ethiopia to Somalia and beyond, governments,
international aid agencies, and the villagers they help are building up
“community resilience.” That’s the new buzzword in humanitarian circles:
It is seen as key to ensuring that farmers and herders have something
to hold onto when drought strikes, rather than cycling endlessly in and
out of disaster."
Christian Science Monitor: Amid persistent drought, a nation of herders plots a new course
— "Still, unlike so many Somalis forced to roam in search of scarce
fodder and water, Madar is staying put – a major goal for a region whose
centuries-old pastoralist culture is, out of necessity, beginning to
envision a more sustainable future. That means improving water and aid
systems. But it could also mean deep changes to most Somalis’
traditional way of life, shifting away from the nomadic patterns of
camel- and livestock-herding to more stable – and anchored –
livelihoods."
Are you interested in donating to hunger relief efforts? Visit the Global Emergency Response Coalition for more information.
This program aired on August 7, 2017.
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