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Colonisation And Colonialism Never Died in Africa!

Re’Written by: Tristan James Jr.

Have you ever seen a European Christian call a non-christian European a pagan or idol worshipper?

It was rebranded and given new names and language.

You’ll never ever hear that.

Have you ever heard the Pope or Archbishop of Canterbury call other European traditional worshippers, pagan or idol worshippers? Never.

Have you ever seen churches in Europe or Asia mount big billboards by road and litter the streets with loud noise?

Have you ever seen a European denied a job or attacked online for not being a Christian? Never.

Come to Africa.

A pastor or priest would mount the pulpit and begin to attack the African traditional religions, calling them pagan and Idol worshippers.

Churches would brandish everyone who doesn’t share their faith as a satanic person and they would sing intolerant songs coined to mock and ridicule African religion.

You’d see Catholics arguing if Anglicans should be allowed to receive communion in their church and vice versa.

They forget that both churches are named after two civilisations; Rome and England.

“Western religions taught the African man that his brother was the enemy and that except his brother accepts his own religion, he was evil”

InsiderNotes!

The same Europeans taught their own people that Africans are animals and that we were merchandise to be bought and owned.

You'd never see a European who goes about shouting Holy ghost fire when he sees a cat or owl in the night.

The African man forgets that cats and owls are creatures created by the Almighty and that it’s natural for them to move at night.

Rome colonised Africa but how many of us know this?

Italy, Spain, Germany, France, Netherlands, England, Belgium, Portugal, Switzerland, Luxembourg and about 30 others were all Roman empires.

Remove Switzerland and Luxembourg, the rest on the list colonised Africa.

Today the Roman religion is the most dominant in Africa.

The Roman Catholic church and the Anglican church are directly controlled by Roman culture

HRH Omu Onyebuchie Okonkwo! The Omu of Obio Great Kingdom!!

So it means that till date, we’re still under control, this time spiritually and mentally.

I do not say this to incite religious discomfort but rather to buttress the obvious fact.

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All Rights Reserved: HRH Omu Onyebuchie Okonkwo! The Omu of Obio Great Kingdom!!

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UMUEZECHIMA CLAN IN ANIOMA ARE ORIGINAL IGBO STOCK IN THEIR DNA! [Iqwe ChiBe Uzimba!!]

Re’Written by; Tristan James Jr.

I've gone through the lists of prominent names of my people who fought in the Ekumeku war and none of the names are Igala, Bini, Yorùbá or Hausa.

They’re all Igbo.

The reason I’m saying this, is because a lot of us do not understand history and how its distortion affects us today.

Today the descendants of these brave men who resisted the British soldiers for 31 years are claiming that they’re no longer Igbo instead they’re Bini.

I have come across comments accusing me of being sponsored by certain elements to push the Igbo unification agenda

HRH Omu Onyebuchie Okonkwo Omu of Obio!

I wish such were true because I’d really appreciate the money.

I have seen how ignorance has caused us to reason from our nose and our culture has been ridiculed by our very own people.

Why would a Nwabuokei from Ọnịcha Olona open his mouth to say he's Bini and not Igbo?

I watch his videos and I’m appalled to say the least, at how a sensible person would set up his camera and go on to deny his very identity.

The other day it was the man from Idumuje Unor who was doing the same thing online.

Odiakose is an Igbo word.

Ose/Olise/Osebuwa are Igbo names for the Almighty Creator.

Odi na aka Olise is purely Igbo.💯

I’m happy his king has come out to reaffirm their Igbo identity.

Such elders should be ignored as they do not speak for us.

I am an Igbo woman and I speak the Enuani dialect of the Igbo language.

Someone dropped a video comment of my King saying he’s from Bini and that Obio is from Bini.

I laugh at such people because I have no business with such claims.

If some people say they’re Bini, yet they don’t understand an iota of Bini language, they speak fluent Igbo, they use the Ọfọ, they use the four Igbo native market days and they celebrate iwaji festival, then they are only living in denial and should be ignored.

It doesn’t matter whether they have a crown on their head or not...”

Read that again, please!

Even if my mother wakes from the grave today and claims Bini, I’m purely Igbo.

I have gone beyond petty blackmail and gaslighting and I know my roots.

My ancestors were Igbo and if there’s any Bini or Igala blood here, then it is through marriage, assimilation and servitude

HRH Omu Onyebuchie Okonkwo Omu of Obio!

The Bini people who joined us from Bini after our migration, they have their own quarter here in Obio and we have always been told that they are visitors so how are we now Bini when we acknowledge these people as visitors?

Obio market is on Eke day.

Eke is Bini, abi? I don’t know how most of these Bini apologists think.

You bear Igbo names, speak Igbo and you observe the Igbo calendar, yet you are Bini.

I’ll keep talking and I don’t mind being dragged by unruly elements who lack consciousness and history.

The task ahead is daunting and can only be achieved through consistent teachings and reorientation and hopefully, we would be able to salvage most of our people.

Daalụ nu Umunne m.

All Rights Reserved: HRH Omu Onyebuchie Okonkwo (Omu of Obio Kingdom)

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6 Indigenous Women Activists of the Amazon You Should Know!

Re’Written by; Tristan James Jr.

Women in various Indigenous communities across the Amazon have kept up the fight against the injustices that face their lands for decades.

In the early 2000s some of these women united in yearly marches known as Marchas das Margaridas, in honour of the late Margarida Maria Alves, which focused on advocating for women’s rights, education, and land reform and this movement is still alive today.

More recent movements such as Mujeres Amazónicas have taken significant steps against governmental and corporate efforts to threaten their ancestral land.

Indigenous women’s leadership has led to successful landmark court rulings that have helped safeguard ancestral territories from oil extractions, such as the women from The Kichwa People of Srayaku, who in 2003 successfully expelled oil industries from their sacred lands.

“Across the Amazon rainforest, the legacy of Indigenous women as fierce protectors of the environment has shaped a powerful movement against exploitation and climate threats”

InsiderNotes

As guardians of the Amazon, Indigenous women cultivate a profound relationship with the land, nurturing medicinal plants, collecting seeds for reforestation efforts, patrolling their lands against illegal mining, and so much more.

Their efforts have helped to enhance biodiversity, increase carbon storage, and foster resilience to climate change in the rainforests they manage.

Today, Indigenous women activists of the Amazon are continuing this legacy, making their voices heard in South and Latin America, and globally.

Here are six Indigenous women activists you should know.

1. Zaya Guarani

Zaya Guarani is a world-renowned Indigenous Brazilian model,  activist, speaker and actor who is making strides in the fight to protect the Amazon in the fashion industry and beyond.

Growing up in Rondônia, Brazil, near the Madeira River in the Amazon, Guarani experienced first-hand the devastating impacts of climate change and illegal industrial activities on her community.

Her home state is now included in the Amazonian Arc of Deforestation, an area where tropical forests are vanishing quickly due to logging and mining activities, which forced her family to often move from one area to another.

While currently living in New York City, far from Brazil, Guarani remains vocal about her Indigenous Brazilian roots, advocating for her community and fighting against deforestation in the Amazon.

Throughout her career she has used her platformer to champion Indigenous rights and climate justice.

Guarani joined forces with Indigenous activist Dayana Molina to create Indigenous Creatives Latin America, a collective that champions Indigenous representation in the fashion industry in Brazil and South America.

As an advisor for The Slow Factory and the UN Spotlight Programme, she is intentional when it comes to collaborating with brands and organisations that share her commitment to a socially and environmentally responsible future.

Guarani, understands the important role Indigenous peoples and their cultural teachings play in combating climate change, even as they face its impacts.

“As indigenous people, we serve as guardians of an entire ecosystem, yet some still seek to exploit our land livelihoods.”

In a 2024 interview with Atmos, she said:

2. Helena Gualinga

Helena Gualinga is a passionate Ecuadorian environmental and human rights activist from the Kichwa Sarayuku community in Pastaza, Ecuador.

Coming from a long line of women in her family who were advocates for Indigenous women’s rights and land defenders in the Amazon, Gualinga witnessed the struggles her community faced against oil companies encroaching on their land without consent.At just 10 years old, her journey into activism began when her community achieved a significant victory in 2012, winning a landmark case at the inter-American Court of Human Rights that affirmed Indigenous rights to free, informed consent regarding resource extraction.

At just 10 years old, her journey into activism began when her community achieved a significant victory in 2012, winning a landmark case at the inter-American Court of Human Rights that affirmed Indigenous rights to free, informed consent regarding resource extraction.

Since then, she has emerged as a dynamic spokesperson for her community and co-founded Polluters Out an International youth-led coalition, focused on kicking the fossil fuel industry out of every aspect of society.

At 17 years old she made her mark at the COP25 Climate conference in Madrid, when she called out the Ecuadorian government for continuing to allow oil extraction on Indigenous lands.

Her activism has been recognised in various publications and her inspiring story was captured in the documentary Helena Sarayaku Manta.

Now 23 at the time of publishing, she carries forward her family’s legacy of advocacy, inspiring youth globally to join the fight for the Amazon and our planet’s future.

3.  Vanda Witoto

Vanda Oregta Witoto is an Indigenous woman from the Witoto tribe.

She is a nurse, climate activist, and Indigenous community leader from Manaus, Brazil.

For years, she has been advocating for her community’s rights and well-being in Parque das Tribos, also known as Tribes Park which is the first recognized Indigenous neighbourhood in Manaus and has faced historical neglect.

Witoto has worked to address critical issues impacting her neighbourhood of 700 Indigenous families from 35 ethnic groups.

These issues include poor sewage systems and waste management, both of which threaten local health and the Amazon River.

As a nurse working during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, she personally drove sick neighbors to hospitals when ambulances refused to respond, and with the help of her mother volunteered to distribute handmade masks to the community.

Witoto was also among the first to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, which helped to dispel misinformation in Indigenous communities.

Driven by her neighborhood’s struggles and the poor official response to COVID-19, Witoto ran for federal deputy in 2022, at the age of 35.

Her campaign advocated for Indigenous rights, improved education and healthcare, support for underrepresented groups, women’s economic empowerment, and sustainable development in the Amazon.

Though she did not win, she contributed to a historic wave of Indigenous women seeking political representation.

The now 37-year-old continues to advocate for the fundamental rights of Indigenous people and nature through her women-led organisation, The Witoto Institute.

She has also attended international climate summits including the COP27 conference in Egypt, where she spoke about the challenges forcing Indigenous people to leave their ancestral homes and their familes for urban areas in search of work, food, and safe water due to economic and environmental pressures.

4. Nina Gualinga

Nina Gualinga is a prominent activist and leader from the Kichwa community of Sarayaku in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

At 31, she has spent most of her life working to protect the rainforest and its inhabitants against the threats posed by oil and mining companies.

Her activism journey began at just eight years old when she witnessed an oil company’s attempt to exploit her community’s land without their consent.

Inspired by the local women in her community who refused the selling of their land, Gualinga committed to advocating for environmental justice and Indigenous rights.

In 2018, her activism was crucial when she and five hundred Indigenous women from the Indigenous women-led organization Mujeres Amazónicas, also known as Amazon Women, presented a mandate to Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno.

This mandate included 22 demands addressing land rights, gender-based violence against Indigenous women, and climate change.

This moment was monumental, despite the threats and attacks the activists faced for speaking up.

5. Nemonte Nenquimo

Nemonte Nenquimo is Indigenous Waorani woman dedicated to protecting her ancestral territory, ecosystem, culture, economy, and way of life.

For generations, the Waorani people from the Ecuadorian Amazon rainforest have stood resolutely against outside forces threatening their ancestral land.

In 2015, Nenquimo co-founded the Ceibo Alliance an Indigenous organization, aimed at protecting Indigenous lands from the threats of planned oil concessions.

In 2018, she was elected as the first female president of the Coordinating Council of the Waorani Nationality of Ecuador-Pastaza, an organization that represents the Waorani of the Pastaza province.


Her advocacy work over the years has not gone unnoticed.

Nenquimo has won numerous awards for her activism, including the prestigious Goldman environmental prize.

She has been recognized as one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world in 2020, and has been named a United Nations Champion of the Earth.

In a groundbreaking 2019 court case, Nenquimo successfully challenged the Ecuadorian government, which resulted in the protection of 500,000 acres of Amazonian rainforest and Waorani territory from oil extraction.

In 2023, she campaigned in a successful referendum to protect the country’s Yasuní National Park from oil drilling.

6. Txai Suruí

At just 28, Txai Suruí is a notable Brazilian environmental activist known worldwide.

A member of the Paiter Suruí Indigenous community in Brazil, she founded the Indigenous Youth Movement of Rondônia and leads the Associação de Defesa Etnoambiental Kanindé, a community organization that has worked with Indigenous people for over 30 years.

Suruí hails from a family of activists her father is Chief Almir Suruí and her mother is the legendary activist Ivaneide Suruí, both known for their work in combating deforestation in the Amazon.

Following in their footsteps, Suruí has carved her own path as defender of the environment and advocate for Indigenous rights.

Her activism can be seen in governmental halls and climate summits around the world, but also on the ground with Indigenous communities, and on social media where she advocates for her community.

As the first woman in her community to earn a law degree, she used this, along with the support of her peers, to successfully sue the Brazilian government for changing its 2005 carbon baseline to fulfill the Paris Climate Agreement’s carbon reduction objectives.

In her powerful COP26 summit speech addressing world leaders, she said, “Indigenous people are at the forefront of the climate emergency and must be at the center of decision-making.

We have solutions to postpone the end of the world; let’s stop spreading lies and false promises.”

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Today is the International Day of Potato 🥔!

Potatoes are also a climate friendly crop

About 2/3 of the world’s population consumes potatoes as its staple food and nearly 50% of potatoes are used as the household staple food or vegetable.

#Potatoes provide accessible and nutritious food and improved livelihoods in rural and other areas where natural resources, especially arable land and water are limited and inputs are opulent.

The crop’s versatility and ability to grow in a variety of conditions make it an advantageous crop choice.
Potatoes are also a climate friendly crop, as they produce low levels of greenhouse gas emissions in comparison to other crops.


Potatoes are also a climate friendly crop, as they produce low levels of greenhouse gas emissions in comparison to other crops.



In the past decade, the global production of potatoes has increased by 10%, leading to growth in employment and income, but more work still needs to be done to harness the full potential of the crop to end hunger and malnutrition globally.

There are over 5,000 improved varieties of potatoes many of which are unique to their original location in Latin America

The 150 wild relatives of the cultivated potato show a wide genetic variation with a range of traits, including the ability to adapt to different production environments, resistance to pests and diseases, and different tuber characteristics.

  • Drop a 🥔, If potato is your favourite vegetable.
Watch this movie and let’s have your opinion expecting all ya’ feedback👍
Watch this another amazing skit coming from one of the OG’s in the industry.
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A DIABOLIC TREATISE AGAINST THE HOUSE OF #MTN :

Where Gold Is Tarnished and Trust is Taxed


I. Prologue of Perfidy MTN, once heralded as the golden child of telecommunications in Africa, now stands accused in the court of public accountability.

Cloaked in branding brilliance and armed with influencer backed deception, they market connectivity but deliver captivity.

Their creed is not connection, but consumption of wallets, of trust, of digital dignity.

II. The Great Data Mirage
How does 1GB vanish like mist in the Harmattan sun? MTN claims usage; we claim daylight robbery.

Background Data Drain: Users report hemorrhaging megabytes even while idle ghost apps, or ghost billing?

Stealthy Auto Renewals:

A cunning trapdoor packages renew without prompt, often seconds before expiry, charging the user even if balance is insufficient, plunging them into silent debt.

Night Data Shell Game: Night plans supposedly valid from midnight till dawn but access throttled or denied until 2am.

Fraud disguised as fair use.

“I’ve just subscribed for the 33th time after first subscribing #9000 for 45GB 30Days plan in the same month👹”

Another Concerned User Layers Issue As A Classified Fraud;



III. The Unholy Tariffs Data pricing on MTN is not just high; it’s high handed.

Biased Bandwidth Economics: MTN Nigeria’s average price per gigabyte towers above what #MTN charges in South Africa or #Ghana.

Same brand, same servers different rates?

That’s regional exploitation, not localization.

Punitive PAYG Billing: Accidentally fall out of a bundle and your airtime vanishes in seconds with no warning.

Billing at “standard rates” is code for sanctioned theft.

IV. The Customer Care Masquerade
You dial 180 and enter purgatory.

Bots Before Humans: Conversations go in loops.

You’re passed from chatbot to cold line like a hot potato in a dead zone


“We’ll escalate this issue” becomes a mantra of delay problems disappearing into a black hole of broken promises.

Agents Without Authority: Even when you reach a rep, they lack the mandate to reverse charges or correct wrongs.

You’re stuck in bureaucratic limbo.

V. Network Tyranny They boast

“Everywhere you go” but what they deliver is “Nowhere you flow.”

InsiderNotes


Intentional Throttling? Peak hours see speeds drop to a crawl.

Meanwhile, premium users whisper tales of smoother streams.

Are we witnessing a class system in the cloud?

Selective Congestion: Some apps (read: high bandwidth or competitor friendly ones) mysteriously lag.

Others tied to MTN partners? Lightning-fast.

VI. The Final Accusation: Digital Colonialism This isn’t just about poor service.

It’s about gatekeeping access in the digital economy.



“MTN’s grip on infrastructure gives it a monopoly on our online lives”

A Concerned User Complains Bitterly;



They shape what’s fast, what’s slow, what’s possible while raking in billions from the very economies they throttle.

This is more than profit seeking; it’s a subtle form of control of a 21st-century telecom tyranny masquerading as connectivity.

VII. Epilogue: The People’s Verdict
We do not seek pity, only parity.

We demand transparency, fairness, and a fundamental reset of digital ethics.

Until then, let the people rise switch providers, expose shady practices, and rewire the narrative.

This treatise shall be carved not in stone but in tweets, blogs, and viral threads.

@MTN must be held accountable.

The signal is clear: Enough is enough.

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The ‘America First’ Case for U.S. Engagement in Africa

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio delivers remarks alongside Democratic Republic of the Congo Foreign Minister Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner (L) and Rwandan Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe during a Declaration of Principles signing ceremony at the State Department in Washington on April 25. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Of the three Gulf states that U.S. President Donald Trump visited last week, the United Arab Emirates struck some of the most spectacular deals.

Pledges between the two countries amounted to more than $200 billion, and following restrictions under former President Joe Biden the UAE will enjoy expanded access to advanced U.S. artificial intelligence chips.

Lifting these controls is a dangerous error, Alasdair Phillips Robins and Sam Winter Levy warn: Without them, the United States is

“placing the most important technology of the 21st century at the whims of autocratic regimes with sophisticated surveillance systems [and] expanding ties to China.”

InsiderNotes

The nexus between China and the UAE is especially apparent in Africa, where Emirati businesses are making green energy investments using Chinese technology and minerals.

The United States, meanwhile, looks set to retreat from the continent, with cuts to the U.S. Agency for International Development and Trump’s tariffs pushing African nations to form new alliances.

Through the transactional lens that Trump is fond of,

Africa is not likely to be judged by its long-term potential or the future strategic risks of disengagement,”

InsiderNotes

Curtis Bell and Christopher Faulkner, of the U.S. Naval War College, write.

But the authors argue that U.S. Africa policy can still prioritize tangible returns through investments that build enduring partnerships, not through quick exits or one-sided gains.

Trump will have the chance to follow that advice as he meets with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in Washington on May 21.

South Africa is the United States’ largest trading partner in a region that is an important strategic gateway into Africa, yet Ramaphosa and Trump have not gotten off to a good start.

In fact, the diplomaticrelationship between the United States and South Africa has reached its lowest point since the latter’s transition to democracy in 1994, Imraan Buccus, a senior research associate at South Africa’s Auwal Socio Economic Research Institute, writes.

Much of the blame can be attributed to a Feb. 7 executive order awarding refugee status to Afrikaners that South Africa’s foreign ministry described as based on a “campaign of misinformation and propaganda.”

Ramaphosa has said that his country would not be “bullied” by Trump, but as he looks to reset relations and strike a much needed trade deal, the stakes for his meeting at the White House this week are high.

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Very Serious Demand a ceasefire by all parties to end civilian suffering:

A mother crying out for help Israel’s genocide against Palestinians must stop and the siege on Gaza must end. Ceasefire Now!

I am a mother from Beit Lahia, and being a mother during genocide is to fight, every minute, every second to maintain your family when nothing is available.

InsiderNotes

Everything here is a struggle: “Getting clean water is a battle; securing food is a battle; getting fresh vegetables or fruits is a dream, but I am a lucky mother because my children are still alive.”

I look at my children and feel guilty because they have been denied their childhood, they were forced into the cruel world of adulthood, of war: no schools, no playgrounds, no daily walks by the sea. I hear bombs and wish I could wrap them with my own body, wish that my love, larger than the universe could protect them, shelter them. 

Let’s stand with this mother, and all the mothers in #Gaza, by showing our support for their right to protect their children and demanding Israel to stop the genocide and lift its total siege.

I don’t know if we will survive this round of bombardment, I do not know if the world will remember that one day people lived in a small place called Gaza, which had the most beautiful coastline in the world.

Here lived people who wanted to live, they had so many dreams, they wanted to raise their children under normal circumstances but never got the chance to do so. 

All I know is that if we do not make it;

we will leave knowing that we did everything in our power and beyond to protect our children

Beit Lahia is the capital of strawberries and flowers; it is now a city of rubble, smoke, and stench of death.

But please remember us by our strawberries and poppies and remember the names and faces of our martyred children

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Africa’s Internet Shutdowns: Where, Why, and How Do They Happen?

45’MEDIA Breaking News

As Sudan experiences a civil war where one of the most severe hunger crises of 2023 (and 2024 so far) is ongoing, access to humanitarian aid is both dire and scarce, and innocent lives are being scraped off the planet every day authorities added insult to injury by shutting the internet down when citizens needed it most. 

It was mid-February 2024, almost a year into the ongoing violence, when Sudan’s internet would be disrupted for around 10 days.

While the current civil war has been ongoing for over a year, violence and conflict have clung to Sudan’s back on and off for years, and throughout, internet shutdowns have been the norm.

A humanitarian aid worker in the country explained the most recent shutdown’s impact on their work on the ground, saying:

“Because of the internet shutdown, we are unable to communicate with our volunteers, we are unable to buy food, medicine and deliver these services to those in need.

Most of our soup kitchens in the greater Khartoum are cut off and therefore not working.” 

A civilian expressed: “Due to war, using online banking apps for transactions has gained popularity given the lack of liquidity.

Now, however, we are almost starving because of this shutdown, as we can’t even buy food and medicine.

All my interactions, including business and online courses, have come to a stop too.”

Whether or not access to the internet should be considered a human right is no longer up for debate: it should be.

The internet has become a vital part of the engine that propels the world forward, and to block someone’s access to it is to block someone’s access to their already existing human rights. 

Access to education, food, employment, health, and humanitarian aid, are all within the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and because the internet has overwhelmingly become the means by which we access these rights, it should suffice that access to the internet itself should be a human right.

Global Citizen

We go deeper into this argument here.

So when an entire region or nation has been denied the right to access the internet due to political agendas that are not always in the best interest of the people, we should be worried as a global society. 

Internet shutdowns have increasingly become the norm across the African continent, and as uprisings and protests erupt, elections are scheduled and rescheduled, and wars and conflicts continue, it has become both a weapon and a currency.

Internet shutdowns across the African continent are not only frustrating, but they are increasingly harmful.

Here’s what more you should know:

What are internet shutdowns?

We’re not talking about an outage here.

An outage is when an error or accident occurs and the internet goes off as a result, for instance in times of extreme weather where infrastructure is destroyed, or in the case of maintenance repairs.

A shutdown, on the other hand, is the deliberate turning off of the internet to control a population or the information flow surrounding a situation, and is often orchestrated by some form of authority.

One of the most prominent internet crackdowns in recent history was that of the Arab Spring pro-democracy protests.

Global Citizen

Egypt’s authorities at the time caught on to the fact that demonstrators were using the internet to mobilize and multiply the protest movement, and so they shut off the internet directly impacting access to an open civic space for the right to protest and speak freely.

While it wasn’t the first internet shutdown in history, because of the magnitude of the Arab Spring protests, the world opened its eyes to how internet shutdowns can be weaponized.

A similar thing happened in the last African monarchy-state, eSwatini, in 2021, when pro-democracy and anti-police brutality protests erupted, the state shut down the internet citing “security reasons”, depriving children of their education, businesses of their income, and citizens alike of their free speech. 

If it’s still not clear why these shutdowns are a bad thing, a Global Citizen from Ghana, who wished to stay anonymous, broke it down for us: “The internet means Information, which means power in the hands of the people.

The reason governments like to impose restrictions is so the information flow can be stagnant, robbing people of their power to be seen and heard.”

How do governments shut down the internet?

There are two ways that governments can turn off access to the internet.

They can either rely on what’s called a routing disruption, which is to stop the transmission of information altogether, meaning people using the internet can’t connect to it, and information being sent will not find its destination.

This is largely what we’ve seen across the continent, particularly in the case of Sudan and eSwatini.

Global Citizen

The second is called packet filtering, where parts of the internet or specific sites are shut down, or specific content is targeted, for instance, Nigeria blocking access to Twitter in 2021.

What impact is it having on people’s lives? 

Civic space and West African court cases

After making the mistake of breaking Twitter’s “abusive behavior” regulations, former Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari’s Tweet was deleted by the social media platform.

In retaliation (or what the government referred to as protecting the state from “undermining Nigeria’s corporate existence”) the government banned Twitter for the entire country.

A ban that would last for seven months.

This move also came mere months after the end of the #EndSARS protests, in which protesters used Twitter as a tool to organize and mobilize their movement. 

At the time, Human Rights Watch and other organizations raised alarm about the impact of freedom of expression and an open civic space, however, these calls were ignored by Buhari’s government.

What’s more is that any use of Twitter, including by journalists and media houses, was deemed “unpatriotic”, and could result in persecution.

We’ll continue the rest of the discussion in our next blog, subscribe to be the first to be notified when it drops.

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Empowering Women for Optimal Usage, Necessary?

45'MEDIA Latest News:
by Sai Educational Rural & Urban Development Society (SERUDS)

This project intends to give skills training in tailoring, embroidery, and fashion design courses for sustainable livelihoods to over 200 women.

With this vocational skills training, women will live with dignity by earning money themselves.

During this training, women will learn and develop skills in tailoring & embroidery to work on sarees and blouse pieces.

We provide sewing machines and tool kits to survive on their own and live with dignity.

Here Are The Challenges

Women are facing atrocities & harassment at work place and have no role in decision making due to lack of financial independence.

They are treated as second class citizens.

They are working as labourers in market yard, cleaners in hospitals, private enterprises & engaged in beedi (tobaaco) making, a hazardous profession.

Women charge lesser in terms of Economic digressions.

They stand a chance to hold the centre for anarchy in obligation.

They are socially & culturally ill-treated. They lack employable skills & sustainable and dignified livelihoods.

This tailoring & embroidery project intends to create economic development of women & break poverty.

Tailoring & embroidery training will provide self employment at their homes, can give them a daily income and can enable them to buy necessary medicines and make them capable to pay school fee for their growing children.

Investment in these women is a proven path to reduce poverty.

They are disadvantaged when it comes to employment, education, and work skills.

What Can We Do;

This tailoring & embroidery project intends to create economic development of #women & break poverty.

Tailoring & embroidery training will provide self employment at their homes, can give them a daily income and can enable them to buy necessary medicines and make them capable to pay school fee for their growing children.

Investment in these women is a proven path to reduce poverty.

INSIDERNOTES

Here Are The Solutions

The income of these women will be enhanced and they will be independent.

They need not depend on any one else.

With this skills training women will be self reliant and live happily.

mompreneurship is another level of independence and a leak to societal development.

The economic development of women will increase and they participate in decision making process.

They will teach these learnt skills to other woman who are in needy position.

Women all over the world not just in #India, deserves to be given the same measure of attention and proficient supplies as due to anyone promoting useful standards in the community, they deserve to be treated with respect & dignity, equity and not trials.

Donations to this project are eligible for a 50% match as part of the April 2024 Little by Little campaign! (while funds remain)

Get more of this click below 👇

https://www.globalgiving.org/dy/cart/view/gg.html?cmd=addItem&projid=15201&frequency=ONCE&vo_id=53549&vo=20

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Empowering Women for Optimal Usage, Necessary?

45'MEDIA Latest News:
by Sai Educational Rural & Urban Development Society (SERUDS)

This project intends to give skills training in tailoring, embroidery, and fashion design courses for sustainable livelihoods to over 200 women.

With this vocational skills training, women will live with dignity by earning money themselves.

During this training, women will learn and develop skills in tailoring & embroidery to work on sarees and blouse pieces.

We provide sewing machines and tool kits to survive on their own and live with dignity.

Here Are The Challenges

Women are facing atrocities & harassment at work place and have no role in decision making due to lack of financial independence.

They are treated as second class citizens.

They are working as labourers in market yard, cleaners in hospitals, private enterprises & engaged in beedi (tobaaco) making, a hazardous profession.

Women charge lesser in terms of Economic digressions.

They stand a chance to hold the centre for anarchy in obligation.

They are socially & culturally ill-treated. They lack employable skills & sustainable and dignified livelihoods.

This tailoring & embroidery project intends to create economic development of women & break poverty.

Tailoring & embroidery training will provide self employment at their homes, can give them a daily income and can enable them to buy necessary medicines and make them capable to pay school fee for their growing children.

Investment in these women is a proven path to reduce poverty.

They are disadvantaged when it comes to employment, education, and work skills.

What Can We Do;

This tailoring & embroidery project intends to create economic development of #women & break poverty.

Tailoring & embroidery training will provide self employment at their homes, can give them a daily income and can enable them to buy necessary medicines and make them capable to pay school fee for their growing children.

Investment in these women is a proven path to reduce poverty.

INSIDERNOTES

Here Are The Solutions

The income of these women will be enhanced and they will be independent.

They need not depend on any one else.

With this skills training women will be self reliant and live happily.

mompreneurship is another level of independence and a leak to societal development.

The economic development of women will increase and they participate in decision making process.

They will teach these learnt skills to other woman who are in needy position.

Women all over the world not just in #India, deserves to be given the same measure of attention and proficient supplies as due to anyone promoting useful standards in the community, they deserve to be treated with respect & dignity, equity and not trials.

Donations to this project are eligible for a 50% match as part of the April 2024 Little by Little campaign! (while funds remain)

Get more of this click below 👇

https://www.globalgiving.org/dy/cart/view/gg.html?cmd=addItem&projid=15201&frequency=ONCE&vo_id=53549&vo=20

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Amnesty International Has Been Responding since Day One

45’MEDIA (BreakingNews)

Exactly six months ago, a new wave of devastation and profound suffering began.

Israeli civilians were targeted and at least 1,139 were killed by Hamas and Palestinian armed groups with hostages being taken and 132 remaining in captivity today.

Palestinians in the Occupied Palestinian Territories came under retaliatory attack and continue to face daily horrors more than 32,000 civilians have been killed in Gaza, and over 2.3 million remain at risk of genocide and famine.

Families are waking up every morning without their loved ones, and with uncertainty for their own lives.

I remain heartbroken — and determined to help.

I know you share my sense of moral responsibility.

While the U.S. government and the international community have failed to put an end to the staggering scale of death and devastation, Amnesty International has been responding since day one:

  • Our call for a permanent ceasefire, unimpeded humanitarian access to Gaza, and the release of remaining civilian hostages has mobilized more than 1 million signatures from 167 countries1;
  • Our investigations have exposed numerous human rights violations and war crimes by all parties — including unlawful attacks by Israeli forces in which U.S.-made weapons were identified2;
  • Our experts are meeting with U.S. leaders and lawmakers, who are referencing and uplifting our research on the national stage3;
  • For over six decades4, we have been documenting how Israeli forces have committed grave human rights violations against Palestinians with impunity.

Amnesty is on the ground ensuring violations do not go unchecked all thanks to dedicated people like you  and we need your help to continue our lifesaving work.

We rely on compassionate supporters like you to fund our ongoing crisis response and pursue justice. This is your chance to make a difference and be one of the 600 people we need to sustain our efforts.

Your gift today will be doubled to expose injustice, end atrocities, and protect victims of the hostilities in Gaza, Israel, and around the world.

Tristan: this crisis is devastating but we must not give into despair or assume someone else will come to the rescue.

Behind the stories you read about Israeli and Palestinian civilians being killed in ruthless attacks, we are there, collecting evidence and interviewing survivors so we can seek justice.

Behind the historic number of Palestinians being displaced, we are there, documenting their plight so we can show people in power why a permanent ceasefire is so urgently needed.

And behind Amnesty, there’s YOU. With your help, we can ramp up efforts to protect human rights and demand accountability for the human rights crimes being committed around the world.

Your support will mean more investigations to uncover war crimes, more pressure for a ceasefire, humanitarian access, and hostage release, and more action to shine a light on injustice.

We have no intention of slowing any of this work. Help us maintain the resources needed to continue responding.

Thank you for powering our movement,

Paul O’Brien
Executive Director
Amnesty International USA

P.S. Not ready to make a donation? Use our simple tool to send a message to your members of Congress calling for an immediate ceasefire, which would help put an end to unlawful attacks, allow for lifesaving humanitarian aid, and negotiate the release of hostages.

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BreakingNews: Plastics vs. Planet! (Earthday Theme 2024)

45’MEDIA (team onboard)

As Earth Day approaches, it’s crucial to reflect on the environmental challenges we face and the actions we can take to protect our beautiful planet.

This year the Earth Day theme is Planet vs. Plastics, looking at the impact both on our health and the environment.

FossilFuel🚫

In this special Earth Day edition, we delve into the three main reasons why plastic is harming our planet and share actionable steps we can all take to make a difference.

  1. The production of plastic is heavily reliant on fossil fuels
  2. Most plastics can take hundreds of years to decompose in landfills
  3. Plastic pollution poses a severe threat to nature, especially in our waterways.
Global Citizen

So, what can we do about it?

It can often feel like we don’t have a lot of control over the amount of plastic in the world, and that governments or companies should be the ones making the changes. 

But change needs to come from everyone.

We all have an area of influence and control over our own decisions when it comes to things like shopping, or our homes.

And laws are changing! In March at the UN Environment Assembly, #175 nations agreed to develop a legally binding agreement on plastic pollution by the end of this year.

This hugely important resolution addresses the full lifecycle of plastic, including its production, design and disposal.

CustomerRights

Plus, lots of companies are making changes to the amount of plastic in their products, due to increasing public demand. So don’t underestimate what a difference consumer pressure can make!

Things we can do today


Step 1 – Reduce
We’ve all heard the phrase ‘reduce, re-use, recycle’, but these are not all of equal importance.

The most important thing we can do is REDUCE the amount of plastic we use.

This could be not using single-use water bottles, choosing food items with less packaging when we shop, or buying plastic alternatives such as plastic-free bathroom products.

If we reduce what we use, we reduce the demand for products containing plastics.


Step 2 – Re-use
The second-best thing we can do is to RE-USE the plastic we do have.

Whether this is carrier bags, bottles or plastic containers.

It could also be wearing our clothes for longer.

Synthetic fibres in clothing account for 10% of all plastic usage.  


Step 3 – Recycle
Finally, when we must buy or use plastic, we should RECYCLE it.

The reason this is the 3rd step is because, whilst recycling is preferable to incineration or landfill, plastic cannot be recycled forever (unlike metal).

So, recycling delays, rather than avoids, landfill.

 What happens to our plastic waste?

When we act together, we can accomplish things that seem impossible to achieve alone.

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The Secret iPhone Setting Every Owner Should Know

Tristan James Jr. 45’MEDIA

A new way to launch apps and certain iOS features is hidden right behind your screen.

Quickly: Try to turn on your iPhone’s flashlight. If it took you longer than two seconds, you’re probably missing out on one of the iPhone’s best hidden features.

Though the iPhone’s Settings menus harbor many hidden gems, including one that can protect it from thieves, they’re so numerous and buried you’d be forgiven for mostly ignoring them.

Still, those who wish to turn their phone into the fastest flasher in the West needn’t look too hard.

  • Open Settings, scroll down to “Accessibility,” find “Touch,”
  • Scroll all the way down and tap “Back Tap.”
  • You’ll see two options: “Double Tap” and “Triple Tap.”

Each lets you tell your phone to do something when you tap its back twice or three times.

I use the trick for my flashlight, so I can quickly find things in the dark closet under my stairs, but you can customize the taps to do tasks like launch the camera, take a screenshot or mute your ringer.

If you have found uses for Siri beyond reeling off the population of Belgium, you can tap for the voice assistant too. 

INSIDERNOTES

You can do even more powerful things with the help of Apple’s “Shortcuts” app.

It lets you create custom automations that you can trigger with the taps.

Open the app, tap the plus arrow to create a new shortcut, then add as many steps as you want.

When you return to your “Back Tap” settings, you’ll see all your saved automations as options. 

“My favorite customization allows me to use Shazam, the app that helps identify any song you encounter while walking around, by just triple tapping the back of my phone”

a trick that lets you turn the back of your phone into an app launchpad

I’ve also made one that just starts playing the most recent episode of my favorite podcast and one that tells me the next event I have scheduled in my calendar.

Really, the possibilities are endless.

One small limit: Since you can only tap two ways, you can only use this feature to do two things.

And whatever you build, make sure you practice getting the tap to work before trying it in the wild.

Ensuring it consistently triggers requires finesse.

If you don’t have a case on your phone (you animal!) you can likely get it to work with just a gentle touch.

Those with thick cases might need to tap harder I’ve found it helps to use your fingernail.

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Dangote Refinery Finally Begins Oil Production

Tristan James Jr

The world’s single train refinery, the Dangote Refinery, has made an essential move by issuing tenders to sell its first two fuel cargoes for export in Nigeria.

The development is an essential step for the newly launched refinery, which has generated a buzz in the industry.

A Reuters report quotes three sources saying that the first cargo of 94,000 metric tons of sulphur straight run fuel oil, which Dangote has awarded to Nigeria, is due to load at the end of this week. Before 25th February 2024.

The second tender is for about 70,000 tons of naphtha, which three other sources told Reuters, with the tender started on February 05, 2024.

The development comes after reports emerged that the refinery was preparing to deliver its first fuel cargoes to the domestic market in early weeks today.

“Significant oil marketers in Nigeria had registered with Dangote Refinery to lift and distribute petroleum products from the $20 billion facility”

INSIDERNOTES

The Petroleum Products Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria said that PETROAN has been in talks with the refinery management holding on a conclusion to supply products from the facility as soon as possible.

The report outlined the seven significant marketers, including 11 Plc, Conoil Plc, AA Rano, Ardova Plc, MRS Oil Nigeria Plc, OVH Energy Marketing Limited, Total Nigeria Plc and NNPC Retail.

Adeola Yusuf, Energy Policy expert and Lead of Platforms Africa said the development is good and did say that the move will affect local pricing positive.

In another report the Port Harcourt refinery is set to begin operations after receiving 745,000 barrels of crude oil from #Shell Petroleum Development Company Limited.

The crude oil supply is the first to be made in the past few years due to the poor state of the plant, which called for rehabilitation and testing to ensure readiness for sustainable operations.

Port Harcourt refinery begins production after years of neglect Shell stated that the recommencement of crude oil supply from the BOGT to Port Harcourt Refinery is a significant achievement and a game changer for the industry and Nigeria.

The intensive preparations, partnerships, and dedication of both teams involved were responsible for overcoming challenges and ensuring safe and efficient supply operations.

According to Shell, the move will support the government’s plan of a steady supply of petroleum products to the downstream market and other associated benefits to Nigeria’s economy like the #150naira sale back from October, 7th, 2023.

FG gives oil firms in Nigeria strict orders on Dangote, other refineries as reported that the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has ordered oil companies in Nigeria to supply about 934,000 barrels of crude oil daily to local refineries for the next seven months beginning from January, 1st, 2024.

The initiative is part of Nigeria’s efforts to ensure regular supply to local refiners for domestic consumption.

About 12 local refineries are expected to begin production in the coming weeks, including the 960,000 capacity Dangote refinery and Nigeria’s four refineries in Port Harcourt, 2 in Warri, and 3 in Kaduna.

The economic hardship in Nigeria has proven on over time that “while the seething nectar we drink inn harms no one else but ourselves” every institution from every sector is detrimental to this scourgerous failure.

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3 Types of Overthinking & How to Overcome Them

TRISTAN JAMES JR.

There’s no shortage of situations to overthink in today’s work world.

Whether it’s fretting over the implications of a new market trend, agonizing about the tone of an email to a major client, or losing sleep over an employee’s reaction to feedback, the opportunities for leaders to get trapped in their own heads are endless.

As we have access to more information and higher demands than ever before, it’s no surprise that half to nearly three quarters of adults confess to thinking too much.

After coaching professionals at some of the world’s top companies for over a decade, I’ve observed a common pattern:

Some people who appear outwardly successful tend to overcomplicate everything, layering unnecessary complexity into their decisions, and deliberating far longer than needed.

This tendency is particularly pronounced among a group I refer to as Sensitive Strivers those who are hardwired to process the world around them more deeply and are often their own toughest critics.

Constantly churning thoughts can be exhausting, and if left unchecked, overthinking can contribute to anxiety and burnout.

There’s far-reaching consequences for organizations, too. When individuals or entire teams habitually overthink, it creates a bottleneck. Decision-making slows, opportunities are missed, and a culture of risk-aversion can take hold, stifling business growth.

Clearly, there’s a pressing need for more effective solutions to overcome overthinking in the workplace.

But to truly tackle this issue, it’s important to first acknowledge and understand that there are actually three forms of overthinking: rumination, future tripping, and overanalyzing.

Armed with this knowledge, it’s possible to develop targeted strategies that lead to meaningful and lasting change for workers and the organizations that employ them.

Here’s how to spot and handle each of the three types of overthinking. 

Rumination 

Rumination is best described as a mental loop where you dwell on past events, particularly negative or distressing ones.

Those who ruminate are often caught in a whirlpool of regret, guilt, and “woulda, shoulda, coulda” scenarios.

They review what went wrong, often blaming themselves.

A key aspect of rumination is its orientation towards the past and getting stuck there.

Signs to watch out for:

  • You fixate on negative feedback. 
  • You often bring up past failures, setbacks, or slip-ups in conversation with others.
  • You’re overly cautious, perhaps double or triple-checking your work, because you want to avoid mistakes.

How to address it:  

Counterintuitively, it can be helpful to schedule “worry time.”

Instead of letting rumination overrun your entire day, confine it to a manageable slot usually no more than 15 to 30 minutes.

Choose a time of day that works for you (just not right before bed) and pick a specific place for your worry time.

It could be a particular chair, room, or even a spot in a park.

Divide your worries into two categories: those you can control and those you cannot.

For worries within your control, brainstorm possible actions or solutions.

For example, if you’re worried about meeting a deadline, your action steps could include saying no to another commitment.

Each time an uncontrollable worry arises, try visualization.

Imagine placing the worry in a balloon and releasing it into the sky.

By setting aside a designated time to address these thoughts, you’re not in a constant battle to push them away. You’re simply postponing them to a more convenient time.

If rumination crops up outside your designated worry time, gently remind yourself, “Not now, I’ll tackle this later,” which helps bring greater awareness and control to your thought patterns.

Future tripping

Instead of being trapped in the past, those who are future tripping are concerned about what lies ahead.

While some degree of anticipation is beneficial, future tripping can escalate to the point where it holds you back.

The uncertainty of what might happen, the potential for failure, and the fear of the unknown can make it a challenging form of overthinking. 

Signs to watch out for:

  • You spend excessive energy planning for every possible scenario to feel prepared for any eventuality. 
  • You find it hard to celebrate your successes because you’re always thinking about what’s next.
  • You often feel restless or agitated, driven by thoughts of outstanding to-do items.

How to address it: 

Use your ability to look forward to your advantage.

Mentally projecting yourself into the future, beyond the point of your current worries.

For example, Caelin, a marketing manager, is overwhelmed with the launch of a new product.

The deadline is tight, expectations are high, and his team is under significant pressure.

He’s concerned about the campaign strategy, the team’s workload, and potential customer reactions.

Caelin finds a quiet conference room during his lunch break.

He closes his eyes and pictures himself five years from now. He’s in a more senior role, reflecting on his career path.

From this future perspective, Caelin realizes that the product launch was just one of many projects he handled. He’s able to put it in perspective.

While it’s important, it’s not a defining moment of his career.

He recalls how some aspects didn’t go as planned, but also how the team adapted and learned from the experience.

This strategy, known as temporal distancing, can reduce the immediacy and intensity of your concerns, helping you focus on the present with a calmer, more balanced mindset.

You can also choose to practice “selective ignorance” by reducing your exposure to unnecessary stressors.

Be intentional about the information you consume, especially from news sources and social media.

Identify triggers that escalate your future-tripping, such as updates about constant market fluctuations and industry predictions or constantly checking KPI dashboards or financial accounts.

If certain updates or data do not impact your day to day work or decision-making, they might not be necessary.

Prioritize information that you can act upon.

Overanalyzing

While rumination and future tripping are bound by time one looking back and the other looking forward overanalyzing is centered on depth.

It involves diving incredibly deep into a topic, thought, or situation, often to the point of excess.

While this can sometimes lead to profound insights, more often than not, it results in getting bogged down in details that might not be particularly relevant. 

Signs to watch out for:

  • You procrastinate or delay taking action to research further. 
  • You frequently seek out others’ approval or confirmation, because you lack confidence in your own analysis. 
  • You have difficulty distinguishing between high-priority and low-priority tasks, leading to a backlog of decisions. 

How to address it:

Instead of striving for the perfect choice, aim for one that is “good enough” with an approach known as satisficing.

Once a decision meets your established criteria and is satisfactory, you should go ahead with it, even if a potentially better option might exist.

Compare this to maximizers, who examine every option and keep searching for better alternatives, deals, or outcomes to their own detriment.

Of the two decision making types, maximizers are more prone to overanalyzing, less likely to feel happy with the results of their decisions, and more likely to negatively compare themselves to others.

Key decision criteria principles, guidelines, or requirements help you prioritize the most important variables weighing into a decision.

Your decision criteria can be professional or personal.

For example, let’s say you’re trapped in analysis paralysis around whether or not to offer a new feature for your product or service.

Your decision criteria could include: cost, profitability, effort, risk level, or impact.

Now let’s say, you’re trying to make a personal decision, like whether to move for a new job.

You might consider criteria like how well the role fits your strengths, the salary, or whether the role aligns with your future aspirations.

Select three criteria at most, with one that outranks the others.

If you’re in a group decision making situation, have everyone brainstorm and agree on the criteria together.

It’s important to remember that the goal is not to eliminate all deep thinking, but rather to prevent it from spiraling into the unproductive kind.

Identifying the type of overthinking you or your team is dealing with is the first step in breaking free from its grasp and more crucial than ever when the demand for quick yet thoughtful decision-making is high.

Melody Wilding, LMSW is an executive coach and author of Trust Yourself: Stop Overthinking and Channel Your Emotions for Success at Work. Get a free copy of Chapter One here.

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3 Types of Overthinking & How to Overcome Them

TRISTAN JAMES JR.

There’s no shortage of situations to overthink in today’s work world.

Whether it’s fretting over the implications of a new market trend, agonizing about the tone of an email to a major client, or losing sleep over an employee’s reaction to feedback, the opportunities for leaders to get trapped in their own heads are endless.

As we have access to more information and higher demands than ever before, it’s no surprise that half to nearly three quarters of adults confess to thinking too much.

After coaching professionals at some of the world’s top companies for over a decade, I’ve observed a common pattern:

Some people who appear outwardly successful tend to overcomplicate everything, layering unnecessary complexity into their decisions, and deliberating far longer than needed.

This tendency is particularly pronounced among a group I refer to as Sensitive Strivers those who are hardwired to process the world around them more deeply and are often their own toughest critics.

Constantly churning thoughts can be exhausting, and if left unchecked, overthinking can contribute to anxiety and burnout.

There’s far-reaching consequences for organizations, too. When individuals or entire teams habitually overthink, it creates a bottleneck. Decision-making slows, opportunities are missed, and a culture of risk-aversion can take hold, stifling business growth.

Clearly, there’s a pressing need for more effective solutions to overcome overthinking in the workplace.

But to truly tackle this issue, it’s important to first acknowledge and understand that there are actually three forms of overthinking: rumination, future tripping, and overanalyzing.

Armed with this knowledge, it’s possible to develop targeted strategies that lead to meaningful and lasting change for workers and the organizations that employ them.

Here’s how to spot and handle each of the three types of overthinking. 

Rumination 

Rumination is best described as a mental loop where you dwell on past events, particularly negative or distressing ones.

Those who ruminate are often caught in a whirlpool of regret, guilt, and “woulda, shoulda, coulda” scenarios.

They review what went wrong, often blaming themselves.

A key aspect of rumination is its orientation towards the past and getting stuck there.

Signs to watch out for:

  • You fixate on negative feedback. 
  • You often bring up past failures, setbacks, or slip-ups in conversation with others.
  • You’re overly cautious, perhaps double or triple-checking your work, because you want to avoid mistakes.

How to address it:  

Counterintuitively, it can be helpful to schedule “worry time.”

Instead of letting rumination overrun your entire day, confine it to a manageable slot usually no more than 15 to 30 minutes.

Choose a time of day that works for you (just not right before bed) and pick a specific place for your worry time.

It could be a particular chair, room, or even a spot in a park.

Divide your worries into two categories: those you can control and those you cannot.

For worries within your control, brainstorm possible actions or solutions.

For example, if you’re worried about meeting a deadline, your action steps could include saying no to another commitment.

Each time an uncontrollable worry arises, try visualization.

Imagine placing the worry in a balloon and releasing it into the sky.

By setting aside a designated time to address these thoughts, you’re not in a constant battle to push them away. You’re simply postponing them to a more convenient time.

If rumination crops up outside your designated worry time, gently remind yourself, “Not now, I’ll tackle this later,” which helps bring greater awareness and control to your thought patterns.

Future tripping

Instead of being trapped in the past, those who are future tripping are concerned about what lies ahead.

While some degree of anticipation is beneficial, future tripping can escalate to the point where it holds you back.

The uncertainty of what might happen, the potential for failure, and the fear of the unknown can make it a challenging form of overthinking. 

Signs to watch out for:

  • You spend excessive energy planning for every possible scenario to feel prepared for any eventuality. 
  • You find it hard to celebrate your successes because you’re always thinking about what’s next.
  • You often feel restless or agitated, driven by thoughts of outstanding to-do items.

How to address it: 

Use your ability to look forward to your advantage.

Mentally projecting yourself into the future, beyond the point of your current worries.

For example, Caelin, a marketing manager, is overwhelmed with the launch of a new product.

The deadline is tight, expectations are high, and his team is under significant pressure.

He’s concerned about the campaign strategy, the team’s workload, and potential customer reactions.

Caelin finds a quiet conference room during his lunch break.

He closes his eyes and pictures himself five years from now. He’s in a more senior role, reflecting on his career path.

From this future perspective, Caelin realizes that the product launch was just one of many projects he handled. He’s able to put it in perspective.

While it’s important, it’s not a defining moment of his career.

He recalls how some aspects didn’t go as planned, but also how the team adapted and learned from the experience.

This strategy, known as temporal distancing, can reduce the immediacy and intensity of your concerns, helping you focus on the present with a calmer, more balanced mindset.

You can also choose to practice “selective ignorance” by reducing your exposure to unnecessary stressors.

Be intentional about the information you consume, especially from news sources and social media.

Identify triggers that escalate your future-tripping, such as updates about constant market fluctuations and industry predictions or constantly checking KPI dashboards or financial accounts.

If certain updates or data do not impact your day to day work or decision-making, they might not be necessary.

Prioritize information that you can act upon.

Overanalyzing

While rumination and future tripping are bound by time one looking back and the other looking forward overanalyzing is centered on depth.

It involves diving incredibly deep into a topic, thought, or situation, often to the point of excess.

While this can sometimes lead to profound insights, more often than not, it results in getting bogged down in details that might not be particularly relevant. 

Signs to watch out for:

  • You procrastinate or delay taking action to research further. 
  • You frequently seek out others’ approval or confirmation, because you lack confidence in your own analysis. 
  • You have difficulty distinguishing between high-priority and low-priority tasks, leading to a backlog of decisions. 

How to address it:

Instead of striving for the perfect choice, aim for one that is “good enough” with an approach known as satisficing.

Once a decision meets your established criteria and is satisfactory, you should go ahead with it, even if a potentially better option might exist.

Compare this to maximizers, who examine every option and keep searching for better alternatives, deals, or outcomes to their own detriment.

Of the two decision making types, maximizers are more prone to overanalyzing, less likely to feel happy with the results of their decisions, and more likely to negatively compare themselves to others.

Key decision criteria principles, guidelines, or requirements help you prioritize the most important variables weighing into a decision.

Your decision criteria can be professional or personal.

For example, let’s say you’re trapped in analysis paralysis around whether or not to offer a new feature for your product or service.

Your decision criteria could include: cost, profitability, effort, risk level, or impact.

Now let’s say, you’re trying to make a personal decision, like whether to move for a new job.

You might consider criteria like how well the role fits your strengths, the salary, or whether the role aligns with your future aspirations.

Select three criteria at most, with one that outranks the others.

If you’re in a group decision making situation, have everyone brainstorm and agree on the criteria together.

It’s important to remember that the goal is not to eliminate all deep thinking, but rather to prevent it from spiraling into the unproductive kind.

Identifying the type of overthinking you or your team is dealing with is the first step in breaking free from its grasp and more crucial than ever when the demand for quick yet thoughtful decision-making is high.

Melody Wilding, LMSW is an executive coach and author of Trust Yourself: Stop Overthinking and Channel Your Emotions for Success at Work. Get a free copy of Chapter One here.

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9 Pivotal Historic Moments in the Fight for Women’s Bodily Autonomy

GLOBAL CITIZEN 45'MEDIA.

It’s been an uphill battle over centuries for women to have the right to say and do as they please, and to make decisions over their own bodies, lives, and futures.

When it comes to gender equality, one thing the whole world can agree on is that we’ve not yet achieved it and not one country in the world has reached the milestone of viewing and treating women equally, and acknowledging them as autonomous beings who have a say over their decisions, movements, and bodies. 

Few things in this world have been fought over as extensively as women’s bodies.

You’d think by now, in 2023, women would be free to make choices over their bodies and their futures; that we’d have reached a collective understanding that all human beings have the right to do what they want with their own bodies.

Alas, we’re not there yet instead, women’s sexual and reproductive health, their safety, and their rights are at risk the world over.

But to map out our journey to an equitable future, it’s important to know how far we’ve come.

Here are some of the most pivotal moments in recent history that have shaped the fight for women’s bodily autonomy.

1960

The first oral contraceptive is invented and approved by the US’s FDA.

This was a huge win after women had fought for it for decades, and scientists had to work around laws that prohibited contraceptive research at the time.

“The ability for women to control their reproductive cycle ushered in a transformation in women’s engagement in society, the economy, and politics in the US”

INSIDERNOTES

1969

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) is created.

The UN’s sexual and reproductive health agency has been hard at work for 50 years building knowledge, awareness, and capacity on the importance of bodily autonomy, reproductive health and family planning, and to promote strategies and solutions for developing countries that are based on gender equality and human rights.

1984

The US institutes the “global gag rule”.

A.k.a. the Mexico City Policy, this dangerous policy prevents US aid and support for international organizations and partners whose work involves abortion.

These organizations are often prohibited from sourcing funding elsewhere for this purpose.

Between 1984 and 2022, the rule has been enacted and reversed by Republican and Democratic administrations respectively.

1993-1995

World leaders met at pivotal human rights conferences during this time, in Vienna, Beijing, and Cairo.

At these important meetings, violence against women (VAW) is finally recognized as a human rights violation; the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) is created; and an agenda to tackle gender-based violence (GBV) globally is adopted.

In Beijing, Hiliary Clinton delivered her now famous saying that

“human rights are women’s rights and women’s rights are human rights”

2010

UN Women is created.

Recognizing the world was falling behind on progress towards gender equality, leaders united different agencies and offices to create a new organ of the UN system focused exclusively on gender equality and the empowerment of women.

Over the last decade, UN Women has made sure women’s rights stay on world leader’s agenda while supporting feminist movements and women leaders around the world. 

2012

The UN passes the first resolution calling for a ban on female genital mutilation (FGM) worldwide.

In the same year, Somalia officially bans FGM, and three years later, so does Africa’s most populous country, Nigeria.

2018-2022

Protests against Poland’s restrictive abortion laws begin.

These demonstrations were in response to the country’s constitutional court proposing then imposing a near-total ban on abortion.

The ban still exists today.

2022

Global protests against the overturning of Roe v. Wade in the US.

Roe v. Wade was implemented in 1973 to safeguard the constitutional right to abortion across the US.

In 2022, the US Supreme Court overturned this 50 year decision, putting the question of women’s bodily autonomy and rights up for debate once again and putting millions of women’s lives, health, and futures in the balance.

When it was overturned, women in the country and around the world united in protest. The fight continues.

2023

The Taliban ceases the sale of contraceptives in Afghanistan, stating that they are a “Western conspiracy” designed to control the Muslim population.

This comes with reports of soldiers using the threat of violence to stop pharmacies and health facilities from stocking any form of birth control.

Shortly before this, the Taliban ended higher education for girls and women, and forced women out of employment.

You can also check out our Global Citizen x Social Goods “Autonomy” merchandise collection, including a tote, hat, t-shirt, and more!

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10 Countries Facing Underreported Crises You Need to Know About in 2023

GLOBAL CITIZEN 45'MEDIA

A question for you: have you heard about Zambia’s escalating HIV crisis? No?

Well what about Angola experiencing one of the most intense droughts in its history, have you heard anything about that?

If not, it’s not surprising, because nor have a lot of people.

Despite the world having this wonderful access to information technology where news and stories can be shared globally with just the click of a button, some of the most crucial stories and events are going overlooked.

lobal media attention can be both fickle and fleeting and, often depending on where a crisis is happening or who the people are being impacted, the threat to lives and the urgent action needed can often go unnoticed or underreported.

This in turn, can affect the political and humanitarian attention that each crisis receives.

Humanitarian agency CARE International released a report this month called,

 Breaking the Silence: The 10 most underreported humanitarian crises of 2022.

The report dives into the crises that are impacting millions of people yet received the least media coverage of the past year they found that all of them are on the African continent

CARE’s research compares the coverage of these crises to the coverage of major pop culture moments, and the results are… revealing. 

In Malawi, for instance, 5.4 million people are facing an acute hunger crisis as a result of tropical storms such as Cyclone Ana with 2,330 articles written about the crisis.

That might sound like quite a lot — until you compare it with the 217,529 articles written about the Chris Rock/Will Smith incident at last year’s Oscars.

That’s almost 93 times more articles than the hunger crisis in Malawi. 

According to CARE, the main reason these humanitarian crises don’t get more attention is because they often don’t suit the criteria of being compelling enough news, which, according to experts CARE consulted for the report,

“prioritize dramatic, timely, familiar, unambiguous, and easy to explain stories, which are assumed to resonate with their target audiences.” 

InsiderNotes

But now more than ever, as the climate crisis wreaks havoc, the refugee and displacement crisis is the worst it’s been in decades, the global food crisis leaves millions going hungry every day, and conflict is raging across countries and continents we can all play a part in making sure all crises get the attention they need.

And how do we do that? We asked Emily Janoch, Senior Director for Thought Leadership, Knowledge Management, and learning at CARE USA.

“As an individual, diversify your news sources.

Look at what you consume, click on, and share.

If that hasn’t covered one of these crises, start thinking about why, and who might be covering those issues,” she said.

“Also look at who is telling the story,” she added. “Is it someone who is impacted by the crisis?

Does it show the people involved as humans who can act and who deserve better? Or does it only treat them (especially women) as victims?”

Let’s start with learning more about 10 of the world’s crises we need to keep talking about and get involved in taking action to help by heading to the Global Citizen app and taking our “Neglected Crises: Raise Your Voice” challenge.

1. Angola: Drought, Hunger & Displacement

Southern Angola is experiencing its most damaging drought in 40 years.

This is a result of rising temperatures, with CARE reporting that there’s potential for these droughts to be more frequent due to climate change.

The droughts are causing climate migration, and have impacted food insecurity resulting in 3.8 million people not having enough to eat.

It also doesn’t help that Angola is also one of the countries with the highest food price increases as a result of the war in Ukraine.

2. Malawi: Cyclones, Cholera & Hunger

An image taken from a slight distance of healthcare workers in protective gear assisting at least one person visible in the image with their child. The worker furthest from the camera stands near an IV drip.

Health workers treat cholera patients at the Bwaila Hospital in Lilongwe central Malawi on Jan. 11, 2023.

Malawi’s cholera outbreak has now claimed more than 1,000 lives by Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2023 according to the country’s health minister, who warned that some cultural beliefs and hostility towards health workers are slowing down response efforts.

We’ve mentioned that 5.4 million people in Malawi are experiencing an acute hunger crisis as a result of damaging cyclones.

We also need to mention that Malawi’s health care system is under strain due to rising HIV cases and intense cholera outbreaks, seen as a result of not enough access to clean drinking water. 

3. Central African Republic: Conflict & Climate Change

One in two people in the Central African Republic don’t have enough to eat.

The changing weather conditions have impacted the soil that the country’s food grows from, while storms and floods have destroyed thousands of homes and left 10,000 children without schools to attend.

The country has also experienced unceasing conflict since 2013, which has resulted in a severe refugee crisis with over 740,000 people seeking refuge across the borders and 500,000 people experiencing internal displacement.

4. Zambia: Increased Poverty, HIV & GBV

More than half the Zambian population lives in extreme poverty — meaning living on less than $1.90 a day and the country is experiencing some of the worst malnutrition rates in the world as a result of economic instability and the climate crisis affecting agriculture.

Meanwhile, more than 10% of people have recently been infected with HIV and, in 2021, around 19,000 people died of AIDS in the country.

Gender-based violence is also highly prevalent in the country, particularly following the #COVID19 pandemic and lockdowns that also saw economic hardship increase across the country.

5. Chad: Unrest & Floods

A top view of one of the biggest camp for people displaced by Islamist extremists in Maiduguri, Nigeria on Aug. 28, 2016.

Droughts, flooding and a shrinking Lake Chad caused in part by climate change is fueling conflict and migration in the region and needs to better addressed, a report said Thursday, Jan. 19, 2023.

Armed conflicts and insurgency have remained a major issue in the Sahel region of North Africa for several years, and right now, 6.1 million people in the region are in need of humanitarian aid as a result.

Chad is also experiencing serious blows from the impacts of climate change, as irregular rainfall has impacted agriculture, increasing malnutrition and hunger, and extended rain periods resulting in catastrophic flooding. 

6. Burundi: Economic Crisis & Natural Disaster

Over 70% of Burundi’s people live below the poverty line, and 1.8 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance due to the lack of safe drinking water and inadequate access to health care.

Climate migration has also been a major issue, with 85,000 people being forced to leave their homes following extreme flooding.

6. Burundi: Economic Crisis & Natural Disaster

Over 70% of Burundi’s people live below the poverty line, and 1.8 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance due to the lack of safe drinking water and inadequate access to health care.

Climate migration has also been a major issue, with 85,000 people being forced to leave their homes following extreme flooding.

7. Zimbabwe: Climate Shocks & Increased Poverty Rates

A vendor counts her money after making a sale in Harare, Thursday ,June, 2, 2022. Rampant inflation is making it increasingly difficult for people in Zimbabwe to make ends meet.

Since the start of Russia’s war in Ukraine, official statistics show that Zimbabwe’s inflation rate has shot up from 66% to more than 130%.

The country’s finance minister says the impact of the Ukraine war is heaping problems on the already fragile economy.

High inflation and economic instability mean more than half the Zimbabwean population is living in extreme poverty.

The climate crisis, including intense drought periods followed by heavy rainfall, have impacted food production and food security, resulting in food shortages and insecurity across the country.

8. Mali: Conflict & Climate Crisis

Ongoing violence and two coups in 2020 and 2021 have led to citizens fleeing the country in large numbers resulting in 2.5 million children dropping out of school, and exposing women and girls to the threat of sexual violence.

The climate crisis has also hit Mali hard, with floods and droughts contributing to crop failure and increasing malnutrition and hunger in the country. 

9. Cameroon: Displacement, Conflict & Economic Instability

Cameroon has faced crisis after crisis over the last decade, and currently 3.9 million people are in need of emergency humanitarian assistance that’s around 14% of the country.

There has been ongoing conflict and political unrest since 2016, resulting in 3,000 schools closing down, and citizens becoming internally displaced this despite the fact that there is already a large influx of refugees entering Cameroon to escape violence in the neighboring Central African Republic.

Water and sanitation is also a major issue, with 1.8 million people unable to access clean water. 

10. Niger: Hunger & Lack of Development

“In general, Niger is a country of records: one of the hottest countries, it has the highest fertility rate, and the highest population growth in the world,”

The Report Highlights.

Yet, despite these records, little to no investment has been made into the country’s development and climate adaptation.

Natural disasters such as droughts, together with ongoing conflict and insurgency, have led to food instability 4.4 million people are acutely food insecure, and half the country’s children under the age of 5 are chronically malnourished. 

Now you’re done reading, don’t forget to head to the Global Citizen app and take our “Neglected Crises: Raise Your Voice” challenge to learn more about these crises, quiz yourself on what you’ve learned, and take our pledge to play your part in making sure all the world’s crises get the attention they need and deserve.

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COP28: Everything You Need to Know About the 2023 UN Climate Change Conference

GLOBAL CITIZEN 45’MEDIA

The COP28 climate summit in Dubai, November 2023. Here’s what you should know.

Many countries had their representatives at the COP28, and still yet are with less or zero knowledge about what really went down well, here’s a brief recap if you fall into this category just a two minute read.

The climate crisis has been hard at work throughout 2023. Wildfires in Argentina and Canada.

Flooding in India, Cameroon, and Libya. Extreme heat across the US, Europe, and Asia.

A cyclone in Myanmar. A tropical storm hitting Japan, Guam, the Philippines, and Taiwan. The list goes on.

This is not exactly the kind of sentence you’d expect from a qualified climate expert, a group that prefers the more austere language of hard facts.

Yet, these days, “climate scientists are struggling for words,” writes climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe.

Instead, she’s started replying to questions about the latest extreme weather event or report about how dire things are with: “I am running out of original things to say.” 

This year’s COP is a significant milestone: the first assessment of how countries are faring against emissions cutting commitments made at Paris in 2015 (known as the Paris agreement).

This process is known as the “global stocktake.” 

In case you’re wondering, this global stocktake isn’t going to tell us anything we don’t already know.

We are well off track to make the emissions cuts needed to stay within 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Political leaders continue to back the fossil fuel industry even as forests burn, the ocean heats up, permafrost melts, and lives and livelihoods are lost.

According to the Guardian, a diplomat from one developed country said: “It could not be much worse.” Another said: “You could not make this stuff up.”

The timing couldn’t be more crucial.

Here’s everything you need to know about COP28 and why we can’t afford for it to be a flop.

What is a COP?

COP is an annual climate summit convened by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), a climate body of the UN. 

COP stands for Conference of the Parties — meaning a gathering of countries and 2023 will be the 28th time that it’s taken place. Hence: COP28.

When will COP28 take place?

COP28 was held from Nov. 30 to Dec. 12, 2023.

Where will it take place?

In Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Some have been skeptical of this given that the UAE has the third biggest net-zero-busting plans for oil and gas expansion in the world.

What really goes on at a COP?

It depends. 

When the Paris agreement was signed in 2015, it was agreed that every five years countries would return with more ambitious plans to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and tackle global warming.

The #COVID19 pandemic caused COP to be canceled in 2020, making COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, in 2021, one of the “big COPs.”

The “small COPs,” held in the intervening years, tend to focus on laying the groundwork for negotiations.

COPs usually open with a ceremonial opening meeting.

This is then followed by days of world leaders on stage talking about climate change, generally concentrating either on what their countries intend to do about it or on the dire consequences they are experiencing.

The remaining days have themes such as finance and energy and see politicians and business leaders stepping up to announce various new promises, pledges, coalitions, and projects.

But outside the doors, activists usually rage against superficial commitments and rally against political inaction. 

This time, there’s been significant outrage after it was leaked to the Guardian that the UAE’s state oil company has been able to read emails to and from the COP28 climate summit office and was consulted on how to respond to a media inquiry.

Remind me, what was agreed at Paris?

Under the landmark Paris agreement at COP21 in 2015, nations committed to holding global heating to well below 2 degrees Celsius above pre industrial levels, and preferably limiting warming to 1.5 degrees.

Though the deal is legally binding, the commitments that countries have made to cut their emissions are not, unless they are enshrined into national or regional legislation. 

INSIDERNOTES

Who takes part?

The attendees at COP are dignitaries and Heads of State and Government as well as tens of thousands of government delegates and representatives of civil society, intergovernmental organizations, NGOs, and the media.

There are 197 parties which are broadly organized in five regional groups: Africa, Asia, Eastern Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, and Western Europe and Other States (including Australia, Canada, and the US).

At the cluster of COP side events, climate change leaders, experts, and influencers gather to share their stories and solutions at panel discussions, exhibits, cultural events, and more.

What happened at COP27?

After two weeks of fraught negotiations, a “historic pact” was struck at COP27 in which developed countries, which are historically responsible for the climate emergency, agreed to provide climate finance to help poorer countries experiencing climate-related disasters, known as a loss and damage fund.

Alok Sharma, the UK President of COP26, was more scathing about how the conference fared.

“I said in Glasgow that the pulse of 1.5 degrees was weak. Unfortunately, it remains on life support,” he said.

What do we want to happen at COP28?

An End to Fossil Fuels

That means support for the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty from world leaders to ensure a Just Transition away from fossil fuels, an end to fossil fuel subsidies, and robust taxing of remaining fossil fuel production.

Cough Up the Climate Finance 

Now isn’t the time for baby steps, it’s time to go big: fund a Just Transition in all countries, help countries adapt to climate change, and fund loss and damage.

Protect Climate Activists and Environmental Defenders

Almost 2,000 environmental activists have been killed over the past decade.

We need a human rights approach to all aspects of climate action.

What can Global Citizens do to help?

Head to our climate action headquarters here to see what actions you can take to make a difference whether that’s signing petitions urging world leaders and businesses to do better on the climate crisis, sending emails to G20 ministers, or shooting off messages to European countries to support a green transition for all.

The world belongs to each and everyone of  us, so we must join hands together to fight and protect it as our only hope for inhabitant.

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