, that 1953 classic, by famed American playwright, Arthur Miller. Set in 17th century Salem, in the Massachusetts Bay colony, with its witch hunts, the play echoes the Joseph McCarthy US communist purges .major themes include reputation, hysteria, power and authority, guilt, portrayal of women, deception, goodness and judgment.
For another, the Western Region, whose denizens more or less strutted the media, had tried and convicted the Balewa government — not without cause — of the anarchy in the “wild, wild West”; and were puritanically baying for blood.Still, Orizu’s bad judgment provided the first grist, for the latter-day dubbing of that putsch as an “Ibo coup” — and the cascade of tragedies that followed, cresting with the Nigerian Civil War .
You could spot a similar recklessness, among the uppity Yoruba, in the rash ranks of the Oodua Republic lobby: that fashionable folly of swearing — at the grave of your father! — that frothing emotion and brainless zest are indeed rigorous strategy!succeeds: a Yoruba version of South Sudan perhaps, where the glorious revolution consumes own children, with old whipping boy, Nigeria, out of reach?
Still, banditry, insurgency and kidnapping are a whiplash from the past: viciously hitting back are those disinherited and dispossessed, by past heinous policies and humongous greed — consolidated, rather than dissipated, by the Olusegun Obasanjo-led civil order, after eons of ruinous military rule.
channelstv Yes is true but the will not to do that.