French satire magazine Charlie Hebdo decided to challenge Elon Musk, the self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist,” with a series of indecent caricatures.
Martin Luther King Jr., who wrote parts of his “I Have a Dream” speech in South Carolina, was scheduled to be in Columbia on April 3, 1968, the day before he was killed.
Surprisingly enough, while Nyerere’s followers upon his 1981 speech as it spread among Western universities and supported by established socialist critics of the IMF and the World Bank, among ...