This City Councilman Turned a $50K Deal Into a Personal Payday. Now He's...
Meet the Conservative Outsider Who Wants to Bring Common Sense Back to His...
How This Small-Town Police Force Became a 'Criminal Organization'
Iranian Regime's Latest Move Shows How Desperate It Has Become
CBS News Tried to Recalibrate Detention Stats — DHS Was Having None of...
If 'The Only Thing More Powerful Than Hate Is Love' Democrats Missed the...
Elites Did Their Part to Fight Global Warming by Flying Dozens of Private...
Historic: U.S. Marks Ninth Month With Zero Releases at the Border
Man Who Pushed Propaganda About a Young Gazan Boy Slaughtered By The IDF...
Harry Sisson Refuses to House Illegals in His Home, And Claims ICE Agent...
Critics Blast Katie Porter's Pre Super Bowl X Post As She Tries to...
Immigration Win: Federal Court Sides With Trump Admin on TPS Terminations for Multiple...
Federal Judge Blocks California Effort to Demask ICE Agents
Jasmine Crockett Might Be Running the Most Incompetent Campaign in History
WaPo Claims That Bad Bunny's Profane Performance Represented 'Wholesome Family Values'
Tipsheet

Pompeo Blasts Socialism to Conclude Africa Tour

(AP Photo/Sait Serkan Gurbuz)

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - On the final day of his tour through Africa, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blasted socialism and failed government-controlled economic planning. 

Advertisement

“I think we can all agree that the poverty rate in many African countries remains way too high,” he said during a speech at the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Wednesday. “While effective foreign aid can help to alleviate the problem, very unlikely it will solve it." 

“Centralized planning hasn’t worked. Look at the failed socialist experiments of years back in Zimbabwe, Tanzania, and right here in Ethiopia. Even now, even as we stand here today, South Africa is debating an amendment to permit the expropriation of private property without compensation. That would be disastrous for that economy, and most importantly for the South African people,” he continued. “Socialist schemes haven’t economically liberated this continent’s poorest people.” 

Throughout his trip, which included stops in Senegal and Angola, Pompeo touted the successes of private enterprise and entrepreneurship. He met with a number of small business owners and urged governments to rid their systems of corruption in order to unleash the full economic potential of their countries. 

“But we all...know the right way forward," he said. "Basic, strong rule of law, respect for property rights, regulation that encourages investment."

"We also need women’s full participation in this economic liberation and we need governments that respect their own people," he continued. "These are the key ingredients for true, inclusive, sustainable economic liberation." 

Advertisement

China continues to dump money into Africa, saddling countries and their citizens with enormous debt - both monetarily and politically. They’re building low quality, dangerous infrastructure all over the continent. 

“Not every nation doing business in Africa from outside the continent adopts the American model of partnership. Countries should be wary of authoritarian regimes and their empty promises. They breed corruption, dependency, they don't hire the local people, they don't train them, they don't lead them. They run the risk that the prosperity and sovereignty and progress that Africa so needs and desperately wants won't happen,” Pompeo warned. “The United States stands for local jobs, environmental responsibility, honest business practices, high quality work, and mutual prosperity.” 

Pompeo will now travel to Saudi Arabia and Oman, shifting focus to the threat from Iran. 

"I leave here even more optimistic than I came," he said. "There is enormous opportunity not only for Africa here, but for the world." 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement