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The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria - Politics (3) - Nairaland

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Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by ayo011: 9:54pm On Jul 14, 2012
Mr. Globe:
I tire for this bias thread oh. Why is onitsha conspicuously missing here? Its onitsha and others. Aba is commercial but not even industrialized as nnewi. Onitsha is both industrialized and commercial. Onitsha takes all the cake. meanwhile you guys should continue naming dead villages here (especially the sweet people) and continue turning the thread to a joke it has become. ogbomosho indeed


I agree with you on this.

Onitsha takes it all; both commercial, economic and industrialized, Onitsha wins it. Infact Onitsha has more bank branches than Warri, Zaria and Aba put together. Economy, commercialization and industrialization determines financial institutions migration.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by UCyril: 10:04pm On Jul 14, 2012
Afikpo

1 Like

Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by billante(m): 10:12pm On Jul 14, 2012
ayo011:


I agree with you on this.

Onitsha takes it all; both commercial, economic and industrialized, Onitsha wins it. Infact Onitsha has more bank branches than Warri, Zaria and Aba put together. Economy, commercialization and industrialization determines financial institutions migration.

It has been generally agreed dat onitsha wins it! But what I can't fathom is why the IGR(taxes) from onitsha is abysmal, with all d commercialization and industilization going on there, Including nnewi....Anambra IGR should be rivaling lagos IGR...those guys have refused to pay taxes and peter obi is also not doing his job about it! He should come and learn some tax lessons from fashola!
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by billante(m): 10:16pm On Jul 14, 2012
U.Cyril:
Afikpo

No be only afikpo! Nzam nko?

1 Like

Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Abagworo(m): 10:31pm On Jul 14, 2012
ayo011:


I agree with you on this.

Onitsha takes it all; both commercial, economic and industrialized, Onitsha wins it. Infact Onitsha has more bank branches than Warri, Zaria and Aba put together. Economy, commercialization and industrialization determines financial institutions migration.

Please can you list what is manufactured in Onitsha. I know Palm olive soap, Tura soap, Omo, Elephant, Harp, Star, Guiness, Seamans schnapp and some other known products are manufactured in Aba. I do not like arguments based on hear say or personal feelings.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Dhelake: 10:33pm On Jul 14, 2012
afam4eva: If you guys noticed, the OP said "Most Commercialized/ Industralized", so i don't know why some people are naming Agbara, Ota and Sapele. These towns may be industralized but not commercial. It's cities like Aba, Onitsha and Warri that fit this description.
Who told u dat Ota is nt commercialized?
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by MrGlobe(m): 10:39pm On Jul 14, 2012
Abagworo:

Please can you list what is manufactured in Onitsha. I know Palm olive soap, Tura soap, Omo, Elephant, Harp, Star, Guiness, Seamans schnapp and some other known products are manufactured in Aba. I do not like arguments based on hear say or personal feelings.
You are a tower of ignorance. Have you been to onitsha before. Can any sane person waste his precious time mentioning things manufactured in onitsha? Breweries, beverages, limca, plastics just name it.

And mention one nationally not even internationally known market in otta. You need to take your ignorance elsewhere

1 Like

Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Afam4eva(m): 10:46pm On Jul 14, 2012
Dhelake: Who told u dat Ota is nt commercialized?
What serious commercial activity goes on in Ota?
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Tafugo: 10:48pm On Jul 14, 2012
A lot of Indian companies in ota
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by billante(m): 10:48pm On Jul 14, 2012
Abagworo:

Please can you list what is manufactured in Onitsha. I know Palm olive soap, Tura soap, Omo, Elephant, Harp, Star, Guiness, Seamans schnapp and some other known products are manufactured in Aba. I do not like arguments based on hear say or personal feelings.

So many plastic industries, vegetable oil industries, lubricant oil industries,breweries,textile industries,marble industries,aluminum roofing sheets etc....hundreds of them!
But they mostly privately owned and moderate....big ones like sabmiller breweries, orange drug pharmaceuticals are also coming up!
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Abagworo(m): 10:50pm On Jul 14, 2012
Mr. Globe:

You are a tower of ignorance. Have you been to onitsha before. Can any sane person waste his precious time mentioning things manufactured in onitsha? Breweries, beverages, limca, plastics just name it.

And mention one nationally not even internationally known market in otta. You need to take your ignorance elsewhere

You sound kind of ignorant. You earlier wrote that Nnewi and Onitsha has more industries than Aba and I just mentioned a few popular everyday products we use manufactured in Aba. Let me add to the list. Thermocool, Close up, Imperial leather, 7up, Colgate. These are all verifiable.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Afam4eva(m): 10:53pm On Jul 14, 2012
@Abagoro
At times I marvel at your logic.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by MrGlobe(m): 11:00pm On Jul 14, 2012
Abagworo:

You sound kind of ignorant. You earlier wrote that Nnewi and Onitsha has more industries than Aba and I just mentioned a few popular everyday products we use manufactured in Aba. Let me add to the list. Thermocool, Close up, Imperial leather, 7up, Colgate. These are all verifiable.
These stuff you listed are not manufactured in Aba. lol at thermocool. The companies you listed are just depots not industries. There is a difference between depots and industries. All the products you mentioned and more are also in onitsha. stop fooling yourself with your ignorance

1 Like

Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by billante(m): 11:00pm On Jul 14, 2012
Abagworo:

You sound kind of ignorant. You earlier wrote that Nnewi and Onitsha has more industries than Aba and I just mentioned a few popular everyday products we use manufactured in Aba. Let me add to the list. Thermocool, Close up, Imperial leather, 7up, Colgate. These are all verifiable.

All dis product u have mentioned are not more than 4 factories that are manufacturing them! They are almost from d same company
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Abagworo(m): 11:04pm On Jul 14, 2012
Mr. Globe:

These stuff you listed are not manufactured in Aba. lol at thermocool. The companies you listed are just depots not industries. There is a difference between depots and industries. All the products you mentioned and more are also in onitsha. stop fooling yourself with your ignorance



You need to verify and not use hear say. I have really gone right round all Southeast. You need to do that. None of them is in Onitsha but rather Onitsha traders come to Aba factories to carry them as distributors. just verify from the traders themselves and stop being ignorant.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by MrGlobe(m): 11:16pm On Jul 14, 2012
Abagworo:



You need to verify and not use hear say. I have really gone right round all Southeast. You need to do that. None of them is in Onitsha but rather Onitsha traders come to Aba factories to carry them as distributors. just verify from the traders themselves and stop being ignorant.
You are indeed funny. I don't think any trader in onitsha goes to aba to buy anything. It's only people from Ph that go to aba because of proximity, some even go to onitsha. you need to check the products you listed to see their places of manufacture, I assure you will never see aba. Aba only has depots wait are you even trying to say aba is more commercial or industrialized than onitsha? I will not join you in this stup!dity. That's stup!d to say or think. Like I said, take your ignorance elsewhere
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Abagworo(m): 11:28pm On Jul 14, 2012
Mr. Globe:

You are indeed funny. I don't think any trader in onitsha goes to aba to buy anything. It's only people from Ph that go to aba because of proximity, some even go to onitsha. you need to check the products you listed to see their places of manufacture, I assure you will never see aba. Aba only has depots wait are you even trying to say aba is more commercial or industrialized than onitsha? I will not join you in this stup!dity. That's stup!d to say or think. Like I said, take your ignorance elsewhere

As usual less intelligent people resort to insults rather than facts when arguments reach verifiable stage. Aba is by far the most industrialized in Southeast and one of the top in Nigeria. Onitsha takes commerce.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Nobody: 11:30pm On Jul 14, 2012
THE FUTURE IS KNOWLEDGE BASED GREEN ECONOMY. The building of traditional resource intensive companies does not represent the future.

In emerging economies and developing countries , the gains are likely to be higher than in industrialized countries because the former can leapfrog to green technology rather than replace absolete resource intensive infrastructure.


Green economics requires two profound changes: a decrease in the overall quantity of goods produced; and an increase in democratic decisions concerning production. Market economics can do neither. A market system is incompatible with Green economics.

The Fundamental Goal of Green economics

The cornerstone of Green ecologism is the idea that humans should survive by having the smallest possible effect on other species. The Fundamental Goal should be for humans to improve the quality of their lives simultaneously with decreasing the total quantity of goods produced. Market economics prevents attainment of this Fundamental Goal.

The cornerstone of Green social relationships is empowerment. Greens seek a society where everyone develops their abilities to the greatest extent possible so that the largest number of people can participate in determining our future.

A market economy is inherently domineering dom·i·neer·ing
adj.
Tending to domineer; overbearing.


domi·neer . It is the epitome of people seeking to dominate other people. Markets intensify social divisions and increasingly disempower dis·em·pow·er
tr.v. dis·em·pow·ered, dis·em·pow·er·ing, dis·em·pow·ers
To deprive of power or influence.


dis people.

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A market economy is based on corporations, legal entities that own social wealth and compete with each other for profit. Corporations produce products by purchasing raw material and paying people to work for them. Every corporation has an ultimate goal, a defining characteristic of its existence: to maximize profit. Profit is the one true God of corporations. The market looms over corporations and exterminates any that worship a lesser deity. Its deification of Profit is what renders a market economy inherently anti-ecological and incompatible with empowerment of the oppressed op·press
tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es
1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny.

2. .

Markets vs. nature

Corporations would not be fulfilling their duties to stockholders if they did not maximize profit in every way possible. They may even be liable to lawsuits if they fail to do so.

The first way to increase profits is to increase the quantity of goods produced and sold. The change to a market economy has been characterized by the most massive expansion of production in world history. For several centuries, this seemed to help create the basis necessities of life. But for several decades markets have focused on goods that are useless (Coca Cola Noun 1. Coca Cola - Coca Cola is a trademarked cola
Coke

cola, dope - carbonated drink flavored with extract from kola nuts (`dope' is a southernism in the United States) , genetically engineered genetically engineered adjective Recombinant, see there food), of dubious utility (TV, drugs), designed to fall apart (furniture, appliances, clothes), or designed to become obsolete (cars, computers).

Each corporation is compelled to produce more and more. If it does not, its competitors will produce more and will drive it out of business. Each logging company must rush to clearcut as much as possible. Each fishing company must slaughter ocean life as fast as it can. Each oil company must promote whatever wars it can to exhaust reserves as fast as possible. Markets compel corporations to drain natural resources and destroy entire areas of the earth.

Corporations can also maximize profit by producing as cheaply as possible. This means releasing massive quantities of poisons into the air, on the land, and in water. Poisons such as radiation, lead, mercury, cadmium, chromium, nitrogen oxides, PCBs, furans and dioxins destroy human health and the earth's ecosystems.

We usually think that industrial processes release poisons because it would be more expensive to remove them. It is cheaper to burn coal without capturing mercury, which then goes into the air. But sometimes industry is compelled to use the more-polluting process because it involves more capital investment and therefore presents more opportunity for profit. Incineration incineration

the act of burning to ashes. is more expensive and vastly less effective than less destructive disposal techniques; but it is the corporate preference because the required equipment is a source of profit. There may be no more expensive and poisonous way to produce energy than nuclear power; but it is preferred to solar and wind because, like incineration, its vast equipment offers the opportunity to soak the taxpaying public for more profit.

A Green economy would improve the quality of our lives by producing and consuming less. This would be accomplished by:

1. producing fewer objects that are destructive or useless,

2. producing goods that are designed to last a longer time, and,

3. increasing the production of goods and services In economics, economic output is divided into physical goods and intangible services. Consumption of goods and services is assumed to produce utility (unless the "good" is a "bad"wink. It is often used when referring to a Goods and Services Tax. that are actually necessary.

Green economics would aim to manufacture furniture that would last for centuries. This is key to having a better life with a decrease in production. Simple arithmetic confirms that if clothes were to last 20 years instead of 2 years, you could decrease the quantity of clothes manufactured by 80% and have twice as much clothing available. Multiply this by dozens of categories of goods or thousands of consumer items and total production decreases dramatically.

There is no contradiction between increasing the production of necessary items while decreasing total production. This is accomplished if the decrease in production of useless junk is greater than the increase in the quantity of necessary items. But a shift in the production of necessary items can also decrease production simultaneous with increasing consumption.

Visualize food. The market economy wastes enormous social wealth by (a) encouraging people to eat meat, and (b) developing genetically engineered (GE) crops. Much of GE is for the purpose of animal feed. Production of meat requires an 80-90% loss of protein by converting vegetable protein into animal protein before it is consumed by humans. GE actually involves a decrease in crop yield and is done primarily to help agribusiness agribusiness

Agriculture operated by business; specifically, that part of a modern national economy devoted to the production, processing, and distribution of food and fibre products and byproducts. eliminate small farmers. To the extent that a Green economy was successful in persuading as many people as possible to shift to an organic vegetarian diet, it would:

1. decrease the total quantity of crops produced (largely, but not solely, due to decreasing the need for animal feed);

2. increase the total quantity of healthy food produced;

3. decrease the quantity of road repair and production of machines that do road repair for the purpose of transporting garbage disguised as food;

4. decrease the need for medical care associated with bad food; and,

5. decrease mental health services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract for people with disorders from working unnecessarily long hours.

The food example shows how production can decrease simultaneous with an increase in necessary production and the quality of life. Add to this transportation (reduction of cars), energy (replacement of oil and nukes), buildings, clothes and appliances and the result is an enormous decrease in consumer items that then results in an even greater decrease in production of machines that produce consumer items.

Imagine a world eliminating nuclear power, reducing oil production, and increasing organic food production. Picture a world with furniture designed to last 200 or more years, appliances without electrical crap that breaks every six months, and roofs made of slate instead of asphalt shingles. If you are seeing this in the context of a market economy, try imagining total economic failure and the most massive unemployment the world has ever seen.

Corporate radio, TV and newspapers constantly indoctrinate in·doc·tri·nate
tr.v. in·doc·tri·nat·ed, in·doc·tri·nat·ing, in·doc·tri·nates
1. To instruct in a body of doctrine or principles.

2. us that an increase in consumption is a "bright" economic forecast and the consumption of fewer objects means the economy is having a "downswing down·swing
n.
1. A swing downward, as of a golf club.

2. A decline, as of a business.

Noun 1. downswing - a swing downward of a golf club ." Market economists debate the best way to have an increase in the quantity of consumption but they never debate whether consumption should go

up or down. They share an assumption that producing and consuming more is good because they correctly understand that a large decrease in consumption could cause a market economy to fall apart. While they may want us to believe that a need for an increase in consumption is eternal, it is not. The market system is perhaps the only economic system in history that collapses if there is a large decrease in consumption.

Despite the personal feelings of owners, board members and investors, market competition compels corporations to increase the total quantity of goods and increase the production of poisons. This makes a market economy incompatible with the Fundamental Goal of Green Economics.

Markets vs. democracy

Long before there was widespread concern with corporate destruction of the environment, people realized the extreme dehumanization de·hu·man·ize
tr.v. de·hu·man·ized, de·hu·man·iz·ing, de·hu·man·iz·es
1. To deprive of human qualities such as individuality, compassion, or civility: of their lives brought by corporations. In the 21st century, corporations see environmental destruction as an "externality Externality

A consequence of an economic activity that is experienced by unrelated third parties. An externality can be either positive or negative.

Notes:
Pollution emitted by a factory that spoils the surrounding environment and affects the health of nearby residents is ." That is, if an industrial facility emits mercury while burning coal, it considers problems with mercury poisoning mercury poisoning, tissue damage resulting from exposure to more than trace amounts of the element mercury or its compounds. Elemental mercury (the silver liquid familiar from thermometers) is the most common occupational source.
..... Click the link for more information. to be "external" to production and that the cost to humans and other species should be paid for by those affected or by the government. Environmental organizations side with the victims and argue the costs of poisoning should be "internalized" and paid for by the company committing the crime.

This debate is actually several centuries old. The first unions fought not only for higher wages but for corporations to "internalize internalize

To send a customer order from a brokerage firm to the firm's own specialist or market maker. Internalizing an order allows a broker to share in the profit (spread between the bid and ask) of executing the order. " costs such as workers being injured and killed during production, for health plans and for pensions. Corporations have always viewed these as "external" to production and wished to lower costs by shoving them onto the backs of workers. One way to think of labor and environmental history is as a continuing struggle to prevent externalization The ability to easily connect to and transfer information between business partners. Increasingly, information systems are designed to make their data available to outside partners and customers. This type of collaboration is expected to be a vital part of IT in the 21st century. See EDI. of costs of production.

Though there may be a victory against externalization, it is always temporary. The victory may last 200 years, but it is still temporary--the victory does not affect the structure of market economics but only its current apparition apparition, spiritualistic manifestation of a person or object in which a form not actually present is seen with such intensity that belief in its reality is created. . Unions may have won pension plans, but Profit remains the one true God of the market economy. Every corporation is compelled to worsen the conditions for workers as much as possible in order to lower costs of production and maximize profit. If corporations can lessen wage gains, they will work to eliminate wage gains. If they can stop wages from going up, they will try to make wages go down. If they can make wages go down, they will seek to lengthen length·en
tr. & intr.v. length·ened, length·en·ing, length·ens
To make or become longer.


lengthen·er n. the work week, eliminate pensions and make workers pay for their own injuries on the job.

It makes no difference whether individual corporate board members think that this is nice or that it is not nice. If a corporation does not maximize its profits by attacking its workers as viciously as it can, its competitors will and the market will drive it out of existence.

This unending effort to undermine the livelihood of those who actually produce goods and services is not exactly workplace democracy. It is the antithesis of workplace democracy. And it is required by market economics.

In contrast, Green values require democracy in every aspect of life. Green values require that all people have the right to vote on how to organize their work lives and how to distribute the wealth produced by collective labor. Except for a few rare examples, those who work for corporations leave their democratic rights at the company's door.

Green values of egalitarianism require an economy that distributes social wealth as evenly as possible. This means between genders, between ethnic groups and across the continents. But market economics forces corporations to do the exact opposite. If nineteenth century male secretaries were relatively well paid, and if the changing of secretarial work to a predominantly female occupation could be accompanied by a sharp fall in pay, markets compel the corporation to do so. If corporations can define some work as Black work or Chicano work and get away with paying less or offering no health plan, this is what the market says they must do.

The most extreme difference in working conditions is between the overdeveloped countries and victims of imperialism. Workers in the US and Europe may earn 10 to 100 times as much as their counterparts in Africa, Asia and Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. , largely because of the military machine and extreme national bigotry Bigotry
See also Anti-Semitism.

Beaumanoir, Sir Lucas de

prejudiced ascetic; Grand Master of Templars. [Br. Lit.: Ivanhoe]

Bunker, Archie

middle-aged bigot in television series. which has always been used to maximize profits. Once again, these evils are not because a few wicked men in corporate boardrooms make unfortunate choices. Sexism, racism and national chauvinism chauvinism (shō`vənĭzəm), word derived from the name of Nicolas Chauvin, a soldier of the First French Empire. Used first for a passionate admiration of Napoleon, it now expresses exaggerated and aggressive nationalism. increase because a few wicked men in corporate boardrooms make choices that the market compels them to make.

Just as the Green value of democracy means that people should vote on how work should be organized, a society as a whole should vote on what should be produced. We the people should vote whether we want more cars or more mass transportation systems. We should vote on whether spaceships should be produced and whether food should be genetically contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object. . There is no idea in this essay which is more antithetical an·ti·thet·i·cal also an·ti·thet·ic
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or marked by antithesis.

2. Being in diametrical opposition. See Synonyms at opposite. to market economics than the idea that all of society, rather than a wealthy few, should democratically decide what goods and services they want. In the Religion of the Market, the Grand Invisible Hand Invisible Hand

A term coined by economist Adam Smith in his 1776 book "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations". In his book he states:

"Every individual necessarily labours to render the annual revenue of the society as great as he can. of consumption decides what is produced. And if the pocketbook in some invisible hands is larger than the pocketbook in other hands, so be it.

By preventing citizens from voting on what is produced, market economics is inherently disempowering. You can support Green economics or you can support market economics. Only a mugwump Mugwump

Member of the reform faction of the early Republican Party. In 1884 the Mugwumps refused to support the Republican presidential candidate, James Blaine, whom they considered politically corrupt, and campaigned instead for Democratic nominee Grover Cleveland, whom can claim to support both.

The pet argument

If a market system is so awful, why would any Green ever defend it? Consider the pet argument:

"We're agreed that we will get a pet, but I don't want a cat."

"Then you want to get a dog."

"No, just because I don't want a cat does not mean that we have to get a dog."

"Yes it does. If you don't want a cat that means that you want a dog."

Knowing the wide range of animals to choose from, few would take the above "pet argument" seriously. Unfortunately, it represents the logic of many who support a "Green market economy." The reasoning is that, if we were to say that a market economy was bad, then we would be saying that a state-run Soviet-type economy was good; and, since we know that Stalinism is bad, therefore, some form of capitalism must be at least acceptable.

As far as economic systems go, this makes no more sense than saying that if you claim that feudalism feudalism (fy`dəlĭzəm), form of political and social organization typical of Western Europe from the dissolution of Charlemagne's empire to the rise of the absolute monarchies. is bad then you must be in favor of a slave system. In reality, there are an unlimited number of economic systems that people can design. Greens will not develop an economics of empowerment if their analyses are based on fear that rejecting something which is evil will get them labeled "socialist."

Greens have been willing to challenge sexism by requiring equal representation by women, challenge racism with open support of reparations reparations, payments or other compensation offered as an indemnity for loss or damage. Although the term is used to cover payments made to Holocaust survivors and to Japanese Americans interned during World War II in so-called relocation camps (and used as well to and challenge homophobia homophobia Psychology An irrationally negative attitude toward those with homosexual orientation, or toward becoming homosexual. See Closet, Gay-bashing, Heterosexism. Cf Gay, Homosexual, Phobia. by endorsing gay marriage. Just as Greens participate in social struggles which may be unpopular in a white, male chauvinist male chauvinist
n.
A man whose behavior and attitude toward women indicate a belief that they are innately inferior to men.


male chauvinism n.

Noun 1. society, development of a Green economic theory means that we must be willing to oppose dogmas of corporate ideology.

If not a market economy, then what?

Every society believes that it is the ultimate form of human social organization. And every social system ends up being replaced by another which believes it is the ultimate system. Despite the fantasies of Bill Gates (person) Bill Gates - William Henry Gates III, Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft, which he co-founded in 1975 with Paul Allen. In 1994 Gates is a billionaire, worth $9.35b and Microsoft is worth about $27b. and Donald Trump Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism. that their ilk will reign eternal, the market system will eventually be replaced.

There is a virtually endless list of movements that tried to discover democratic ways to live without markets. A few that jump to mind are the Russian mir Mir, Soviet and Russian space station
Mir, Soviet and Russian space station: see space exploration; space station.mir, former Russian peasant community
mir (mēr), former Russian peasant community. (system of communes), the Paris Commune of 1871, the syndicalists of late nineteenth century Europe, nineteenth century communes in the US, the Wobblies Wobblies: see Industrial Workers of the World.
Wobblies

nickname for I.W.W. members. [Am. Hist.: Hart, 400]

See : Labor , the original Soviets of the 1905 Russian Revolution Russian Revolution, violent upheaval in Russia in 1917 that overthrew the czarist government. Causes


The revolution was the culmination of a long period of repression and unrest. , ejidos arising from the twentieth century Mexican revolution Mexican Revolution

(1910–20) Lengthy struggle that began with the overthrow of Porfirio Díaz, whose elitist and oligarchic policies had caused widespread dissatisfaction. , communes of revolutionary Spain (1936-39), the 1956 Hungarian Revolution Hungarian Revolution

(1956) Popular uprising in Hungary following a speech by Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in which he attacked the period of Joseph Stalin's rule.
..... Click the link for more information., and Chilean tomas during Allende's presidency. There must be countless more that I am not familiar with or that never made their way into Western history books. These all shared a yearning for a society without a dichotomy between the powerful and the powerless. They also existed without awareness of the acute ecological crisis An ecological crisis occurs when the environment of a species or a population changes in a way that destabilizes its continued survival. There are many possible causes of such crises:

*

facing human survival.

Green economic theories must not ignore these social movements This is a partial list of social movements.

* Abahlali baseMjondolo - South African shack dwellers' movement
* Animal rights movement
* Anti-consumerism
* Anti-war movement
* Anti-globalization movement
* Brights movement
* Civil rights movement
*

. True Green economics would begin with the long-held desire to abolish man's domination over humanity and expand it into the goal of abolishing man's domination over nature.

Some small companies such as family restaurants will stay open for a long time. But this is a far cry from multinational corporations


Main article: multinational corporations


* ABB
* ABN-Amro
* Accenture
* Aditya Birla
* Affiliated Computer Services Inc
* Airbus
* Allianz
* Altria Group
* American Express
* Akzo Nobel
* Apple Inc.


..... Click the link for more information. expanding to control every aspect of our lives. A few independent shops are not a market system. A market system means that private corporations are the dominant form of production which determines the direction of the economy.

Many economic formations exist which can be expanded as corporate markets shrink. A few are:

* non-profit corporations;

* government agencies;

* cooperatives which distribute goods and services;

* collectives (people living together but working in separate locations); and,

* communes (people living and working together).

What would increase most rapidly in a Green society could well be economic formations we have not yet imagined but which will be created by those born into a world which strives to eliminate institutionalized in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize
tr.v. in·sti·tu·tion·al·ized, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·ing, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·es
1.
a. To make into, treat as, or give the character of an institution to.

b. domination. While we cannot say what those yet-to-be-conceived Green economic formations will be, we can be clear on what they will not be: they will not require people to serve feudal lords, they will not allow slavery, and they will not be based on market economics.

Don Fitz is an editor of Synthesis/Regeneration, is on the Green National Committee of the Green Party USA, is Outreach Coordinator for the Missouri Green Party, produces Green Time TV in St. Louis, and edits the Compost-Dispatch for the Green Party of St. Louis.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by dayokanu(m): 11:31pm On Jul 14, 2012
Mr. Globe:

lol.. I saw that too but decided to face the topic. Detroit is the capital of Michigan, Los Angeles for California, Chicago for Illinois and others but lets leave his ignorance and face his massage tho

You have brought your illiteracy to the internet again. Instead of staying in your Masters shop and watching out for customers you are posting on the web

Capital of Michigan is Lansing, Capital of California is Sacramento, Capital of Illinois is Springfield and Capital of Texas is Austin

Go to school and learn not coming here to spew akpu trash
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by ijcu(m): 11:38pm On Jul 14, 2012
this really is funny , Nnewi with the largest motorcycle mafket and innoson automobile company is not considered 'commercial enuff' , dat is just pathetic . . .
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by chucky234(m): 11:39pm On Jul 14, 2012
jbaur24: The cup goes to the following three cities:

Lagos: Island/ Victoria

Onitsha

Kano

Industries on Lagos Island? I'm lost here,or is it my thinking.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by ice234: 11:58pm On Jul 14, 2012
Mr globe... So sorry for you... U getting it all missed up. I reside in PH. Onitsha is more of a market than a manufacturing centre. Aba and Nnewi is more of a manufacturing centre than a market. You don't see made in aba due to the stigma attached but believe me most things on you is aba made. Please so far my journey in Nigeria there isn't a manufacturing center as Aba and Nnewi so stop calling Warri and the likes cos I grew up in Warri.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by tpia5: 12:01am On Jul 15, 2012
I would love to see cities assuming the status of silicon valley of Nig., the Detriot of Nig., Las vagas of Nig. etc

replace "cities" with "towns' and for silicon valley, substitute yahoo yahoo valley/s.

then you'll have a clearer picture.

detroit is currently a depressed area, so where do you compare that to? Most of nigeria has been in a similar state for a long time.

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Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by chucky234(m): 12:04am On Jul 15, 2012
Why is it hard for people to understand simple English,OP said industrialized and commercialized cities yet people mention Agbara as a commercialized city.
A in my book will only qualify as a village and not even an industrial town as many people claimed because Agbara far short of development and standard infrastructures like good road network,water supply and urban town planning.
Agbara and some of the villages people mentioned above can never pass for cities not to mention industrialized and commercialized cities.

In my opinion I choose the following as industrial and commercialized cities:
Lagos: ikeja,Apapa,Victoria Island and Isolo
Onitsha
Aba

Industrial towns (not commercialized):
Ota
Warri
Sapele
Okene
Bony
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by chucky234(m): 12:09am On Jul 15, 2012
Why is it hard for people to understand simple English,OP said industrialized and commercialized cities yet people mention Agbara as a commercialized city.
A in my book will only qualify as a village and not even an industrial town as many people claimed because Agbara is far short of development and standard infrastructures that qualifies a town or city like good road network,water supply and urban town planning.
Agbara and some of the villages people mentioned above can never pass for cities not to mention industrialized and commercialized cities.

In my opinion I choose the following as industrial and commercialized cities:

Lagos: ikeja,Apapa,Victoria Island and Isolo
Onitsha
Aba
Nnewi

Industrial towns (not commercialized):
Ota
Warri
Sapele
Okene
Bony
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by micath09(m): 1:04am On Jul 15, 2012
Mr. Globe Sacramento is California's capital and Springfield is Illinois capital as a point of correction.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by eaglechild: 4:50am On Jul 15, 2012
Mr Globe, i thought u had internet connectivity.
It takes little to nothing to look up simple facts like state capitals.
It very irritating for u to come and start bashing someone for being ignorant based on your decerebrate assumptions when u are the one that is actually wallowing in ignorance.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by MrGlobe(m): 6:53am On Jul 15, 2012
dayokanu:

You have brought your illiteracy to the internet again. Instead of staying in your Masters shop and watching out for customers you are posting on the web

Capital of Michigan is Lansing, Capital of California is Sacramento, Capital of Illinois is Springfield and Capital of Texas is Austin

Go to school and learn not coming here to spew akpu trash
mumu like you. I got some of them mixed up but Detroit was formerly the capital of Michigan and is still considered as such. I don't live in those cities and could care less. for you insults let me give you an assignment. Check out my signature. grin grin grin grin
bloody yahoo boy.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Tolexander: 6:55am On Jul 15, 2012
Jarus: Apart from the already mentioned like Onitsha, Aba, Zaria etc let me add:

Ijebu Ode
Ogbomoso
Ilesa
Ile-Ife
Okene
ogbomoso, ile-ife? Wat industry do u think we are talkin about here, akara and block industries? Though ilesha stil has a brewry in omi asoro.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Tolexander: 7:13am On Jul 15, 2012
oseiwe: The OP original post looks funny.
*in United States a good number of developed cities are non_state capital eg Lose Angelese, Chicago, las Vegas, Hollywood, Detriots,Houstin, Miami, San Fransisco*
Apart from Hollywood, d other names r state capitals na. Hollywood is not even commercialised or industrialised sef, just a residential suburb. Just like the second poster wrote; he should go back to school.
mr man, stop publicizin ignorance. They are all non state capital cities.
Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Tolexander: 7:23am On Jul 15, 2012
Mr. Globe:

You are a tower of ignorance. Have you been to onitsha before. Can any sane person waste his precious time mentioning things manufactured in onitsha? Breweries, beverages, limca, plastics just name it.

And mention one nationally not even internationally known market in otta. You need to take your ignorance elsewhere
[quote
Mr. Globe:

mumu like you. I got some of them mixed up but Detroit was formerly the capital of Michigan and is still considered as such. I don't live in those cities and could care less. for you insults let me give you an assignment. Check out my signature. grin grin grin grin
bloody yahoo boy.
es. u are the everest of ignorance. Wonderin if u are the US president dt assigned those US cities as capital to those states! Imagine u. Mr dayokanu, an elder stateman here is correcting u and trying to despise it. U got everything wrong not gettin dm mixed up. He who knows not and knows not that he knows not? Up to u to complete.

1 Like

Re: The Most Commercialized/industrialized Non-capital Cities In Nigeria by Icon4s(m): 7:23am On Jul 15, 2012
eaglechild: Mr Globe, i thought u had internet connectivity.
It takes little to nothing to look up simple facts like state capitals.
It very irritating for u to come and start bashing someone for being ignorant based on your decerebrate assumptions when u are the one that is actually wallowing in ignorance.
Chai! Mr Globe don hearam.lol. To the topic: Reading thru d topic d author never defined industrialization as Manufacturing only. The leading industries in Nigeria today are the Oil, Telecom & Banking! Our Manufacturing industry is struggling. He also said Commercialised which is buyin & Selling or exchange of goods & Services. And remember he said non-state Capitals as well. The City that fits this descriptn is Lagos(Island, Mainland, VI).Lagos has the HQ of most Oil Companies both Services and E & P, Most Telecom HQ are in Lagos, most Banking HQ ar in Lagos. Lagos has some of the largest markets in d country: Balogun, Oke-Arin, Idumota etc. The number of manufacturing industries on Lagos Mainland: Nigerian Breweries, Nigerian Bottling company, Guinness,7UP, Nestle, Dangote group, Honeywell,Flourmills, Pharmceuticals etc. put together exceed those of any other City in Nigeria. Checkout Ilupeju industrial estate, Isola Axis, Iganmu industrial estate, Apapa even d Agbara & Ota u pple have been shouting are jst spill overs from Lagos.

1 Like

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