Language
English
عربي
Tiếng Việt
русский
français
español
日本語
한글
Deutsch
हिन्दी
简体中文
繁體中文
API
Home
How To Use
Language
English
عربي
Tiếng Việt
русский
français
español
日本語
한글
Deutsch
हिन्दी
简体中文
繁體中文
Home
Detail
@clareandchessa: I have questions
Clare & Chessa
Open In TikTok:
Region: US
Monday 04 May 2026 05:06:32 GMT
2087
43
1
1
Music
Download
No Watermark .mp4 (
2.39MB
)
No Watermark(HD) .mp4 (
1.14MB
)
Watermark .mp4 (
1.91MB
)
Music .mp3
Comments
🌈mau🇨🇦 :
that's called marketing seo 🤏🤏🤏
2026-05-23 14:30:30
0
To see more videos from user @clareandchessa, please go to the Tikwm homepage.
Other Videos
#elbruso
😫লাইক ছাড়া ভিউ বেশি😩 #bangladesh #vairalvideo #foryou #foryoupage❤️❤️
Not giving af*** is better than revenge #fyp #finetunez #donahlyrics #faimlyrics🎶🖊️ #viralvideo
#ghait_houcine #LearnOnTikTok #EduTok #tiktoktutorial
On that June afternoon in 1981, President Milton Obote stood before Parliament to confront the economic abyss. The Uganda he addressed was still reeling from a decade of catastrophic disintegration—eighteen months earlier, the country had whipsawed through Amin, Lule, and Binaisa in a frantic scramble for order. Inflation was rampant, the black market had devoured legitimate commerce, and the nation's infrastructure lay in ruins. Obote offered no gentle reassurance. "Uganda is economically sick," he told the packed chamber, "and the economy needs major surgery." The patient was on the table, and the scalpel was in his hand. The audience before him was a volatile mixture of democratic formality and military reality. Speaker Francis Butagira, a Harvard-trained lawyer from Mbarara, presided with constitutional calm. Nearby sat Vice President Paulo Muwanga, the quiet architect of Obote's disputed electoral victory. In uniform, the Okello Generals—Tito Okello, commander of the UNLA, and Bazilio Olara-Okello—watched with the silent weight of men whose loyalty was already being tested by regime factionalism. Obote began with promises of renewal: salt projects, cement factories, textile mills, water schemes. But the chamber sensed he was building toward something larger. The cabinet sat in neat rows, but power was not seated in the seating plan. Then Obote delivered the first tremor. The official exchange rate of 7.08 shillings to the US dollar would no longer be paid. He paused, timing impeccable, and the chamber burst into laughter—a nervous release from men who understood the old system was finished. But he had not yet reached the true explosive core. He let the mirth settle, then continued deliberately: the shilling would be allowed to find its own level in exchange for foreign currencies. The laughter died. A profound silence descended, broken only by a few stunned whispers from the back benches. The currency would no longer be commanded; it would be set free to find its own value. The President explained, with the calm precision of a surgeon describing an incision, that foreign exchange would now be sold freely on the money market, dictated solely by supply and demand—a radical leap into the orthodoxy demanded by the IMF and World Bank. The room erupted again, but this was a different laughter, incredulous and tense. Obote observed the chaos, removed his reading spectacles, and smiled. "BEER," he declared, naming one of the few exceptions, and the tension shattered into genuine hilarity. Then his face grew solemn. "Just like a human body," he told the silent chamber, "Uganda needed surgery." The economic operation had begun, but the political body they inhabited had already developed its own fatal hemorrhage. The surgeon had made his incision, but the patient was already bleeding from wounds no scalpel could reach. #Ughistory #ugandatiktok #Obote @Parliament of Uganda
#fyp #yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy #الشعب_الصيني_ماله_حل😂😂
About
Robot
API
Legal
Privacy Policy