by Ayk Fowosire
Recently I witnessed why we, a great nation in
Wonderland; a corrupt nation at heart; and a weakling in reality, continually
blaming more serious nations for our inadequacies and military deficiencies,
cannot but be right where we are: aimless, voiceless, dying... our legislators
collecting exorbitant salaries; our executives looting our treasury, and
complicit in the evanescence of our oil; and our Naira falling, in need of 0.5%
of the crooks' take-home pay to stabilise itself, and yet not likely to get it.
For some things do happen ONLY in Nigeria: It is
only in Nigeria that a whole ship disappears with oil despite the existence of
the Navy, NIMASA, Intelligence services, et al! It is only in Nigeria that BH
gets rescued and the military advancement gets scuttled each time we are going
to win the war. It is only in Nigeria that our sovereignty is dependent on the
US, and her aid– if you ignore Israel, Germany, and, lately, France, that is...
First Ebola vaccine, then military weaponry. Why can't we be self-sufficient in
the latter as we were in the former?
We are anti-truth... We are afraid to
die for what we believe in, if at all we believe in anything... We are
hypocrites criticising others for a trait we all bear, an act we all wear, a
flaw we all share... And what is worse? We are not even bothered!
Recently i saw how a class that will not
agree to appoint a leader quickly resorts to begging the unwanted one once the
villain shows promise of winning. No, they must have the lesser of two evils,
if at all they must have evil. It did not matter if the villain could do the
job, and do it well. It did not matter if a willing hand was better than a
forced mind. It did not matter that they all refused to pick the gauntlet. The
villain just must not be appointed, shikenah! Alas, they did not need a hero to
rally about, they could do as much rallying against a villain. The point is to rally, after all, and we do that
quite well, don't we?
Quite the same way we have rallied to
Buhari despite the uncertainties, despite the insecurities, despite the
undeniable flaws... Despite his figure-head past, anti-freedom policies, pro-BH
stance. We just must have the (seemingly) lesser of two evils, even if we will
yet pay for it.
Recently I saw how a hundred and fifty persons could
not organize themselves in credible affiliations to appoint competent
officials. How then does one expect sanity in the democracy of a hundred and
fifty million? How? If a hundred and fifty people cannot vote for the most
competent as the most eligible, if they mistake congeniality for competence,
and loyalty for productivity. If they will not speak the truth and be damned.
If Jonathan can be called clueless, liar, thief; but
not their president. Oh, their president is a sacred cow, we must not attack
his personality, we must not bring him to book; he must not explain why he was
firm on the one hand and slack on the other, why stealing is not corruption,
and contemptible enough to warrant his dismissal at the polls. Oh, I too am attacking
his personality, I s'pose... I better stop.
It doesn't matter whether he is innocent
or guilty, if he is acquittable or culpable, if he actually is unfit for
presidency: he has washed the right feet, worshipped the right knees, rubbed
the right palms; he has consulted the right wazoo, he must win– his
inadequacies not withstanding. Àbí no be so una dey do? Vote the highest
bidder, the most rice, the more kerosene, and not necessary his integrity and
competence, passion and compassion!
If there is any position where personality, personal
values, and judgement are inextricable, it is the presidency. I want to be sure
that my president is of sound mind, that he is trustworthy, that he is
reliable; that he will not call kettle pot, or spade, shovel. Yes, he has to
pay attention even to such minute details. And if in such thorough
cross-examination I attack his personality, then I better be so damned.
Luckily, I cannot have more enemies as it is, since they have said I have no
friends (among them)!
And this is, as they said I would write, "the
class I lead".
We may vote Buhari. We may vote Tambuwal. We may
vote Jonathan. But until we change our attitude to truth (and death) as a
nation of hypocrites, we remain the suffering masses that we always have been.
We remain the prime villain of our own story. Even as none of our politicians
is a hero in the true sense of the word.
They are politicians, navigating the tides, doing
what is best for themselves, installing their kin, and securing our allegiance
at all cost– since we are yet for sale, and our price his hypocrisy.
Ayk Fowosire
@adelayok
No comments:
Post a Comment