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Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” - Politics (2) - Nairaland

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Nobody: 10:04am On Aug 06, 2013
52. In the land of mumus.Mumus waste their time on mumuland to argue and bash other mumus instead of fighting for their rights in reality grin

9 Likes

Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by madanne4real: 10:05am On Aug 06, 2013
The masked phenomenon known simply as Lagbaja is one of the few Nigerian musicians whose art is inspired by the late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. In keeping with the Felaian spirit, Lagbaja’s act and art combine prodigious, heart-thumping entertainment with a political message that, at its eloquent best, has the powerful effect of summing up the Nigerian “condition.”

Fela, for example, flung the word “zombie” in our faces. In the heydays of military rule, when our uniformed men exhibited the complex of mini, mindless gods – flinging the lash at hapless civilians or shooting at the slightest provocation – Fela’s term captured that syndrome of senseless, rampaging power. The way Fela deployed the word was deeply penetrating. “Zombie” entered Nigerians’ social lexicon, a handy word for all battered or potentially battered subjects of military despotism. The word entrenched itself as the most natural way to describe the military honchos who ruled (and ruined) us. It also described the antics of the uniformed minions who – forgetting that they were victims of misrule – seemed ever willing to keep the rest of us in line, to still voices of dissent, to serve any regime with rabid, ferocious efficiency.

Fela also gave us “ITT,” deconstructing the name of an international telecommunications corporation headed by the late Moshood Kashimawo Abiola to yield a new term: “International Thief Thief.” His song, “Beast of No Nation,” proclaimed the collective bastardry of the Nigerian society just as his “Overtake Don Overtake Overtake” (ODOO) is a shorthand for anomie.

Today, it is Lagbaja, I suggest, who has offered us the handiest name for our collective malady. In a recent song that should become as much an anthem as Fela’s “Zombie,” Lagbaja famously calls Nigerians 200 million mumu. The word mumu is a quintessentially Nigerian word, its rich inflections and negative connotations derived from its pedigree. It translates (rather prosaically) as a fool, a buffoon, a person susceptible to scams and other forms of trickery.

In the lyrics, Lagbaja names some of the big men who have shaped – that is to say, misshaped – Nigeria: Ibrahim Babangida, Sani Abacha, and Olusegun Obasanjo. But there’s an unusual, jolting twist in the song. As the listener settles to it, expecting to hear the familiar “yabis” – words of insults usually lobbed at the country’s past and present misrulers – Lagbaja turns his barbed tongue on the so-called “ordinary” Nigerian, the “followers.” In his worldview, all Nigerians are part and parcel of the fabric of corruption and oppression that the unfortunate among us bemoan.

In Chinua Achebe’s fourth novel, A Man of the People, one of the characters earns a chilly, censorious look when he teases the ill-educated, prototypically corrupt politician, Chief M.A. Nanga, with an old joke: “MA, minus opportunity.” Lagbaja uses a similar linguistic move on all of us. Nigerians, all of us, are corrupt – he seems to say – minus opportunity. At any rate, Lagbaja sees the lot us as mumu, collaborators in our own oppression and debasement, architects of our collective misfortune.

At first glance, Lagbaja’s would appear to be a harsh, excessive and even misplaced indictment. But it’s hard to deny that there’s a vital sense in which the musician is right on target. In fact, it’s impossible to undertake any retrospective of events in Nigeria without coming to the conclusion that too many Nigerians act as fertilizers for the malaise that plagues and wrecks their lives.

Let’s take some of the recent events from the past week or two.

We’ve watched – some riveted with peculiar glee – as politicians from Rivers State darted onto the stage to offer us a veritable theater of the absurd. In an act of particular impunity, four or five members of the state assembly attempted to stage a spurious impeachment of the speaker and to replace him with one of their number. Backed by powerful politicians in Abuja (including, some suggest, President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife), these legislative renegades were prepared to act on the proposition that they outnumbered 27 or so other lawmakers loyal to the speaker they sought to remove.

A physical fight ensued to settle this sordid, “political” arithmetic. In the melee, one legislator seized a make-shift mace imported by the Abuja-backed renegades and used it to batter a colleague, Michael Chinda – a member of the Abuja Collective. Numerous videos of the fracas have gone viral on youtube. In them, we see so-called lawmakers who should have been on Nigeria’s boxing team at the London Olympics. We see the police at their inefficient worst, unable to control a rowdy gathering of thuggish legislators and their hired thugs. We see one of the lawmakers ready to kill or die because the state governor, Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, had insulted his “mother,” aka Patience Jonathan, aka (the fuming pugilist’s) “Jesus Christ on earth.”

I wrote a few weeks ago that there was no substantive principle at play in the political crisis in Rivers State – or in any location in Nigeria, for that matter. It’s all a game about who gets to steal the most from the commonwealth and who gets to rape the people. Neither faction in the dispute is actuated by the public good. Power, the acquisition of raw power for self-aggrandizement, is the governing motivation.

If Mrs. Jonathan now functions as divinity, a “Jesus Christ on earth,” then her husband, who fancies himself a “transformational leader,” must occupy a special seat in any gathering of leaders, dwarfing such figures as Barack Obama, David Cameron, Angela Merkel, and Paul Kagame. Yet, the terribly injured Chinda could find no hospital within the precincts redeemed by Mrs. Jonathan and transformed by her husband for treatment. Instead, it was to Mr. Cameron’s Britain that the battered Chinda was flown for urgent surgery.

Here’s a safe bet: Mr. Chinda is not spending a penny of his money to pay his bills at the Bupa Cromwell Hospital in Britain. There’s a chance that the hospital demanded and received full payment before commencing treatment. At any rate, those bills will be paid with public funds, most likely provided by his sponsors in Abuja.

The arrangement makes a mumu of all of us who accept this daylight abuse of public resources. Nigerian lawmakers, state as well as national, are paid obscene sums of money. Yet, they hardly ever use the instrument of the law to address the crises that menace the lives of Nigerians – including a non-existent healthcare system. Instead, they gallivant, carouse, undertake meaningless jamborees in Nigeria and abroad, and – when it suits them – take to boxing. They hardly work, but when they fall sick, they travel to such addresses as Britain, Germany, South Africa and India where people work hard and use their brain power.

As if Chinda’s transfer to a British hospital was not wasteful enough, last week a group of his backers, including a junior minister, Nyesom Wike, flew to London to commiserate with him. The odds are excellent that the government in Abuja paid for the flight tickets and hotel accommodation of the five or so well-wishers – to say nothing of spending cash. Mr. Wike and his team must not know how ludicrous they appear to their British hosts; they have no idea how the British would use them as the butt of jokes: Here are these Africans who have too much money but not a bit of sense to do anything for themselves!

It’s an altogether awful picture. I doubt that Mr. Chinda has sponsored a single bill that improved the lives of the people of Rivers State by a jot. Instead, he lent himself as a stooge to carry out the designs of those in power in Abuja, determined to lay waste to his state. He is injured serving this despicable agenda. And then Nigerians, including the hapless people of his home state, must pay the tab for his treatment in London. A statement released by Mr. Wike’s team underscored the ridiculousness of it all. It began: “Prominent leaders of Rivers State from across political and professional divides on Saturday visited the member representing Obio/Akpor State Constituency 2 at the Bupa Cromwell Hospital in London, United Kingdom, where the legislator is recuperating from head and jaw surgeries carried out on him by medical experts in the health facility.” Then it stated that “the leaders were grateful to God for the survival of Hon. Michael Chinda despite the vicious knocks he received from the mace-wielding Majority Leader of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Mr. Chidi Lloyd.”

These parasites, shameless consumers of other people’s products and enterprise, are the kind of characters who pass for “leaders” in Nigeria. There are also figures like Ango Abdullahi, a saber rattling jingoist who insists that Nigeria’s presidency must be turned over to a “northerner” or there will be mayhem. Even though Mr. Abdullahi wears the prefix of professor, he doesn’t evince any interest in stellar leadership. It suffices for him that somebody from the so-called North – any “northerner,” however mediocre or visionless – assume the presidential office.

It all boils down to clownishness. I’m with Lagbaja: the fact that the vast majority from all parts of Nigeria permit certifiable clowns to pollute and deform our lives makes us 200 million mumu inhabiting a perfect mumudom!

16 Likes

Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Wsdm: 10:05am On Aug 06, 2013
homesteady: Let us continue the write-up
46) In the land of mumu, where citizens are deported in their own country
47) In the land of mumu, where one man imposes his family members on a whole state
48) To be continued
What is all these? How about the part he blast the ACN governors for using tax payer's money to visit Ameachi? All he has said is the fact which we all know. So i am sorry for most of us that trivierlise everything.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Nobody: 10:06am On Aug 06, 2013
Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make. I guess Lagbaja's music is not selling that he has time to nag online.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Tonitelli: 10:06am On Aug 06, 2013
Kai!!!!we be mumu for this country!!!!**covers head in shame and makes for the nearest toilet****
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by mooregan(m): 10:06am On Aug 06, 2013
Mumu people reading an un-mumu write up by a mumu of mumudom in the Federal republic of Mumuria.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by unmask: 10:08am On Aug 06, 2013
And like the mumus lagbaja has described some people would start to play the religion and tribal card.... Well good luck to you guys.... I am off to Ghana... I need to charge my phone

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by NIGHTFOX: 10:09am On Aug 06, 2013
Y didn't d mumu write about the igbo's dat were deported in there own country? Mak him pack well abeg....

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by baduks(m): 10:09am On Aug 06, 2013
People still typing rubbish on this page....."the e no concern me" attitude"
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by shalmen: 10:09am On Aug 06, 2013
Paroman: damn too long!
after what any mumu would have thought was a very
sobering write up by lagbaja, an idiotic mumu like paroman
would've enough shame to be reflective. but no "it's too long" he says
mumu!

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Tonitelli: 10:10am On Aug 06, 2013
Billyonaire: Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make. I guess Lagbaja's music is not selling that he has time to nag online.

Stfu mumu!!!the guy has nagged out more sense than you ever have in your miserable life of existence on nairaland and beyond!!!we are here talking abt issues of importance you are comparing record sales......following wizkid at your age..u need deliverance!!!ode!!!

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by MrAboki: 10:11am On Aug 06, 2013
Kai!!

This guy done finish us...

Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by abacus(m): 10:12am On Aug 06, 2013
Our mumu no get part 2.

"We forgive the killers of our best staffs, we'll not revenge. God will revenge for us"
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by baduks(m): 10:13am On Aug 06, 2013
Billyonaire: Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make. I guess Lagbaja's music is not selling that he has time to nag online.

Really!!!!! how can you make such comparison?

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by unmask: 10:13am On Aug 06, 2013
Billyonaire: Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make. I guess Lagbaja's music is not selling that he has time to nag online.
well I guess u can say that...... the only problem I have with the write up is that lagbaja failed to point out pple like you a.k.a higher mumus

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by chatterly: 10:13am On Aug 06, 2013
MUMUCRACY BEING PRACTICED MUMUARIA(MUMU-AREA)
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by anonimi: 10:13am On Aug 06, 2013
Billyonaire: Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make. I guess Lagbaja's music is not selling that he has time to nag online.

Any need for more evidence of "e nor concern me" mumuism
It boils down to how much money one INDIVIDUAL has to do the i-better-pass-my neighbour.

BTW, how did you conclude that Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make

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Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by omenka(m): 10:14am On Aug 06, 2013
Here we go again. This piece ought to stair up deep reflection in our minds as to the sorry state of our nation. Yet just as expected, some people want to turn the thread into another ethnic bashing fiesta! A nation of retaards run by halfwits. God help us.

2 Likes

Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Nobody: 10:14am On Aug 06, 2013
Wow, this is like the BOMB. THUMBS Up SIR!
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by aspabay(m): 10:14am On Aug 06, 2013
Let those who agree with Lagbaja say "I", those against say Nay...
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Gideon1010(m): 10:15am On Aug 06, 2013
Na waoo, overload!, Only God knws?.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Nobody: 10:16am On Aug 06, 2013
The suffering and smiling attitude of most Nigerians is one of the major symptom of Mumulization.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Nobody: 10:17am On Aug 06, 2013
Billyonaire: Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make. I guess Lagbaja's music is not selling that he has time to nag online.
I dae shame for ur family.

6 Likes

Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by VALIDATOR: 10:19am On Aug 06, 2013
Excellent writeup. Deep.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by deols(f): 10:21am On Aug 06, 2013
And many mumus here are fighting on tribal grounds.


Veiled political tools causing division while their pay masters are dining behind closed doors.

May God save you from your MUMuRITy
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by ba7man(m): 10:22am On Aug 06, 2013
Billyonaire: Wizkid has made more money than Lagbaja will ever make. I guess Lagbaja's music is not selling that he has time to nag online.
At least, he's one of the few Nigerians saying the truth.....Except you can't identify the truth even when its in your face.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Wsdm: 10:24am On Aug 06, 2013
omenka: Here we go again. This piece ought to stair up deep reflection in our minds as to the sorry state of our nation. Yet just as expected, some people want to turn the thread into another ethnic bashing fiesta! A nation of retaards run by halfwits. God help us.
Where ever the head( Jonathan) and its parts( his attack dogs) follows that is were the entire body( the 'mumus') will follow. When ever we are lucky to have a good head, the entire citizens will begin to think right.
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by Nobody: 10:24am On Aug 06, 2013
in mumudom this article will ‎​be read by thosands of Mumus we will leave the message, attack the messenger, and soon we will start what we are very good @; verbally attacking each other while the rulers we should ‎​be attacking are busy milking us dry.

1 Like

Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by abacus(m): 10:28am On Aug 06, 2013
zonaking: This man must be the father of Mumu land! If your environs is percieved as mumu kingdom,pls count Nigeria out of it. Your type is the reason why the contry remain its sorry state! Sabo! Your only telling us the problem has affected amechi without seeing the other side of Amechi. Infact this president is the most kindest presdo Nig will ever produce! Mark my word. If we were to reverse power between GEJ and Amechi,I wonder wia GEJ wud ve been Now! You only saw a new mace but what become of said new mace is unknown to you-mumu! Amechi dt suspended local govt, chairmen becus they attend his function some minutes behind schedule.I neither support Amachi nor GEJ buh wat am saying is "if you don't like bitter leaf soup don't serve it to others as a must take soup"

Mumu write your own na.. you are the very mumu we are talking about.

3 Likes

Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by rill: 10:28am On Aug 06, 2013
Chill, u guys actually read all that
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by homesteady(m): 10:29am On Aug 06, 2013
Abeg I no dy part of una mumurity oh!
Re: Lagbaja Responds To Okey Ndibe On “mumudom” by moscobabs(m): 10:31am On Aug 06, 2013
Last but not the least ..In the mumudous some mumu will still have time to post some mumu comments and they forget that they are referring to mumus in that mumu topic ooo

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