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An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi - Politics - Nairaland

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An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Julivas(m): 10:31pm On Nov 13, 2017
Dear Osita:
I must congratulate you for an exhilarating debate performance yesterday. You shone like a million bright stars. Such was your brio that we should not even be here today discussing the possibility of your winning the forthcoming election. It should be a no-brainer, a foregone conclusion. However, we have to face the grim fact that we are dealing with a tragedy called Nigeria, which makes your brilliance and exceptional qualities an electoral liability.
On the stage with you yesterday was an incumbent whose incoherence and dullness would be tragic if he had not already governed for four years. Another competitor, the APC candidate, is determined to build “portable roads”. The others are as forgettable, as dour and tragically uninspiring as these two. In other words, your competitors are precisely the sort of leadership material that Nigeria has embraced since independence for Nigeria, by definition, is a way of either doing things wrongly or leaving things undone.
This tragic irony notwithstanding, you should be the next Governor of Anambra state. I am rooting for you and so are thousands of Anambrarians and non-Anambrarians. Your candidacy is becoming the symbolic expression of a nationwide deep-seated yearning for paradigm shift. And this is where I begin to fear. This is why I wanted to check with you to make sure that you have done enough soul-searching to understand what is truly at stake.
You hit all the right notes yesterday but you operated essentially at the level of platitudes, albeit brilliant platitudes. Now, to the heavy conceptual lifting. I will ask you a question to help deepen your awareness of the stakes as the election closes in. Have you accepted the fact that you could be a one-term Governor? No candidate for public office, who isn’t ready to accept the real possibility of a single term or even of impeachment, can be the truly revolutionary reformer that Nigeria needs at this important moment.
What you are proposing to change, fundamentally, is a national culture built on a status quo foundation of corruption and rottenness. This culture of corrupt dysfunction inheres in every state and every LGA in Nigeria. It is entrenched. It is deadly. Every Nigerian within it benefits from it. Every Nigerian without it lives wholly and exclusively in anticipation of integration into that political economy of corruption and rottenness. The Nigerian screaming and yearning for change hopes that this change would happen only after he has benefited maximally from the rot. In other words, within or without, no Nigerian truly determines a radical, fundamental shift in the system.
These Nigerians will fight you to a standstill once they detect that you are a Governor who “does not understand”. They will ensure that you do not get a second term. They will try to correct the mistake. Are you prepared for this? Are you prepared to damn the consequences, run the risk of being a one-term Governor and spend four years draining the gutters, the pit latrines and the “soakaways” no matter whose ox is gored?
Let me break it down for you. Your townspeople will own you and your mandate in a Nigerian manner that is at variance with modern practices of democracy. Their son is now the state Governor. It is their turn to eat. The Igwe of your town and his council of elders will immediately start to make representations to you. They will expect you to establish a brand new state University in your hometown within one year of your mandate. They will expect appointments – whether their candidates deserve it or not. They will expect “dividends of democracy such as are befitting the hometown of a Governor". Are you prepared to spend the next four years blowing grammar and explaining the evils of nepotism to your Igwe, his council of elders, and your townspeople?
If you cannot do this, you cannot rise up to your promise as a revolutionary reformer. Yet, going against the semantic portents of “it is our turn to eat” means alienation from your people, from your immediate family, from your extended family, from the status quo. Are you prepared for this? This is a question President Buhari never really asked himself when he offered to serve. His failure began when he failed this fundamental Nigerian challenge and bowed to the demons of nepotism and parochialism.
Also, look at Rochas Okorocha in Imo. His most glaring failure is not in the morbid imbecility which has reduced him to wasting public funds on statues. His failure started from his inability to say no to nepotism and the personalization of public office for himself and his family.
The same pressures will descend ferociously on you. If you cannot say no to your brothers and sisters and your kinsmen, to special interests and the status quo, you will slip into the status quo you promised to change. If you say no, you will be alienated and you will run the real risk of being a one-timer. Have you thought about these things?
You are not the first promising kid on the block. Dimeji Bankole was 37-years-old when he became Nigeria’s No.3 citizen. Brilliant, cosmopolitan, eloquent. Just like you. He has entered the history books as a colossal failure. There have been other “youths” like you and Dimeji. As state governors, Ministers, Senators or political appointees, they have virtually all failed. Every one of them was consumed by the status quo because they never really gave a thought to this one question I have asked you.
Again, whoever is not prepared to risk a single term or impeachment can never change Nigeria.
If you are not prepared for this risk, you will never change Anambra. You will deceive yourself that you will go easy and rush through your reforms after having secured a second term.
Many have gone that way. Once you lose your bearing within the first two years and become status quo, you never recover. Please give a thought to these things and strengthen your resolve to damn every consequence and bring light to Anambra.

7 Likes

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Built2last: 10:35pm On Nov 13, 2017
Free and fair . Obaze Oseloka or Osita Chidoka will win.

4 Likes

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by cremedelacreme: 10:39pm On Nov 13, 2017
Julivas:
Dear Osita:
I must congratulate you for an exhilarating debate performance yesterday. You shone like a million bright stars. Such was your brio that we should not even be here today discussing the possibility of your winning the forthcoming election. It should be a no-brainer, a foregone conclusion. However, we have to face the grim fact that we are dealing with a tragedy called Nigeria, which makes your brilliance and exceptional qualities an electoral liability.
On the stage with you yesterday was an incumbent whose incoherence and dullness would be tragic if he had not already governed for four years. Another competitor, the APC candidate, is determined to build “portable roads”. The others are as forgettable, as dour and tragically uninspiring as these two. In other words, your competitors are precisely the sort of leadership material that Nigeria has embraced since independence for Nigeria, by definition, is a way of either doing things wrongly or leaving things undone.
This tragic irony notwithstanding, you should be the next Governor of Anambra state. I am rooting for you and so are thousands of Anambrarians and non-Anambrarians. Your candidacy is becoming the symbolic expression of a nationwide deep-seated yearning for paradigm shift. And this is where I begin to fear. This is why I wanted to check with you to make sure that you have done enough soul-searching to understand what is truly at stake.
You hit all the right notes yesterday but you operated essentially at the level of platitudes, albeit brilliant platitudes. Now, to the heavy conceptual lifting. I will ask you a question to help deepen your awareness of the stakes as the election closes in. Have you accepted the fact that you could be a one-term Governor? No candidate for public office, who isn’t ready to accept the real possibility of a single term or even of impeachment, can be the truly revolutionary reformer that Nigeria needs at this important moment.
What you are proposing to change, fundamentally, is a national culture built on a status quo foundation of corruption and rottenness. This culture of corrupt dysfunction inheres in every state and every LGA in Nigeria. It is entrenched. It is deadly. Every Nigerian within it benefits from it. Every Nigerian without it lives wholly and exclusively in anticipation of integration into that political economy of corruption and rottenness. The Nigerian screaming and yearning for change hopes that this change would happen only after he has benefited maximally from the rot. In other words, within or without, no Nigerian truly determines a radical, fundamental shift in the system.
These Nigerians will fight you to a standstill once they detect that you are a Governor who “does not understand”. They will ensure that you do not get a second term. They will try to correct the mistake. Are you prepared for this? Are you prepared to damn the consequences, run the risk of being a one-term Governor and spend four years draining the gutters, the pit latrines and the “soakaways” no matter whose ox is gored?
Let me break it down for you. Your townspeople will own you and your mandate in a Nigerian manner that is at variance with modern practices of democracy. Their son is now the state Governor. It is their turn to eat. The Igwe of your town and his council of elders will immediately start to make representations to you. They will expect you to establish a brand new state University in your hometown within one year of your mandate. They will expect appointments – whether their candidates deserve it or not. They will expect “dividends of democracy such as are befitting the hometown of a Governor". Are you prepared to spend the next four years blowing grammar and explaining the evils of nepotism to your Igwe, his council of elders, and your townspeople?
If you cannot do this, you cannot rise up to your promise as a revolutionary reformer. Yet, going against the semantic portents of “it is our turn to eat” means alienation from your people, from your immediate family, from your extended family, from the status quo. Are you prepared for this? This is a question President Buhari never really asked himself when he offered to serve. His failure began when he failed this fundamental Nigerian challenge and bowed to the demons of nepotism and parochialism.
Also, look at Rochas Okorocha in Imo. His most glaring failure is not in the morbid imbecility which has reduced him to wasting public funds on statues. His failure started from his inability to say no to nepotism and the personalization of public office for himself and his family.
The same pressures will descend ferociously on you. If you cannot say no to your brothers and sisters and your kinsmen, to special interests and the status quo, you will slip into the status quo you promised to change. If you say no, you will be alienated and you will run the real risk of being a one-timer. Have you thought about these things?
You are not the first promising kid on the block. Dimeji Bankole was 37-years-old when he became Nigeria’s No.3 citizen. Brilliant, cosmopolitan, eloquent. Just like you. He has entered the history books as a colossal failure. There have been other “youths” like you and Dimeji. As state governors, Ministers, Senators or political appointees, they have virtually all failed. Every one of them was consumed by the status quo because they never really gave a thought to this one question I have asked you.
Again, whoever is not prepared to risk a single term or impeachment can never change Nigeria.
If you are not prepared for this risk, you will never change Anambra. You will deceive yourself that you will go easy and rush through your reforms after having secured a second term.
Many have gone that way. Once you lose your bearing within the first two years and become status quo, you never recover. Please give a thought to these things and strengthen your resolve to damn every consequence and bring light to Anambra.

Apt and well written.

1 Like

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by RoyalUc(m): 10:51pm On Nov 13, 2017
President Buhari's "failure began when he failed this fundamental Nigerian challenge and bowed to the demons of nepotism and parochialism."
Hmm...sincerely, I wonder (but I am praying and looking forward to) who will overcome this fundamental Nigerian challenge and overpower the demons of nepotism and parochialism.

Such a nice write-up!

1 Like

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Julivas(m): 11:56pm On Nov 13, 2017
cc. lalasticlala


Let's people see this nice piece
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by rozay12345: 12:18am On Nov 14, 2017
Pius Adesanmi and Farouk Kperogi are excellent in journalism, their articles are always on point and devoid of the nepotis, all the problems he boldly stated are what affects the country in every ramifications, we all know Osita Chidoka would not win the election but he has given a good light of himself as a credible Igbo man who Nigerians can vote for in the future to run the country, his sterling performances in FRSC and Aviation were never overrated. I just hope he walk the talk when the mantle eventually falls on him.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Pavore9: 12:32am On Nov 14, 2017
A nice piece.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Nobody: 12:40am On Nov 14, 2017
Wonderful piece.

How I wish Chidoka will win that race. I haven't lost hope though, afterall Peter Obi did it in 2003 with APGA.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by DontForceUnity: 2:38am On Nov 14, 2017
So wisdom still exist in the land of the Afonjas.

Brilliant writeup Chidoka must look at critically.

1 Like

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Caseless: 3:16am On Nov 14, 2017
Nice piece. Again, what are chidoka's achievements as aviation minister?

3 Likes

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Mcdondayan: 3:55am On Nov 14, 2017
Caseless:
Nice piece. Again, what are chidoka's achievements as aviation minister?
How many months did he spend as minister of aviation?
Now compare that to the your principal who has spent over 2 years in power with nothing to show for it.
https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/daily/business/49074-experts-laud-chidoka-s-achievements-in-aviation

3 Likes

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Nobody: 4:41am On Nov 14, 2017
Ipob must stop their no election nonsense now and support osita chidoka

He is the truest Igbo political leader of this generation who understands the meaning of due process, justice and standing up for what you believe in through peaceful means

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Konquest: 4:47am On Nov 14, 2017
GoldenChiddy:
There's a lot of igbo culture being promoted within the igbo-British community. Have a look at the channel.




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuZjPkvP-C8&list=PL1UutY7_uGmt-RkJ5NRGywNhmIMtIIjw9&index=3
^^^^^^
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by nijabazaar: 5:36am On Nov 14, 2017
I wish Chidoka will win
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by UchaNwababa: 6:36am On Nov 14, 2017
Wetin i go Comment self? Anyway i stand with No Election in Anambra State.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Nobody: 7:01am On Nov 14, 2017
Chidoka- if niger delta and fulani herdsmen were not proscribed. Why shud ipob be

1 Like

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by spartan117(m): 8:32am On Nov 14, 2017
If chidioka should win it will mark a revolution in southern Nigeria. It would mean that we no longer vote based on party or across religious or ethnic lines but based on the best candidate. If I was from anambra I would be campaigning for chidioka on the streets!

2 Likes

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by RoyalUc(m): 8:40am On Nov 14, 2017
[qluote author=UchaNwababa post=62356487]Wetin i go Comment self? Anyway i stand with No Election in Anambra State.[/quote]

Then obviously, you are standing on a very short queue (one with very few people), directly behind a man who doesn't even know why he is standing in the queue and the service or actually DISSERVICE he will soon get when he gets to the front of the line... grin grin grin
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by niceprof: 8:44am On Nov 14, 2017
And he has always identified with Nnamdi Kanu,both men are courage personified.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Infamous(m): 12:12pm On Nov 14, 2017
NICE WRITEUP. IF WORDS CAN BE TRANSLATED (AS IS) INTO ACTION, I WILL SAY THIS IS THE BEST CANDIDATE. THAT INCUMBENT IS BEST KNOWN FOR HAVING PERFECTED HIS ALCOHOLIC SKILLS. OTHER ASPIRANTS ARE THERE TO SHOW FACE.

2 Likes

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Caseless: 12:16pm On Nov 14, 2017
Mcdondayan:

How many months did he spend as minister of aviation?
Now compare that to the your principal who has spent over 2 years in power with nothing to show for it.
https://www.dailytrust.com.ng/daily/business/49074-experts-laud-chidoka-s-achievements-in-aviation
simple question, bro, simple question. And all it required was an answer.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Infamous(m): 12:31pm On Nov 14, 2017
niceprof:
And he has always identified with Nnamdi Kanu,both men are courage personified.

I AM JUST SADDENED BY THE POLITICAL BARRENESS SEEN IN MY PEOPLE. IT GIVES ME HEARTACHES.
A VERY BASIC PLAY IN POLITICS IS TO STAND WITH WHO HAS YOUR INTERESTS AT HEART AND CAN ALWAYS DEFEND THE INTERESTS OF HIS PEOPLE.
THE INCUMBENT GOVERNOR JUST FACILITATED KILLINGS OF THE AGITATORS. LEFT TO ME, HE SHOULD HAVE BEEN IMPEACHED A LONG TIME AGO AND IF HE MANAGES TO WIN THIS ELECTION (EVEN WITH THE POWER OF THE INCUMBENT), I WILL LOSE ALL HOPES OF REDEMPTION FOR MY PEOPLE.
BACK TO THE MATTER, MY PEOPLE SHOULD VOTE OSITA CHIDOKA. HE IS THE VERY FIRST STEP IN RECOVERY FROM THIS ILLNESS. AGAIN, IF WORDS CAN BE TRANSLATED (AS IS) TO ACTION...

1 Like

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Infamous(m): 12:34pm On Nov 14, 2017
krendo:
Ipob must stop their no election nonsense now and support osita chidoka

He is the truest Igbo political leader of this generation who understands the meaning of due process, justice and standing up for what you believe in through peaceful means
BEAUTIFUL!.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Cooly100: 12:55pm On Nov 14, 2017
I am not from Anambra state. But going by the debate it has to be between Obaze and Chidoka. However, we know, voting hardly counts in this part of the world.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by globemoney: 1:18pm On Nov 14, 2017
Built2last:
Free and fair . Obaze Oseloka or Osita Chidoka will win.
Free and fair, oseloka obaze and Chidoka will not win. they are not popular in the state.. The debate will influence the outcome of the elction by less than 1%.
As for the article, Chidoka couldnt have won the debate with false statistics.. He lied his way through the debate and his statement on the anambra airport showed he didnt know the facts despite serving as a former minister in Avaiation. Obiano was not fluent enough in speaking but he made the best points and won the debate for me
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Cooly100: 1:23pm On Nov 14, 2017
globemoney:

Free and fair, oseloka obaze and Chidoka will not win. they are not popular in the state.. The debate will influence the outcome of the elction by less than 1%.
As for the article, Chidoka couldnt have won the debate with false statistics.. He lied his way through the debate and his statement on the anambra airport showed he didnt know the facts despite serving as a former minister in Avaiation. Obiano was not fluent enough in speaking but he made the best points and won the debate for me

May be you watched the debate with bottles of beer...drained.

Did you see Obiano response on questions...? Mostly out of point...

What did he say about repairing parts of Onitsha-Enugu road?

2 Likes

Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by obailala(m): 1:29pm On Nov 14, 2017
Built2last:
Free and fair . Obaze Oseloka or Osita Chidoka will win.
If the election is free and fair, Obaze or Obiano will win; a fact which you forget is that the bulk of real voters did not watch the debates, and neither do they know who Osita is. The real voter who even dwell in rural areas wouldn't even understand what Osita stands for; the building of airports and 'portable' roads sound more like music to their ears.
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by globemoney: 1:38pm On Nov 14, 2017
Cooly100:


May be you watched the debate with bottles of beer...drained.

Did you see Obiano response on questions...? Mostly out of point...

What did he say about repairing parts of Onitsha-Enugu road?
meet me here, iti
https://www.nairaland.com/4175974/anambra-debates-neither-obaze-nor
Re: An Open Letter To Osita Chidoka By Pius Adesanmi by Mcdondayan: 2:44pm On Nov 14, 2017
Caseless:
simple question, bro, simple question. And all it required was an answer.
Bro don't expect me to spoon-feed you. I just gave you a link. All you have to do is open it and read.

1 Like

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