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Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? - Politics - Nairaland

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Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by Activeman391(m): 2:02pm On Nov 24, 2017
By Remi Oyeyemi



The former Vice President, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku is today one of the most interesting personalities on the Nigerian political pedestal. Interesting because as an elite and a member of the ruling class, a bonafide scion of the status quo, he seems to understand best the concept of enlightened self interest in comparison to the other contemporary members of the same ruling class.

Nigeria is a Capitalist State. The traditional systems, on which many of the ethnic nationalities that comprise Nigeria built their social, economic and political cultures are basically capitalistic in nature, sprinkled with light variations of what Marxist theorists would characterise as Communalism. To this extent, the emerged State, grandfathered by a capitalistic colonial master became essentially a Capitalist one.

But Nigeria's socio - economic and religio - political character that emerged, imbued with and by the traditional and cultural variables of its milieu, when properly dissected, is a perfect study of the crudest genre of Capitalism. Its crude form, as expected and as has been attested to historically in practice and theory, in other climes, is incubating antagonistic forces to its survival. It is nurturing self destructive internal contradictions.

While Capitalism is aimed at creating and accumulating wealth through profit making, it contextually engenders, as a matter of course, some of the ills average Nigerians are worried about and are complaining of today. These ills are encapsulated in the etimology of corruption. A study of this etimology reveals some variables that are conventional and universal in nature. It also reveals some unique characteristics to the Nigerian environment.

However, the ruling class in Nigeria, the primary beneficiary of the subsisting crude capitalism, is exuding dangerous indolence, digging deeper to further the depth of its deadly drony. It is slumbering, snoring sneeringly, in the comfort of incompetence, unperturbed by the searing concomitant degeneracy that is gradually readying to engulf the country.

This is where Abubakar Atiku, a cerebral politician, beneficiary of this crude capitalism, business man, a privileged member of this status quo comes in. He comes in with a clear understanding of this system, with an analytical approach grounded in selflessness imbued with self preservation to which his fellow members of the same class are oblivious.

He comes in with a reformative agenda to save the system from itself and possible collapse. He is not out to change the system and as such could not be characterised as a "revolutionary." But he wants to reform the system, make it more functional, fair, balanced, productive and regenerating of and to the people and all members of it's constituent units.
As a Yoruba Nationalist myself, I am enthused and enthralled by his grasp of the need to foster SELF DETERMINATION as an essential tool to rejuvenate a sense of social, political and economic justice among ethnic nationalities in Nigeria. He is genuinely concerned about the importance of sense of belonging as a basis of and for a renewed belief and faith in the Union of Nigeria.

Abubakar Atiku sees the European Union concept as being practicable in Nigerian context. It allows every ethnic nationality to be in control of its destiny while still being loyal and patriotic to the Nigerian State. He wants a stronger Nigeria built on freedom of individual expressed in the ability of its local community to determine its needs and act accordingly in the larger objective of strengthening Nigeria as a major player in international fora.

His position on RESTRUCTURING is unassailable. He has been on this concept for fourteen going to fifteen years. He is asking Nigeria to go to what brought this country together as negotiated between 1957 and 1959 with Federating Units having a range of autonomy within the Nigerian context with some limited variations. This was the Constitutional arrangement that Obafemi Awolowo, Ahmadu Bello and Nnamdi Azikiwe agreed on before they proceeded on the 1960 Independence

Atiku believes that this is the quickest way to save Nigeria, move it closer to its peoples, meet their aspirations and make their hopes realizable. He believes this is the best way to meet the urgent need to sanitize this system, cleanse it of the debilitating corruption, make the hospitals work, revitalize the educational system, make the country economically viable and competitive within as well as socially stable.

Atiku is the right leader for today's Nigeria. He is bold, smart and intelligent. He listens and cares. He is selfless and humane. He respects the law and revere the courts. He is urbane and cosmopolitan. He is not shackled by any form of provincialism. He is a man of ideas. He is not a leader that could be held hostage because of limited intellectual endowment. He has a plan to bring Nigeria from the brink.

As a reformer, Atiku is straddling on the theoretical divide between the rulers and the ruled. He is offering hope to the disenfranchised and the disenchanted. At the same time, he is offering salvation to an inert, inept, inapt ruling class with a sense of invulnerability that is at best fake, by trying to reform the system, making it more functional, humane and fair.

The ruling class in Nigeria needs Atiku more than Atiku needs to be President. It would be in their best interest to rally round him in full appreciation of enlightened self interest. The first Law of Nature is self preservation. This is what Atiku is offering them. It would be wise on their part to take it.

Closely intertwined with this is the hopelessness on the Nigerian streets. The disenfranchised are frustrated, hungry and angry. Their impatience is already being permeated with volatility. They are exhausted by and tired of governance by mantra and propaganda. They have no use for further preachment. They want results in concrete terms.

Atiku is the man with the plan to turn things around. His leadership genre - informed, exposed, ready, experienced, competent, stable, fair and balanced - is what Nigeria needs now. His cosmopolitanism guarantees accommodation of all. He would not only bring the country together, he would heal it by putting it on the path of greatness through freedom and self determination of all ethnic nationalities in the context of Nigeria.

Yes, Atiku wants to be President. But Nigeria needs him now more than ever. He has a defined and clear vision. It is a vision from whence every societal stratum could derive a lasting benefit. Nigerians have a choice between total Balkanization of Nigeria with its Historical demise staring us all in the face or self determination of all ethnic nationalities in the context of Nigeria.

It is time to make a choice. It is time to choose Atiku.


SOURCE:
https://m.thenigerianvoice.com/news/260250/abubakar-atiku-a-revolutionary-or-reformer.html

Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by SillyMods: 2:04pm On Nov 24, 2017
[s]
Activeman391:
By Remi Oyeyemi



The former Vice President, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku is today one of the most interesting personalities on the Nigerian political pedestal. Interesting because as an elite and a member of the ruling class, a bonafide scion of the status quo, he seems to understand best the concept of enlightened self interest in comparison to the other contemporary members of the same ruling class.

Nigeria is a Capitalist State. The traditional systems, on which many of the ethnic nationalities that comprise Nigeria built their social, economic and political cultures are basically capitalistic in nature, sprinkled with light variations of what Marxist theorists would characterise as Communalism. To this extent, the emerged State, grandfathered by a capitalistic colonial master became essentially a Capitalist one.

But Nigeria's socio - economic and religio - political character that emerged, imbued with and by the traditional and cultural variables of its milieu, when properly dissected, is a perfect study of the crudest genre of Capitalism. Its crude form, as expected and as has been attested to historically in practice and theory, in other climes, is incubating antagonistic forces to its survival. It is nurturing self destructive internal contradictions.

While Capitalism is aimed at creating and accumulating wealth through profit making, it contextually engenders, as a matter of course, some of the ills average Nigerians are worried about and are complaining of today. These ills are encapsulated in the etimology of corruption. A study of this etimology reveals some variables that are conventional and universal in nature. It also reveals some unique characteristics to the Nigerian environment.

However, the ruling class in Nigeria, the primary beneficiary of the subsisting crude capitalism, is exuding dangerous indolence, digging deeper to further the depth of its deadly drony. It is slumbering, snoring sneeringly, in the comfort of incompetence, unperturbed by the searing concomitant degeneracy that is gradually readying to engulf the country.

This is where Abubakar Atiku, a cerebral politician, beneficiary of this crude capitalism, business man, a privileged member of this status quo comes in. He comes in with a clear understanding of this system, with an analytical approach grounded in selflessness imbued with self preservation to which his fellow members of the same class are oblivious.

He comes in with a reformative agenda to save the system from itself and possible collapse. He is not out to change the system and as such could not be characterised as a "revolutionary." But he wants to reform the system, make it more functional, fair, balanced, productive and regenerating of and to the people and all members of it's constituent units.
As a Yoruba Nationalist myself, I am enthused and enthralled by his grasp of the need to foster SELF DETERMINATION as an essential tool to rejuvenate a sense of social, political and economic justice among ethnic nationalities in Nigeria. He is genuinely concerned about the importance of sense of belonging as a basis of and for a renewed belief and faith in the Union of Nigeria.

Abubakar Atiku sees the European Union concept as being practicable in Nigerian context. It allows every ethnic nationality to be in control of its destiny while still being loyal and patriotic to the Nigerian State. He wants a stronger Nigeria built on freedom of individual expressed in the ability of its local community to determine its needs and act accordingly in the larger objective of strengthening Nigeria as a major player in international fora.

His position on RESTRUCTURING is unassailable. He has been on this concept for fourteen going to fifteen years. He is asking Nigeria to go to what brought this country together as negotiated between 1957 and 1959 with Federating Units having a range of autonomy within the Nigerian context with some limited variations. This was the Constitutional arrangement that Obafemi Awolowo, Ahmadu Bello and Nnamdi Azikiwe agreed on before they proceeded on the 1960 Independence

Atiku believes that this is the quickest way to save Nigeria, move it closer to its peoples, meet their aspirations and make their hopes realizable. He believes this is the best way to meet the urgent need to sanitize this system, cleanse it of the debilitating corruption, make the hospitals work, revitalize the educational system, make the country economically viable and competitive within as well as socially stable.

Atiku is the right leader for today's Nigeria. He is bold, smart and intelligent. He listens and cares. He is selfless and humane. He respects the law and revere the courts. He is urbane and cosmopolitan. He is not shackled by any form of provincialism. He is a man of ideas. He is not a leader that could be held hostage because of limited intellectual endowment. He has a plan to bring Nigeria from the brink.

As a reformer, Atiku is straddling on the theoretical divide between the rulers and the ruled. He is offering hope to the disenfranchised and the disenchanted. At the same time, he is offering salvation to an inert, inept, inapt ruling class with a sense of invulnerability that is at best fake, by trying to reform the system, making it more functional, humane and fair.

The ruling class in Nigeria needs Atiku more than Atiku needs to be President. It would be in their best interest to rally round him in full appreciation of enlightened self interest. The first Law of Nature is self preservation. This is what Atiku is offering them. It would be wise on their part to take it.

Closely intertwined with this is the hopelessness on the Nigerian streets. The disenfranchised are frustrated, hungry and angry. Their impatience is already being permeated with volatility. They are exhausted by and tired of governance by mantra and propaganda. They have no use for further preachment. They want results in concrete terms.

Atiku is the man with the plan to turn things around. His leadership genre - informed, exposed, ready, experienced, competent, stable, fair and balanced - is what Nigeria needs now. His cosmopolitanism guarantees accommodation of all. He would not only bring the country together, he would heal it by putting it on the path of greatness through freedom and self determination of all ethnic nationalities in the context of Nigeria.

Yes, Atiku wants to be President. But Nigeria needs him now more than ever. He has a defined and clear vision. It is a vision from whence every societal stratum could derive a lasting benefit. Nigerians have a choice between total Balkanization of Nigeria with its Historical demise staring us all in the face or self determination of all ethnic nationalities in the context of Nigeria.

It is time to make a choice. It is time to choose Atiku.


SOURCE:
https://m.thenigerianvoice.com/news/260250/abubakar-atiku-a-revolutionary-or-reformer.html
[/s]
Atiku cannot win even his Adamawa

grin

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by maximilano: 2:05pm On Nov 24, 2017
Atiku is a wanderer, he doesn't even have a political stronghold.

1 Like

Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by yanabasee(m): 2:37pm On Nov 24, 2017
SillyMods:
[s][/s]
Atiku cannot win even his Adamawa

grin

Politics in Nigeria is beyond your one vote.... It's always all about "cabals"..... If Obasanjo eventually forgives him... he's definitely gonna be the next president...
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by SillyMods: 2:40pm On Nov 24, 2017
yanabasee:


Politics in Nigeria is beyond your one vote.... It's always all about "cabals"..... If Obasanjo eventually forgives him... he's definitely gonna be the next president...
Yinmu. Elections nowadays have gone beyond the time PDP used to write/allocate votes in their sitting rooms and offices.
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by Hector09(m): 2:43pm On Nov 24, 2017
Atiku is non of the above he is just a jumpologist, my regards goes to sula lamido, PDP should gv him d ticket, cus he stick with them at the time of trial
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by yanabasee(m): 2:48pm On Nov 24, 2017
SillyMods:

Yinmu. Elections nowadays have gone beyond the time PDP used to write/allocate votes in their sitting rooms and offices.

And APC redefined that method by manipulating the card reading conformed standard introduced by PDP to oversee and supervised free and fair election, right?
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by TheShopKeeper(m): 2:50pm On Nov 24, 2017
None of the above, he is a political 'vagabond'
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by Activeman391(m): 2:57pm On Nov 24, 2017
maximilano:
Atiku is a wanderer, he doesn't even have a political stronghold.
I wonder who is a wanderer between Buhari and Atiku or who was more desperate ..we all know Buhari before he finally won the last presidential election cross carpet 3 different political parties of which Atiku is just 2...if you ask me about desperation for Power Buhari is the true meaning of the word
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by Activeman391(m): 3:01pm On Nov 24, 2017
Hector09:
Atiku is non of the above he is just a jumpologist, my regards goes to sula lamido, PDP should gv him d ticket, cus he stick with them at the time of trial
I guess he learnt the jumpologist idea from Buhari who jumped to three political party in search for power
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by Hector09(m): 3:03pm On Nov 24, 2017
Activeman391:
I guess he learnt the jumpologist idea from Buhari who jumped to three political party in search for power
both of them are just the same, thats why bola tinubu is my best Nigerian politician, he stick with his party
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by SillyMods: 3:15pm On Nov 24, 2017
yanabasee:


And APC redefined that method by manipulating the card reading conformed standard introduced by PDP to oversee and supervised free and fair election, right?
Redefined by clamour for change by majority of Nigerians having gotten tired of rubbish elections where results were usually declared even when no elections occurred. Also redefined by Jega by forcing PDP to accept his reforms.

grin
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by yanabasee(m): 3:22pm On Nov 24, 2017
SillyMods:

Redefined by clamour for change by majority of Nigerians having gotten tired of rubbish elections where results were usually declared even when no elections occurred. Also redefined by Jega by forcing PDP to accept his reforms.

grin


How many clamours by the masses have been attained to and implemented since your APC took over? At least, PDP listened to your cry and hue!!!
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by SillyMods: 3:27pm On Nov 24, 2017
yanabasee:



How many clamours by the masses have been attained to and implemented since your APC took over? At least, PDP listened to your cry and hue!!!
Stop kidding around. Nothing for you guys anymore.

grin
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by yanabasee(m): 3:32pm On Nov 24, 2017
SillyMods:
Stop kidding around. Nothing for you guys anymore.
grin
We'll see.....!!
Re: Abubakar Atiku: A Revolutionary Or Reformer? by maximilano: 3:59pm On Nov 24, 2017
Activeman391:
I wonder who is a wanderer between Buhari and Atiku or who was more desperate ..we all know Buhari before he finally won the last presidential election cross carpet 3 different political parties of which Atiku is just 2...if you ask me about desperation for Power Buhari is the true meaning of the word
I don't care about Buhari, but since you have brought him into the topic,I'll tell you why Atiku is a wanderer and Buhari is not. Buhari left ANPP to form his own party CPC thereby strengthening his political stronghold, CPC even won Nasarawa state gubernatorial polls. A merger deal came up and APC was formed. That makes Buhari a schemer and not a wanderer. Atiku has decamped from PDP to ACN to PDP to APC to PDP. So Who's the Wanderer? The one who strengthened his political stronghold who's own party won a governorship election or the one who has never won his Local govt despite all his cross carpeting. Strategic persistence is different from desperation.

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