Politics › Re: What's The Benefit Of Education To Nigeria by Gamine(f): 2:36am On Sep 18, 2010 |
Red Button Design. They are Young and Fresh not Nigerian though. But it would be nice to do some projects with them. |
Politics › Re: What's The Benefit Of Education To Nigeria by Gamine(f): 2:28am On Sep 18, 2010 |
[quote author=oyinda. link=topic=512462.msg6774334#msg6774334 date=1284772724]by lucrative i was talking about financial returns for the individual who came up with the idea. ie. being a banker is lucrative while being a geographer is not lucrative for the person studying it. although both are useful to society.[/quote]I see your point now but that's just one meaning of 'Lucrative'
All these just brought to mind a company i tried interviewing once they are into 'Humanitarian Design' and strongly believe 'Aid' is killing Africa so they design products which are for-profit but highly beneficial to the community. in doing so they create economies around this product which becomes lucrative for the community in which it's used. (Wealth in = Wealth out) |
Politics › Re: What's The Benefit Of Education To Nigeria by Gamine(f): 2:09am On Sep 18, 2010 |
[quote author=oyinda. link=topic=512462.msg6772209#msg6772209 date=1284742354]Anyways, my recommendation is for the wealthy people in Nigeria to cultivate academic thinking in their children. These "rich kids" the the ones that are more likely to come up with the ideas that change the world. Another recommendation is for them (the wealthy people) to become philanthropists for the education system The purpose of general education system is to diffuse useful/technical/professional knowledge ie one that will enable you to make a living out if it rather than one that encourages you to think outside the box. although the latter is the kind that creates civilization innovative ideas generally come from research and work that aren't really lucrative (although there are exceptions). that's why rich people are more likely to be the ones who are into it. they don't need the money.[/quote]While I don't believe that 'Rich Kids' are the ones more likely to come up with ideas (how can you even think this) I understand what you mean by Wealthy people putting their foot into this, because to a large extent Wealthy = Power and they are the ones most likely to stand up to the bullies in our system with success. Also your take on innovation is twisted. Ideas are just ideas, they only become innovative when they are actually lucrative. i.e when it is actually useful to society. Beaf: I find it so funny that Nigerians make so much noise, but refuse to act when presented with a vehicle.
I've plead with a lot of folk (even on this thread) for some days now, to go register here http://afrosciencecommunity.com
So far, there are quite a few downloadable tech PDF's and we have have the following free inventions to donate to those willing to go a step further;
Yam Harvester (FREE!) Banana and Plantain Harvester (FREE!) Energy Forest (FREE!) Atomic Hydrogen Power Plant (FREE!) Solar Air Conditioning (FREE!)
Our free inventions catalogue should increase by two by midweek next week. We are not resting on our oars. 
. . .So why do we beat the question so much and do little or nothing about it? Thats the question, cos there are lots of capable minds. Why are these minds left to lie fallow? The only answer to me is, there is a widespread problem of low self esteem (one of the reasons we are so overly "religious," instead of logical and methodical). Don't you know the age we live in?? by the time you have finished inventing this, people have already bought their own from China. We need to put our thinking caps on and act fast. Good idea though |
Politics › Re: What's The Benefit Of Education To Nigeria by Gamine(f): 1:57am On Sep 18, 2010 |
I just asked this question in my house and everyone laughed. If we go by the question of this topic, Nigerians not Nigeria There are too many benefits, If that is what you are really concerned about As long as there is passion lacking in Nigerians for Nigeria, we won't go anywhere Some talk about the work man and his tools. AjanleKoko: This is overflogged jare. Spineless being the operative word there. It's easier to duck and blame everything and everybody for your personal failings. As I said earlier. A lazy workman blames his tools. A good workman fixes his tools. Period. Nigeria's situation is such that the Work man has no tools kpa kpa. Any tool he tries to get, is taken away from him. The only thing he can do is, tend the garden in his backyard while the farm which would have fed the whole town is left to rot. Our Government is like the stereotypical bully you had in your primary school. Everytime you wanted to make a paper boat He would tear the paper. Any kind of paper, even the one signed by your teacher that says 'Do not tear' and he keeps going on and on until someone else stood up for you. Or until you realised that you also had a mouth or that you can run away (which is what most Nigerians 'Breaking Ground' outside Nigeria have done) As long as this bully is running rampant in the schoolyard, there will be no peace of mind, no progress Until someone with passion as powerful as the bully steps in. Till 'thy kingdom come' Education will only benefit some Nigerians not Nigeria |
Career › Re: Globacom Staff Resignation Mail by Gamine(f): 8:22pm On Sep 17, 2010 |
We need more people like this. |
Culture › Re: Ethnic Groups in Nigeria, Less Than 40 by Gamine(f): 8:17pm On Sep 17, 2010 |
afam4eva: When did Edo become a language? I only know of Bini, etsako etc. Obviously Ignorant |
Crime › Re: Evil That Men Do: Defrauding Women Searching For Husbands by Gamine(f): 3:02pm On Sep 17, 2010 |
These are your fellow Nigerians. Stoopid! |
Fashion › Re: ~ Street Style! Get Inspired Or Steal A Style! by Gamine(f): 12:28pm On Sep 17, 2010 |
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Fashion › Re: ~ Street Style! Get Inspired Or Steal A Style! by Gamine(f): 12:24am On Sep 17, 2010 |
I honestly don't like when guys do too much fashion but these are alright ^^ spikedcylinder:
@ Gamine, those shoes are fab and yea, I see what you mean. Has Solange started growing her hair back? No It's a wig/weave, I'd like something like this when i go on skin |
Culture › Re: Ethnic Groups in Nigeria, Less Than 40 by Gamine(f): 11:43pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
lol.  |
Culture › Re: The Truth About The Number Of Nigerian Languages by Gamine(f): 11:41pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
@Abagworo ^^^^Is it possible to have a discussion/debate without thinking people are after you because you are of a certain tribe. ChinenyeN: Where was this? I posted a link to a blog where there was a discussion on Nigerian Languages |
Culture › Re: Ethnic Groups in Nigeria, Less Than 40 by Gamine(f): 9:49pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
There is no where for it to go to except the recycle bin. |
Culture › Re: The Truth About The Number Of Nigerian Languages by Gamine(f): 9:33pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
ezeagu: That if you think your post is dumb you should remove it. You are in my thoughts now, Well if you are threatened by opinions, you better stick to your fabrications. |
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Culture › Re: The Truth About The Number Of Nigerian Languages by Gamine(f): 9:19pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
ezeagu: Why don't you remove the link then? What are you trying to say? |
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Culture › Re: The Truth About The Number Of Nigerian Languages by Gamine(f): 8:58pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
ezeagu: What are you trying to say? Really dumb post |
Culture › Re: Ethnic Groups in Nigeria, Less Than 40 by Gamine(f): 8:31pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
I don't know where all these Igbo people are coming from with authority on ethnic groups and language puzzling  |
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Culture › Re: The Truth About The Number Of Nigerian Languages by Gamine(f): 8:28pm On Sep 16, 2010 |
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Culture › Re: The Truth About The Number Of Nigerian Languages by Gamine(f): 10:02pm On Sep 15, 2010 |
ezeagu: It seems many people cannot separate language from ethnicity and politics. Everything is political. |
Fashion › Re: ~ Street Style! Get Inspired Or Steal A Style! by Gamine(f): 9:55pm On Sep 15, 2010 |
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Fashion › Re: What Hair-style Do You Have On Now And How Long Did It Take To Fix It? by Gamine(f): 9:45pm On Sep 15, 2010 |
Kinky braids as usual.
Very soon, Gorimapa |
TV/Movies › Re: X-factor (Who's Watching) by Gamine(f): 9:44pm On Sep 15, 2010 |
manmustwac: @GAMINE well if you don't mind your more than welcome to come and audition for me in my home studio and help me do some recording work.  eeeh?? Serious? mesef i wan become celebrity.  [quote author=Kenny_G link=topic=313504.msg6760482#msg6760482 date=1284578902]And i missed all this? Let's hope youtube can help me out with the clip[/quote]I've looked for it myself, nothing!!  |
Fashion › Re: ~ Street Style! Get Inspired Or Steal A Style! by Gamine(f): 12:09pm On Sep 15, 2010 |
^^^^ na I don't like any of these  |
Fashion › Re: ~Confessions Of A Shoe Manic ~ by Gamine(f): 2:53am On Sep 15, 2010 |
^^^ Gawd those shoes are accidents waiting to happen!  |
Music/Radio › Re: Remembering The Rap Legend -tupac Shakur by Gamine(f): 2:05am On Sep 15, 2010 |
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Career › Re: What Is The Salary For Social Workers In Nigeria. Please Advice by Gamine(f): 1:33am On Sep 15, 2010 |
aisha2: Lagos Actually pays well. They have passed the Prision reform Bill and need a lot of Social workers to coordinate child and community services. FCDA pays reall well too. Hospitals like National Hospitals pay well. @all, if you dont know somehing, try to find out, broaden your knowledge. How can you say there are no social workers in Nigeria? Maybe we do not make a lot of noise but there are over 10000 registered social workers in Nigeria, Go to any major hospital and ask for a social worker. Please learn to know Well that's good to hear, but if many do not know they exist (As social workers) It shows how well organised they are. It's not about noise making it's about 'reach' We definitely need more people like the OP. |
Politics › Re: What's The Benefit Of Education To Nigeria by Gamine(f): 12:27am On Sep 15, 2010 |
[center]"Educated" to Feel Inferior: "Will Africa ever Catch Up?"[/center]
by Bedford Nwabueze Umez, Ph.D.*, www.africamasterweb.com
Introduction
After reading my latest book, "Nigeria: Real Problems, Real Solutions," Dr. Nnanna Ukegbu, one of the most learned, enlightened and illustrious Nigerian thinkers, invited me for a talk (August 9, 2002) on a serious issue of common concern, namely, the apparent lack of progress in Nigeria and several African countries. Dr. Ukegbu, who is now completing a very powerful, thought-provoking book on African development, had this question to ask me: "Will African ever catch up?" After a brief pause, I answered him, "Yes, if and only if the African mind is liberated."
In this paper, I will briefly explain the relationship between development and liberated mind. Specifically, I will explain (a) how most of us, the Africans, were "educated" to feel inferior, (b) the terrible consequences of inferiority complex, i.e., low self-esteem, in Africa, especially in Nigeria, and (c) then present the ONLY powerful solution to revert this inferiority complex so that Africa can meaningfully grow and develop.
Although a perfect representation of African countries cannot be made using one country, I decided to focus on Nigeria to make my point. Nigeria is, in many aspects, a typical African country. It suffered slavery; it was subjected to colonial rule; it achieved political independence (1960) around the time so many African countries did; it is faced with the task of welding into a nation a variety of differing people. Besides, Nigeria is, by population, the largest African country.
"Educated" to Feel Inferior: How?
It was never easy for me learning in Nigeria. My parents, who never attended any school due to poverty, could neither read nor write. I lost my father at the age of three. To make the matters worse, those I looked up to, namely, my mentors, educators, and leaders were busy teaching me and other youths, probably inadvertently, to feel inferior and remain inferior. Essentially, I was taught, just as many youths in Nigeria are being taught today, to feel inferior and develop low self-esteem. Here are few examples.
I was thoughtlessly taught (and children are still being thoughtlessly taught today), that "oyibo bu ndi muo," (white men are naturally spirits)," "oyibo bu agbara," (white men are wizards by nature), and "America ilu oba" (which suggests that white man's country is naturally the land of kings). Similar phrases such as "dan bature," (which implies that white men are by nature civilized), and "or buter" (which symbolizes the natural lead of white men) are very common all over Nigeria.
I was thoughtlessly taught (as children are still being thoughtlessly taught today) that almost anything "black" is inherently evil. In fact, to our "educators," it is perfectly okay to use the word, "black" (the ascribed name to people with African decent), to describe evil. In accordance with this teaching, a bad person is the "black sheep of the family," and should be "black listed." In accordance with this teaching, illegal market is "black market" (as if only black people do business in such market). In according with this teaching, Satan (no one has ever seen) is "black" in color. In fact, to our "educated" teachers, frequent use of "black" to describe evil demonstrates a mastery of the "Queen's English," deserving an "A" in English essay composition. What an education! It is a pity!
Indeed, Nigerian African children and the general public are being thought, directly or indirectly, self-hatred and how to develop a sense of low self-esteem. Without question, there are deadly consequences resulting from this kind of miseducation, and to them, I now turn.
"Educated" to Feel Inferior: The Grave Consequences
We often hear that "the mind is a terrible thing to waste." I must add that the mind is a terrible thing to pollute. The minds of so many African children and that of the general public have been grossly polluted and destroyed by a powerful force largely unseen by unclothed eyes. That powerful force is inferiority complex (also called "mental slavery" . Here is a brief illustration of the destruction caused by inferiority complex/lack of self-confidence in Africa and among Africans:
Let us present an African medical doctor and a non-African medical doctor to a sick African and ask him to choose the doctor to treat him. You are right, most likely he will choose the nonAfrican doctor. Why? Because he has been miseducated to believe that by nature white men are "ndi muo," "dan bature," and "agbara."
Invite an African to two meetings - one called by Africans and the other summoned by non-Africans. You are right again, that African, all things being equal, will attend the meeting called by non-Africans on time and attend the one summoned by his fellow Africans anytime he wants. Why? He dare not offend "ndi muo" by attending his meeting late. Notice that this "selective punctuality" on the part of so many Africans, particularly Nigerians, is what passive thinkers call "African time" (or "colored people time," in American context). To us at LAM, Liberating African Mind [www.LiberateAfrica.org], there is nothing like "African time." "African time is nothing other than "selective punctuality" ROOTED in inferiority complex.
By comparing the leadership styles of African leaders and non-African leaders, one also observes another handiwork of inferiority complex/lack of self-confidence. Specifically, one notices that while non-African leaders wisely refuse to invest their countries' money and resources in Africa, by practicing "charity begins at home," most African leaders are very proud to invest African money and resources in non-African countries. Why? In their miseducated minds, Africa is "unsafe heaven," while "America ilu oba" - the safe heaven. What a lack of self-confidence! What a leadership! It is a pity!
The bottom line is that a polluted African mind accepts that Africans are, by nature, normal human beings, while nonAfricans are "ndi muo." A polluted African mind believes that nonAfricans are "divinely" chosen to live in "ilu oba," the "safe heavens," while Africans are "divinely" relegated to "unsafe heavens." A polluted African mind does not know that "ndi muo," "agbara," "dan bature," and "ilu oba" are products of tireless research engineered by true compatriot leaders and elite. In fact, a polluted African mind does not know that George Washington, the first President of the US, did not have, for instance, Space Exploration Program. Nigerians, for instance, must know that the reason for lack of so many "ndi muo," "agbara" and "ilu oba," in Nigeria is that so many Nigerian leaders rob their own people only to deposit the loot in "ilu oba." As such, the money that could have been used to produce "ndi muo," "dan bature," "or buter," "agbara" and "ilu oba" in Nigeria is senselessly siphoned out of Nigeria.
African children have been repeatedly told lies, and the liars never, for one day, reflected upon the horrible consequences of their lies. They never realize that if a lie were told repeatedly, sooner or later some people would start believing it to be true. Just as a determined and concerted effort to tell a child that he is silly is likely to get that child thinking and acting silly, "educating" African children to develop low self-esteem and feel inferior has produced so many Africans who have, consciously or unconsciously, accepted that they are ordinary humans while nonAfricans are "ndi muo," "agbara," and "dan bature," divinely planted in "ilu oba."
The Solution: The Right Education
Active thinkers know that pollution of African mind, i.e., miseducating Africans to develop a sense of low self-esteem, has produced and continues to produce terrible consequences in Africa and among Africans. It is not normal for people to turn against themselves; it is not normal for leaders and elite to turn against their own people. Now is the time for African leaders and elite to start asking WHY things are the way they are in Africa instead of telling everyone HOW terrible things are. By asking WHY, solutions will naturally emerge. For instance, questions similar to those below will help move Nigeria forward:
Is there a relationship between research and "ndi muo?" Is there a relationship between research and "agbara?" Is there a relationship between research and "dan bature?" Is there a relationship between research and "ilu oba?" Is there a relationship between the legacies of slave trade and colonialism (i.e., slave and colonial mentalities) and the robbery of Nigeria by a substantial number of its leaders only to deposit the loot abroad? Is there a relationship between the robbery of Nigeria by most of its leaders only to invest the loot abroad and high unemployment rate in Nigeria? Is there a relationship between high unemployment rate in Nigeria and mass exodus of Nigerians to foreign countries? Is there a relationship between investing Nigerian money abroad and growth in negative developments in Nigeria, e.g., corruption, mortality rate, "419," armed robbery?
My fellow Africans, PRACTICAL answers to serious questions like those above will definitely produce "ndi muo," "dan bature," and "agbara" in Africa; in fact, they will produce AGAIN the class of African "ndi muo," "dan bature," and "agbara" who built the first known skyscrapers - the pyramids, and developed the first means of written communications, the hieroglyphic writings, long before the slave trade and colonialism. Nigerian children, for instance, cannot become "ndi muo" and "agbara" by miracle if their leaders continue to neglect education. In fact, "agbara," "ndi muo" and "ilu oba," will not emerge in Nigeria by miracle when teachers are being starved, libraries empty, research thoughtlessly abandoned, and universities senselessly shutdown for several months each year due to strikes. [Note: I have appealed, and will continue to appeal, to Nigerian government to summon, without further delay, series of National Economic Summits to discuss the terrible consequences of looting Nigerian treasury and investing the loot abroad, and start, on a collective level, to invest Nigerian money in Nigeria as "ndi muo" leaders and elite are doing in their own countries.]
Conclusion
African youths must be told the truth, and that truth is that what makes white men "ndi muo," "agbara," and "dan bature," is nothing other than tireless research, and with massive investment of African money in Africa by African leaders and elite, Africa will definitely produce "ndi muo" and "agbara" in large quantity as it once produced long before slavery and colonialism. Furthermore, African leaders and educators must stop using "black" as a symbol for evil and start teaching their children that black is beautiful just as any color.
All told, "Africa will can catch up" if and when African mind is liberated, for a liberated mind is a thinking mind that has the foresight to produce "ndi muo," "dan bature," "or buter,' and "agbara," and make his country "ilu oba." |
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