“E Go Better,” Kill Nigeria
Whereas
the French would have long revolted and changed their governments;
whereas the African-Americans would long have been on the streets as
they are in Ferguson today; as they were in LA years ago. Compared, the
Arabs would have “sprung,” and the masses of America would have
“occupied;” Nigerians are hopeful.
It
is our happiness that is at fault. Our hope is our blight. We have been
diagnosed for this attitude. We were called the happiest people on
earth. We thought this was something to be happy about, little did we
realize then that this was a slight.
Recent
polls by Gallup have better qualified this so-called “happiness.”
Africans and Nigerians most especially are not quite the happiest people
on Earth, but what the studies have found is that we are the most
“optimistic” people on earth; the most “Positive.”
Quoting Gallup;
“Nigeria proved to be the most positive country about 2015 with 85% of
respondents thinking it will be better whereas Lebanon was most
pessimistic with just 26% saying that they believe it will be better and
52% believing it will be worse.”
This unusual result (85%) compared to a global average of 53% optimism in a better future.
We
are the “Positive thought” nation; in lay and local lingo, we are the
“e go better” people. Faced with adversity, we smile and say, “e go
better.” Governed by rottenly corrupt and clueless leaders, we shrug and
advise calm, proclaiming, “e go better.” When ruled by leaders who
spend the entire 5 years plotting against a so-called opposition,
maleficiently looting the treasury and campaigning for their
re-election, we say, “e go better.” When ruled by rulers who purposely
mismanage all state assets then auction them to their cronies, we say,
“e go better.”
Throw a nuclear bomb at us, we will say, “e go better.”
They
allow terrorists kill 100,000 of us and displace 3 million more, we
will say, “e go better.” When they supervise pogroms in the north or
south, we say, “e go better.” Kill us yourself; send the army to wipe
out our entire villages to “teach us a lesson,” we will say, “e go
better.”
No
matter what you throw at the Nigerian, he will not only not fight, but
he will actually smile and encourage platitude and hope – optimism that
“e go better.” China Okasi noted this in an OpEd piece she wrote in the MSNBC
last May when we lost our 234 Chibok daughters – sure enough it didn’t
“better,” the worst happened; the girls are gone! A year after the
deadly Immigration scam, it did not better. Abba Moro was never
sentenced, Jonathan never resigned. We were never employed. Nothing
changed. Nothing got better.
This
false optimism is what has been noted about us. This is our blessing
and our curse so long as we do not, as China stated, “actively demand
and ensure better,” seek the change to make it better, and not
“passively wish” for it to “better.” This is why we did not expel the
government when Odi happened. This is why we tolerated the government
when Baga I happened and again when Baga II happened and when Chibok
happened. This is why we tolerated IBB and Abacha. And this, “e go
better” is what will – if it has not already – kill us.
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