Saturday, 25 February 2017

R for Respect, R for Resignation By Pius Adesanmi


Recently, Justin Trudeau was in the province of Quebec for a townhall meeting with citizens. He has been holding townhalls across Canada. An Anglophone Quebecois woman asked him a question in English, he responded in French saying he preferred to respond in the official language of the province.



Although French is the language of Quebec, there is an Anglophone minority in that province. English and French being the two official languages of Canada, the Anglophone minority woman deserved to have her question answered in English.

The national outrage was swift and major. The Prime Minister was condemned everywhere. Such was the intensity of the nationwide condemnations of the Prime Minister that I almost exclaimed Yorunigerianly: “ki ni Trudeau gbe ki ni won ju gan sef?”

Why were Canadians so aghast? It was said that the Prime Minister had disrespected a citizen. And by disrespecting a citizen, he had disrespected his office.

Trudeau has since been writing profuse letters of apology. He has apologized to the woman in question. He has apologized to Quebec Anglophones. He has apologized to Canadians.

Yesterday, I read another apology and nearly exclaimed, again Yorunigerianly: “wo, ogbeni yi ma f’idobale pa wa jare.”

I intend to draw heavy conclusions from this situation in the light of ongoing scenarios with President Buhari in Nigeria, sorry, in London.

I have been intrigued by the idea that respect for the highest office in the land starts with the occupant of the said office. I have been intrigued by the fact that Canadians are saying that respect for the said office and respect for the citizen are two indissociable elements of the political lifeworlds we refer to as statehood and nationhood.

In other words, as Prime Minister or President of a country, respect for your office – the highest office in the land – starts with you. To respect your office, you must start by respecting your employer – the citizen.

When these two fundamental prerequisites are met, a powerful symbolism emerges which automatically makes the people respect your office. For it to be respected, the highest office in the land must first be made respectable by the occupant.

From Obasanjo to Jonathan via Yar’Adua, I have written treatises on the Nigerian presidency. The most enduring of my reflections on that branch of the Nigerian state is, I believe, my essay, “Why the Nigerian Presidency is not Respectable.”

I wrote that essay in 2012. Its salience has returned to me as aides and supporters of President Buhari have intensified the familiar and sanctimonious calls we’ve been through with every President since 1999: “respect the office of the President!”

I call this category of compatriots Citizen Abobaku. We took civics to Citizen Abobaku during the respective tenures of President Buhari’s predecessors. I am afraid we must continue that task of civic engagement of Citizen Abobaku today.

The first thing to note is that throughout our recent experience with democracy, whenever Citizen Abobaku has been at his loudest, condemning his compatriots for not respecting the office of the President, it means he has run out of excuses, rationalizations, and justification of the incumbent President who disrespects that very office by: 1) continuously disrespecting the citizens, his employers; 2) reneging on campaign promises or failing to fulfill them.

Calls for respect also means that Citizen Abobaku has never really learnt to separate Nigeria from the person and body of the incumbent President he supports.

If we witnessed this scenarios with every President since Obasanjo, it has been raised to a level worthy of a Nobel Prize by President Buhari, his administration, and Citizen Abobaku who has been all over the airwaves taking umbrage at compatriots insisting on their right to be respected by President Buhari and his handlers.

If Citizen Canadian insisted on and got an apology from the Prime Minister for answering a question in the wrong language, can you imagine what would happen if this Prime Minister, knowing that he was ill and going to take care of his health in another country, wrote a letter to Parliament asking for a rest and recreation leave abroad instead? It would have led to so many problems at so many levels.

First would be the problem of not trusting the national health facilities under his supervision in Canada and going off to another country’s health facilities. Second would be the problem of who exactly is paying for the health safari. Third would be the most serious problem of all: lying to your country’s parliament to conceal the real reason and purpose of your trip. That is lying to the people. That is disrespecting the citizen. That is disrespecting the office of the President – the very office you occupy. Any single one of these itemized problems is an impeachable offence.

A combination of all of them would create not just impeachment but possible investigation and prosecution – in serious democracies. Ask our friend, Sarkozy in France. The former President is now facing prosecution for concealing certain aspects of the disbursement of his campaign funds. He is on trial for more than corruption. He is on trial for disrespecting the office he occupied and disrespecting the citizen through concealment of his activities.

Because Nigeria is never satisfied with little absurdities, the National Assembly decided that President Buhari would not outdo them in disrespecting his office and the citizen. The Senate President and the House Speaker took off to London to visit the President. They reported him hale and hearty.

Before the London trip, the Senate President also twitted vociferously about his telephone conversations with a “hale and hearty” President Buhari. Then he returned from London and read a letter from the President to the Senate asking for an extension of the President’s extended tenure in London on medical grounds.

On Twitter, spokespersons of the Presidency have been at their arrogant best, raining insults daily on citizens who dare to insist on respect. I did not want to dignify the utterly silly Femi Adesina with a mention in this treatise but he is inescapable. In tweet after tweet, he has been calling his boss’s employers - Nigerian citizens - unprintable names. He says they prefer to embrace lies no matter how many times he confronts them with the truth.

Yet, his television appearances are an ode to shallowness and incoherence. He is never able to get his facts straight. Who exactly is he talking to in London? He will begin to dance kokoma and palongo around that question. I don’t blame him. He understands fully well that he is operating in an environment where power overwhelms and there is not enough civic consciousness to engage him.

Citizen Abobaku is always in line, screaming that the people must “respect the office of the President” by unquestioningly accepting the latest stomach-churning incoherent verbiage coming from Aso Rock.

This maxim needs to be translated into every Nigerian language: respect for the office of the President starts with the President, not with you. It starts with everybody he appoints in the Presidency to help him serve you as citizen. And the first requirement of respecting their office is to respect you.

The entire situation of President Buhari’s trip to and stay in London is an epic of disrespect for the Nigerian citizen. Apart from the original grand deception (for which the President deserves impeachment as far as I am concerned), every aspect of the trip has been handled 
as if the dissemination of information to Nigerian citizens were a privilege.

Lai Mohammed – bless his soul! – even opined that the President is a victim of his own forthrightness. Translation Nigeriana: it is not you people’s fault that you feel entitled to information about the President. Shebi it is the President himself who on reaching London initially let you know that he is seeing his doctors. Na una fault?

When Lai Mohammed and Femi Adesina are in a mode so contemptuous of citizens and they enjoy a drumbeat of support from a large fragment of their victims, how does one even begin to teach such citizens that they are owed daily press briefings on the President’s condition by the Presidency? How does one teach such people that they are owed regular briefings by President Buhari’s Nigerian doctors who would have conferred and coordinated things with his medical team in London before holding such briefings in Abuja? The citizen is entitled to these things. It is not a privilege.

R stands for more than respect. R also stands for resignation whenever you understand that you are no longer in the position to carry out the solemn responsibilities of any office, especially the highest office in the land.

In Nigeria, resignation from office is a taboo word. Mention resignation and the supporters, political, religious, and ethnic “owners” of the concerned public official enter into a demented public orgy, screaming and foaming. A Nigerian can pardon rape. A Nigerian can pardon genocide. A Nigerian will never pardon you if you so much as hint the resignation from office of a politician he supports.

One of the many untenable reasons he is going to mobilize against resignation is – you guessed right – the need to respect the office in question. This is why we need more diligent workers in the national civics enterprise. We need to decriminalize resignation in the national imaginary of our people. The idea that it is unthinkable for my man to resign from office gave us Yar’Adua. It gave us Danbaba Suntai in Taraba.

I am not saying that President Buhari is anywhere near these circumstances. However, there are 180 million lives at stake. Those lives do not live in Femi Adesina’s alternative universe of milk and honey all over Nigeria. A state is always more important than any single citizen and that includes the President. One month away, poorly handled, is enough ground for resignation especially if there is no telling how exactly you would be able to handle compound problems on your return: the economy, insecurity, Fulani herdsmen, etc.
Resignation is not leprosy. Resignation is not a crime. In certain cases, it is a moral obligation, an ethical one. Where there is a conscience, it is a decision to be taken in loneliness, away from heehawing opportunists capable of convincing Sigidi that he can swim successfully across the river Niger. Sometimes, resignation is the only way to respect one’s country and one’s compatriots. Sometimes, resignation is the only way to enter history in a grand fashion.

President Buhari, take a measure of your conscience. If you know that even in the best of health, you are overwhelmed, go ahead and resign without listening to the fawning voices around you. Many of your overwhelmed predecessors had a chance to resign. None did because they were admired into perdition and ignominy.

The other day, I heard Femi Adesina saying that it’s still early days for you. You are just in year two of a four-year tenure and you have two more years to deliver miracle. Silly talk like this is what I call admiring one’s boss to perdition and ignominy. Sadly, the majority of your support base speaks like this. That is not how it works. You don’t really have any time left.

Perhaps many in your support base cannot tolerate the idea of your resignation because they fear the chest-beating reaction of the Lilliputian promoters of the corrupt era of your immediate predecessor who are still prosecuting the 2015 election. That is why they can’t even criticize you for not only not prosecuting the anti-corruption war properly but for also harboring your own clan of corrupt aides and associates. That is a shame because it puts such people in your support base in the same infantilist and puny partisan boat as the promoters of the last order.

Anybody who sees Nigeria above such clowning partisan pettiness should be able to give you the advice I have offered you here: respect your office by resigning if you know you can’t go on.

BY Professor Pius Adesanmi

Raise me a nation. How by Johnson Abbaly!

Sharing anyone’s post or opinion on our BLOG doesn’t in any way IMPLY that the Person is a member of the YouthFul and UseFul Democratic Alliance (A Political Party). It doesn't automatically IMPLY that the PERSON also endorses the PARTY until THE PERSON decides to do so PUBLICLY. We deem their OPINION and WRITE-UP worth sharing.


Raise me a nation. How


Create a picture. How it should be.

Break it into 3parts Short. Medium. Long. Work on 3 levels.

Provide Quick wins, short term.

Institutions, medium term.

Expanding Growth capacities, long term.

Raise youths from cradle to business. Educate their minds, unleashed their genius, give them tools...

Get out of their way.

Stick with the vision. 

 Don't talk about you ... What you want to do.

Talk about what's done!

The kingdom is among men.

To raise a kingdom

...raise men!#InnerRythms




For our YOUTHS interested in SECURING OUR FUTURE!

Register here as a member of Africa’s first Youth Oriented Political Party: http://bit.ly/YouthFulNUseFulPoliticalParty

Kind Regards!

Yours In Service (YouthFulNUseFul)

#YoungLeaders #FutureLeaders #GenerationUnborn #LifeLongLegacy #SecuringOurFuture #LongTerm #ChangingtheStatusQuo #PoliticalLeadership #YouthSynergy #TakingResponsibility #TakingOwnership

Friday, 24 February 2017

Why will we Keep QUIET when Men of God meant to LEAD a LIFE of PROBITY decide to become CHILDISH!

I want to talk about a delicate issue!

I know we the people are meant to respect and honour them, Men of God!




But what will make a young educated and well cultured man like myself keep quiet when I see obvious trash being displayed publicly particularly by those who are meant to show decorum and public probity.

I won’t blame the spiritual leaders but the spiritual followers who have decided to be so used by these so-called spiritual leaders. If you happen to adore your Mummy and Daddy in church more than you honour your parents, you are of all son or daughter most miserable and the thunder that should fire you is still doing press-up in Heaven!

I see the way many men and women, boys and girls honour, respect and listen to their Pastors and Spiritual Leaders but the case becomes totally different when it comes to their biological or adopted parent that groomed them. They even quote these infallible men like they are Angels from Heaven, even Satan was an angel and fell!

Our Pastors and Spiritual Leaders will keep taking us for a ride when we keep being foolish followers. For crying out loud, these Pastors are humans like me and you and it’s high time we keep them in that place than exalt them more than the God we haven’t seen but have obviously felt his hands.

With the suffering in the land, a so called ‘Self-styled Big Boy Fashionista Pastor’ somewhere in Africa has the effrontery to show-off on social media and I begin to wonder what sort of generation we are breeding  - these are the kind of Pastors that their members will likely see nothing wrong in what is happening in the BigBrotherNaija show. How do you ever have the guts to show-off your affluence on social media when 90% of your wealth is reaped off other people’s sweat – its high time Pastors begin to establish, run and manage factories, set up businesses, build roads in their immediate communities, provide free or discounted healthcare for members of the host communities. These Pastors need to know that they can live off the purse of the church and they can operate like they are above corrections – Freeze, you are my GUY anytime anyday for calling out that ‘Self-styled Big Boy Fashionista Pastor’ somewhere in Africa. He is part of the problem we have in Nigeria.

We need a strong hand (Efficient Laws and Strong Institutions) on the spiritual leadership and institutions in Nigeria and I really do hope that the present generations of youths are taking a cue and deciding that these wrongs and oligarchs in the Nigerian Christendom cannot continue. If Nigeria will ever change, even our Pastors must be accountable and made to lead a simple life of probity.


We are not saying ‘Don’t enjoy or live large’ but do so in your closet off the prying eye of your ‘followers’ that obviously cannot afford the life you lead but that their sweat and suffering has made possible.

Personally, I will never ever adore or love a Pastor above my Family or even my Country. As a God personified entity with a mandate to fulfill his purpose on earth, my mandate lies first to Humanity (those around me), my family and lastly to myself (ensuring that I lead an exemplary life worthy of emulation)
For our YOUTHS interested in SECURING OUR FUTURE!

Register here as a member of Africa’s first Youth Oriented Political Party: http://bit.ly/YouthFulNUseFulPoliticalParty

Kind Regards!

Cheers!

EldaDavid be my Name!

Sunday, 19 February 2017

We are the architect of our own destinies. We are responsible for our actions and inactions today that determines our tomorrow.




We are the architect of our own destinies. We are responsible for our actions and inactions today that determines our tomorrow. All over Nigeria, the rate of inequality is appalling and painful. A lot of young people suffer and toil to go and read through school with the hope of a better life only to have their hopes dashed as they find that Jobs are no longer readily available for exceptional students unless you have an exceptional connection, family relation or father/mother willing to push you ahead in the search for an excellent Job.

A lot of young people have found their way in Nigeria and abroad often working out their *sses to get opportunities and business their way. They have created a niche and name for themselves from nothing, we have seen the resilience deep within the spirit of the youth, that resilience that is convinced its DREAMS are valid and can come to fruition in Nigeria.

We must hold our Leaders accountable and responsible for the high disparity between the opportuned and less opportune, we must task our old leaders to close the gap between the rich and poor, we must take up the call to action by ensuring our Government can create equal access that guarantees everyone particularly the youths have an equal shot at making it in life from the very onset (18 years and above).

Present day and yesteryears idealism have failed the youths woefully. Youths have been forgotten, trampled upon, we have been neglected, we have been insulted. Lots of youths have even given up on themselves as their situations are hopeless and there seem to be no way for redemption. A lot of Young PEOPLE are tired, weak, frustrated, depressed, angry, dejected, pained, forsaken and totally disillusioned with the present day, #Nigeria.


This is not the Nigeria they have grown up knowing – the stories of past years where everyone had equal opportunities and access to development and growth. A Nation where our best and even worse brains could strive at something good in Nigeria.

Today, a lot of young folks are finding succor in some of the worse of countries as a result of a better economic climate that assures them of butter and bread. We must change this, #OurMumuDonDo

YouthFul and UseFul Democratic Alliance (YUDA) is the #NewDeal we are proposing. We are the new kid on the #bloc. We believe in #Equality, we believe in #EqualOpportunities, we believe in #EqualAccess, we believe in #EqualDevelopmentNGrowth, we believe that #everyone should have an #equalShot at success.

We are postulating a new political #IDEOLOGY called #Equalnism – A Form of Government that serves and creates #EqualOpporunities for the masses to prosper and establish themselves particularly its Youths. A prosperous youth can take care of his father, mother and young siblings and also contribute to the economy by way of tax and donating to humanitarian efforts.

It has become evident and expedient that a new kind of Leadership Disposition is what we need to move forward in Nigeria. We must correct the errors of the past and ensure that we secure the future of generations unborn.


Article Credit: EldaDavid Kehinde Samuel


For our YOUTHS interested in SECURING OUR FUTURE!

Register here as a member of Africa’s first Youth Oriented Political Party: http://bit.ly/YouthFulNUseFulPoliticalParty

Kind Regards!

Yours In Service (YouthFulNUseFul)

#YoungLeaders #FutureLeaders #GenerationUnborn #LifeLongLegacy #SecuringOurFuture #LongTerm #ChangingtheStatusQuo #PoliticalLeadership #YouthSynergy #TakingResponsibility #TakingOwnership


Saturday, 18 February 2017

NIGERIAN YOUTHS AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT by YouthFul & UseFul Democratic Alliance



NIGERIAN YOUTHS AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT.


The development of any society is the interplay between man and his environment. This interplay that ensure self discovery plays a major role in energizing, conscientizing, motivating and mobilizing the people towards a common goal. There is no doubt, when nature created the world, he perfected it with major variable that will make the life of man simpler, easier and peaceful, towards moral, physical and celestial prosperity . However, the inability of man to curtail his ego and self love has been the major obstacle to attaining nature’s promise, thereby, heightening circle of confusion and hopelessness. It is important to say, that man is a product of his environment or value system. It is the value system that shapes the perception and beliefs of the people. Generations upon generation were feed with value system that comes to influence their perception, behaviours, attitude and characters for centuries. Therefore, society with strong value system will experience high development and discipline group of people while a society with weak value system will experience chaos and underdevelopment.

   
The development of any society is the interplay between man and his environment. This interplay that ensure self discovery plays a major role in energizing, conscientizing, motivating and mobilizing the people towards a common goal. There is no doubt, when nature created the world, he perfected it with major variable that will make the life of man simpler, easier and peaceful, towards moral, physical and celestial prosperity . However, the inability of man to curtail his ego and self love has been the major obstacle to attaining nature’s promise, thereby, heightening circle of confusion and hopelessness. It is important to say, that man is a product of his environment or value system. It is the value system that shapes the perception and beliefs of the people. Generations upon generation were feed with value system that comes to influence their perception, behaviours, attitude and characters for centuries. Therefore, society with strong value system will experience high development and discipline group of people while a society with weak value system will experience chaos and underdevelopment.



Although there is no universally accepted definition of whom a youth is? However, in a way of making a personal conceptual clarification, “Youth can be define as a special group of people with strong stamina and passion for realizing certain set goals and objectives”. Also, youth share certain characteristics that distinguish them from others generation. Such characteristic include, impatient for change, zealousness, radicalism, rebellions, curiosity, hardwork, ego and ambition etc.  You will agree with me, that, these are the propelling factors for national development. While national development is the general improvement in the lives of individual, groups, and environment. Looking at these two concepts, it is safe to say, that, youth are the engine and actualizes of national development, if their mindsets are channels in the right direction. Therefore, their actions and inaction are necessary impetus for entrenching and consolidating the vertical and horizontal integrations of any society or country like Nigeria.


You will agree with me, there is a linkage or/and intercourse between youth and national development. This intercourse is not only symbiotically connected; but, one depends on the other for its sustenance. Therefore, the role of youth on national development can not be over emphasis. The wheel of development of any country lies on the shoulder of how productivity and creativity the youthful populations are. The youth in any society are the engine of growth and development; because, they provide the labour force for production of goods and service to take effect. And also, are the critical masses of people, whose action and inaction can develop or destroy the hegemonies of their society. For example according to the 2006 census, the youthful population constituted over 70% of the population. So, therefore, this quantum of population is great assets for the Nigerian state if harness and utilize in the right direction.


Interestingly, the transition of society from one generation to another is critical to the formative and developmental aspiration of such society. That, is why society that prepare their youth for the sake of future aspiration will not only secure her future development; but, will prepare her next set of leaders with the challenges of national reconciliation and development. So, therefore, the role of youth on national development is sacrosanct to the whole developmental aspiration of any society.


The youth are the cornerstone to societal rejuvenation. Societies are not only recreated through the youthful population, but, youth are often referring to as leaders of tomorrow. So, their mindset and roles is of major important to the development of any society. It is perplexing to say, that, no nation will experience development when the preponderance of the population that constitutes the largest percentage of the population are idle and ineffective. So, therefore, the youths have a greater role to play on national development. It has been suggested that Nigeria could by 2030 reap the benefits of what some called a “demographic dividend” if it invest now in human development. Nigeria current demographic structures could be future assets when a demographic window of opportunity opens as fertility and high youth dependency declines. In fact, The Nigeria youths, not oil are the future of Nigeria in the 21st century. 


Unfortunately, these projections, expectations, and future forecasts, seem to be an abysmal blindfolded future,  if the prevailing realities is anything to go by. The current state of the mind of Nigerian youth is not encouraging and doesn’t inspire confidence. Societal neglects and government inability to design an integrated and implementable policy framework targeting the youthful energy for national development, has left the youth without guardianship, mentorship and direction. Instead of utilizing their energy, curiosity, creativity, passion and impatient for change to foster national development; unfortunately, the gamut of the society has left the youth without, hope, guardianship, mentorship and future aspiration, if the agonies of poverty, unemployment, frustration, despondence, confusion, hopelessness, parental and governmental neglects, are anything to go by.


It is my humble submission that, today, due to lack of opportunities and support based in the country, the only place of consolation for the youthful minds to showcase their talents and energy is in the entertainment industry. Which to me is a great disappointment, minus and annoying to me as we continue to forecast future developmental aspiration of our dear country, Nigeria. Entertainment though a multi-million dollar sector in advance countries, but, is a diversionary and idle sector for the pool of human resources and creativity that lie buried in the hands and hearts of Nigeria youth. I believe, the Nigeria youth have more, than, entertainment to offers this great nation. The leaders, and society in general most understand, the miracles of development lies in the development of youthful minds and souls with knowledge and skills. Knowledge and skill have become the global currency of the world. Unfortunately, there is no central bank in the world that prints such currency, except, leaders and societies device their own means of prints it, through harnessing and utilizing the energy, creativity and passion of their youth for national development. Sure it is great to have oil and gas and other mineral resources, but as according to Schleicher, they only weaken society in the long run unless they’re used to build schools and the culture of long time learning.

It has often be argued that, if you want to know how a country is going to do in 21st century, don’t count its oil resources or gold, but, count its highly effective teachers, involved parents and committed students. It is a knowledge based century; the ability of nations to rise and consolidate the gains of globalization, lies in training and educating well inform youths. The secret of development in Asia, Finland is the miracle of development of human engines through education and skill acquisition. It is equally, important for both the leadership of the country, parents and societal gatekeepers to understand and appreciate the fact that, we will only be deluding ourselves if we think that, we can build a nation out of these centrifugal forces of confusion and frustration, we called leaders of tomorrow (Nigeria Youth). Political leaders must channels their energy in harnessing and utilizing the energy and passion of the youth through positive means, not the current image of political thuggery, assassins, election riggers, bed warmers and prostitution.

No doubt; Nigeria is seating on a gun powder ready for explosion, if the reality of frustration and hopelessness among the vast of Nigerian youths are anything to go by. Therefore, it is important, for policy makers, parents and gate keepers, to understand and appreciate that, youth are the future of this country; therefore, their mindset and creativity should be a major concern to the nation. There is need for the government to create atmosphere favourable for the youth to achieve their desire objectives. The agonies of Boko Haram, Militancy, armed Robberies, Scams and other social deviance are the product lack of guardianship and vision for national development. Investing in knowledge and skill is critical to youth development. Education is the cornerstone of country’s future. Education here should be more than, just knowing facts and receiving recognitions for being able to attain such; but, it should be holistic in nature, teaching more than just knowing data, but, also, teaching understanding and awareness and nurturing potentials. No doubt; if properly harness and utilize, the youth are the future of Nigeria in 21st century, because there is direct relationship between youthful mindset and developmental aspiration of such society.

For our YOUTHS interested in SECURING OUR FUTURE!

Register here as a member of Africa’s first Youth Oriented Political Party: http://bit.ly/YouthFulNUseFulPoliticalParty

Kind Regards!

Yours In Service (YouthFulNUseFul)


#YoungLeaders #FutureLeaders #GenerationUnborn #LifeLongLegacy #SecuringOurFuture #LongTerm #ChangingtheStatusQuo #PoliticalLeadership #YouthSynergy #TakingResponsibility #TakingOwnership

Friday, 17 February 2017

The time has come for us Nigerian youths to radically change our strategy and approach, not only towards these avaricious, wicked, callous older political leaders but also to national issues.



"For our future world to be livable, the heroes must win their struggle. But the villains have the guns and the money, and to date, they have usually prevailed. That will continue unless we radically change our approach..."
Excerpts from "Bottom Billion" by :
~ Paul Collier

The quote above is a reflection of what is obtainable in our society today.  We live in a country where the older corrupt political leaders believe that Nigeria and her enormous wealth is their private property. The reason they have succeeded so far is because they enjoy the support of the masses, especially the youths.

As mentioned in the quote above, the time has come for us Nigerian youths to radically change our strategy and approach, not only towards these avaricious,  wicked, callous older political leaders but also to national issues.

Repeatedly,  most of the political parties that have been registered by INEC and are presently in existence, have all failed the masses,  the down trodden, especially the youths/young people. Is it not time we all come together and make this better alternative stand the test of time? It is for this reason that "Youthful and Useful Democratic Alliance" (YUDA), a youth - based political party and movement has being established for the entire Nigerian youths. This is a platform where it is not required of you to go get a loan, simply because you wish to contest on our platform. We can no longer rely on these older political leaders anymore.

Let us youths come together under This platform and rebuild our polity . I challenge every Nigerian youth to get involved and become more proactive. Together we can reclaim our divine mandate from these older political leaders(villains). Youthful and Useful Democratic Alliance (YUDA) is a youth - based political party, that has been created, as an alternative for all those who are really tired of these same sets of older political leaders, that have dominated our political space for ages.

~ Ekokorhe Ejiro Friday

Wednesday, 15 February 2017

I start on a note of argument that whoever is between the age of 50 years and above, belong to the older generation.



I start on a note of argument that whoever is between the age of 50 years and above, belong to the older generation. And sincerely I congratulate you if you are part of this bracket because it is a great privilege to have attained the adult ages.



I must commend the efforts been made to develop a thought to be liberated from colonialism and as such, I found it a vital achievement from the their generation to have strived or fought firmly without any sense of intimidation or fear of uncertainty in the struggle for Nigeria independence.

During the period of independence, the entire nation were filled with ecstatic activities. People were extremely happy as slaves regaining freedom, the hopeless began to live in greater expectations. Freedom agitators made history as they became heroes of the moment and were seen as the Lords of the nation with uncompromising honour and worship from the common people. Expectations from the people became necessity, hoping that independence would bring ease and peace, growth and development, surplus and sincere management, economic boom and employment, innovations and technologies, fairness and justice, strength and confidence, faith and unity, loyalty and honesty etc, and people began in solidarity to pledge allegiance to the Nigerian soil.

The future of Nigeria as a republic was cloudy and undefined, the society was very scanty of foresight specialists who would have forecast or issue out warnings on possible outcomes or consequences of independence we were not ripped for.

Of course I believe that if you are not ripe to be independent, you would lack leadership ideologies and qualities. Shortly after independence, military took over and civil war began! Millions of lives were lost. Many ran away to protect there lives, some embarked on a journey of no return. Families and properties were destroyed, some went on exile and many were left without a family. Many became citizens of another soil unexpectedly and the scar is still in people's mind till date.

A nation where people have pledged "to defend her unity" became a nation with tribal sentiment. The same people who have pledged to defend the unity of the entire Nigerian soil became tribal agitators, they starts fighting for their selfish interest. What a pity!

A nation where people have pledged "to be faithful, loyal and honest" later metamorphose to a territory where people's hope is fade overnight, loyalty became political, and honesty became personal decision. People have pledged to "serve Nigeria with all their strength". But unfortunately, citizens are not encouraged. I have never seen where people serve with all their strengths when there is no hope like in slavery. If people are not encouraged, they turn to what they are not meant to be.

People have pledged to "uphold her honour and glory" but it is a pity that the name Nigeria among comity of nations is a symbol of corruption and mismanagement, tribalism and ethnicity, discrimination and inequality, terrorism and militancy, insecurity and lies, economic woes and recession, greediness and injustice, unemployment and inflation, poverty and under development etc.


Government influences all independent agencies, politics is everywhere including judicial and defence ministries. Older generation have successfully effects people's reasoning with virus of poverty. Of course if poverty rate is too high, it affect brain. People born and brought up in poverty, that's why it is very difficult for an average Nigerian today when it comes to decision making. The greatest disaster is to not reason straight. That is our inheritance from the older generation. We have inherited a country where lies and deceits are mixed with governance and trust is at your own risk.

We are now in the era of CHANGE where official incompetence is seen as credibility and everything turn out to be economic crisis in just a year. Whoever has taken a wrong step does not deserve any reward but penalty and therefore the consequence of any wrong step in life is nothing but punishment. Now, the entire nation is suffering for a cause from some fanatic or self centred Nigerian whose reasoning has been fade, politically hijacked and brainwashed to the point they still never know anything rather than composing excuses to defend failure and official incompetence of the central government.

I said in one of my articles that Nigeria is going through a very critical period in her history and it requires the effort of everyone to address the problems even though it is self inflicted. The time to sit back and wish for a Messiah to come and resolve all problems for us is gone. None but ourselves can emancipate ourselves from years of deceit, corruption and misrule. In taking our destinies in our hand, it's a journey that requires us to delete our ergo and differences and let us come together to unite against our nation's common foes.


Article by Opeyemi Ayoola!


For our YOUTHS interested in SECURING OUR FUTURE!

Register here as a member of Africa’s first Youth Oriented Political Party: http://bit.ly/YouthFulNUseFulPoliticalParty

Kind Regards!

Yours In Service (YouthFulNUseFul)

#YoungLeaders #FutureLeaders #GenerationUnborn #LifeLongLegacy #SecuringOurFuture #LongTerm #ChangingtheStatusQuo #PoliticalLeadership #YouthSynergy #TakingResponsibility #TakingOwnership

NIGERIAN YOUTHS: A GENERATION IN SEARCH OF ITSELF - ( part 1) by Ekokorhe Ejiro Friday



" when we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves"
- Victor E. Frank



This write up is intended to prick the conscience of every Nigerian youth and galvanize us towards positive action. It is a call for us to challenge the present status quo, create a reawakening, cause everyone of us to engage in sober reflections and possibly lead to rediscovery of ourselves individually and as a generation. 

Today, an average Nigerian youth, save for few, irrespective of geographical positioning within the polity or religious beliefs, is filled with self-pity, despair, hate, suspicion and so on. This is partly because over the years, we have been relegated, abused, shut out of relevance in our national affairs etc. This now seem to be the normal way of things and in fact, some of us youths have completely resigned to fate, accepted this trend as a way of life without any form of rational enquiry. For too long, we have allowed a few people from the older generation to hold us captive, dictate to us who we are, lie to us about who we really are as youths and a generation. These older people have consistently lied to us that we are not ready for leadership. We have been held down continuously by these set of people with the notion that we are good for nothing other than to engage in political rallies and campaigns for them during elections.  Some of the questions I'd love to ask are: are these assertions about us correct, with the various ways our generation has been labelled? Who really are we as a generation? What can we achieve if we come together? Are we still leaders of tomorrow? Or leaders of today, with stubborn determination to confront our fears and adversaries of today so we can attain the promises of tomorrow?

I dare to write to every youth in our nation- the youth in the extreme of sokoto, those in far away akwa ibom, those in the hills of plateau, those in the interior of Enugu, I dare to write to all of us, both home and in the diaspora, declaring that we're a different generation, set apart by providence to salvage our nation. In spite of all we are going through at the hands of these few older generation, that seem to have shackled and weighed us down, there are some unique things about us. I am particularly delighted that majority of us have realised that we can only be leaders of tomorrow only by procrastination and choice. In the world we live in today, procrastination can no longer hold sway because the rest of the world is marching on, thus we cannot afford to lag behind again. As evident over the years, we are not easily broken, we are a resilient generation, we are that generation that the world has been waiting upon to take the lead in Africa and indeed, the third world. 

The history of us in recent times has demonstrated that indeed we have all it takes to be a great generation, to be that generation that will lay the foundation upon which other coming generations will build on. All the requisite factors for greatness are embedded in us already. 

When the older ones try to weaken our collective spirits again, let us remind them of the giant strides youths across the federation are taking in the ICT world, tell them of our entrepreneurial spirits in spite of the state of near hopelessness that they have plunged our nation over the years. Remind them of our level of tolerance so far, even in the face of brazen corrupt acts perpetrated by most of them and the level of bad governance across all tiers of government.

 It is time for us to write our own history, be the leaders of today and assert ourselves as a generation in our nation today. The last 100 years was never really about our generation, we were not active partakers of historical events that took place with that span of time. But we sure can make the next 100 years count by being gladiators, actors and makers of history. It is up to us now to love ourselves, even when the older people may bicker and beat the drums of war or seek to annihilate themselves. We must come together and make a difference because most of their actions are never about us and our welfare. Hence, nothing about us, without us, is for us youths.

When you are asked, who are you? Tell the inquirer that you are a quintessential part of the present generation that is poised to rewrite our history as a people and as a nation.

- Ekokorhe Ejiro Friday


For our YOUTHS interested in SECURING OUR FUTURE!

Register here as a member of Africa’s first Youth Oriented Political Party: http://bit.ly/YouthFulNUseFulPoliticalParty

Kind Regards!

Yours In Service (YouthFulNUseFul)

#YoungLeaders #FutureLeaders #GenerationUnborn #LifeLongLegacy #SecuringOurFuture #LongTerm #ChangingtheStatusQuo #PoliticalLeadership #YouthSynergy #TakingResponsibility #TakingOwnership

Tuesday, 14 February 2017

Iyalaya Anybody: Pencils, Nigerian Innovation, & Africa’s Path In The 21st Century By Pius Adesanmi

Sharing anyone’s post or opinion on our BLOG doesn’t in any way IMPLY that the Person is a member of the YouthFul and UseFul Democratic Alliance (A Political Party). It doesn't automatically IMPLY that the PERSON also endorses the PARTY until THE PERSON decides to do so PUBLICLY. We deem their OPINION and WRITE-UP worth sharing.

You must excuse the obscenity, “iyalaya anybody”, in my title. When you invite a well-known scholar of African popular cultures to address such a distinguished assembly of actors and professionals in Nigeria’s corporate and entrepreneurial world, you must be prepared to be illuminated by the philosophical nuggets always hidden in the lingos and cultures of the African street.



In its pristine cultural background in the Yoruba world, “iyalaya is an obscenity hurled at your opponent in a brawl to display contempt for his or her maternal lineage. It is usually accompanied by the insulting palm and five-finger flash we call “waka” in the face of your opponent. The consequence, as you all know, is often a bloody nose and an unscheduled trip to the hospital. However, as cultures evolve across generations, new meanings emerge and old words or expressions and are sent on new errands by the human imagination.
Thus, in its contemporary usage in Nigerian popular culture, iyalaya anybody”speaks directly to the spirit and theme of Verdant Zeal’s 5th Innovention Series: “The Next Big Thing: Identifying Africa’s Untapped Potential.” Within this broad thematic framing around the African continent, I was further mandated by the organizers of this event to try and think through the particular issue of a path for Nigerian innovation in the 21st century. 
I was asked to ponder some questions: what promises does Nigerian innovation hold and in which directions could it lead our society? What are the challenges to Nigerian innovation? Indeed, during one of my many telephone conversations with Verdant Zeal’s Mr. Dipo Adesida on the subject matter of this lecture, he had even told me point-blank: “Prof, we want you to answer the question: what’s the next big thing for Nigeria?” I gave him a confounding answer: iyalayaanybody”!
It was not immediately clear to Mr. Adesida – and I am sure it is not clear to you too as yet – how “iyalaya anybody”, a slang from the popular culture factory of a certain Nigerian youth demographic that loves to display its swagger on social media, can be said to be the next big thing in Nigerian, nay African innovation. Permit me to sustain your suspense a bit. The longer you are unable to figure out the connection between “iyalaya anybody” and the theme of this conference, the more time I have to make my case and explore matters in detail!
Suffice it to say, for now, that starting with your beautiful neologism, “innovention”, the theme of this event features at least three of the conceptual keywords which 21st-century modernity and civilization ritually use to capture the futuristic flights of the human imagination, as well as the feats that are shaping our collective human future in the provinces of invention, innovation, entrepreneurship, and potential.
Invention. Innovation. Entrepreneurship. Potential. Add globalizing economy, competitive knowledge economy, technology-driven development, and knowledge-based economy to these four keywords and you would have established a broad handle on how peoples, nations, states, and other actors and participants in the global marketplace of human advancement are remapping and reshaping notions such as growth, development, and prosperity. These keywords speak to something I propose we call a global scramble for the future of humanity. Peoples, nations, states, corporations, multilateral organizations – and just about everything and everybody in between – are in a scramble to envision the future of humanity in line with the conceptual benchmarks of the aforementioned keywords. 
The UN, with her sustainable development goals, wants to fundamentally change the world in seventeen sustainable steps by 2030. In essence, the SDGs are a fifteen-year agenda. Europe is slightly more ambitious. She does not stop at 2030 in her own roadmap to the future. The European Commission’s vision document is entitled: “The Knowledge Future: Intelligent Policy Choices for Europe 2050”. Incidentally, China also has Vision 2050. For the United Arab Emirates, it is Vision 2021, mapped out in a document built around what she calls a “competitive knowledge economy”.
Africa is not left out of this scramble for the future. Indeed, in my comparative study of what I am calling the global texts of the scramble for the future, the Africa Union’s Agenda 2063 – a fifty-year envisioning of the future of the continent and her peoples launched in 2013 – is by far one of the most ambitious agenda-setting texts. Furthermore, while studying these agenda texts, the literary critic in me did not fail to observe that the omniscient narrator speaking about Africa’s future in Agenda 2063 speaks compellingly from a position of agency.
The confident perspective of the omniscient voice speaking in Agenda 2063 is an indication that the African continent is very much aware of a global scramble for a future powered by invention, innovation, genius, and entrepreneurial efflorescence; a future that will be determined and shaped by those who understand and position themselves as central players in a global growth and development scenario driven almost exclusively by competitive knowledge economies and economies of competitive knowledge. In this picture, Africa seems to be saying that she has a stake and an edge.
In essence, if you compare the omniscient narrative voices in, say, Europe 2050 and Africa’s Agenda 2063, the latter seems to be saying to the former: if you think that the nature and the order of things in the next fifty years are going to be the way you have programmed them in the last five hundred years, with you on the throne and me always groveling in poverty and backwardness at your feet, you’ve got another think coming! To the extent that the race to the second half of the 21st century and beyond is going to be powered by genius, innovation, invention, and knowledge, and not by slave ships, Gatling guns, natural resources, and colonial punitive expeditions, I, Africa, have all it takes to be an agent and a central stakeholder in the said race. 
In other words, the Africa Union’s Agenda 2063 seems to be beating its chest and saying iyalaya anybody” to all the other agenda-setting texts and literature from Europe, North America, Asia, and the Middle East. How does one account for the optimism, hope, and confidence which powers Agenda 2063 despite the persistent realities on the ground in Africa? To answer this question, we need to take a closer look at what unites these vision documents from various parts of the world. Let me lift a sample language from the chapter on “competitive knowledge economy” in the UAE’s Vision 2021 document:
“The global economy will witness significant economic changes in the coming years and the UAE Vision 2021 National Agenda aims for the UAE to be at its heart. As a result, it focuses on the UAE becoming the economic, touristic and commercial capital for more than two billion people by transitioning to a knowledge-based economy, promoting innovation and research and development, strengthening the regulatory framework for key sectors, and encouraging high value-adding sectors. These will improve the country’s business environment and increase its attractiveness to foreign investment. 
The National Agenda also aims for the UAE to be among the best in the world in entrepreneurship as this plays a key role in unlocking the potential of nationals and enables them to be a driving force of the UAE’s economic development through small and medium enterprises in the private sector. Furthermore, the Agenda strives to instill an entrepreneurial culture in schools and universities to foster generations endowed with leadership, creativity, responsibility and ambition. This will allow the UAE to be among the best in the world in ease of doing business, innovation, entrepreneurship and R&D indicators”.
This is how the UAE frames her path to 2021. Now, let’s hear from the European Commission. Here, we need not go beyond the Foreword to Europe’s Vision 2050 text, written by the European Commissioner, before we encounter language very similar to the language of the UAE document:
“Foresight is an important tool to help us face the future with confidence, understand opportunities and risks, and help us develop our medium to long term strategies for research, science and innovation policy. It takes many guises: trends, signals, scenarios, visions, roadmaps and plans are all parts of the tool-box for looking to the future. In addition to these tools, using foresight requires an in-depth reflection on the policy implications and related scenarios. This report ‘The Knowledge Future: intelligent policy choices for Europe 2050’ is an excellent example of such a reflection. 
Europe’s research, innovation and higher education systems are the foundation of our economic and social prospects, shaping our ability to tackle numerous challenges at both local and international level. Globalization, demographic changes and technological advances pose important challenges and opportunities for research and innovation in Europe. By reflecting on the trends and articulating scenarios, this report helps us think differently about European policies in the medium to long term.”
Same keywords. Same phraseology. Similar texts from North America and Asia do not disappoint in featuring the same keywords. Agenda 2063 agrees with all these texts from the rest of the world: the future belongs to innovation, invention, knowledge, research and development. But commonality of language, diction, and vision is not enough to account for why Africa’s Agenda 2063 places her in an “iyalaya anybody” position with the rest of the world in terms of the scramble for the future. This leaves us with the last thing that all these vision statements from Africa, Europe, Asia, and the Americas have in common.
Youth!
All the texts agree that with the global shift from resources to human capital development, the youth demographic is the next big thing – the single most strategic key in creating prosperous societies of the future. Take the overwhelming emphasis on the youth demographic out of any of these documents and the lofty dreams, hope, vision, promise, and aspiration contained therein will collapse completely. 
Basically, these documents are saying that invention, innovation, genius, entrepreneurship, and potential all devolve mainly from the dynamism of the youth demographic. In the last decade or so, the future of humanity has placed a bet on youth. The societies of the future are saying that the youth demographic is the next big thing. For good reason. If you look at the conjugation of genius, innovation, invention, energy, and work ethic which led to the emergence of the Asian Tigers and placed them at the forefront of global economic and infrastructural postmodernity, you will find the unmistakable footprint of the youth demographic all over that scenario.
This explains why from South Korea to China, from Singapore to Malaysia, from Japan to India, the explosion of the youth demographic, which social scientists once labelled a problem, is now often discoursed as a “demographic dividend” by Asia watchers. If you study Europe 2050 very carefully, you’ll notice a certain discomfort when it comes to population. The document recognizes the centrality of the youth demographic to a future of humanitymidwived by innovation, invention, and genius but Europe is worried and you should know why. 
Unlike Asia and Africa, her population is aging and she does not have the youth demographic that can sustain her competitiveness in the sort of innovation-dependent future that I am describing here but hush…hush… these are things we whisper behind Europe’s back. As Fela would put it, don’t tell anybody that I told you that Europe is aging and is at a strategic demographic disadvantage in a future that is going to be determined by the restless and borderless scope of youth innovation, creativity, genius, and invention.
What the Asian Tigers call “demographic dividend” is what watchers of Africa have been calling “youth advantage” or “youth opportunity” since the beginning of the 21st century. It wasn’t always rosy. Just as the youth demographic in Asia was initially seen as a problem, the usual suspects who have told Africa’s story for five hundred years said that Africans were having way too many children. They said that there was a youth bomb waiting to explode and unleash continental scenarios of hunger, poverty, want, unemployment, social unrest, crisis, conflict, and all the usual things they say about Africa. When their master of ceremony, The Economist, saw all these things, she promptly declared Africa a hopeless continent at the end of the 20th century.
Ten years later, The Economist had a road to Damascus experience and declared Africa a hopeful continent. Our friends in Bretton Woods began to scream Africa Rising. The entire frame of discoursing Africa changed. Suddenly, everybody began to see hope, opportunity, and potential. China rushed in. 
The connecting strand in all these developments is Africa’s youth and her innovation. For when experts speak, for instance, of the rise of a new African middle class and how they are changing the topography and the skylines of Lagos, Abuja, Accra, Nairobi, Kampala, Addis Ababa, what they really mean is the rise of a mall-cultured, IT-savvy, and tech-savvy generation that has altered the destiny of the African continent by finding a way to bypass the insurmountable dysfunction of the state in Africa and connect to global and transnational circuitries of opportunity – the way that the youth of Africa found around the collapse of the African state is called innovation. 
I will return to this question of African youth and innovation shortly but perhaps it is now time to end your extended suspense over what “iyalaya anybody” has got to do with this matter. The mere mention of iyalaya anybody” brings to mind the Nigerian musician, Olamide, and his famous spat with music industry icon, Don Jazzy. No Nigerian needs to be reminded the details of this spat which shook the African entertainment industry to its roots and set Twitter and Facebook on fire for weeks. With the whole world watching, Olamide had shot out at the audience, “iyalaya anybody”, while dissing Don Jazzy.
When we are done here, I want you all to go to YouTube and watch the clip of that episode again. Watch Olamide’s poise and posture; pay attention to the tenor and cadence of his voice; do not miss the streak of confidence with which he screamed “iyalaya anybody” at the audience. Iyalaya anybody and what it entails in popular culture is the summation and the biography of the 21st century postmodern African youth. Iyalaya anybody is swagger. It is a thematic of the self as borderless and unleashed. Iyalaya anybody involves a projection of the self into horizons of derring-do, of exploration, of adventure. It is the unmooring of the human spirit and imagination. Iyalaya anybody says I am young and I can self-project into spaces and places never before imagined. It is human potential untethered.
“Iyalaya anybody” is the philosophical base and portrait of the kind of youth demographic that has been at the heart of Africa’s resurgence and promise since the beginning of the new millennium. A confident youth demographic that dares sans frontieres! It is the abundance of this youth potential all over the continent that makes Agenda 2063 so confident, so sure of herself, so certain that Africa will not be marginal in the scramble for a future underwritten by invention and innovation. If Agenda 2063 is betting so much on the ability of the continent’s youth demographic to rise up to the challenges of the global knowledge economy, it is because examples abound across the continent of momentous shifts in culture and economics midwived by youth innovation and invention. Nigeria has been the pacesetter and trendsetter in this respect.
Consider the fact that as recently as the 1990s, Africa’s consumption of culture was largely dependent on Hollywood and the American music industry. Then came the reinvention of musical genres across the continent and American musicians were driven out of the dance floors and party halls of the entire continent. The Francophones started this continental cultural rebirth. I am sure you all remember how an entire continent and her diaspora swayed to the magical rhythms of “Premier Gaou” in a transcontinental and transnational burst of musical jouissance. I am sure you still remember how Awilo Longomba entranced an entire continent from Johannesburg to Nairobi via Lagos and Accra in the 1990s.
I mentioned earlier that “iyalaya anybody” is no respecter of borders and boundaries. From behind thelanguage Iron Curtain in Africa, Awilo Longomba and Magic System burst across Anglophone Africa in the 1990s. The recalibration of the African musical landscape that they inaugurated was what prepared the ground for Innocent TuFace Idibia of the African Queen fame and Soni Nneji of the Oruka fame to conquer Africa and the world. Think of how far Africa’s musical innovation has come since then. There is even a generation of Nigerians on Facebook and Twitter for whom TuFace, African China, Mad Melon, and Soni Nneji are old school because this latter generation came of age on Azonto, Dorobucci, Eminado and Shakiti Bobo.
But also think of what has come with the rebirth of music: economics, entrepreneurship, industry, employment. Everything I have said about Africa’s music industry could be said for Nollywood. Indeed, much more could be said for Nollywood in terms of how the derring-do and innovative spirit of Nigerian youth created an industry that eventually said “iyalaya anybody” to Bollywood and is now giving Hollywood a good run for its money.
One asset that Nigeria’s and Africa’s youth demographic has in terms of channeling innovation and the knowledge economy in confronting Africa’s contemporary challenges and mapping her way to the future is the dysfunction of the African state and the near total absence of imagination and critical intelligence in running the state.  Sounds contradictory, innit?
Come with me. 
If you look at the United Arab Emirates, which around here is reducible to Dubai, you will see that she solved two major problems within a generation. First was the question of how she was going to transition to a post-oil economy through an aggressive diversification of her economy. Second was her irrepressible urge to become the touristic capital of the world.
If you want the wealthiest people in the world to replace you with Paris and other chic Western destinations as the world’s headquarters of tourism, there must be a visionary leadership able to channel the imagination and potential of the youth to finding innovative ways to have ice rinks and ski resorts in the desert. The leaders of the United Arab Emirates have been providing this strategic vision that has enhanced the creative and innovative juices of their youth. 
The American example is also instructive. Today, people look at Mark Zuckerberg and his generation as the epitome of 21st-century youth innovation, invention, and entrepreneurship. But the foundation for this spirit was laid by generations of American visionary leaders. Long before Mark Zuckerberg was born, an American leader had taught his people that there is no limit to human will and desire. He gave them a deadline to extend themselves beyond us all and conquer the moon. This no-limit philosophy to human daring, imagination, and innovation is the philosophical matrix into which the generation of Mark Zuckerberg was born. Do not make the mistake of thinking that these kids just happened along ex-nihilo. 
And today, the leaders of Dubai are inspiring their youth demographic by making them believe that whatever futuristic leaps they can imagine can be done. Every time you think that Dubai has taken us to the very limits of futuristic architecture and construction, some youth somewhere innovates an engineering marvel that allows Dubai to add more floors to those skyscrapers. In America, the leadership is telling a restless youth demographic that the moon is not enough – they must conquer Mars. All over Asia, youth are imagining and shaping our future in huge innovation leaps because their leaders are telling them that they must beat American kids. That is why Chinese kids go to Harvard, MIT, Yale, Stanford, and Columbia and make American kids look like dunces in those places.
The opposite is the case in much of Africa. Take Nigeria for example. While visionary leadership and the state are making it possible for the youth in America and Asia to dream of conquering Mars and opening up the next frontiers of science and innovation, the Nigerian Federal government recently assured her own youth that with patience, dedication, prayers and dry fasting, we may be able to manufacture pencils in two or three years. Yes, you heard me right. Manufacturing pencils by 2018 or 2019 is how a Federal Minister in Nigeria recently framed the aspirations of the Nigerian government. With any luck, the Nigerian government may inspire our youth to try and see how we might be able to manufacture toothpicks in 2050.
The tragic mental constipation of the state in Africa is magnified by Nigeria in ways that are intensely painful and personal. If you think that aiming to manufacture pencils at about the time that some people elsewhere are thinking that they may land a man on Mars and start Mars tourism is the worst case of aspirational poverty we have encountered from the Nigerian state in recent times, it means you are not current. 
All over Nigeria, Fulani herdsmen have been having bloody clashes with their host communities, culminating in the recent Agatu massacres which resulted in about five hundred deaths in some estimates. The Nigerian state’s predictable response to a problem which calls for the facilitation and mobilization of the innovative genius of the people is to retort that she would import grass from Brazil to feed the cattle and solve the problem! This got me thinking about the boy who recently resolved a problem for the Masai of Kenya. Lions kill their cattle. The boy invented a flashing light device which scares away the lions. The boy’s invention is trending in Kenya. Bring that problem to Nigeria and the Nigerian state’s reaction would not be how to inspire genius and innovation. Some Minister would have suggested that we import lions that are allergic to the cattle of the Masai.
But I insist that the lack of enabling or inspiring official environments for the unleashing of the creative intelligence of the continent’s youth demographic is an ironic advantage. When you understand that all over the world, the youth demographic is being called upon to harness the resources of the global knowledge economy to solve the critical problems of their societies in the present and to innovate pathways to the future; when you understand that leadership and the state have a significant role to play that is largely absent in Africa, then you understand that the cards are stacked against you and you must double your effort. 
Your innovative spirit must be much more intense than what obtains in the United Arab Emirates, Europe, or North America. Making monumental progress through innovation and an irrepressible spirit of the sort that I have theorized as iyalaya anybody is how Africa’s cultural consumption in music and film has been redefined by the continent’s youth with Nigeria as hub. Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Amazon, Tumblr, and YouTube are products of genius, innovation, invention, and entrepreneurial wizardry but they were all midwived in an enabling environment. Ushahidi, Budgit, Nairaland, Konga, and Nollywood were all midwived in chronically disabling and disabled environments. The case of Nollywood is particularly telling. By the time the Nigerian state eventually decided to throw money at her in 2015, she had already overtaken Bollywood without help.
It should be clear from the foregoing that identifying the next big thing and surmounting debilitating circumstances has never been a problem for Africa’s youth demographic. Ushahidi and Budgit are innovations of foresight by young people in Kenya and Nigeria who understand that the future of the continent cannot happen in the absence of a citizenry divorced from civics. Budgit is also a warning to the Africa state. The imagination of the youth is unleashed and cannot be stopped. The innovation or invention that will make you accountable to the people is always just around the corner. The innovation that will bring you closer to good governance is always just around the corner. 
In 2016, for instance, President Buhari failed in his oversight duties and his budget was padded by unscrupulous civil servants, creating one of the worst fiscal scandals in the postcolonial history of Nigeria. President Buhari failed in his duties because he was not aware of an innovation called Budgit. He has now been made painfully aware of it. Trust me, his 2017 budget will be fine. He will buy plenty of tomtom and kolanuts and go through the budget with a fine tooth comb.
What the 21st-century global atmospherics of innovation, invention, and potential should say to Nigeria’s youth demographic, therefore, is that they are called upon to solve the big problems of the day in the absence of visionary governance. Let us return to the question of the Fulani herdsmen and government’s proposed solution of importing grass from Brazil to feed Fulani cattle. With daily advancements in biotechnology, all it will take is for some gifted youth one day to stumble on a patent for improved nutritious grass that can be grown all over the arid expanse of the north. After all, there are people already projecting into a future of rainforests in the aridity of the United Arab Emirates.
Just imagine the lives that will be saved, the enhanced economic activities and the entrepreneurial frontiers that will be opened up in Nigeria if we were to channel the innovative spirit of the youth into thinking up ways to come up with nutritious grass! Just imagine the opportunities that could open up for Verdant on the promotion, branding, and packaging front if biotechnological innovation were to be used in solving the grass issues of cattle rearing in Nigeria! 
This brings me to my next point: mobilities. Mobilities is the future of humanity. Part of the reason why Africa and Nigeria still face enormous challenges is that we are yet to fully understand mobilities are indissociable from the knowledge economies and innovation ecosystems that are shaping the nature and future of human society.
Innovation has no home. Cutting edge knowledge and invention are no respecters of boundaries and borders. It is in response to the fluidity of innovation and invention that economies are globalizing and interconnecting in a frenetic pace. People will and must move and with them ideas. The next innovation or invention that will change the face of medicine, construction, or architecture forever may be crossing the Sahara Desert right now as we speak, on its way to Europe via the perilous boats of the Mediterranean Sea.
Brazil, the country from which Nigeria wants to import grass, understands the centrality of mobilities to the scramble for the future. Unknown to many people, Brazil is currently one of the biggest players on the African continent alongside China and South Africa. Brazil is buying up huge tracts of land in Southern Africa to feed its ethanol and agricultural industries. We are speaking of millions of acres already bought in Mozambique, a country twice the size of California. 
The imagination of Brazilian inventors and innovators is crossing boundaries to make the soil of Angola and Mozambique produce high-yield sugar cane for Brazil’s ethanol industry. That is the power of contemporary global mobilities. I understand that Verdant Zeal has blazed a trail here by organizing a staff retreat in one African capital a year. Now, here is a Nigerian brand that understands that the future belongs to mobilities. Keep it up!
Yet, in Nigeria and in Africa, we continue to place cultural, religious, and political impediments on the path of mobilities, forgetting that our youth have to be part of the global ecology of mobilities for their imagination to roam untrammeled. We continue to let primordial identities stand in the way of the freedom to innovate which, according to Professor Calestous Juma of Harvard, is the way to go for Africa. If I am Igbo, Hausa, Yoruba, Fulani, Tiv, Ijaw, or Ogoni, how am I supposed to give free rein to my imagination and potential when I have to watch my shoulders as a non-indigene every time I venture out of my state? What we lose in the 21st century by placing primordial obstacles on the path of the freedom to roam and innovate is not easy to quantify in empirical terms and that is why we are hardly aware of it.
Only Ghana seems to have understood what is at stake in terms of mobilities because she inaugurated visa-free entry to Ghana for all citizens of Africa. That is one small step for Ghana, and one giant step for Africa. It is important for Nigerian youth to rise up to the challenge of national and transnational mobilities.
One way in which Nigerian youth can overcome strictures and impediments to mobilities is by constantly striving to become full and active citizens of global economies of knowledge. Cast your mind back to the agenda-setting documents we examined at the beginning of this lecture. Whether it is the UAE document or the European text, you would have noticed the emphasis on world-class and first-rate Universities and research institutions as the power houses of 21st century cutting-edge research. They are not joking. The University idea is taken extremely seriously in those societies and billions is poured into research and knowledge production.
In fact, China and the United Arab Emirates are having it both ways. They are building their own 21st-century world-class Universities, attracting the best brains in the disciplines and the professions to those Universities while still sending their kids en masse to elite Institutions of the West in case there is anything they are missing. That is why Universities and research institutions in the West and in Asia always dominate all the rankings and are by far superior in research output and indicators.
Africa barely registers here and you know why. The closest we have to what might be generously called 21st-century Universities in Africa are in South Africa. I am thinking of Wits, UJ, UCT, Rhodes, and Stellenbosch to name a few. The emphasis here is on the word generosity otherwise South Africa wouldn’t even come close to having anything I consider to be a 21st-century University. The picture indeed is very bad in Africa and there is no need sugar coating it. Nigeria, as usual, leads Africa in the bastardization of the University idea. 
In fact, one of the most frustrating things for me is when Nigerian kids graduate and they send me emails seeking admission opportunities abroad. You hear that so and so graduated from the great University of Ibadan, the great University of Lagos, the great UNN, the great Ahmadu Bello University, the great Obafemi Awolowo University, etc. I would read such emails and shake my head and mutter, God soda your mouth! 
Who told you that there is a great University in Nigeria by 21st-century standards? Do you even have any idea what a University is, let alone a great one? State governments are the worst culprits here. Imagine Ondo state having almost four Universities when her entire annual budget is not up to the research endowment of Harvard! I am sure you have heard that the Governor of Osun state received only N6 million in Federal allocation this month. Given the fact that the Governor’s helicopter is more important than the State University, I think it is safe to say that the said University is OYO this year.
Given this picture, how do Nigerian, nay African youth become citizens of the global knowledge economy? How do they become fully functional in global economies of knowledge? The good news here is that the era of innovation, invention, and entrepreneurship is also an era that has ushered in a global democracy of knowledge. Cutting-edge knowledge is available everywhere. Knowledge communities and circuitries are ubiquitous and transnational. The Universities of the developed world are finding out that our present age does not respect the traditional borders and boundaries between the town and the gown. Conferences, journals, classes are increasingly becoming open access. You can be in my hometown, Isanlu, in Kogi state, and access research in Harvard that could help you innovate in the domain of cutting-edge practices in agriculture.
The successes recorded by Africa’s youth in innovation, especially in IT-tech, the emergence and expansion of tech hubs all over the continent, and the creativity of our youth have created a new continental vibrancy and dynamism that is visible in Lagos, Nairobi, Johannesburg, and Accra. But, alas, Africa still suffers from what Chinua Achebe calls an imbalance of stories and this is an area that our youth must pay serious attention to. MIT has an annual ranking of thirty-five innovators under thirty-five. That, in itself, is an affirmation of the thesis of this lecture that all over the world, the generation that is thirty-five-years-old and below is in the driver’s seat of innovation and invention. 
However, if you look at MIT’s selection for two consecutive years, 2014 and 2015, not a single African innovator, inventor, or entrepreneur makes the cut. Yet, if you read the biographies of the Europeans, Americans, Indians, and Chinese who make the cut, what some of them are said to have invented does not even come close to the revolutionary credentials of Ushahidi and Budgit. What many of the young entrepreneurs are said to have done does not even come close to the genius that Africa’s youth demographic is deploying to radically change the way in which we do e-commerce and make e-payments on the African continent. 
What I have learnt from MIT’s canonical efforts is that the scramble for the future is not limited to a rush by societies to deploy invention and innovation and entrepreneurship in the creation of happiness and prosperity. There is also a story that is being quietly told about who matters in the race, who is creating and inventing, and Africa is quietly being written out of the picture. Luckily, Africa’s youth, Nigerian youth, have all it takes to tell MIT and her ranking: iyalaya anybody!
I thank you for your time.
Keynote lecture delivered at the 5th Innovention Series of Verdant Zeal Group
For our YOUTHS interested in SECURING OUR FUTURE!

Register here as a member of Africa’s first Youth Oriented Political Party: http://bit.ly/YouthFulNUseFulPoliticalParty

Kind Regards!

Yours In Service (YouthFulNUseFul)

#YoungLeaders #FutureLeaders #GenerationUnborn #LifeLongLegacy #SecuringOurFuture #LongTerm #ChangingtheStatusQuo #PoliticalLeadership #YouthSynergy #TakingResponsibility #TakingOwnership