The Bugle Call: Fix What is Wrong and Everything Else Will Fall into Place.

Any masquerade that fails to respect its limits will have its veil removed.

This unvarnished truth is coming out more forcefully in Sierra Leone’s existence as depicted by the socio-political inanities of the country today where life just having been what it used to be.

I mean how funny can it get when a responsible administration celebrates receiving money from foreign bodies and organisation after eight years in office and with all the resources at its disposal, as an achievement? Our leaders are taking serious loans left and right that the country will have to pay back. Yet the same funds are being misappropriated.

Agreed the global economy is wobbly but becoming a beggar nation is definitely not something to be proud of and I stand to be corrected. Thriving economy doesn’t just happen. Mobilising the economic agents (citizens) is crucial.

The gaping chasm between the aspirations of the masses and the ambitions of politicians is reaching a powder-keg level and is the reason why today there’s a great big hole where smiles used to be on the faces of the people and a silence where belly-laughs once rang from the mouths of a contented populace. To a large extent there has been a disconnect between our ‘leaders’ and the ‘led’. The connect had switched to money which is why there’s a lot of negative weighed-down emotions in the country.

Our prevailing realities show a pathetic decline in rational commitment to resolving our inherent problem which has been left to become a calamity. Our governance like any other tectonic imperative shows no distinction and lacks critical thinking which is why it contributes little to the society.

As a result, no matter how strong our rhetoric is on change and development, there will be no guaranteed delivery until our systems and institutions are revamped and positioned for twenty-first century realities.

After the decrepit abyss which a once-prosperous nation was flung into by some insensible ‘rulers’, now, comes slowly, the naked truth: We are in a deep rot. And only we can save ourselves. And that’s by nonpartisan thinking and action.

If Sierra Leone doesn’t kill hypocrisy, hypocrisy will kill Sierra Leone. If it looks like a downward spiral, smells like one and feels like one, surely it must be one. We’re really up shit creek with not a paddle. If Sierra Leone were a hard disk, no antivirus made by man can help it! We’ll need an acid cleaning.

Our political class is our problem. Ditto our penchant for pretending that black is white. Our ethno-religious divide is our problem; corruption across board is a problem as is a largely polarised and illiterate populace. Widespread deceit in every facet of our society haunts us as a nagging issue while our distorted political system; the demonic judiciary, in conjunction with a clueless legislature and an overbearing executive have become national predicament.

What of our dysfunctional educational system and murderous health services or our hapless fourth estate of the realm and our puppet police force and timid populace. In fact ‘we’ the people of Sierra Leone are the dilemma of Sierra Leone.

Change cannot and should not be aesthetic; it needs to be comprehensive and address the root causes of the nation’s problems. Therein lies one of the reasons behind our laborious climb up the mountain of development.

Our affliction which has been stricken by psychotic kleptomania, if there’s anything like that in the psychiatrist’s lexicon, is the result of the serial and continual disinvestment and non-development of the huge population under the age of forty in the last three decades or so.

The question now then is how do we repair the opportunity cost before the social cost overwhelms us? Where do we get the capacity that we failed to build to repair the incapacity we unleashed? To be honest, one is getting apprehensive because I know that this is why the world will not take us seriously until we begin to develop.

Yet it appears we are incapable of the dialogue required to talk ourselves out of this ever-deepening quicksand we are jollifying in. God help us.

The present generation of young men and women prefer to “go to sleep” in the hope that when the soup is cooked, the aroma will wake them up and they too can begin to ecstatically trod the narrow path of wealth accumulation being pursued by greedy decadents of our ruinous past whose descendants are now in the corridors of power or clamouring to get there.

Meanwhile, all that the people are asking for is the prospect of making their own lives and those of their children, progressively better. Yet, in today’s harsh conditions, none of these are on offer.

Instead what we have is a famished populace scrambling for contaminated food just to satisfy its hunger and yet being lambasted for its plight by those who drove them to such a degrading level and a minister telling the nation that the ruling party’s salvation for the country is fifty light years away.

Our talents are often overwhelmed and frustrated by defective systems and institutions as evident in the current imbroglio whereby one of the very few professors left in the country is being hounded out of a cesspit of illiteracy amidst an educational system that even cavemen would reject.

The first step was bastardising the educational system. Yet, long before we slipped from a highly meritocratic society into this cesspool of corruption and mediocrity, our Fourah Bay College was a highly regarded citadel with real educational titans and an attractive foreign exchange earner.

Our democracy is also in double jeopardy because of a breakdown of trust and the social contract. Today, our youths who ought to be at the forefront of social revolution and grassroots’ oversight of governance are the political thugs and agents of destruction, foot soldiers, cultists and drug runners. They are the catalysts for subverting democratic processes such as term elongation.

This is despite the fact that those in charge, who have continued to exploit the naivety of the people and who continue to sell the idea that they know best, even when the ship of state is virtually grounded, have been found out as nothing but stinking cheese. They are compromised. They are dirty. They are deserving of roasting in the flames of hell. The lying and heartless clowns.

Students of truth-economics may want us to believe that those in charge are fighting for their people. Really? For which people? For the people or their pockets? Come off it, why is it that inspite of all the huge amount of slush funds pumped into this country at the inception of this administration, people are still ravaging in acute poverty?

Please tell me what is on the ground to justify the amount of financial and natural resources that have been fleeced from this country in the name of foreign investments and repatriation? Why are we still with a whole nation without water, electricity and homes; a country where politics is seen as a do-or-die affair and the fastest route to satisfying a gluttonous appetite for wealth.  The obscenity of this unconscionable thievery is mind boggling.

Legacy?  Sorry but we are just two bus stops away from returning to social abyss. Sad. Shameful. Petrifying. Because all that is left right now is nothing but hope. That same hope that is always creeping up in neon signs at every election but which never seem to materialise.

At the inception of the current administration, it was thought that its vision represented a remarkable deviation in politics which had for decades been preoccupied with divisive issues, rather than development.

It was indeed a veritable opportunity for us to re-educate ourselves and to resist and reject the evils of ethnocentrism and intolerance as well as the discordant tendencies of our political, religious and social leaders, which had threatened our very existence as a nation and nearly caused our annihilation.

Sadly, those men and women who litter the corridors of power in our dear beloved country have now ended up driving our national bus through a labyrinth that renders impossible, the kind of substantive debate and true change upon which any democracy fighting for the emancipation of the people and national resources relies.

It is why we are finding it exceptionally difficult to reset our morals and reinstate meritocracy as well as utilise our only sustainable resource at our disposal- the people – who are the critical agent in all economic and socio-political progress.

Sadly, we are so corrupted and immoralised that the rationality underpinning economic theorems doesn’t exist here. We don’t have leaders but dealers.  But then, you can’t rationalise the activity of hustlers. It’s all about chop, maintaining the past, sustaining the present and angling for future chop. Hustlers have neither principles nor a moral core.

We do not have any meaningful connect between labour and rewards. Money men are not economic wealth builders but hustlers!  Hustlers and their protégés are in leadership positions across this land. Hustlers hustle, period. A dealer cannot be a leader and a leader will never be a dealer, never mind that both words are comprised of the same 6 alphabets. We’re on very shaky grounds indeed.

Aside those who believe in blind, political, religious and ethnically-motivated support for those who’ve done little to deserve it, living in Sierra Leone can be frustrating. It has nothing to do with the common man who remains poor no matter who or what ethnic person is in power.

If you look around, you’ll discover that the institutions which should make existence bearable for those who are neither vermins still rampaging our commonwealth; or vagabonds usurping democratic and economic processes meant to make life fair and decent for all, remain dangerously underfunded, with the attendant mechanisms and thinking completely obsolete, when faced with the sophistication of the evil political intentions holding our country back.

Now, since discontinuous disruption is what makes for quantum leaps, the question arises: is our government headed in the right direction? Added to that is the question: will the current policies lead us to the Promised Land? As we continue to head towards over-reliance on China and other foreign locusts, will the current policies in place lead us out of the woods?

The most dangerous concept in humanity is compromise. Foreign interventions in our economy, especially the IMF and such bodies have led us in circles to the extent that our problem has now become a challenge that the nation must confront and overcome desperately. Are we armed with indigenous alternative measures to salvage our predicament and to serve as the springboard for our success story?

At this point in our national existence, we just have to come to terms with the fact that a national dialogue on the situation we find ourselves is inevitable rather than continue to kill the enthusiasm, passion and energy of those who believe there is another way out of our mess.

We have enough problems begging for urgent solutions and the continuous deceit that all is well only compounds the situation. Many of the challenges we are currently facing, is an indication of the mental laziness of both the leaders and the led.

Fair enough institutionalised poverty, the unbearable cost of political foolishness as well as an incompetent political class have kept us down for so long, but in my opinion, we have reached a stage where we shouldn’t just be relying on what is poured into our begging bowls or rely on manipulative politicians but do something creatively and exponentially different.

But I guess that since this will indicate the function and level of our dedication to the national cause, we can all now go back to our various lives and continue pretending not to notice how our national affair has become one man’s family affair.

As we approach the change of baton in the relay race of our development, my prayer is that may the trumpet sound of the child elephant be better than the adult’s noise. True leadership is not about creating followers, but developing leaders.

But for this to happen, we must wake up. Right now, my own problem is whether to continue to fight against the social and political injustices in our system or join the majority and throw my arms up in surrender as several readers have advised.

Whatever happens, the change we need will be compelled, because honestly, as a people, it seems that we can’t free ourselves from our four decade sojourn in uncertainty.

The people are hungry and not bored. Enough of the current scenarios. Let’s address the economic woes of the country. Let’s fix the inherent problems collectively.

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