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Captain Ed
23rd Jun 2000, 17:38
Africa has to get new breed of humans (Opinion)

The Monitor (Kampala)
January 4, 2000
By Ssekitooleko Deo

Kampala - I wish to agree with Charles Onyango-Obbo's article, "Slave Trade Took
Our Best, Left Us Chaff" (The Monitor Dec. 08). I go a step further to suggest that if
Africa is to rediscover itself, it must acquire new, improved breeds of not only
plants and animal species but also humans.

This can be done through cross-breeding with superior human beings from other
continents; inviting our relatives, the Afro-Americans, to come back and occupy
our highest political and economic positions, and recalling the colonialists to
govern us for a specific period. The latter can be done by privatising the political
structure of our governments.

With the advent of genetic engineering, we have seen increased milk production,
eaten chicken of only two months old, and acquired clonal coffee which matures in
a couple of years.

All this has been possible because the Agriculture ministry recognised the
potential of new improved breeds of crops and animals.

The same formula can work with human beings.

However retrogressive it may appear, there is no doubt that Europeans have been
the best breed of human species, followed by Asians.

At the bottom of the list are black Africans.

The African morphology, dark colouration, greed, lack of intellect, failure to
internalise theories and lack of interest in preserving our best things clearly show
that we are an inferior people.

It is universally accepted that any specie that practices cannibalism against
members of its kind is primitive. Look at African politicians, butchering whole
ethnic groups, starving whole populations.

Since it is beyond doubt that almost all Africans in positions of power tend to
misuse it, it is logical to conclude that there is a problem with the stock from
which our leaders come.

Even our intellectuals, public servants and business people are of poor stock.

In recent times, the American breed of human species has out-competed the
European breed, the main reason being that the American stock is an improved
one.

It is a mixture of the Europe's, Asia's, and Africa's best breeds.

Americans continue to improve their human stock through the Green Lottery
project whereby they admit into the US at least 60,000 superior individuals from all
over the world.

Now, if Americans are so serious about the quality of humans entering their
country, how could they have bought chaff as slaves, leaving the best behind?

Let's face the fact that the best were taken, we are descendants of the chaff and
that is why we cannot live at peace with ourselves and cannot exploit our potential
to the full.

I wish to suggest that if Africans were evolving at the same pace with Europeans,
then those Africans who had attained a high evolutionary level; both social and
biological, were taken away as slaves and only chaff remained.

Why is it that all African leaders can't think beyond their life spans?

Almost all of them made constitutions which suited them but not their nations.

They introduced police regimes, enriched themselves at the expense of their
nations and jailed or murdered their political opponents.

Kwame Nkrumah, Milton Obote, Julius Nyerere, Kenneth Kaunda, Houphouet-
Boigny, Kamuzu Banda, etc. were all descendants of the chaff.

When these sons of the chaff failed to fulfil the independence promises and abused
power massively, they were toppled by army generals who became even worse.

The generals killed, raped, and some even practised cannibalism - Jean Bedel
Bokassa, Idi Amin, Mengistu Haile Mariam, Mobutu Sese Seko, Sani Abacha, etc.

Finally, the generals have been replaced with the so-called "new breed" of African
leaders -- Yoweri Museveni, Paul Kagame, Laurent Kabila, Isias Aferweki and
Meles Zenawi.

These leaders mainly captured power through popular revolutions. But many of
them have since formed one party systems, in some cases disguised as
movements. They have personalised armies, fought each other, looked on
helplessly as their relatives plunder national treasuries and worse still, they are not
prepared to quit power peacefully.

The African intelligentsia is another category of chaff that pollutes the African
environment.

Most of our professors are opportunists and cannot defend their opinions.

They change like chameleons and their political beliefs don't depend on research -
Apolo Nsibambi, George Kanyeihamba, Tarsis Kabwegyere, Adonia Tiberondwa,
Edward Rugumayo, etc.

It is in fact amazing that a person of modest education like Maj. Gen. Salim Saleh
lectures them on development issues and is the only one has organised his beliefs
into a philosophy!

Whatever we may say, therefore, the fact remains our stock is of a poor quality
and there is an urgent need for "restocking."

Copyright (c) 2000 The Monitor - Kampala. Distributed via Africa News Online

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Kubota
23rd Jun 2000, 18:22
Not only is this offensive in the extreme (and has no place here), what does this have to do with aviation?

nugpot
23rd Jun 2000, 18:59
Kobuta

1. Why is a Hong Kong 747 driver complaining about a post in the African Aviation forum?

2. When you fly in Africa, you find that all political opinions and local political conditions have a lot to do with aviation.

3. You only have to look at the track record of African countries to see why an article like this is written.

4. I don't think that black africans are inferior to any other race, just different in culture and approach to life in general, but why should this article be offensive? I have seen articles and posts about almost all nationalities describing them as dumber/more corrupt/weaker/more arrogant as others. Is it perhaps because blacks DO feel inferior and people then feel they have to protect them from opinions? We are working in SA to build a nation with 11 oficial languages from at least 20 ethnic groups, and shielding certain groups from opinions (in this case from one of their own) certainly perpetuates the notion that they are weak/inferior and should be protected. I think the article raises a very interesting question and might even have some merit. The specific leaders and academics named in the article do not have a good track record.

I do not want to get into an political or ethnic argument with you, but you will find that pilots in Africa have a greater interest in these things than pilots in other countries.

The gist of this article is that the slave trade and colonial occupation could be partly responsible for Africa's current situation and I agree. The genetic enrichment idea I guess is partly tongue-in-cheek. Where he is right is that restocking might be necessary, because AIDS, wars and famine is slowly but surely depopulating this continent.


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It is much easier to ask for forgiveness than to ask for permission.

[This message has been edited by nugpot (edited 23 June 2000).]

[This message has been edited by nugpot (edited 23 June 2000).]

Goldfish Jack
23rd Jun 2000, 19:32
????

What is the point of this posting??

The Guvnor
23rd Jun 2000, 19:54
Anyone who doesn't think that ethnic/national perceptions play a major part in African aviation should spend a few minutes looking at some of the back issues - the fake licences being dished out to politically connected people at SAA; discrimination at Air Zimbabwe; and the reaction/postings of a certain individual in the Fire at Lagos Airport thread.

I was recently told of a black Captain working with a Caribbean carrier that had to do a charter to West Africa. When he got back home, he 'did a Pope' and knelt down and kissed the runway, saying "thank God my ancestors were slaves".

Not ethnic; not racist. Just Africa. :rolleyes:

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:) Happiness is a warm L1011 :)

Sleepless_Knight
23rd Jun 2000, 23:24
Quick, someone tell Bob!
:)

Agaricus bisporus
29th Jun 2000, 02:54
Without having read this thread the title alone seems to say it all.

Sadly I had thought they were voting for this principle this weekend in Zim, but sadly to no great effect.

Africa, my heart bleeds...