Brokenation: Paradox of a Poor Nation’s Wealth Vol. 1

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The narrative of 21st century Africa should be dominated by Nigeria, which has a quarter of the continent's population, and, even in its severely troubled state, its largest economy.

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Overview

The narrative of 21st century Africa should be dominated by Nigeria, which has a quarter of the continent’s population, and, even in its severely troubled state, its largest economy.

However, the Nigerian State is clearly not a model or desirable example for any nation that will achieve positive outcomes for its indegeneous peoples and citizens. Created by foreigners on a quest to plunder and subjugate the indegeneous countries and resources, it is sadly sustained by a collaborating military, which was used to create the country in the first place, and a fragmented and ultimately destructive political, traditional and lately religious ruling class which shown little interest in understanding the game into which it has been drawn. A game in which its battered and long-suffering are nothing but expendable and disposable pawns.

Little wonder that the moments that the Nigerian state manage to capture global attention have mostly had to do with war and terrorism, with the Nigeria-Biafra civil war of the late 60’s, one of the deadliest wars since the 2nd World War, and the incresingly bold cleansing and displacement attacks by three of the world’s most dangerous terrorist groups (Boko-Haram, Herdsmen and the curiously named Bandits) that operate in operate with various degrees of freedom within its borders.

Nigeria also generates interest for its supporting role in OPEC, the Saudi led crude oil cartel that has become a global economic force over the last half century, especially in times of high oil prices.

Those oil revenues, the indigenous but foreign created military, the plundering foreign interests of the creators and enforcers of the Nigerian state (masked as colonialism and puritan religion at various times), and inherently conflicting interests combine to form a clueless outlook from the indegeneous leaders, have become layers of bondage and entrapment of the indegeneous peoples and countries in the Nigerian state. Little wonder that over half of indegeneous young adults want to escape from Nigeria. Most people will flee from bondage, if given the opportunity.

BrokeNation, unlike any work before it, unravels, with economic facts and realities, how these layers of entrapment manifest through paradoxical cycles and the forced legal and fiscal structure of the Nigerian state. It will provide a massive dose of reality to your knowledge and understanding of Nigeria, and the state of contemporary, post-colonial Africa.

BOOK DETAILS
  • Pages: Paperback: 264 pages
  • Publisher: Mindstir Media
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9798985673326
  • Dimensions: NA
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