THE AFRICAN MINDSET
cheap is expensive.
The Cost of “Free”: Unveiling the Hidden Agenda of Foreign Aid
Foreigners often bring free or cheap goods and services into our land under the guise of charity, but beneath the surface lies a hidden agenda of exploitation. Whether it’s the importation of religion that discourages practicality in favor of blind faith, or the distribution of seemingly free goods that later result in health issues, the true cost of these offerings becomes apparent only after we’ve fallen into their trap.
By instilling ignorance and desperation within our communities, foreigners create a market for their solutions, which they then sell to us at a hefty price. What initially appears to be a benevolent act of charity ultimately reveals itself as a profit-driven agenda, with foreigners profiting off our misfortune and vulnerability.
The true cost of these “free” offerings becomes evident when we find ourselves in dire need of help and are forced to turn to the very individuals who exploited us in the first place. The price we pay for our ignorance and desperation far outweighs the initial perceived value of these goods and services, making the “free” things they bring into our land ultimately more expensive than we could have ever imagined.
We need to remain vigilant and skeptical of foreign aid that comes with hidden agendas. By empowering ourselves with knowledge and refusing to fall prey to exploitation, we can protect our communities and safeguard our well-being against those who seek to profit off our vulnerabilities.
Africans to decide their own fate.
The mindset of a people can profoundly shape their destiny. In the case of the African people, a troubling pattern has emerged over time, one rooted in a history marked by colonialism and dependence on external influences.
Firstly, the act of worshipping foreign imported nonsense represents a surrender of cultural and intellectual autonomy. When a community unquestioningly embraces beliefs, practices, or ideologies that originate from outside their culture, it can erode their own rich heritage. This blind acceptance of external influences not only weakens the cultural identity of the people but also perpetuates a cycle of dependency on foreign ideas and solutions.
Secondly, the notion of waiting for miracles from white paperwork highlights a deep-seated passivity. Relying on foreign imported paperwork, often created by distant authorities, for solutions to local problems implies a lack of agency and self-reliance. It’s as if the people have resigned themselves to a fate dictated by those who hold the pens, rather than taking an active role in shaping their own destiny.
Begging for free things is another manifestation of this passive mindset. While assistance and aid can be valuable in times of need, chronic dependence on handouts can strip individuals and communities of their self-esteem and sense of responsibility. It fosters a culture of entitlement rather than one of empowerment.
Furthermore, waiting for someone from outside Africa to solve problems reflects a lack of faith in the capabilities and potential in our own people. It sends a message that Africans are incapable of addressing their own issues, requiring external saviors to come to their rescue.
This mindset collectively paints a picture of a people who have unwittingly become a dumping site for foreign ideas, influences, and even charity. It’s a stark reminder that, in the grand scheme of things, we are allowing ourselves to be regarded as cheaper and less valuable than the things we receive.
Ultimately, the wisdom of the statement “cheap is expensive” rings true. When a people settle for less, whether in their beliefs, their reliance on paperwork, their dependence on charity, or their expectation of foreign intervention, they may gain temporary relief, but they sacrifice their long-term growth, self-reliance, and true freedom.
The path to a brighter future for Africans lies in rejecting this mindset of dependency and embracing a culture of self-determination, self-reliance, and self-worth. By valuing our heritage, nurturing our intellectual independence, and actively participating in solving our own challenges, we can transform our continent into a haven of free, wise individuals who shape their destiny rather than merely reacting to it.
the home of the gullible
Africa is a place where people are inclined to embrace foreign falsehoods and invest more in those beliefs than in the truth inherent within and around them. We tend to place more trust in foreign imports than in our own practical experiences. We seem to find solace in literature, venerating its content over our own real-life encounters.
We’ve been handed the most destructive tools that enable us to harm ourselves. Our unwavering faith in foreign imported systems established by our adversaries erodes our capacity for independent thought and perception. It elevates insignificant things into valuable treasures and convinces us to discard practical reality, truth, and genuine treasures within and around us as if they held no worth. Yet, when these foreigners arrive, they retrieve all the discarded items, they’ve made us perceive as trash and useless, repackage them in new forms, and sell them back to us at significantly higher prices. This is the method by which our poverty is both engineered and perpetuated.
Our adherence to futile beliefs and faith brought to us by our enemies strips away our ability to ask questions and acquire new knowledge. It erases our capacity to discover solutions and resolve our own issues.
Our fixation on religious beliefs and faith renders us unique slaves to a distorted reality. Foreign-imported religions don’t present this world to us as humans or gods, but rather as ignorant creatures, often compared to sheep. According to these imported religions and texts, we remain clueless about our purpose on Earth and are made to believe that we don’t deserve a good life. Hence, we are taught to embrace pain and suffering as the sole path to a heavenly existence, as dictated in those white pages.
Our fear of the unknown signifies a severe intellectual drought. Fear is a natural response to ignorance, but if it were natural in all respects, we would never have evolved. The fear of the unknown is where our adversaries invest substantial time and resources from the moment of our birth, instilling this fear and reducing us to mere animals. We are transformed into docile, blind sheep solely interested in consumption and obedience.
Fear and ignorance serve as the foundation of our existence, meticulously cultivated and safeguarded by our enemies, who recognize us as their slaves, not their equals.
In our state of fear and ignorance, we remain trapped by faith and beliefs, anticipating a savior to deliver us to the promised heavenly realm—ironically, a place designed by the very people who established the savior’s attributes and our current confinement.
The African mindset creates a living hell on Earth. We possess everything, yet we fail to comprehend our own wealth and await validation from foreign individuals to recognize the value of our possessions.
Our brains, although gifted to us, have gone to waste since our enlightened ancestors departed. Poverty is merely the result of our detachment from our intellect and our reluctance to employ it when the opportunity arises.
when we accept to be ignorant of our history we deny our home, culture and identity.
your mindset is your approach to the world around you
when we accept to be ignorant of our history we deny our home, culture, and identity.
when our mindset makes it so hard to embrace our identity, history, and culture. Only Fear, ignorance, insecurity, and poverty make it so easy for us to accept being led like stupid animals for slaughter willingly.
Our mindset is the lens through which we perceive and engage with the world within and around us, and it conveys the complete narrative of our present and shapes our future.
our African approach to the world Is a wish to be in foreign developed nations a clear expression of being a slave preaching freedom and human rights but cannot help him for anything other than being a slave and a puppet soldier for foreign controlled systems.
We possess freedom and human rights, but without our minds practically aligned with reality, they are merely superficial adornments, and we remain devoid of true substance.
The only time and situation where our freedom and human rights are truly in action is when we find ourselves defending foreign-imported and adopted systems that dictate our thoughts and beliefs. It’s during this period that we are safeguarding the root cause of all our problems.
Our human rights and freedom only gain value when we align ourselves with foreign interests and imported systems, following their lead, advocating for their cause, and defending their interests and systems. This is because we are under the influence of foreign cultures that prioritize expanding their interests and extending their dominance.
When we begin to question our faith in foreign absurdities and the imported systems we are compelled to blindly worship and defend, it becomes evident that our human rights and freedom are a direct reflection of fear and ignorance in action.
When you stroll just a few blocks and observe that everyone bears the same hallmark, it becomes clear that our faith, convictions, fears, and ignorance are all safeguarded by the very individuals who, while pretending to aid in our development and salvation, actually aim to witness our suffering and maintain control over our existence.
MUTE GODS
miscarriage of justice
A mindset that becomes charmed with the weapons of our foreign adversaries evolves into an enemy itself, serving as an instrument of division and a conduit for our enemies.
If only we were willing to educate ourselves, study, and advocate for our own history with the same dedication as we do with the sacred imported text not intended for our comprehension, we could achieve true freedom and independence.
If only we sought out our own history and our authentic identity with the same fervor as we seek divinity in foreign-imported weaponry that obscures our lives and deceives us as our genuine path to salvation, education, and progress, we would not find ourselves ensnared in a cycle of illness and poverty.
If only we truly understood our own identity, we would be driven by a sense of purpose, and we wouldn’t easily forgive our unrepentant enemies, allowing them to walk among us as friends. Forgiving someone who is unwilling to change is merely affording them an opportunity to further their agenda.
Believing in a god who, according to the preaching of indoctrinated individuals, knows everything, sees everything, and loves us unconditionally, but who apparently lacks knowledge about our origin, desires, and true whereabouts. who relies on foreign maps and foreign efforts to speak and find us and insists that we believe in him by adhering to foreign interests and controlled systems to find salvation. who is portrayed as ready to punish us and disregard our suffering if we dare to disagree or refuse to conform. This portrayal appears akin to a form of dictatorship, colonialism, and distortion of reason and justice, all within a framework of the silent war for dominance through deception.
Our imported conception of God represents foreign endeavors to condition and exert control and power over our lives and resources. The guise of God and salvation has proven to be one of the most effective foreign weapons wielded against Africans. The deities we’ve been introduced to as a source of salvation are, in reality, the definition of an adversary with weapons subtly aimed at us through educational and religious texts.
Amidst poverty, disease, and corruption, we find ourselves unable to question why the foreign imported deities have seemingly been punishing us consistently. It’s perplexing that these foreign gods seem to relish our suffering while disregarding the beautiful churches we’ve constructed for them, the offerings we provide, the adoration, the worship, and the numerous sacrifices we’ve made. They readily accept our money but offer no solutions to our problems. It becomes apparent that they do not reside in our beliefs or our edifices, lack emotions, and remain oblivious to our desires. They are blind and deaf to reality, solely interested in money, control, and power, which we surrender when we unquestioningly submit to foreign interests.
Why do we seek salvation today from these same foreign imported gods who remained silent during one of the most tragic periods in our history? Specifically, where were they during the era of slavery? What role did they play when our ancestors were being subjected to torture, enslavement, and murder? It’s essential to recognize that these foreign mute gods were, in fact, the very tools of oppression—both the guns and the holy books wielded by our adversaries. These foreign gods hold power only when they are transformed into instruments of destruction in the hands of our enemies. They are essentially puppets, compelled to act in accordance with the intentions of those who conceived them, with the objective of conquest and destruction.
The unfortunate reality is that many impoverished Africans are unable to perceive the deceit; they are willing to stand and vehemently defend the falsehoods with their very lives. It eludes our understanding that the imported gods we worship are nothing more than mere pieces of paper, and their fundamental essence is weaponry. They are essentially the embodiment of the enemy’s dominion, constructed upon a foundation of falsehoods.
Africans have dedicated their all to a collection of imported, meaningless documents that were never intended for our comprehension but rather to be manifested in our lives as divine words and the very essence of God, all to glorify our adversaries.
This is the reason why these foreign imported gods only seem to communicate with a select few corrupt individuals. The masses spend their entire lives waiting for guidance from these silent gods through these select individuals, who are, in essence, merely communicating with pieces of paper. They then come to the masses, asserting that God has spoken to them, all in an effort to deceive us and prosper at the expense of our suffering. Deception serves as the underlying basis for profit in all organized religions.
If these silent gods genuinely communicate, and their messages are solely delivered to a select few individuals, it implies that they are interested in engaging with only a limited number of corrupt minds. In that case, it might be best to let those tainted minds grapple with their own misguided beliefs, leaving them to stew in their own falsehoods.
WEAPONS OF OUR ENEMIES
DO NOT UNDERESTIMATE THE POWER OF IGNORANCE
Africans have elevated the use of foreign imported deception to another level by orchestrating emotionally charged, staged “miracles.” However, it remains puzzling that the masses don’t question why only a select few receive these “miracles” when thousands possess the same level of faith and energy in the word of God. The fact that a small amount of poison can instantly achieve the same effect for all of them, whether taken willingly or by force, should raise concerns and provoke inquiries.
Organized imported religions amass great wealth by marketing gods and salvation that lack genuine existence, serving only as imaginative facades for deception. These imaginary images have no emotions or common sense to begin with. Yet, we dedicate our lives to conforming to these images, ultimately achieving nothing more than a legacy of poverty, pain, and suffering. Ironically, this is considered the highest form of salvation from these silent and docile imported gods.
politicians are better than mute gods and often take development initiatives even to areas where they weren’t elected, often in anticipation of the next election to garner support and votes.
Many Africans today have realized that they’ve gained little, if anything, from the teachings of imported gods. Instead, they have recognized the potential for personal profit and have adopted strategies akin to those employed by their colonial masters—deceiving the masses and amassing wealth rapidly.
religious Miracles
Religious Miracles in Africa appear to be beyond the grasp of children, as they typically require adults who understand the art of deception, who are motivated by financial gain, and who are willing to perform staged miracles to earn money. These individuals then return to provide testimonies about events that never truly occurred, all in the pursuit of collecting the final installment. It may sound like madness, but it is a sad reality.
Religious miracles are often presented as though they are freely available, but they remain out of reach for those genuinely seeking answers. In reality, they are designed to deceive the gullible, especially when individuals who have been trained to perform for the camera are on the stage.
Religious Miracles are often presented as free, but they can be exceedingly costly when you consider the amount of time and money they demand. Despite the investment, many end up with nothing to show for it, leading to self-blame and the belief that their faith wasn’t strong enough to capture the attention of the distant and disconnected foreign mute god, who appears to value a large number of unquestioning followers primarily for profit.