Thank you for your service to Ghana. You’ve been part of the Black Stars since 2009. Going forward, we (the citizens of Ghana) will not require your services. We wish you well in your endeavors. If we see you around the team again, we will stone you. Thank you. Bye Jordan Ayew!
Doesn’t press
Doesn’t attack
Doesn’t shoot
Doesn’t track back
Doesn’t pass
Doesn’t cross
Doesn’t progress the ball
Doesn’t create
Doesn’t get into good attacking positions
Doesn’t run
Doesn’t push for the ball
No urgency
It just occurred to me we can create huge employment opportunities in the @GhArmedForces if we create a pipeline that sends engineering graduates from universities straight into the army. They can help rebuild Ghana in a huge and meaningful way plus a more disciplined workforce
I couldn’t bring myself to care about you attending the Grand Prix but you see this, “Only Black man to…” “First Black man to…”
What usually follows is some utterly mundane achievement that you think is some racial milestone, it lowkey reeks of an inferiority complex.
You’ve been doing alright for a few years now, settle in already.
Many Africans need to unlearn this mindset. It is a subtle form of mental servitude that conditions people to view ordinary participation in global spaces as extraordinary simply because a Black person is involved.
Worse, it encourages Africans to seek status over one another through proximity to institutions, activities, or standards they subconsciously regard as belonging to someone else.
Who was the first white man to eat amala? Who cares about the first white man to speak Yoruba? Who was the first white man to dance to Afrobeats or Fuji? Nobody knows, and nobody cares.
Yet you as an African cannot announce the most routine activity without attaching “Black” to it. If white people do something every day, why must a Black person doing the same thing be framed as a historic breakthrough?
Ghana's swift and responsible intervention should now be better appreciated by the critics who accused us of overreacting and moving in too quickly to save our citizens.
The Mahama Administration does not gamble with the precious lives of Ghanaians.
We convey our deepest and sincerest condolences to the Government and people of Mozambique on the loss of five of their nationals due to the ongoing xenophobic attacks as confirmed by the Mozambican Government.
No African should ever be killed by fellow Africans on African soil.
May these condemnable acts never quench our Pan-African resolve for true African unity, full integration, free movement, common market and significant intra-African trade as Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah pioneered and sacrificed greatly for.