PanAfricanist. Socialist.Unlearning colonial lies. Speaking truth about Africa. If your death doesn’t bring a change to Africa,then you should be ashamed to die
100–200 years from now, their historians will tell your descendants that Africans “sold their resources.”
But we are alive now. We are watching it happen in real time, and we know that is not the full truth.
We know there is forced extraction across Africa. We know entire communities are displaced through war, terrorism, sanctions, economic pressure, and political manipulation so foreign interests can control land and resources. We know there are local collaborators who help facilitate it.
We watched France extract wealth from Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso for decades while those nations remained trapped in poverty. We see foreign corporations and foreign-backed militias feeding on Congo while the people remain in suffering. We see external powers and their regional allies tearing Sudan apart around strategic interests.
And one day, their history will likely reduce all of this to: “Africans sold their resources.”
Just like slavery.
Yes, there were African collaborators during slavery. But the way the story is often told today is intentionally dishonest. It is presented as though Africans independently created an international slave system and Europeans merely arrived to participate in an already existing market.
As though there were global slave ports waiting for European ships before European demand, weapons, financing, and industrial-scale trafficking transformed it into one of the largest crimes in human history.
That distortion removes power from the aggressor and transfers the blame almost entirely onto the victims and his collaborators.
That is how empire protects its image across generations.
The victors do not just control economies and militaries. They control historical memory.
And if Africans do not document this era themselves, future generations will be taught that their continent willingly handed over its minerals, land, labour, and sovereignty in exchange for nothing but corruption and incompetence. Just like slavery, the systems of coercion, destabilisation, foreign interference, debt control, military pressure, and resource wars will be deliberately erased.
Just the way you insult your ancestors, your children will insult you for selling their continent.
As long as this system remains intact, it does not matter who you vote into office. The outcome will remain the same.
At best, the boot on your neck eases a little. At worst, it presses down even harder.
Either way, the boot never leaves your neck.
Changing the person wearing the boot is not the same as changing the system that put it there.
The biggest problem Africans face is an identity crisis.
A people disconnected from their own identity becomes vulnerable to imperialism. How do you fight for your freedom when you see yourselves through the eyes of your oppressors?
How do you fight when you don’t know who you are?
The worst part is that our societies encourage imitation over authenticity. African societies encourage people to become pseudo-Europeans or pseudo-Arabs. But the African body can never fully fit into either identity.
A people who know who they are, are far more difficult to conquer. The recovery of Africa begins with the recovery of African identity. The sooner we know this, the better for us.
@CodeinstigaturX Exactly. My response was to those self hating Africans who always find the need to defend their invaders by saying “Africans were also fighting wars and so on”
“Black people have a way of ruining anything they touch”
The same black people who are supporting his business.
This is how these inferior people shit on their skin folks.
He only said what he said because of a white man.
Well, a man who agreed that his private part is the only sophisticated part of his body, would never have a brain 🧠 to reason sophisticatedly.
Of course I knew this is what they will turn him into.
He has been meeting billionaires casually on the street and interviewing them, he gets invited to Nigeria and its gradually turning into a show of Penis.
Black people will always do black people things coz why is he getting invited to see a billionaire's house and being told how much the houses cost?.
I honestly hope he doesn't derail because black people have a way of ruining everything they touch.
Somehow, many Nigerians who claim to be capitalists do not understand that the fuel subsidy, despite the fraud surrounding it, was a social effort in the fuel sector.
Now that it has been removed and life has become harder, many of the same people are demanding that the government bring back socialism in the fuel sector.
Too many people confuse commerce with capitalism. Commerce predates capitalism and also exists under socialism. Buying and selling is not exclusive to capitalism.
The irony is that poor Nigerians proudly call themselves capitalists while lacking the one thing capitalism actually requires: capital. If you do not own capital, in what meaningful sense are you a capitalist?
The biggest problem Africans face is an identity crisis.
A people disconnected from their own identity becomes vulnerable to imperialism. How do you fight for your freedom when you see yourselves through the eyes of your oppressors?
How do you fight when you don’t know who you are?
The worst part is that our societies encourage imitation over authenticity. African societies encourage people to become pseudo-Europeans or pseudo-Arabs. But the African body can never fully fit into either identity.
A people who know who they are, are far more difficult to conquer. The recovery of Africa begins with the recovery of African identity. The sooner we know this, the better for us.
Somehow, many Nigerians who claim to be capitalists do not understand that the fuel subsidy, despite the fraud surrounding it, was a social effort in the fuel sector.
Now that it has been removed and life has become harder, many of the same people are demanding that the government bring back socialism in the fuel sector.
Too many people confuse commerce with capitalism. Commerce predates capitalism and also exists under socialism. Buying and selling is not exclusive to capitalism.
The irony is that poor Nigerians proudly call themselves capitalists while lacking the one thing capitalism actually requires: capital. If you do not own capital, in what meaningful sense are you a capitalist?
Any protest that is not directed towards taking power and led by a revolutionary political Party, is activism. And activism means asking for concessions within an oppressive society. If that is what you are all about, change is far from.
We must organise behind a people’s liberation party. Because the lack of a people’s revolutionary party, will only end up removing one side of a coin, to replace with the other side of the same coin. Little adjustment but no change.
The Bakassi Peninsula was not handed over to Cameroon, it was handed over to the Colonisers.
This will be the first territorial war in Africa when a serious Nigeria leader emerge.
The seceding of Bakassi was based on imperial interest and it will be taken back because it was historically part of Calabar empire which is today Nigeria.
The coloniser has no respect for the natives, not yesterday nor today. It doesn’t matter how long it takes, the Nigeria territory will return.
Africans live in a world that competes with them regardless of whether they want to compete or not. And yet, these same Africans act like all is well.
We live in a world where morality takes the back seat and yet we pay no attention because we have been told in religious houses that morality rewards you in heaven.
@TNNPHQ And some people would still deny the influence of these external powers to the destructions of our nations. If they interfere in little things like this, what happens to the bigger ones?
How do you move on from this?
They could be your children. The teachers could be your mom, father, brother, sister, Uncle, aunty.
Regardless, these are people’s children, mom, sister, brother, uncle, aunty.
Nigerians, why are you moving on from this?
#Bringbackourchildren
Today makes it exactly 50 days since 39 children and 7 teachers were abducted at Orire LGA of OYO State on the 15 of May 2026.
For 50 days, toddlers have known captivity instead of care. Children have known fear instead of love and knowledge. Teachers have known brutality and survival instead of freedom to impact knowledge. Nigeria cannot normalise this.
TNNP stand in solidarity with the victims and their families and we call on the government and relevant authorities to swing into action and secure their release like they did with former minister of power’s sister and kids.
#BringBackOurChildren #OyoKidnapping
While their children are safe at home, the children of the poor remain in captivity.
The government of the day and the political class have abandoned the Nigerian people.
Everything is so expensive that even the poor can barely afford solidarity among themselves. Unlike the rich, they cannot afford private security. It is the children of the poor who pay the price for the failures and recklessness of those in power.
Today makes it exactly 50 days since 39 children and 7 teachers were abducted at Orire LGA of OYO State on the 15 of May 2026.
For 50 days, toddlers have known captivity instead of care. Children have known fear instead of love and knowledge. Teachers have known brutality and survival instead of freedom to impact knowledge. Nigeria cannot normalise this.
TNNP stand in solidarity with the victims and their families and we call on the government and relevant authorities to swing into action and secure their release like they did with former minister of power’s sister and kids.
#BringBackOurChildren #OyoKidnapping
While their children are safe at home, the children of the poor remain in captivity.
The government of the day and the political class have abandoned the Nigerian people.
Everything is so expensive that even the poor can barely afford solidarity among themselves. Unlike the rich, they cannot afford private security. It is the children of the poor who pay the price for the failures and recklessness of those in power.
How you know that the Nigerian elite, or so-called captains of industry, are failures is that none of their children aspire to take up their professions.
They are not even role models to their own children. Even the children of criminal politicians only want to inherit their fathers’ political power and criminality, not the original professions they may have had before politics.