@Kaybene @goshers_ @highesteri_@kwadwosheldon You can “conscientize” for as long and as hard as you want, and hopefully your child goes out there and is of good behavior. But as a minor whose brain is still maturing, the law protects them, and the burden of knowing better falls on the adult. That simple
@Kaybene @goshers_ @highesteri_@kwadwosheldon Of course, every parent must “conscientize” their children on sensitive matters, but when you start talking about twerking, you are victim blaming. A girl twerking doesn’t mean she doesn’t have the morals to reject advances from teachers. Twerking ≠ bad girl
@footbolmatter10 My God. “He does not have the close ball control of Rashford”
Are you blind? Anyone picks up a mic and thinks they’re some expert analyst. Close ball control? Rashford?😂😂😂😂
I was at one of the recent Ghana Business Forums in Washington DC, presenting the opportunities and beauty of Ghana together with the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre.
Among the diaspora representatives, one moment stayed with me.
An elderly Ghanaian gentleman, who had emigrated to the United States over 40 years ago, stood up to introduce himself. He wore a magnificent Kente cloth with pride. And the very first thing he said was that his two sons were serving in the Middle East as US Marines.
At first, I did not fully understand why he chose to open with that.
Later, I realized: it was not about America replacing Ghana. It was about demonstrating that Ghanaian values, discipline, and excellence can compete and contribute anywhere in the world.
His pride as a Ghanaian was expressed through global contribution.
This is why the current dual citizenship Bill should not be reduced to a conversation about personal advantages.
It is not about convenience.
It is about capacity.
Around the world, I meet thousands of Ghanaian Americans and Ghanaian Europeans who are surgeons, lawyers, engineers, creatives, entrepreneurs. They grew up loving Ghana. Many of them want to contribute not just emotionally, but structurally.
The real question is not who benefits individually.
The real question is whether Ghana is ready to strategically integrate its global talent back into national development.
If we approach it correctly, this Bill is not a privilege.
It is an opportunity to convert diaspora excellence into national strength.
I don’t want to be a creator without an audience.
And Ghana 🇬🇭 cannot afford to be a nation without a future.
This affects all of us.
Galamsey must end.