How Big Tech Frames African Audiences As Intellectually Lazy.
African social media audiences are not “dumb” - they are being conditioned.
When Africans have to engage with western controlled information ecosystems, the engagement is never a fair one. Not in traditional media, and certainly not in digital media. It always follows the same colonial playbook of extraction and social engineering over any kind of meaningful conversation or useful solution.
The exploitative relationship between Western-controlled tech giants and Africa's social media audiences is often overlooked, but it shapes almost everything we see or value - and even how we understand ourselves. The low-effort, oversexualized content that has become recognised as the preferred taste of African audiences is not in fact an organic phenomenon. To put it bluntly, Western colonial tech monopolies are actively engineering African social media spaces into cesspits of anti-intellectual slop.
Africa must rise to resist this intellectual suppression by building information and communication ecosystems by Africans and for Africans.
We now know that more than 300 children and 12 teachers have been kidnapped from St Mary's Catholic School in Nigeria.
As a father, seeing these attacks makes my stomach turn.
The Nigerian government must disarm the radical Muslim Fulani militants terrorizing the Middle Belt.
Listen more to my interview w/ @kayleighmcenany on @FoxNews ⬇️
Condanniamo con fermezza le rinnovate violenze avvenute oggi contro le comunità cristiane in Nigeria. La libertà religiosa è un diritto inviolabile: chiediamo al governo nigeriano di rafforzare la protezione delle comunità cristiane e di tutte le comunità religiose e di perseguire i responsabili di questi efferati attacchi. L’Italia esprime tutta la sua vicinanza alle vittime e alle comunità in Nigeria che oggi si sentono in pericolo per il loro credo religioso.
Heartbreaking.
St Mary's Catholic School in Nigeria was attacked overnight with more than 50 students and teachers being kidnapped.
Enough is enough. We must do everything we can to defend our brothers and sisters in Christ.
In a Security Council session on West Africa, Ambassador Waltz drove home that violence against Christians in Nigeria is unacceptable, and the U.S. under President Trump’s leadership is demanding the Nigerian government do more to protect its people from these atrocities.
Press Release: Congressman Moore Meets With Delegation of Senior Nigerian Officials Regarding the Persecution of Christians and Terrorism Threat in Nigeria
Washington, D.C. – Today, Congressman Riley M. Moore met with a delegation of senior members of the Nigerian government, led by Mr. Nuhu Ribadu, National Security Adviser to the President of Nigeria, during the delegation’s visit to Washington, D.C. The meeting allowed for a frank, honest, and productive discussion about the ongoing persecution of Christians and ongoing terrorist threats in Nigeria and opportunities for strengthened cooperation and coordination between the United States and Nigeria to end the bloodshed.
During the meeting, Nigerian officials shared their government’s challenges and concerns regarding counterterrorism, security assistance, protection of vulnerable communities, and ongoing issues involving violence across Nigeria.
Congressman Moore clearly stated that the United States stands ready to coordinate and cooperate with Nigeria, and that, as President Trump made abundantly clear, the United States will not tolerate continued violence against Christians or other forms of religious persecution. President Trump does not make idle threats. Congressman Moore will continue monitoring new developments and pushing the Nigerian government to accept the open hand of cooperation to stop the ongoing persecution and violence against Christians and combat the threat terrorist groups pose to the Nigerian population.
Congressman Moore issued the following statement:
“Today, I had a frank, honest, and productive discussion with senior members of the Nigerian government regarding the horrific violence and persecution Christians face and the ongoing threat terrorism poses across Nigeria. I made it crystal clear that the United States must see tangible steps to ensure that Christians are not subject to violence, persecution, displacement, and death simply for believing in our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
We stand ready to work cooperatively with the Nigerians to help their nation combat the terrorism perpetrated by Boko Haram, ISWAP, and Fulani militants against their population, specifically Christians in the Northeast and Middle Belt regions of Nigeria. The Nigerian government has the chance to strengthen and deepen its relationship with the United States. President Trump and Congress are united and serious in our resolve to end the violence against Christians and disrupt and destroy terrorist groups within Nigeria. I urge the Nigerians to work with us in cooperation and coordination on this critical issue.”
The delegation included:
Mallam Nuhu Ribadu – NSA and Leader of the Delegation
Her Excellency, Bianca Ojukwu - Minister of State for Foreign Affairs
Mr. Kayode Egbetokun - Inspector General of Police
Chief Lateef Olasunkami Fagbemi, SAN - Attorney General of the Federation
General Olufemi Olatunbosun Oluyede - Chief of Defence Staff
Lt. Gen. EAP Undiendeye - Chief of Defence Intelligence Ms. Idayat Hassan - Special Adviser to ONSA
Ambassador Ibrahim Babani - Director of Foreign Relations, ONSA
Ambassador Nuru Biu - Acting CDA, Embassy of Nigeria
Paul Alabi - Political and Economic Section, Embassy of Nigeria