@YouthAllianceM2 When you’re incompetent at something, either u seek help or u take steps to learn. We can’t know it all, so it’s ok to concede when u don’t know it. But no? People would rather wnt to pretend they know & that’s whr the issues lie. Worse is they then start propounding conspiracy.
@YouthAllianceM2@DennisMiracles And they refuse to accept tht on this particular subject they’ve bn defeated. It’s ok to concede folks. Can’t know it all the time. They do that just to tickle their propaganda egos & ‘feed’ their gullible followers who most instances don’t do their own analysis of the situatn
@DennisMiracles Fact is people don’t look at context & analyze issues critically before drawing conclusions. Sad. Even worse those who don’t even understand the narratives then jump on to the bandwagon & start commenting without ref. to what’s at the heart of the conversation. Sad reality 2day.
@SammyGyamfi_@MBawumia If you're finding it difficult to understand him (Dr Bawumia) it's normal, it's not all capacity of brains that understand that genius wai. Don't heckle yourself.
@BBSimons It’s a hard job indeed. Even after assembling ‘all those experts’, still can’t find anything they’ve disproved so far. It’s just English being thrown around. And we’re evn now talking probability at this time when we should be getting hard facts of non-existent job claims but no?
Ain’t u guys tired with ur propaganda already? Very unconvincing. If u think this is wht wld inure to ur pol fortunes? Then it must be a joke. U continue to spew same old propaganda tricks & narratives & expect a diff results? U can’t just take ur eyes off ur biggest nightmare’
“Bawumia's 2.1m job creation figures do not add up. Ghana first conducted its labour force survey in 2015, estimated number of employed people was 9.3m. When GSS last checked on the market in 2022, there were 10.7m, the job growth of 1.4m in 7yrs.”
—Alfred Appiah, Data Scientist
Worldwide, the efforts and contributions of workers to the growth of economies, is being appreciated and celebrated today.
In Ghana, we are celebrating our Day under the theme: “Protecting incomes and pensions in the era of economic crisis: Our responsibility”.
As apt as the theme is, there must be a genuine desire and commitment from the purse managers and policy makers to breathe life into the theme. “Responsible” management of our economy is well reflected in the theme: it must not be just rhetoric.
Indeed, the nation is bedeviled with crisis on many fronts and incomes and pensions are falling apart.
A Better Ghana has been built before and can be built again with the right tools.
I wish all workers of Ghana well on this day for the celebration of Labour.
Let us keep hope alive and embrace the future with greater optimism.