Pundits, advocates for humanity, Africanist,s and altruists would say that there is an unwarranted dichotomy between Africans and African Americans that only serves the interest of those who have been gaslighted without knowing it (African kapos, "Useful Idiots", African Compradors, the ignorant or ignoramuses and the indifferent) and those who caused and continue to propagate the trauma haunting the Black Race today as a result of slavery and colonialism (White Supremacists and/or other Racial Chauvinists who have not reconsidered their ways).
The sad thing is that among
Africans who were badly socially engineered through colonialism to the
point of tolerating and in some cases even accepting neocolonialism (like the Colonial Pact France imposed on
its former colonies in Africa), puppetism, financial slavery, deculturization, and internal division put in place by the former colonial powers and slave
masters, are people who think they are well-disposed to thrive better
than African-Americans who are still suffering the effects of slavery,
African-Americans who fought a better fight in securing their rights and who
are a lot more effective in pushing back the discriminatory actions,
policies and gameplans of that powerful minority among the different
races who think the eternal subjugation of the Black race is their only
salvation.
Africans still suffering from
the traumas of colonialism are no less hurt than African Americans who are
doing a great job of doing away with the remaining shackles of slavery.
The two groups should work together in the total, complete, and universal
emancipation of the minds of people of the Black Race and work with other
progressive forces of the world for the HARMONY OF HUMANITY.
Janvier Tchouteu, author of “FALLEN HEROES: African Leaders Whose Assassinations Disarrayed the Continent and Benefitted Foreign Interests”
https://amazon.com/dp/1980996695/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_dp_JX6Q26H573RSKG7HT9V6
FALLEN HEROES: African Leaders Whose Assassinations Disarrayed the Continent and Benefitted Foreign Interests
by Janvier T. Chando and Janvier Tchouteu |
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