Africans & Their Denialism: African Denialism.

Most Africans are in complete denial about the state of their being in the world. When Africa is under European Terrorism, they call it the Trans-Atlantic-Slave Trade.

What Trade? As if the families of the Africans who were kidnapped and shipped to the Americas got something back for losing their kin. First, to call the European Terrorism of the African continent—to siphon the continent of human labor and human expertise—as a “Trade” is a denialism of monstrous proportions. It necessitates that you, the victim, first indicts yourself.

The second one comes close, but does not beat the first. When the Terroristic European nations decide to change their systems of oppression in a slightly different form—but still widespread, controlling, publicly known and accepted—to hamper any revolts on the continent, African intellectuals come together and call the new system of oppression Independence.

What Independence? When the Terrorized States, which are now called African countries, exist only under the balkanized status imposed on them by Europeans, African intellectuals wag their tails about belonging to nations. What nations?

Yes, the same terrorism that existed during chattel slave abductions on the continent does not remain today in the overpowering form that prevents a revolution. It exists today in ways that we are free to oppose and resist, and yet, we fail to do so only to our own shame.

Only Kwame Nkrumah came close. He called it Neocolonialism. The correct word is Terrorism, still. Colonialism or Neocolonialism does not capture the essence of European barbarism in Africa.

African Denialism is an essentially irrational action that withholds the validation of the brutal, oppressive historical experience or events, when the whole continent refuses to accept the empirically verifiable reality of their European Terrorism. It is so bad that any time I speak of revolting against the terrorism, I am called the following names: Hotep, Afrocentrist, Lawyer of African Culture, and so on.

The wicked part of all this is that those who do the name-calling, the Metha, are unaware that their very education and training demands that they call me these names. They are unware that the fact of their colonial missionary and intellectual existence demands that they acquiesce to the barbarism of European Terrorism in Africa.

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~ Success is a horrible teacher. It seduces the ignorant into thinking that he can’t lose. It seduces the intellectual into thinking that he must win. Success corrupts; Only usefulness exalts. ~ WP. Narmer Amenuti (which names translate: Dances With Lions), was born by The River, deep within the heartlands of Ghana, in Ntoaboma. He is a public intellectual from the Sankoré School of Critical Theory, where he trained and was awarded the highest degree of Warrior Philosopher at the Temple of Narmer. As a Culture Critic and a Guan Rhythmmaker, he is a dilettante, a dissident and a gadfly, and he eschews promotional intellectualism. He maintains strict anonymity and invites intellectuals and lay people alike to honest debate. He reads every comment. If you enjoyed this essay and would like to support more content like this one, please pour the Ancestors some Libation in support of my next essay, or you can go bold, very bold and invoke them. Here's my CashApp: $TheRealNarmer

4 COMMENTS

  1. Strongly worded but recollecting the brutal dismemberment of Patrice Lumumba and the epoch-changing coup against Osagyefo the President alone suggest that the militant characterization of our foreign detractors and their innumerable local puppets may be justified. Africa needs to continue educating its youth in unity, patriotism, science, secularism and entrepreneurship, and cautiously nevertheless go on collaborating with all old and new global partners.

  2. But will they/us/Africans call it Western European slave terrorism? No. And why not? Because we have been taught and it has been ingrained in us that we are part of the problem. And we therefore refuse to see that era in any other light. When have you my brother ever heard an African man or woman say they were miseducated? We will never admit so.

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