Dear Western Feminists: We Can Tell Our Mothers’ Stories! Gbetto-Warrior, or Hunter-Warrior, officially called Mianor, which translates, “Our Mother,” from the Ewe-Fon.

The Gbetto Warriors were Our Mothers (Mianor). Not yours! You are nothing like them, and you will never get any closer. We can tell the stories of our Own Mothers as we deem fit, and so we don’t need you to tell it. Stop imposing your wicked, narcissistic orgasmatron narratives on the memory of Our Mothers!

They were our mothers, first of all, not yours! And for your African students – Afrosaxons and the Afrogauloises – who don’t seem to know any better about your peculiar sexual deviance, I invite them to make a cursory search on your online libraries of the only Amazon Warriors (not the fake ones) that have ever existed in history. (Only Grey Women are found in those searches in various mythical stories of falsehoods!)

Yet, these students, although they are not very bright, may quickly grasp that the interest in the stories of our Mothers, the Mianor, from western feminists, has nothing to do with all the high-sounding words of equality they have presumed.

No! The Mianor were not feminists.

Your interests in our stories has everything to do with seizing our narratives, twisting them and pushing them to serve a certain peculiar Globalist, Neoliberal, Narcissistic, Sexually Deviant agenda. The stories of Our Mothers (Mianor) is ours to tell, not yours to interrupt, dissect and denature!

Thank you.

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Amenuti Narmer
"Success without usefulness is a dangerous mentor. It seduces the ignorant into believing he cannot lose, and it misleads the intellectual into thinking he must always win. Success corrupts; only usefulness exalts." — WP. Narmer Amenuti (whose name translates to Dances With Lions) was born by the river, deep within the heartlands of Ghana, in Ntoaboma. A public intellectual from the Sankoré School of Critical Theory, he was trained and awarded the highest honor of Warrior Philosopher at the Temple of Narmer. As a cultural critic and a Guan rhythmmaker, Amenuti is a dilettante, a dissident, and a gadfly. He eschews promotional intellectualism and maintains strict anonymity, inviting both scholars and laypeople into open and honest debate. He reads every comment. If you enjoyed this essay and wish to support more work like it, pour libation to the Ancestors in support of the next piece—or go bold, very bold, and invoke them. Here's my CashApp: $TheRealNarmer

1 COMMENT

  1. Love the picture. Femininity is not to be confused with feminism. Our mothers can be feminine and still love and fight for our men. They do not need feminism to be the mothers and women that they have always been.

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