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Our $50,000 Car-Loan Parliamentarians “Tie” Us To Cultural Junk

Thu, 24 Dec 2009 Source: Mensema, Akadu Ntiriwa

*By Akadu Ntiriwa Mensema Ph. D.; Post-Grad. Dipl.

“Failure by Sene MP [Member of Parliament] to put on his tie on Thursday

meant he was improperly dressed and could not present the budget estimates

for the Information Ministry” (Ghanaweb Dec 18, 2009).

Our viral genealogies of Parliamentarians

Who push us in contradictory directions

And implant us in Petri-dishes of anomy

The $50,000 car-loan economic saboteurs

Agents of self-fulfilling cultural defeatism

Dabble in neocolonized cultural genocide

In that a tie-less MP was silenced in Parliament

The august body of clueless Parliamentarians

Mirrors what is wrong with our untidy body politic

We have become thirsty acculturated d nomads

We squirm in our homes looking for our sanity

We are the agents of cultural self-derailment

Led by our clueless stomach-Parliamentarians

Who put on ties and tie us to neo/colonialisms

Who put the colonial tie around our weak necks

To commit adulterated acculturated suicides

To promote mass acculturated cultural genocide

The senile cultural nomads in our Parliament

The eternally bankrupt intellectual elites

Who only think about tractors and car loans

Every four years after suffocating us with ties

By tying ties around our national sagging necks

Their ties that are emblazoned with foreign flags

Flags of America, Britain, France, China, etc.

The half-baked educated thievery gangly elites

Who think wearing a tie is a signifier of progress

That a tie is synonymous with whites’ work ethic

Who think a tie is the real deal in a Parliament

We embrace antiquated foreign values

Imparted to us in the slavery/colonial era

But reject Ghanaian ontological values

Without asking revolutionary questions

Folks Westerners do not use our costumes

Our car-loan parliamentarians don’t know

That Westerners don’t use our local names

They do not follow our African religions

They don’t eat our local staple food

They mock at our cottage industries

Yet our leaders like to wear woolen suits

In the hot murderous drenching sun

With ties around their stately necks

Their ties are a signifier of stolen wealth

Social mobility based on elite thievery

A generation of Africans is lost forever

A generation of Ghanaians lost forever

We believe that foreign things are better

We worship any foreign thing/idea

The white man is our god and is godly

The white man’s second-hand tie/socks

The white woman’s second-hand panties

Are our heavenly cherished designer items

Better than new made-in-Ghana goods

Cultural nomads who lack the ability to think

But have patented stealing and thievery

Stewed in neocolonial depraved mentalities

They believe in yesteryear nursery dogmas:

Our dogma of eternal white superiority

Reflect the weight of our traumatic histories

**Akadu N. Mensema is a nationalist Denkyira beauty. She is a trained

oral historian cum sociologist and Professor in the USA. She lives

in Pennsylvania with her great mentor and teaches Africa-area studies

at a college in Maryland. She writes what critics have called “populist

hyperbolic, satirical” poetry. She can be reached at akadumensema@yahoo.com

Columnist: Mensema, Akadu Ntiriwa