
Except for a tiny few, all African countries are in tatters,
riddled by a long record of leaders who have consistently looted the treasuries
of their countries while keeping the poor and middle class oppressed and hungry. This is the story of Nigeria and the story
that South Africa is writing about herself.
In fact, this is the dominant story of Africa’s sociopolitical and
economic history. In Australia, the Aborigines
who were dispossessed of their land are treated as inferior humans in their own
homeland by the same people who stole their country from them; the same people
who now perceive of undocumented immigrants as worthless criminals deserving of
inhumane treatment. South America is
replete with banana republics, thanks to decades of irresponsible leadership. A country as rich in oil as Venezuela has
been brought to its knees by decades of terrible leadership coated in dangerous
rhetoric and a political ideology that was never a fit for the country. In Asia, North Korea is led by a man-boy who
seems to perceive of the world as the playground for whatever evil machinations
can take residence in his mind.
To
the extent that a protagonist is the central figure in a factual
story, a national political leader is a protagonist in the writing and telling of the
story of the country and people that he/she is in office to represent. To the extent that a protagonist is also
supposed to be the champion of a cause, political leaders are supposed to champion
the cause of progress for their countries and fellow citizens. Unfortunately, the world is currently chock-full of leaders whose abilities are limited only to writing and telling stories
that debase humanity. Equally bad is the
fact that most of the world’s leaders are champions only of themselves, their
families and a few sycophants that could not survive otherwise.
The fact that our world has been shattered by an incredible amount of selfish and irresponsible political leaders is not in doubt. But society’s
complicity in this crime should also not be in doubt.
In every situation where national leaders have failed (and are failing)
their countries, there have always been too many people helping to prop them
up. How oppressed citizens, foreign
institutions, the wealthy and religious leaders wittingly and unwittingly
connive to maintain destructive protagonists in position is a reality that defies reasonable
explanation. Yet, that is now the mix
that provides cover for failed protagonists. As a consequence, political leaders can do anything they please, however immoral, and they get away with it because the people who defend them will always do so even at the expense of their own integrity. For as long as that cover remains to excuse political leaders from the
consequences of their actions, for so long will our world remain in
trouble. If you ask me, the clouds are only thickening.