Si mara moja wala mara mbili nimekuwa nikiiona hii hali kwenye sehemu tofauti.
Unakuta mzungu akienda ofisi ya serikali anashughulikiwa ki V.I.P unakuta swala lake linahughulikiwa kwaumakini wa hali ya juu sana.
Akipita mtaani watu anaopishana nao wanampa sana salamu na hata wale wa mbali wanamsalimia. mzungu mambo, mzungu nipe tano, mzungu uko poa.
Kukiwa na foleni, unakuta mzungu anaweza kupishwa kwamba ana haraka na watu wakakubali kiroho safi, huwa wanatembea njiani na mzungu, n.k.
Mtu akiwa na rafiki wa kizungu inakuwa ni kama kacheo flani hivi kwamba anatembelewa na mzungu nyumbani kwake.
Mzungu akiendesha basi hata akikimbiza, abiria watalala fofofo, wanasema ni mtaalam wa magari.
How the LAW OF OPEN PRISON works.
Let start with a banana [emoji529] and monkeys [emoji205].
About twenty monkeys were isolated in a room where there was a banana at the top of a ladder. However, as soon as one monkey began to climb the ladder to take the banana, the other monkeys automatically received a cold shower.
Quickly, the monkeys learned that they must not climb the ladder if they want to avoid being watered. (Pavlovian association).
The shower was then completely deactivated, but the monkeys have already internalized the painful association, and did not try to approach the ladder anymore.
One of the monkeys in the room was then replaced by a new monkey, but when the new one approached the ladder, the other monkeys attacked it violently and pushed it away.
A second monkey was replaced, again it was promptly assaulted while trying to climb the ladder, including by the first replacement monkey.
The experiment was continued until all of the first monkeys, who had actually undergone the cold showers, were all replaced. Still, the monkeys didn’t try to climb the ladder to reach the banana. If any of them would try, it was promptly punished by the others, without anyone knowing why this is prohibited, despite the fact that none of the new cohort had ever undergone a cold shower.
None would try to climb the ladder!
Why? Because in their mind, it’s like that, and it has always been so.
If it were possible to speak with these monkeys and ask them why they viciously attack any who try to climb the ladder, their answer may be as follows: "I don't know, but this is how it is here; it’s our tradition our ancestors values."
These behaviors are prevalent in the minds of Africans and those of African descent.
All these behaviors that we adopt and that we repeat without necessarily knowing why.
All these fears that live in us without being able to put words as to their origins.
All these questions that we want to ask, but that die in the throat because we were told: "we don't talk about that".
We are sometimes in the same situation as these monkeys: one person tried to take the banana one day and the consequences of this act were passed on to all those who followed. This is the strength of conditioning!
That’s how Africans became Christians, Muslims, negropeans, wearing funny names and behaving like monkeys!
Ask any African why they give colonial names to their kids, and wait for a monkey answer!
Ask any African why they speak French or English to their children at home without a colonizer behind them and wait for the monkey answer!
Ask any African why they dream to go to Europe/US to become rich while their parents at home are richer than any person who ever migrated to Europe, and wait for the monkey response!
Ask any African why he wears a suit under the hot sun of Africa, and wait for the monkey response!
Ask any African leader why he/she is not pushing for an Africa national agenda, and wait for the monkey answer!
We've monkeyed until we've turned into a global ridicule, most of the time actively working unconsciously against our own best interest. . . like those monkeys!
Deconstructing that conditioning is our work. A mindset revolution has to take place.