George Floyd: A Worldview of Race – By Kingsely Moghalu

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Moghalu

In this Monday morning thread on Twitter, presidential candidate in 2019, Prof. Kingsley Moghalu examines why the black race is discriminated against  all over the world…

As America burns over the death of George Floyd and other African-Americans from systemic racism, reflected as police brutality with no accountability, there’s a connection between that reality and poverty in African countries where life is also cheap.

That connection is something that scholars have described as “A Worldview of Race”. The black race has been defined negatively by the whitewashing of history-a focus on four centuries of the transatlantic slave trade and colonialism that impoverished and subjugated Africa.

But we have had a history of greatness going back thousands of years, well beyond the epoch of the transatlantic slave trade and the colonial experience.

Race is a worldview, a social ideology of inequality among human beings invented or constructed to justify economic exploitation. It’s not really scientific, because other than external features of skin pigmentation that can be traced to the dispersal of human populations to various parts of the world from Africa as the cradle of humanity, there is little if any fundamental difference in the human biology of the different “races”. Race is mainly a cultural and economic phenomenon.

Read Also: Dangiwa’s Letter – By Femi Fani-Kayode

Black people were not the only or even the first people to be enslaved. The English people held Irish and Indian people as slaves in the 13th and 14th centuries. But the enslavement of Africans in North America lasted for two full centuries, the 17th and 18th.

It was followed by another century of European colonization on the African continent, and then by structural, legal and informal discrimination against blacks in the U.S. They were denied civil rights until the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964.

Black slaves in America did the menial labor that built America’s wealth, especially in the American South. The slave plantations in the Caribbean and African colonies supplied European powers with the raw materials that built their economies.

The only thing that will end racial injustice against black people the world over, whether in Minnesota or in Nigeria, is economic freedom. That’s why it’s unfortunate that, despite the success of political decolonization in Africa, economic freedom has remained a mirage.

The cause of this reality is only partly external. Much more of the reason is internal to African countries themselves— venal, corrupt political leadership and societies divided within themselves by tribalism, absence of strong institutions that can facilitate real development

As late as the early part of the 20th century, Chinese and Japanese people in America suffered discrimination, frequently referred to as “the yellow bastards”. Today, with the economic rise of first Japan and then China, they have achieved grudging respect. Asian money speaks!

Point: The wealth or poverty of nations or peoples is what matters ultimately. Black people in America remain largely poor as a result of the absence of access to opportunities to create wealth, and because of the structural impact of slavery on generations of black families.

They are the most affected by #COVID__19 because, like the urban and rural poor in Africa, they live mainly in poor housing conditions where social distancing is difficult. Key to ending systemic police brutality is police reform & improved economic opportunities for blacks

If African countries were to achieve the kind of economic transformation China and many Asian countries have attained, racism against black people around the world will drop dramatically. Visa restrictions will drop because African youth will not want to emigrate to the West.

Western countries will woo us to come and spend our wealth to create wealth in their own countries. It’s all about the money, which has no color! The black race is discriminated against because over 400 years it has become subliminally associated with poverty.

 

’s our duty to change this reality even as we must challenge racism and discrimination of any sort, whether in America or in Nigeria, Kenya or Côte d’Ivoire, whether such discrimination is anchored on race, ethnic identity or religion.

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