By: Tomás Alberto
Africa-Press – Angola. The world is dynamic, and in recent times, we’ve noticed that this dynamism is accelerating at the speed of light. We’ve lived through several eras since the caveman era, but I’ll mention just three: the Industrial Revolution, the Mobile Phone Era, and the Digital Era.
The industrial era, as the name suggests, led to the emergence of industry and its supply chain worldwide, and included a new way of living in the world.
The same thing happened with the mobile phone era. Today, we have producers of the equipment that makes up mobile phones, antennas, top-up sales services, mass messaging, technicians, and the entire supply chain.
In the digital age, the rule is no exception; just when we thought cell phones were the latest invention, digital technology emerged, evolving at lightning speed, granting freedom and libertinism to all those who own a smartphone, tablet, and computer. It seems the world has stopped here, but it hasn’t. Other eras will emerge.
The creation and expansion of an era required only human resources, willpower, and money. I must say, however, that the evolution of the world in its various stages was born from an idea, and above all, from the will to act.
Academia, universities, inventions, and more were born from an idea. Those who created all of this, at the time, were untrained. There was no pilot training without the invention of the airplane. There was no driver’s license training without the invention of the automobile. There were no students without the invention of school…
Many Africans think that the people who will solve our problems will have to come from Harvard, Oxford, Cambridge, Yale… Others still think that our problem is a lack of money, when it is not; our problem is a lack of understanding, belief, and understanding, and thinking that the ones who will solve our problems are foreigners.
Africans were raised dependent on foreigners, so even though they have the solution here, they prefer to ask foreigners for help. – Despite the help, the problems are not solved.
How much financial aid and training have Africans received since achieving independence? What have they done or created with the aid they received?
The problem with Africans is that they fight against those who are competent, because it is not convenient for them, to give opportunities to those who are not competent, and these in turn hire foreigners with a good salary reward and all their perks.
The foreigner accepts, but is aware that he will not achieve the goals, because his level of education is so high that the masses who will implement the programs cannot understand them…
Unfortunately, this gap is not being filled. Yet, we continue with the programs despite this misalignment between the large and good programs on paper and their implementation, for the reasons outlined above…
African brothers look to Africans as the solution to their problems, and we are the ones who know about our own. Foreigners also have their own problems to solve, and they are not few. They certainly won’t prioritize solving the problems of Africans.
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