Opinion
Dregs And Scum Of The Earth
“Be wiser than others if you can, but do not tell them so” – Lord Chesterfield, once told his son.
Despite high walls which characterise modern residential build
ings in urban towns, quarrels do break out among neighbours. Late Ken Saro Wiwa would suggest that high fences make good neighbours; but smell from a smoking neighbour can create some discomfort for a non-smoking one. The cause of a quarrel among neighbours who live in walled houses, with vicious dogs as guards, arose not from smoke but from care-free dumping of house-hold wastes in a gutter.
No father would be happy that his children are described as “dregs and scum of the earth”, but that statement was the cause of a quarrel between neighbours. Manner of disposal of refuse depicts vital lessons about individuals, house-holds and nations, in terms of standards of decency and value orientations. Obviously, care-free dumping of refuse in gutters, resulting in blockages and flooding of a neighbourhood, depicts grossness.
It would not be wrong to say that acts of grossness usually depict gross-mindedness which obviously leads towards degradation. On the contrary, acts of nobility depict noble-mindedness which would incline towards positive up building. Therefore, to raise an objection towards an act of grossness can be a means of enhancing sanity in the society, even though such corrective measures can bring about quarrels among neighbours.
Would it be disagreeable to say that there are dregs and scum of the earth, living side by side with decent people in the society? Neither is decency determined largely by the possession of wealth and position of power. Dregs and the scum of the earth would obviously refer to the class of shameless and irresponsible people in human society. The relevant issue to delve into is not whether such persons exist, but what accounts for their presence and the disparities among humans, not in terms of the possession of wealth and power, but in terms of character.
The man who described throwers of refuse into the gutter as “dregs and scum of the earth” was brought up in France. Constant plea by members of his extended family for him to return to Nigeria after retirement as a military pilot, forced him to set up his residence in the neighbourhood of this writer. He would shun noise and excessive talks, as he would detest acts of hooliganism, at least, not close to his residence. His giant dogs would ensure that impudent intruders dare not come close to his house. His daily companions are books and classical music. He is also a pianist.
Therefore, when an angry voice of Captain France was heard in the neighbourhood one early morning, his neighbours were curious to know why. It turned out that two children whom he cautioned about dumping refuge in the gutter reported to their father that they were called “dregs and scum of the earth”. Quarrels have one positive impact, namely: energising the body and making the mind bold to say things as they truly are.
“Captain, if you leave Nigeria and return to Europe, who do you expect to rebuild this country?” That was a question asked by one of those who intervened in the quarrel arising from a care-free dumping of refuse in a gutter. The Captain was so visibly angry that he regretted returning to Nigeria and swore to go back, for good. In his hour of tranquility one had to visit him for some chat. It was a delightful surprise that a retired military officer would have such high and expansive knowledge and character as became evident in the interactive encounter. What a polished man!
For those who may think that military officers are not usually university graduates, the truth is that military academies are comparable to conventional universities. There is also an additional advantage of retraining programmes to acquire diverse knowledge of current and vital issues of global importance. Despite the secretive nature of military training programmes, it would be wrong to underestimate the intelligence of military officers. You can find genius among them!
The bitterness of “Captain France”, a military pilot, was that “the collective consciousness or development of Nigerians” is grossly inadequate and low. The fact that he spent longer years in foreign countries than in Nigeria notwithstanding, he is a Nigerian and would want Nigerians to develop and embrace what counts for nobility of character. According to him, degeneration of the urge towards nobility among Nigerian elite arose from easy and unearned wealth coming from petroleum and gas resources: Wealth without labour!
From this unique Nigerian, who spent a better part of his life in foreign countries and in military career, came rich ideas and explanations why Nigeria is yet unable to “rise up from the dust”. Neither would he accept any suggestion of going into politics as a means of making any impactful change in the society. He would say that Nigerian leaders have a mindset of not wanting to be told the truth, whereby he made reference to Lord Chesterfield’s admonition to his son, quoted at the beginning of this article. Nigerian leaders would not want to see anybody who would “outshine them”.
Therefore, comes the political culture of “Cabal” as a protective net and a nest of like-minded people who would “rubbish anyone capable of exposing their mediocrity or agenda. The strategy of such system of power monopoly is to create a terror machine for self preservation purposes. But consequences of such system of power monopoly include the rise of dregs and the scum of the earth as heroes who can hardly be dislodged without bloodshed. The era of such state of social anomaly brings an increase of a rabble whose mission is to darken and pollute the earth more and more. Such rabble abounds in Nigeria!
From a quarrel among neighbours over dumping of refuse in a gutter, came the revelation that inferior souls had access to infiltrate Nigeria through interior and capricious mothers. Those who ask for the way forward in such a quagmire, would be told that “evil destroys itself through its own activities and by its own accomplices. There are rare gems in Nigeria that we rarely know about, but quarrels can bring them up occasionally.
Dr Amirize is a retired lecturer, Rivers State University, Port Harcourt.
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