Opinion
Where Are Men Of Honour?
Politics as they say is an autumn through which the most power-thirsty attains ultimate desire. It is a game of dignifying tricks and practical wisdom. It is imbued bunches of honour, virtues and self-esteem. It is a channel to the top especially in a democratic environment. To most people, someone who falls short in politics is like having his or her most precious and valuable possession taken away by robbers.
About 2,000 years ago, practically during Shakespearean era, politics was an honourable scenario displayed with nobility of words that are accomplished at the end. Nowadays, in what we call modern politics the world is endangered by parrot politics. Modern politics is characterized by doing nothing but mouthing and remounting of the same rhetoric. Do our politicians think we want to elect parrots. “If we do, we may as well pick candidates from the London Zoo.
The most prominent feature of our politic nowadays is achieving little but doing much of media propaganda. During electioneering campaigns, various promises that can send down the rain, or move mountains and even turn the worst and most turbulent situation into safe-haven are echoed like a-ring-ma-bell. But the moment they were elected, rain seizes to drop, mountain remains still and the worst continues to linger.
It is true that someone who labours must eat the fruits of his labour. But shouldn’t it be a little of the fruit and not the whole fruits and the parties? In our own case, we eat and even the seed, leaving the electorate hungry .
It is understandable that our elected leaders cannot meet up the whole needs and demands of the populace, but to some extent, something tangible and basic could be achieved to captivate the masses.
This will in turn boost the electorate’s morale to recommend such leaders(s) for future positions. A true and acceptable politician or leader is someone who is voted into office without prejudice and manipulation.
The act of killing, rigging and hijacking has bedeviled and characterized the entire system of our modern day politics. Our politicians are in a hurry to go to the land of the dead to achieve their undemocratic aims by all means and at all cost. This shabby syndrome is like a bedbug, gruesomely eating deep into the fabric of our political system. If we want to equate our years of independence with politics, we should, by now, be matured enough to play the game by the rules.
A true and acceptable politician or leader is someone who is voted into office without prejudice and manipulation.
It is shameful that in the 21st century, our system is witnessing violence, uprising and upheaval either during party primaries or election proper. How long shall we continue like this? It is a fundamental trught that someone who attains power through violence must also rule with violence. This is why the country is not enjoying true democracy in the real sense of it.
Nigerian politics is still being dictated by ethnicity, religious and other primordial sentiments. Whereas electing people into the helm of affairs is very dignifying and therefore means choosing people of proven quality, they should people with knowledge and love for their country, irrespective of ethnic and religious affiliations.
Above all, such leaders must have the fear of the Almighty God, which is the beginning of wisdom.
I totally agree with Mr. David Seymour in his article titled “where did all the men of honour go?”, where he summarily and constructively described modern-day politicians as lacking the usual vision, focus and direction for their course and as “mere career politicians with no proper concept of service to their country or people. They are only for themselves.
There are many ways to make our political system work. And there are some reasonable and patriotic few also who could change the system for better. What we should do is to encourage and promote those who will sacrifice themselves for the development of the country. If ideological and geographical differences are cast out, there is no doubt that our democracy will survive.
To sustain our young democracy, we should be prepared to push that politician who cannot play the game according to the rule. It will be wise and dignifying to emulate people like Dr. Nelson Mandela of South Africa, late Mr. Ian Gow, Nigel Lawson (in Thatcher administration), Michael Heseltine and Sir Thomas Dugdale etc. These were men who demonstrated true patriotism, and real concepts and practices of modern politics.
Tordee wrote in from Port Harcourt.
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