Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,205,392 members, 7,992,260 topics. Date: Saturday, 02 November 2024 at 09:03 PM

The Warning To Ruto From The Globalist Oligarchs - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / The Warning To Ruto From The Globalist Oligarchs (183 Views)

Wiper Leader Kalonzo Musyoka Fumes To Ruto On Police Brutality Cases Wiper Party / Is Wole Soyinka Becoming A Pawn For The Globalist Elite? / The Warning Message Ikeja Electric Sent To Their Customers (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

The Warning To Ruto From The Globalist Oligarchs by BABANGBALI: 11:06am On Jul 04
Some people do not understand what is going down in Kenya.

Some even said Nigerian youths should take a cue from the Kenyan puppets who are participating in what they do not fully understand, and reenact an End Sars II.

What foolishness.

We need to stop looking at matters on the surface.

Ruto, since his election has been talking of abandoning the dollar, creating a common African market, going off the dollar, and bringing on an African monetary gold standard, BACKED BY REAL GOLD, and our minerals.

(Unlike the current international currencies that are backed by nothing, just paper money with pictures of some dead heroes of white people on them)

In other words, Ruto has been saying exactly the kind of things that Ghaddafi was saying which made the demonic Hilary Clinton and the Satanist Barack Obama take the decision to have Ghaddafi murdered, and his country thrown into the chaos as we see today in Libya.

This Kenyan riots displays the characteristics of a drill for the real deal..
The real deal is to get Ruto out, if he does not stop his Pan africanist and revolutionary rhetoric.

If Ruto doesn't stop speaking about what will benefit Africa, and displease America, he will get the Ghaddafi treatment.

What we are seeing is a sophisticated operation to defang another developing African revolutionary.

Neither the Kenyan riots, nor the end Sars farce will save Kenya or Nigeria.

Both senseless riots are orchestrated by globalist oligarchs who have a different agenda.

The oligarchs always give you a warning, pace you start hurting their interests by action, or by rhetoric.

They gave Jerry John Rawlings a similar warning.

He started out giving fiery revolutionary, pan africanist speeches, laced with attacks on the West generally, and attacks on the dismal record of the IMF in Africa, and the third world.

The West took notice, and warned him with several close -shave coup attempts which made him see that he can not possibly run any government if he is bedeviled by foreign influenced coups. If he is not killed in one of them, the concentration on security from the spectre of coup attempts would distract him.

He prudently took the warning to heart, and toned down his revolutionary rhetoric, went back to IMF, whereupon the IMF configured the Ghanaian economy back to a neo colonial one.

Today Ghana economy is back in trouble. But revolutionary Jerry survived, becoming a darling of the West towards the end of his tenure ( the West which he started out denouncing); and was rewarded sith visits from the Queen, and from Bill Clinton.

The same oligarchs warned Bob Marley back in 1976 when, after he had displayed the unusual audacity of calling out CIA in his 1986 album, Rastaman Vibration, the oligarchs saw that Bob was, and would continue to be a great influence for pan africanism, decolonization, and third world world resistance against oppression, they came to his house, with many assassins fired many shots inside a defenseless house full of civilians and women, AND NOBODY WAS KILLED.

What do we take from this?

Only this:

The attack on Bob Marley residence in 1976 WAS NOT AN ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT.

It was a warning.

Just a drill to warn the first popular musician in history who had the boldness to call out the world's number one spy agency: the CIA, BY NAME in his music.

Bob heard the warning, but did not yield to the threat.

That was why, in the very next year, he was poisoned with slow acting cancer cells as the CIA operative who carried out the hit has now confessed.

So, what happened in Kenya is an orchestrated WARNING to Ruto to stop all the pan africanist Talk, and take his place among the puppets in many state houses in Africa.

Let us see how he reacts.

Either like Jerry Rawlings, in which case, he will survive; or like Bob Marley, defiant, and in which case he will need to be very careful.

Or he will go the way of Ghadafi, Sankara, Murtala Mohammed, Malcolm X , Patrice Lumumba, Kwame Nkrumah etc...patriotic leaders who tried to preach pan africanism, and who paid with their office, or their lives...


Another Perspective lifted from a different platform:

“Microsoft left Nigeria for Kenya, but I can safely say that in 3-5 years, they will leave Kenya, too.

Ghana was the Cinderella of foreign investment in the West African sub region , not too long ago, but now foreign businesses are leaving in droves.

Standard Chartered Bank has left almost all the countries they operate in on the continent except Nigeria and South Africa. But Access Bank is buying their assets.

How come they are leaving and some other businesses more organic to Africa are buying them off?

Diageo is leaving Nigeria not Guiness the brand. They are leaving because they claim that doing business in Nigeria is almost impossible.

Like many multinationals before them, they now realise that their business model is outdated.

Loading foreign inputs and not investing in developing local supply chains cannot be profitable for ever. Those that know, know.

They are right that doing business in Nigeria is not for the weak and ordinary.

But who is buying their stakes?

You see Tolaram group the manufacturer of Indomie who are also building a deep sea port in Nigeria who have been in Nigeria for over 50 years and are deepening their investments in Nigeria.

For 60+ years, none of Shell, Exxon Mobil, or Chevron or Total built a refinery in Nigeria. For everyone's information they have no significant economic asset in Nigeria beyond their production rigs since Shell started drilling in Nigeria in the late 50s.

They milked our raw crude and did not help stop our bleeding from importing finished products, which were the finished product of the more profitable part of the value chain of oil and gas production.

But Shell and Exxon went to Singapore in the 60s and built its biggest refinery in a country that did not have a single crude oil.

Could they have done better in developing the O & G value chain ?

Now the refinery they did not build Dangote has built one that is bigger than the biggest Shell and Exxon's refineries in less than 10 years what they did not do in over 60 years of milking Nigeria's crude.

Shell just sold its Nigerian operations to Aradel, a wholly Nigerian company managed by a friend, a First class alumnus of UI, and one of our brothers and a Baptist and they are doing very well.

A consistent trend is emerging; these colonial economic systems are gradually waning in their ability to build their own economies, harvesting our raw materials to create jobs and an economic value chain at their end through value chain processing.

Now they are leaving, Indians, Asians, and Israelis, and some Nigerians are taking over these assets, and they can not believe how profitable they are and can still be.

It is clear that no foreigner can develop our economies in Africa as their stakes are not permanent, and they will always look to grow their own interest and not ours.

Do we need to work on the ease or unease of doing business in Nigeria? Most certainly we do , a lot has to be done to how Nigeria kills businesses. But, many of these foreign owned companies were feeding fat on the inefficiencies of our economic production and using different transfers, pricing, and fx strategies to make profits , no bilk us.

Now that they sense that we are woke albeit not well organised, they are off… good riddance.

The bottom line is that we need our homegrown solutions to our peculiar socio-economic challenges in Nigeria and Africa.”

My comments:

I agree with the above views.

The companies that are leaving Nigeria will leave at one time or the other because their main interest of creating jobs for their people is not being satisfied.

They don’t give a f—-@#! about seeing Nigeria develop and I cannot blame them because they are working the scripts of their colonial owners.

Guys research the history of the Royal Niger Company in Nigeria.

We should not kill ourselves because of their departure as some of us keep on ringing in our ears.

It is clear to me that they have fulfilled their role and it is time for them to go.

If they don’t Nigeria will remain the same. Japan and China are good examples. The same people told Dangote not to build his refinery.

Now that the refinery has been built, the same people are working to deprive him of feedstock supply; a plant that has so many benefits for Nigeria and Nigerians.

The road is going to be rough - very rough with many adjustments to make along the way but I believe we will get there.

Let us shine our eyes .


Copied

1 Like 1 Share

Re: The Warning To Ruto From The Globalist Oligarchs by MASTAkiLLAh(m): 11:18am On Jul 04
Humor me. Do you really think Dangote will be allowed to "steal" a yearly multi billion dollar petroleum products customer dada from a vicious market just like that ?

(1) (Reply)

Sen. Natasha Akpoti , Others Set For International Study Visit To Parliaments / "Politicians Pay Attention": Nigerian Boys Sing About Nigeria's High Living Cost / APC Govt Force Nigerians To Swallow The Present Hardship.

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 34
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.