The collective mind of a people reflects what
you see in their society. A pointer to the people’s way of life is to observe
the activities going on around them. You extract the psyche of a nation from
what runs in their country. The airport, seaport, or the boarder paints a
bigger picture of what to expect in that country. From whatever point you enter
Nigeria, you begin to feel a taste of what to expect.
Nigeria to most people is a country full of
energy and vibrancy, where many things can go wrong; others refer to it as a
place of many negatives. Reasons not fetched, entrenched in most people’s mind is
that things doesn’t have followed its natural course, anything is permissible. The
idea of an ideal society as obtained in other countries Nigerians praise to
high heavens, but finds hard to duplicate. An honest assessment from foreigners
illustrates a disjointed and disorganized country and to Nigerians it is the
normal way life.
According to a Congolese proverb, a lizard in
a country cannot be an alligator in another country. But that has not stated
the obvious with Nigerians, when they travel out of the country most Nigerians
conforms to the law of that land. They rather live with the adage when in Rome
behave like a Roman and when back in the country they toe the line of the
typical Nigerian mentality. The United Nations rates the country’s the Armed
Forces on peacekeeping mission high, but at home, the accolades are lost.
Road traffic is a huge challenge in the
country. Confusion reigns in most urban areas roads in the country. Learners
with the ‘L’ signs drive on the road even at night. Nigerians obey traffic laws
outside the shore of the country but it is the opposite here.
Nigeria suffers socio-economic maladies primarily
because of the citizens’ orientation. This forms the basis why the country’s President,
as military leader in 1984 introduced the War Against Indiscipline, (WAI). The programme
intended to bring orderliness and discipline into the polity, the bane of the
country’s development, but did not see the light of the day as Buhari regime
was short lived. No one knew, if WAI could have achieved its aim had Buhari’s
regime not toppled.
President Buhari’s second coming as head of
state in the current democratic dispensation has devoted much of its time
fighting corruption in high places, which many argue has underachieved since
corruption still pervades the country, not minding other myriad issues and the
people’s psyche unchanged.
Popular opinion suggests the way we run our
affairs indicates the country lacks direction, a nation that doesn’t plan, and
occasional when it is does is mitigated by many issues that are self-inflicting.
The country structured socio-economic drive over the years suffered comatose.
The citizens believe there is a government in place but not for them. The government
on its whims or on the orders of those in charge rules as it please, reflecting
the common psyche of the people.
Nigeria’s population keeps skyrocketing, with
no affordable housing policy in sight. Individuals have taken up housing
projects than the government. With regional and urban planning offices at
federal and state levels, buildings and structures stands erected irregularly,
towns and cities master plans distorted. People have shops and structures built
on railroads. It is not uncommon to see buildings and structures erected on
drainages and gutters. The government constructs road with uncovered gutters
and drainages, yet for these drainages and gutters lacks proper channeling; hardly
will you find sewerage for any village, town, or city in Nigeria thus results to
block and stinky drainages and gutters.
Every
year, particularly during the rainy season state governments spends money to
clear blocked drainages. With channels linking it to sewerage, money expended
by various state governments on it would cater for projects that would benefit
the masses. Across different states of the federation government at different
levels are constructing open drainages and gutters with no place to channel its
waters. As most towns and cities lacks sewage, people results to building soakaways
in their compounds, where there are no enough space, they build it outside their
compound. In some place, you find the soakaways built on the roads, where the owners
lack space for it in their compound, and in some instances the content of these
soakaways spills on the roads. The average Nigerian accepts this as normal.
Back in the day when things were a bit saner,
many homes can boast of pipe water, today most homes having borehole in their
compounds. Water is a luxury. Nobody erects a building having it in mind to
draw water from the Water Corporation. Every day particularly, in the morning
in towns and cities across the country you see people carrying jerry cans, go outside
their homes to go and get water for domestic use, this applies to those with no
boreholes in their house. Some people have employed the use of wheelbarrow, to
make the number of times less, while some get water close to their
neighbourhood others do not. To average Nigerian, there is nothing wrong with
this, as it is a way of life.
The country’s transport system cries in pain.
Most of the populace can’t take flight. Our rail system remains in comatose.
The waterways in the riverine areas are the last resort for the people in that
region, where boat operators ferry passengers in rickety boats. Road transport the
most common means of transportation has more bad roads stares us in the face than
goods ones does. Commercial buses are packed with passengers than the normal
seating arrangement. Where and when the idea of removing seats that originally
came with a bus and then replaced it with uncomfortable seats that seat more
passengers started, no one can tell, but it is normal with us. Only in Nigeria
do you see such.
Politics in Nigeria to many people is still a
dangerous ground to tread on and with a common belief that most people go into
politics for self-interest. For any election result, the end justifies the
means, victory is all that matter. Politics is still rooted in rancorous
atmosphere, with elections often is marred with violence.
Bad blood trails most elections in the
country. Election year in Nigeria creates political jobbers out of many youths.
Political jobbers are young men who are politicians’ yes men. They carry out any assignment however
difficult it poses. It is in Nigeria that a person who never won an election is
declared winner. Your party or those behind your candidacy, commonly referred
to as ‘Godfathers’ much determines your electoral success than your
personality.
In this clime, most people see politics as a
means to acquire wealth. It is a common knowledge that anyone who occupies an
office is ‘made’. Electoral victory comes with pressure as the winner is
expected to compensate some people; ‘settle them’ is often the common parlance
here. People expect a person who won an election to settle the cronies of their
godfathers’, where such is not applicable; the person settles those that
contributed to their electoral success.
Electoral victory as declared by the election
umpire never guarantees absolute victory as an election tribunal scattered
across the country can upturn any election result. The trend is for the loser
to go to an election tribunal or court, because they stand a chance of being
declared the winner, which any case supersedes that of the election umpire.
Nigerians are accustomed to darkness; constant
power supply is a mirage. Epileptic power supply is a way of life. Many home
connected to electric grids have lived with no glimpse of light for months and
yet pay for darkness. For many homes with occasional power supply, they are
under the weight of ‘estimated bills’ from the power companies.
The bill doesn’t state the exact amount a
customer consumes, but an estimate of it, which usually overshoot. ‘UP NEPA’
thunders the air in jubilation whenever power supply is restored, which often
doesn’t last long before another power cut sets in. It shames and embarrasses
to see, even adults shout ‘Up NEPA’ the acronym for the former national
electric power supply company. It is appalling that Nigerian hotels would
advertise on cable networks like the CNN assuring millions of viewers of steady
power supply, which ordinarily shouldn’t have factored in in their advert
placement.
Get rich quick syndrome has pervaded the
country; it is either you are rich or nobody. In this country, people love to worship
money and positions. If you want to be relevant, you must have deep pocket.
People accord respect based on your level of affluence. Honesty and humility
will never earn the kind of respect or recognition that money does. How anyone makes
money is no other person’s business. In fact, no one will ask you how you made
your money they rather celebrate with you. Conferment of chieftaincy titles
tilts more on wealth and positions occupied.
Here in this clime, looters of national or
state treasury receives hero’s welcome on release from prison. It bewilder to
see people whose economic fortune punctuated line up the streets cheering and
singing praises of someone who contributed to their economic pain. In other places
it shames and lowers a person dignity to get convicted for corruption,
much more celebrate them.
Nigeria treasury looters are not only welcome
with ovation on release from prison, but finds easy integration into the
society. On the street, you hear people say, “after all, it is government
money.” The warm reception accorded looters encourages people to loot public
funds. Plea bargain is another dimension that encourages looting. A person
convicted of embezzling public fund, pleads guilty, in place of prison
sentence, agrees to pay a token, and is acquitted.
The Yuletides are not period when people
enjoys discounts for transactions they made. Many companies do promotions with mouth-watering
discounts for their products and service outside the festive periods. During
the festive periods in Nigeria, we have it ingrained in our consciousness to
prepare for the high cost of goods and services. Embarking on a journey at this
period, particularly by road, could be annoying, the fare is almost doubled in
most cases, and don’t expect any cordial relationship with most transport
operators.
A nation and its psyche
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Rating:

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