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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
Mema mo akye o. I’m looking to do a Saturday Seminar Series on this:
Title
From Uhuru to Abibifahodie to Sovereignty? 2 steps Forward, One Step Backward…
Key points I want to discuss is how the recent “sovereignty” thrust as it has become popularized on krakkka social media in recent times are:
How “sovereignty” is:
1. Linguistically backward in reverting to latinate concepts as our overall objective
2. Conceptually backward. We can see numerous “sovereign” states that have been invaded and subverted from Ayiti to Grenada…and to get to a similar position of being “sovereign” is what we’re supposed to be striving for as our ultimate goal? At best a step in the process, at worst a diversion — stop, but don’t stay; building one’s house on a bridge as analogies
3. Influenced by inherently problematic moorish “sovereign citizen” doctrine? Parallels and convergences.
4. Solutions on the basis of our own concepts, terms and definitions as well as on a sober analysis of our situation and what strategies and tactics should be as Kmtyw (Black people)
Any thoughts on this?
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
@kevlew @songsore @ItuNeter @j-africa @taharka2018 @heru_djet @mwalimubaruti @ijoh @kala_kambon @Nana @karuga @Soki @makiyasmack
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
This would be good. It reminds me of Nna Chinweizu’s History of Pan-Afrikanism course that drew similar distinctions. Definitely, the moorish sovereign-citizen movement is a part of this in the context of the broader sovereign-citizen movement, that traces its origins to the Posse Comitatus movement associated with “white” minister William Potter Gale. I’m still looking more into this, but that’s the earliest attestation that I have of “sovereign citizen” that it seems like the current thrust is riding on. I’ll also, of course, go into the etymology of “sovereign” and “sovereignty” and how the concepts are rooted in aAmw historical phenomena that as Kmtyw, it may not be useful for us to insert ourselves into. @kevlew
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Re: 1 and 2,
The limitation of Grenada and Ayiti was being victim of a 3-on-1 fastbreak (think basketball) – either from forced isolation and/or micro-nationalist vision (as opposed to systematic Pan-Afrikanist nationalist one).
Ayiti is very clear ex. The Brutish Krakkkas, for ex, situationally allied with Ayiti as long as they did not have contact with Kmtyw in Jamaica. Post-Desalin the mulatto-occupiers of Ayiti sought peculiar alleigances with Spanish colonized mulatto Simone du Beauvoir and recognition from krakkka nations, including the France. That biogenetic vector— serious ting.
Grenada was in a similar 3 v 1 position. Cuba and Russia where not of use because, as we know, Kmtyw were simply pawns for Marx krakkkas in their conflict with John Smith Krakkkas.
The Caribbean kmtyw were caught up in these krakkka ideological tribal war of capitalist vs communist. This is why Castro enthusiasts irritiate me. This absence of clarity prevented emancipendence and instead there is flag independence
Re: 4,
When using krakkka political terms, there needs to at least be substantive racial and worldview specifications to clarify the political objective. But thats more of a band aid for the moment.
I think as for solution(s), I think Black-to-Black translation of our Deep thought concepts becomes critical here. Ex, the translation of *ity* in mdw nTr as “sovereign” or *per-Aa* n *nsw-bity* as “king”.
Finding identical terms or phrases in other Kmtyw languages would be ideal.
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In my opinion before gaining “sovereignty” you must be fully self sufficient. Not depending on others to provide your basic needs (food, shelter, clothing and water) is the foundation of sovereignty. Growing our own foods, sharing amongst each other(no one in Africa should ever be hungry w/all that fertile soil). Farming/gardening should be a mandatory class/curriculum from kindergarten to high school, further agriculture classes should be provided in college as well. SurThrival Agriculture should be taught to all ages.
Basic structure building and ancestral construction wisdom should be part of early education also a foundational course/curriculum.
Textile, fabric making, sewing, spinning thread, etc should be taught to boys and girls.
Living “off grid” but still having to depend on kra$$$as or outsiders for your basic needs defeats the purpose of attempting sovereignty, to still have to eat their foods, use their building materials, buy their clothes and drink their bottle/bag water bc they were allowed to contaminate our natural drinking sources makes no sense of sovereignty is a goal. Before, even governing ourselves we have to be able to survive and thrive.
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Agreed Dada
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“The academy assumes the “rhetorical ethic” (see Yurugu, Ch. 6, pp. 311 – 336). “Never say what you are really thinking”… “Hypocrisy is the norm”… “Always hide your true agenda.” Dr. Welsing broke these “rules” of racism/white supremacy — psychopathology. She was always “in their face.”. Not the academic establishment, nor any other aspect of the white supremacist order, could intimidate her. They labeled her “essentialist.” But that is what she was and that is what we are. We are race-identified. She was clearly centered in her Blackness. Everything she said and did was for us and in the interest of her race. Her word was bond; what she told us to do, she did. She thereby alienated the liberals, leftists, academics and the other whites as well as all cowards, apologists, assimilationists and integrationists. We consider this a great Afrikan Sovereignist achievement!”
“at minimum, Afrikan Sovereignty requires:
1) the social and cultural reconnection of Afrikan people with each other globally
2) the development of a military capable of defending both the Afrikan continent against any aggressor and Afrikan people wherever they may reside on the face of this planet, as well as having the authority to maintain national (continent wide) order
3) one representative umbrella government overseeing the affairs and interests of Afrikans globally with its command center in Afrika
4) the removal of divisive and artificial political boundaries from the Afrikan continent
5) the removal of the presence and power of nonAfrikan people from our motherland
6) global citizenship for all Afrikan people, i.e., Afrikan people should be allowed to freely travel wherever Afrikan people are, especially across the Continent and to and from the Diaspora and the Continent without the hindrances of a system of visas that work to make physical contact between individuals in different countries and states difficult
7) a fully functioning transportation system with the capacity to readily move Afrikan people and resources wherever we and they need to go on the Continent and around the world at will and independent of other people’s land, sea and air carriers
8) a political apparatus mobilized to realize nonnegotiated reparations in every form (financial, business technology and facilities, ourstorical artifacts, kwk) from wherever they have been transported, hoarded and profited from around the world
9) the actual material, institutional, infrastructural, technological and retaliatory reparations commensurate with the spiritual, genetic, social, cultural and resource damage done to Afrikans by europeans (Old and New), Arabs and Asians
10) the large-scale promotion and institutionalization of the lifestyle, ritual, language and material aspects of our indigenous traditions and an international educational institution, system and pedagogy that is able to incorporate both the appropriate, nonculturally contaminated, contemporary technology and the moral and ethical values and ways of thinking and doing of our people into a functional and proper education for our youth
11) the creation of a de-europeanizing, re-educating, ReAfrikanization evaluation and correction or removal agency whose mission it is to determine the severity and correctability of each individual’s mentacide in order to assess how Afrikans returning to our countries and communities should be spiritually, psychologically and physically processed in order to best protect our spaces from internal discord.
12) the establishment of an internal and external (international) information gathering agency designed to assist us in making informed decisions about threats to Afrikan security, and able and authorized to deploy agents whose loyalty to the Afrikan nation is beyond reproach to gather said information
13) the removal of our land from foreign “ownership,” control and occupation and a return of this land to the control of and equitable distribution by the state, tribe and clan. The massive reintroduction of non-cash crop farming technologies in the schools and fields. The nationalization of the industries that can best produce those necessities that are essential for the survival (e.g., food, clothing, transportation, infrastructure, building materials, kwk) of the people
14) the development of a fair, nonjudgmental, people’s social welfare system solvent enough to handle the difficult and debilitating conditions people find themselves in and are affected by which are either the result of new situations and events or the outcome of our foreign invasion, destruction and exploitation, or both; that is, until these problems become manageable through the state, tribe and clan, having returned to their former levels of benevolent efficiency and
15) the removal of the prison system as a punitive instrument and its replacement with strong corporeal moral law and rehabilitative, compensatory, service-oriented system of corrections”.
– Mwalimu K. Bomani Baruti
“Is Afrikan Sovereignism (an idea envisioning a politically organised monoracial Afrikan existence, that is powerful, sane, functional, balancing and productive without giving recourse to foreign values, mores, ethics, cultures, religions, ideologies, epistemologies and cosmologies) not a mere lust, on the part of the dethroned Afrikans, for the white master’s privileges and reverse domination/oppression/racism?
Sovereign existence is the ontological layout giving latitude to a people’s essence to express itself in and to reach institutional fullness. Desiring that is desiring realignment to the cosmic harmonies emitting the very vibrations anchoring and fortifying our being. You are simply desiring your restoration to authenticity without giving recourse to other people’s values. It is gravitation to your essence and a need to create an order that will nurture its authentic manifestation and institutional fullness sensitive to its peculiarities”.
– Itumeleng Makale, Unshackle – Stepping On Toes:A Case for the Reorientation of Afrikan Consciousness-
88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
Meda mo ase!
This reminds me of the slogan we had for a while “The revolution will not be anglicized.” That should probably be a subsection of the presentation. That and the once and for all solution to the #1 problem on the planet earth.-
I hear you.
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
sovereignty (n.)
mid-14c., “pre-eminence,” from Anglo-French sovereynete, Old French souverainete, from soverain (see sovereign (adj.)). Meaning “authority, rule, supremacy of power or rank” is recorded from late 14c.; sense of “existence as an independent state” is from 1715.
Entries linking to sovereignty
sovereign (adj.)
early 14c., “great, superior, supreme,” from Old French soverain “highest, supreme, chief,” from Vulgar Latin *superanus “chief, principal” (source also of Spanish soberano, Italian soprano), from Latin super “over” (from PIE root *uper “over”). Spelling influenced by folk-etymology association with reign. Milton spelled it sovran, as though from Italian sovrano. Of remedies or medicines, “potent in a high degree,” from late 14c.
https://www.etymonline.com/word/sovereignty-
88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
@heru_djet I remember one time you said this: “I remember a cat who told me back in the day that Black folks walk around with a bucket of Black paint, throwing it on everything that they like.”
I think the new trend is to put “Afrikan” in front of latinate concepts that have problematic conceptual genealogy. See below: https://www.britannica.com/topic/sovereignty
sovereigntypoliticsBy The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica Edit HistoryJean BodinSee all mediaKey People: Thomas Hobbes Jean Bodin Harold Joseph LaskiRelated Topics: nation-state state capitulation dominion theorySee all related content →SummaryRead a brief summary of this topic
sovereignty, in political theory, the ultimate overseer, or authority, in the decision-making process of the state and in the maintenance of order. The concept of sovereignty—one of the most controversial ideas in political science and international law—is closely related to the difficult concepts of state and government and of independence and democracy. Derived from the Latin superanus through the French souveraineté, the term was originally understood to mean the equivalent of supreme power. However, its application in practice often has departed from this traditional meaning.
History
Thomas Hobbes
In 16th-century France Jean Bodin (1530–96) used the new concept of sovereignty to bolster the power of the French king over the rebellious feudal lords, facilitating the transition from feudalism to nationalism. The thinker who did the most to provide the term with its modern meaning was the English philosopher Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679), who argued that in every true state some person or body of persons must have the ultimate and absolute authority to declare the law; to divide this authority, he held, was essentially to destroy the unity of the state. The theories of the English philosopher John Locke (1632–1704) and the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–78)—that the state is based upon a formal or informal compact of its citizens, a social contract through which they entrust such powers to a government as may be necessary for common protection—led to the development of the doctrine of popular sovereignty that found expression in the American Declaration of Independence in 1776. Another twist was given to this concept by the statement in the French constitution of 1791 that “Sovereignty is one, indivisible, unalienable and imprescriptible; it belongs to the Nation; no group can attribute sovereignty to itself nor can an individual arrogate it to himself.” Thus, the idea of popular sovereignty exercised primarily by the people became combined with the idea of national sovereignty exercised not by an unorganized people in the state of nature, but by a nation embodied in an organized state. In the 19th century the English jurist John Austin (1790–1859) developed the concept further by investigating who exercises sovereignty in the name of the people or of the state; he concluded that sovereignty is vested in a nation’s parliament. A parliament, he argued, is a supreme organ that enacts laws binding upon everybody else but that is not itself bound by the laws and could change these laws at will. This description, however, fitted only a particular system of government, such as the one that prevailed in Great Britain during the 19th century.
Austin’s notion of legislative sovereignty did not entirely fit the American situation. The Constitution of the United States, the fundamental law of the federal union, did not endow the national legislature with supreme power but imposed important restrictions upon it. A further complication was added when the Supreme Court of the United States asserted successfully in Marbury v. Madison (1803) its right to declare laws unconstitutional through a procedure called judicial review. Although this development did not lead to judicial sovereignty, it seemed to vest the sovereign power in the fundamental document itself, the Constitution. This system of constitutional sovereignty was made more complex by the fact that the authority to propose changes in the Constitution and to approve them was vested not only in Congress but also in states and in special conventions called for that purpose. Thus, it could be argued that sovereignty continued to reside in the states or in the people, who retained all powers not delegated by the Constitution to the United States or expressly prohibited by the Constitution to the states or the people (Tenth Amendment). Consequently, the claims by advocates of states’ rights that states continued to be sovereign were bolstered by the difficulty of finding a sole repository of sovereignty in a complex federal structure; and the concept of dual sovereignty of both the union and the component units found a theoretical basis. Even if the competing theory of popular sovereignty—the theory that vested sovereignty in the people of the United States—was accepted, it still might be argued that this sovereignty need not be exercised on behalf of the people solely by the national government but could be divided on a functional basis between the federal and state authorities.
Another assault from within on the doctrine of state sovereignty was made in the 20th century by those political scientists (e.g., Léon Duguit, Hugo Krabbe, and Harold J. Laski) who developed the theory of pluralistic sovereignty (pluralism) exercised by various political, economic, social, and religious groups that dominate the government of each state. According to this doctrine, sovereignty in each society does not reside in any particular place but shifts constantly from one group (or alliance of groups) to another. The pluralistic theory further contended that the state is but one of many examples of social solidarity and possesses no special authority in comparison to other components of society.
Sovereignty and international law
Although the doctrine of sovereignty has had an important impact on developments within states, its greatest influence has been in the relations between states. The difficulties here can be traced to Bodin’s statement that sovereigns who make the laws cannot be bound by the laws they make (majestas est summa in cives ac subditos legibusque soluta potestas). This statement has often been interpreted as meaning that a sovereign is not responsible to anybody and is not bound by any laws. However, a closer reading of Bodin’s writings does not support this interpretation. He emphasized that even with respect to their own citizens, sovereigns are bound to observe certain basic rules derived from the divine law, the law of nature or reason, and the law that is common to all nations (jus gentium), as well as the fundamental laws of the state that determine who is the sovereign, who succeeds to sovereignty, and what limits the sovereign power. Thus, Bodin’s sovereign was restricted by the constitutional law of the state and by the higher law that was considered as binding upon every human being. In fact, Bodin discussed as binding upon states many of those rules that were later woven into the fabric of international law. Nevertheless, his theories have been used to justify absolutism in the internal political order and anarchy in the international sphere.
This interpretation was developed to its logical conclusion by Hobbes in Leviathan (1651), in which the sovereign was identified with might rather than law. Law is what sovereigns command, and it cannot limit their power: sovereign power is absolute. In the international sphere this condition led to a perpetual state of war, as sovereigns tried to impose their will by force on all other sovereigns. This situation has changed little over time, with sovereign states continuing to claim the right to be judges in their own controversies, to enforce by war their own conception of their rights, to treat their own citizens in any way that suits them, and to regulate their economic life with complete disregard for possible repercussions in other states.
During the 20th century important restrictions on the freedom of action of states began to appear. The Hague conventions of 1899 and 1907 established detailed rules governing the conduct of wars on land and at sea. The Covenant of the League of Nations, the forerunner of the United Nations (UN), restricted the right to wage war, and the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 condemned recourse to war for the solution of international controversies and its use as an instrument of national policy. They were followed by the UN Charter, which imposed the duty on member states to “settle their international disputes by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are not endangered” and supplemented it with the injunction that all members “shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force” (Article 2). However, the Charter also stated that the UN is “based on the principle of sovereign equality of all its Members.”
In consequence of such developments, sovereignty ceased to be considered as synonymous with unrestricted power. States have accepted a considerable body of law limiting their sovereign right to act as they please. Those restrictions on sovereignty are usually explained as deriving from consent or autolimitation, but it can easily be demonstrated that in some cases states have been considered as bound by certain rules of international law despite the lack of satisfactory proof that these rules were expressly or implicitly accepted by them. Conversely, new rules cannot ordinarily be imposed upon a state, without its consent, by the will of other states. In this way a balance has been achieved between the needs of the international society and the desire of states to protect their sovereignty to the maximum possible extent.
Nonsovereign states
The 19th-century distinction between fully sovereign states and several categories of less sovereign units lost its importance under the law of the UN. Emphasis was placed not on legal differences among colonies, protected states, protectorates, and states under the suzerainty of another state but on the practical distinction between self-governing and non-self-governing territories. Under the UN Charter, non-self-governing territories became “a sacred trust,” and the states administering them promised to develop them toward self-government. Some of these territories were placed under the UN Trusteeship Council, which resulted in a closer supervision of their administration by the UN and in their speedier progress toward self-government or independence. Once a territory achieved self-government, as defined in resolutions of the General Assembly, supervision by the UN ceased, even though independent status was not reached.
Divided sovereignty
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
The concept of absolute, unlimited sovereignty did not last long after its adoption, either domestically or internationally. The growth of democracy imposed important limitations upon the power of the sovereign and of the ruling classes. The increase in the interdependence of states restricted the principle that might is right in international affairs. Citizens and policymakers generally have recognized that there can be no peace without law and that there can be no law without some limitations on sovereignty. They started, therefore, to pool their sovereignties to the extent needed to maintain peace and prosperity—e.g., the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the World Trade Organization (WTO), and the European Union (EU)—and sovereignty was increasingly exercised on behalf of the peoples of the world not only by national governments but also by regional and international organizations. Thus, the theory of divided sovereignty, first developed in federal states, began to be applicable in the international sphere.
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Family, I acknowledge having read the information you shared on the dictionary definition, etymology and the interpretive conceptual and axiological evolution of the words ‘sovereign’, ‘sovereignty’ as having been applied in different contexts through the passage of time.
My questions to you;
1. How does this information serve to show and prove the linguistic and conceptual backwardness of the terms ‘sovereignty’, ‘sovereign’ apart from them simply being of latinate etymological origins, as is the case with many “unAfrikan” words we situationally use all the time in our work in progress of re-languaging ourselves back to the Afrikan concept map foreground in the Afrikan asili?
2. What is the problematic conceptual geneology of the terminology in issue? How am I a participant in the problematic itself with my, together with Mwalimu Baruti’s, Mme Marimba Ani’s, Ntate Leonard Jeffries’, yourself included, and others’ use of the terminology in question? How is the use of this terminology spell conceptual dis-affinity with the Afrikan-Centred thought?
3. How is envisioning and articulating on Afrikan people as a sovereign people, free from foreign control and influence, in the ultimate, the work of “black paint” on latinate concepts?
4. What informs the seeming perception that my use of the terminology in question is from Moorish Science ideological influence?-
88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
Great questions and I’ll probably cover them more in depth in the presentation than I will here.
1. That information isn’t so much the backwardness part of it. The backwardness is more so in abdicate conceptualizing reality in our own languages in favor of conceptualizing our ultimate goal using a krakkka term. Even Uhuru is better than “sovereignty”.
2. Mama Marimba has gotten no less than a dozen or few terms for me over the years in indigenous languages which makes it puzzling that you would cite her as advocating the use of english to describe our ultimate goal and objective (or even a step in the process). As I go back over past emails, examples of such terms include Abakɔsɛm Sunsum, apam, Abibiman mma, àwọn irugbìn Ilẹ̀ Adúláwọ̀, jiwu yu Réewu Nit Ñu Ñuul, nginga za Nsi a Bandômbe, hyɛbea, hyɛberɛ, makwâtu/makwâti, nkrabea, ne sunsum mu yɛ hare, akekabensɛm, tiboa, pɛsɛmenkomenya, n.k.
From Mwalimu Baruti, in the early days of the school, I informed them that it’s Akobɛn rather than “Ankoben” as it had been rendered previously. Just saying all this to say that those you mention have a track record of seeing the need to conceptualize the world using our own languages. To go from Uhuru in the 1960s to Abibifahodie in the early to mid 2000s to sovereignty now is, in and of itself, an abdication of (conceptual-linguistic) “sovereignty” in many ways. Putting Afrikan in front of sovereignty reminds me of Kemetic yoga which reminds me of Kiswahili kung fu (Kupi gana ngumi) and other Black paint on krakkka phenomena. Just find any krakkka word and put “Afrikan,” “Kemetic”, “Nubian” or whatever in front of it and viola! That bust of plato is magically transformed into imi-r TAty PtHHtp!
3. Beyond this, all states have sovereignty (free from foreign control and influence) until they don’t. In the presentation, I plan on giving numerous examples of that for Kmtyw to demonstrate that “sovereignty” is not the ultimate goal. It may be a step in the process. It may be a diversion. But whatever it is, it’s not the ultimate goal.
4. I don’t think your own use of the term is from Moorish Science directly. I think you’re following others, while, among Black people, the Moors are those who have done the most to popularize the term, while they, in turn, have hopped on the bandwagon of krakkkaz who have promoted it as a way to supposedly get out of paying taxes, having a driver’s license, n.k.
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
Just to preempt what is probably coming next:
Other aAmw terms that are not our ultimate goal include Afrikan World Egalitarianism
Afrikan World Democracy
Afrikan World Rationalism
Afrikan World Individualism
Afrikan World Christianity
Afrikan World Capitalism
Afrikan World Socialism
Afrikan World Communism
Afrikan World Enlightenment
Afrikan World human rights
Afrikan World Scientism
Afrikan World Liberalism
Afrikan World conservativism
Afrikan World non-violence
Afrikan World Feminism
Afrikan World Secularism
Afrikan World Royalty
Afrikan World Hierarchy
Afrikan World Heterarchy
Afrikan World Anarchy
Afrikan World Exotericism
Afrikan World Intellectualism
Afrikan World Emotionalism
Afrikan World rhetorical ethicism
Afrikan World Achimotanism
Culled from Kambon, O. b. d. l. B., Songsore, L., & Asare, Y. M. (2021). Maat vs. The Statue of Égalité: A Critical Analysis of Ataa Ayi Kwei Armah’s Wat Nt Shemsw: The Way of Companions. Legon Journal of the Humanities, 30(2), 33-65.-
First of all let me address our points of agreement and later on deal with what seems to be confusion on your part to clear:-
1. I agree with you that
– Our use of the term in question, as in your own words of concession, “may be a step in the process”, and your cautionary statement that “It may be a diversion”. And my “step in the process” utilitarian use of the term is in no uncertain terms expressed in my expression “case with many unAfrikan words we use situationally all the time in our work in progress, of re-launguaging ourselves back to the Afrikan concept map foreground in the Afrikan asili”.
2. Here is where your logic falls apart in your critique of my text, which critique counter-argues what I never argue for.
– There is nothing in my argument that you can point out, where in no uncertain terms, either expressed or implied, where It can be inferred by any honest and dissective reader that I argue for what in your comment ,which I submit is in error of judgement, that I argue against the “abdicate conceptualizing of reality in our own languages in favour of conseptualizing our ultimate goal using a krakkka term”.
– There is nowhere in my mentioning of the people I mentioned and cited for their use of them, yourself included, are “advocating for the use of english to describe our ultimate and objective”. You are arguing against a non-existent position in my text/shared qoutes of themselves and mine.
– I know those I mentioned have “a track record of seeing the need to conceptualize the word using our own languages”. And is nothing that you or anyone, reading my comments can infer what your statement suggests by your inferrence.
– There is nothing in my use, and all others mentioned by myself, yourself included that is that can be said, by reasonable inferrence of anyone, that either suggests or express or imply that the use is 1. Advocated for in both the “replace-ist” sense that amounts to favor over any of the Afrkan indigenous you mentioned. Rest assured, my dear Brother whom I love very much, I do not use the term ‘sovereignty’ as an “abdication” in the “conceptual linguistics” sense.
I do not argue for what you are counter-arguing. In your argument I really have nothing from my position to defend because what you aguing against is simply not part of my argumentational position.-
88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
@ItuNeter this is actually happening. You’re invited: https://www.abibitumi.com/webinars/from-uhuru-to-abibifahodie-to-sovereignty-2-steps-forward-one-step-backward/
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Yes , we must remember this always
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My apologies for the delayed response. This is very compelling. I think that the central idea, of defining our political aspirations on the basis of our own paradigms is essential. We might look up and find people aspiring to create “socialist democracies” as some sort of ideal outcome for African people, bereft of a vision of how our own traditions should inform our institutional formations.
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
@heru_djet, indeed. Rather than using our own paradigms, the shortcut is to simply put “Afrikan” in front of eurasian paradigms with all the cultural-linguistic baggage that comes along with them. “Afrikan sovereignty” becomes the political counterpart of Kemetic yoga. As you mention, this is what happens when we are bereft of vision based on “how our own traditions should inform our institutional formations.” To that point, knowing words in our languages and conceptualizing reality in our own languages should be complemented by knowing the nature of institutional formations in our traditions to avoid the “Afrikan ___insert krakkka thing____”, “Kemetic ____insert krakkka thing_____” syndrome. I’ll cover this in the presentation that I’m tentatively titling “From Uhuru to Abibifahodie to Sovereignty? 2 steps Forward, One Step Backward…”
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
@heru_djet, indeed. There is a concept called oburoni wawu ‘lit. the white man has died’ to refer to the used clothes imported from krakkkaville. Yet, here we go with oburoni wawu concepts. This is the conceptual plantation. For some, the only way they’ll leave the conceptual plantation is by forceful eviction. Even when they have options to get off, they’ll lead us right back to the linguistic slave quarters. African Sovereignty, African Socialist Democracies, African XXXX. Let’s not only use our own terms, but conceptualize reality for ourselves rather than inheriting problematic krakkkafied conceptions of reality and putting Black paint on it as though that can take the place of self-definition and self-determination.
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Ah this Demokkkrakasity thing…when I actually learned what it is…
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Family, I don’t think the same people who ever used Abibifahodie and knows what it means, and its importance would “replace” it with the anglo term, sovereignty.
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
That’s just what’s going on @afron8v
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Where is this taking place? if they had the overstanding and internalized the importance of using Afrikan words and concepts over anything else, why revert? Or was their usage of Afrikan terms and concepts simply a trend to them? I have said before our people need to stop doing things out of trends…it’s possible that they simply follow what’s popular
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
From what I can see, it’s happening where most retrogression takes place these days: on “white” websites https://www.google.com/search?q=%22Afrikan+sovereignty%22&client=ms-android-mara&sxsrf=ALiCzsZ569VwrRcKhDH6LdiN1CgYfuaVGg%3A1669483716279&ei=xEyCY-vGELWM9u8PoYe1mAk&oq=%22Afrikan+sovereignty%22&gs_lcp=ChNtb2JpbGUtZ3dzLXdpei1zZXJwEANKBAhBGABQixNYohNg0h1oAHAAeACAAQCIAQCSAQCYAQCgAQHAAQE&sclient=mobile-gws-wiz-serp#ip=1
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Yea but don’t think these folks ever knew about Abibifahodie…maybe only a small few
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
Hmmm… Two steps forward, one step backward
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88,608 Abibisika (Black Gold) Points
Updated flyer for this Memeneda!
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