Tag: minds

  • Closed minds

    Closed minds

    He mind is a terrible thing to waste.” This timeless statement is the motto of the United Negro College Fund founded in 1945 by the African-American Microbiologist Frederick Douglass Patterson. As noted by Marian Johnson-Thompson in an article in a 23 February, 2023 publication of the American Society for Microbiology, it “remains an indelible phrase in the fabric of our nation to encourage and support those who lack educational and training resources.” It is not only the minds of those who lack those opportunities that are a waste. Equally wasted are closed minds.

    But, what does it mean to be closed-minded? According to Cambridge Dictionary, to be closed-minded is “not willing to consider ideas and opinions that are new or different to your own.” In other words, a closed-mind has fossilised ideas marked by an inability or refusal to think deep. As the Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English puts it, “if people, ideas, systems, etc., fossilise or are fossilised, they never change or develop, even when there are good reasons why they should change.”

    Closed-mindedness is linked to incredulity which Oxford Languages defines as “the state of being unwilling or unable to believe something.” This definition implies that closed-mindedness can be willful. Many times, such closed-minded incredulity is presented as being ‘principled’. So, those who lapse into such insidious incredulity also suffer the delusion of thinking that what ails them is an unwillingness to compromise their ‘principles’. In human societies, closed-mindedness is ubiquitous and has continued to harm both the closed-minded as well as their targeted victims.

    So, it is pertinent to ask here, “Does education open a closed mind?” Unfortunately, the answer is, “Not necessarily.” In fact, ironically, some of the most despicable closed minds or bigots are people who have been highly-educated. This makes it pertinent to distinguished between ‘being highly-educated’, or ‘being learned’, from ‘being well-educated’ or ‘being properly-educated’. A pigheaded, highly-educated person would not rise above the level of a magisterial ignoramus. Examples can be found in television and newspaper analysts and they exist even in academic settings. This is the case because education is essentially socialisation. So, if a person has had extensive exposure to toxic socialisation in school, their string of academic certificates can only be a magisterial testament to mental incapacitation.

    This fact is recognised by the Yoruba saying, “Ìwé yàtọ̀ s’ọ́gbọ́n.” (‘Learning is different from wisdom.’)  This means that it is possible to have ‘an unwise knowledgeable person’, and they are often narrow-minded, fossilised in thinking, incapable of admitting new facts, asinine in outlook, operating in a bubble, incapable of accurate self-perception, arrogant in perspective, suffused with negativity, and above all prone to unhappiness.  A closed mind is therefore characteristically a sick mind.

    In world history, one of such closed-minds is Paul Joseph Goebbels, a PhD holder in Philology – the study of languages and literary texts – who was Adolf Hitler’s chief propagandist and who was remarkably skilled in public speaking. He was reported to have deployed his oratorical skills in propagating virulent and genocidal propaganda. History records it that in the end, he committed suicide through cyanide poison. 

    The title of Joseph Goebbels’s propaganda newspaper was, in English translation, “Attack”. Can you find a comparable propaganda media outfit in Nigeria today, which has a name syllabically similar to “Attack”, and semantically consonant with inciting insurrection? In Nigeria’s highly adversarial political climate, you can often find pitiable presumptuous political analysts with closed-minded views flowing like lava from their mouths.

    A closed mind can be self-propagating, but some of such minds are reversible, especially if the closed-mindedness is willful. However, some appear to be irreversible, seemingly because it may be said that the key with which they can be unlocked has been long lost. So, it is difficult for them to admit, acknowledge or accommodate any new or alternative facts, views, opinions or perspectives. It is easier to reverse or open a closed mind, if the closed-mindedness is not coupled with arrogance. In this regard, those who created the terms ‘intellectual humility’ and ‘intellectual honesty’ deserve commendation for their perceptiveness and foresight.

    Even in international fora like United Nations, elements of closed-mindedness is discernible, especially with respect to the veto – the power by any one or combination of two or more out of five member countries to override the decision of the around 200 remaining countries. This power to veto has been condemned by some of the leaders of the non-veto-wielding countries and they have called for scrapping it. For example, Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, as Prime Minister of Malaysia stridently campaigned against the veto power.

    For example, he said as follows the 74th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on 28 September, 2019: “Almost three quarters of a century ago five countries claimed victory in the Second World War. On the basis of that victory they insisted on the right practically to rule the world. And so, they gave themselves veto powers over the rest of the world in the organisation they built – an organisation they claim would end wars in the solution of conflicts. The veto power – they must know – was against all the principles of human rights which they themselves claim to be the champions [of]. It killed the very purpose of the great organisation that they had created. It ensured that all solutions to all conflicts could be negated by any one of them. Broken up into ideological factions they frustrated all attempts at solving problems. Each one of them can negate the wishes of the nearly 200 other members. It is totally and absolutely undemocratic. Yet, there are among them those who berate other countries of the world for not being democratic or being not democratic enough.”

    What Dr. Mahathir Mohamad was accusing the 5 veto-carrying countries of is what psychologists call ‘cognitive dissonance’, and which Oxford Languages defines as “the state of having inconsistent thoughts, beliefs, or attitudes, especially as relating to behavioural decisions and attitude change”. The appeal to good conscience as Dr. Mohamad did in his UNGA speech is also akin to what in Yoruba Language is encapsulated in the proverb, “Ẹni tó bá sùn laa jí; ẹnìkan kìí jí apirọrọ. ” (‘It’s only a person who is really sleeping that you wake up; nobody wakes up a person playing possum [i.e., pretending to be sleeping.]’) 

    The closed mind phenomenon also manifested in the Arab Spring which started in 2011. The agitators believed that it was only in dislodging their incumbent leaders at that time that their liberation and advancement lay. Now that some of the agitators have achieved their aim, stories abound of widespread disillusionment. In the specific case of Libya, the killing of Muamar Ghaddafi has ended up turning the erstwhile stable and prosperous country into a basket case of sorts. Similar closed minds who could not reconcile themselves to the fact that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu defeated their candidate, went to the Defence Headquarters to invite the army to take-over the government in order to stop the then-President-Elect from assuming office. Some of such closed minds also seem to be perpetually crouching in wait for bad news about Nigeria. It excites them whenever anything they perceive as negative happens to the country. Whenever anything positive happens to the nation, such perverse minds try to minimise or give it a negative twist.

    Closed-mindedness and its related phenomenon, group think – uncritically jumping on the bandwagon of the opinions of some vocal elements in society – can also be identified in the ongoing efforts to review the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended). One of the refrains by a category of commentators and analysts is “Elections should be won at the polling booth and not in the court.” This seems to be an attempt at a mental shortcut. The analysts, ostensibly pursuing partisan goals, claim that when the court has determined that there is fraud in an election, the court should only order a rerun. It is not certain whether those who hold this view have sufficiently exercised their intellect. When the court has determined that a particular candidate had the majority votes in an election, how just and democratic would it be to direct that the election be rerun? Would that not constitute double jeopardy for the person who was cheated in the first place to ask them to face their electoral tormentors afresh?

    Read Also: Religious mindset won’t advance your life – Woli Arole slams Christians

    Is the constitution review an effort to ensure that future elections in the country are freer, fairer and less litigious?  Or is it that some vocal or influential people think that the person they didn’t like won in the 2023 elections, because certain provisions were not in the constitution then? Are they trying to be like the dog in the Yoruba proverb which went to hide the knife after it had been used to cut its ears? Are they being wise after the act, as an English idiom would put it? Are they trying to shut the stable door after the horse has bolted?

    Interestingly, it is not only in race, politics and religion that closed-mindedness manifests. It manifests even in science. Pharmaceutical research is one area in which it is found in the form of sexism – the inequitable treatment of the sexes. In fact a 14 July, 2016 feature article by Sharon Florentine in CIO.com is wittily titled “Rats! Sexism is really everywhere.” The article deals with the preference for male rats in the efforts to develop new medicines, using the excuse that hormonal fluctuations could make research using female rats unreliable. Researchers have debunked this claim. According to Rebecca Shansky, as reported by Hannah Devlin, the Science correspondent of the Guardian (of London) on 31 May, 2019, “People like to think that they are being objective and uninfluenced by stereotypes but there are some unconscious biases that have been applied to how we think about using female animals as research subjects that should be looked into by scientists.”

    Hannah Devlin further reports that one of the consequences of using male mice and thereby focusing on male humans is that “across all drugs, women tended to suffer more adverse side effects and overdoses.” Another element of closed-mindedness is that it was also reported that some of the younger researchers were reluctant to accept the use of more female rats in their research, because, while in training, they were taught using largely male ones.

    As intractable as close-mindedness may seem to be, special mind-liberating training and retraining can yield positive results. Specifying that being sufficiently broad and equitable in scientific methodology is a requirement for grant eligibility has also been found to be very effective in accommodating change. Above all, taking personal responsibility, reviewing one’s own ideas and attitudes regularly and effecting necessary change in outlook would always be of immense value in tackling closed-mindedness.    

  • Our Girls; ‘Restructuring Minds’?

    Our girls are still missing since April 15, 2014. Work for their release.

    Obasanjo may have the right idea of ‘restructuring’ –‘We Must Restructure The Mind’ because ‘Minds’ lead to ‘Thoughts’, Ideas’, ‘Attitude Change’ and ‘Actions’ to Restructure Nigeria. However he did not say whose ‘Minds-to-Actions Need Restructuring’.

    There is ‘Internal Restructuring’ within the borders of Nigeria and ‘External Restructuring’ altering the borders of Nigeria. ‘Internal Restructuring’ involves tinkering with the strangely sacrosanct federal exclusive list, which we did not participate in making, and at every political and administrative level and in every Ministry, Agency and Department (MDA) empowering the states within which resources like land, water, railways and roads lie.

    Is ‘Internal Restructuring’ therefore not a simple request of a people feeling the effects of ‘federal cheating’ and should those perceived as cheating others not rise to the occasion and admit their guilt and offer equity as well as unity in order to preserve that ‘unity’?  Instead, using cries of ‘The Unity of Nigeria is not negotiable’, the ‘Anti-Restructurists’ in an effort to preserve for themselves the many advantages of ‘False Federalism’ and ‘Federal Cheating’ use proxies and the few calls for ‘External Restructuring’ as the threat of anarchy, doom and terrorism and make it into a stick to beat down every attempt to discuss even simple ‘Internal Restructuring’.

    Most Nigerians are in the silent majority but love their Nigeria even more than the politicians with noisy media access and have stashes of government cash and Nigerian budget houses worldwide. Most Nigerians are totally against ‘External Restructuring’ and also totally against ‘Federal Cheating’ which with corruption has crippled development. ‘External Restructuring’ it is only mentioned as a distant possibility if serious attempts are not made on ‘Internal Restructuring’ and if no ‘Internal Restructuring’ is achieved. ‘Internal Restructurists’ are not terrorists, but pragmatic realists who have unnecessarily suffered and seen their country suffer underdevelopment under the existing ‘Federal Cheating’ structure. Nigerians must have a right to ask questions and get answers to the knotty questions stunting our growth. If ‘Anti-Restructurists’ say the current structure is not ‘Federal Cheating’ then they must come to the table, referendum, conference or constitutional, and explain to the country the mathematics and morality behind the 50 or so apparently sectional discriminatory decisions that were made in the past and why those decisions should remain unchanged if there is a refusal to change them to a more ‘Equitable True Federalism’.

    Let us interrogate the Obasanjo suggestion about the ‘Restructuring of the Mind’…. Is it the ‘mind of the market masses’, belt tightening mama market, Nigeria’s youth- sweating, selling or riding a politically introduced murderous okada, an unheard of business in developing countries killing and maiming more than Boko Haram? Is it the ‘Mind of the Masses’ of ‘Unpaid Civil/Private Sector Employees’ working ‘tirelessly’ for kobo-kobo wages, without salaries for months, watching irresponsible politicians swallowing ‘government N200+ multibillions’ and more nationwide?

    Is it the ‘Mind of The Masses’ of ‘Pension-less Pensioners’ in repeated Re-Verification queues after ‘Gallant Service’ and even ‘Dying-In-Queue’ as the N6.1billion jeeps of NASS and governors, ‘siren blaring‘, drive recklessly by, wrecking the traffic, on their way to buy the next election with stolen budget money while ‘illegally legally’ paying themselves 1,2,3 and even 4 pensions?

    Is it the ‘Mind of the Masses’ of ‘Dedicated Professionals of All Description’ working to keep a broken Nigerian wheel of progress in motion across a broken Nigeria? Rats in Buhari’s office are simply the sign of ‘Nigeria’s Incompetence In ‘Simple Maintenance’, i.e., cleaning and servicing failures? Rats grow in quiet undisturbed surroundings. Period!! Who locked the Presidential door? I have seen rats in every hospital I have worked in.

    The above snapshots of the ‘Mind of the Masses’ ask ‘Why are we a development cripple with all God has given us. The ‘Mind of the Masses’ know it did not steal or mismanage God’s gifts of soil, sun, oil, and ask ‘So why are we so crippled developmentally now?’, ‘Are we happy to be here?’ ‘What governance mechanism, which politicians are responsible for our failure to develop speedily? The masses reject the traditional ‘Followership is too docile’ blame. Nigerian leaders take ‘Serious Oaths’ and break every word! They wield enormous powers to build, cripple, destroy or stagnate any project, projections, plans or policies of their institution, business, LGA, State or Nation! As Obasanjo infamously said very correctly ‘I have adviserrs but I do not have to take their advice, abi!!!’ Yet Nigeria expends a stupendous budget on armies of Senior Special, Special and Other Advisers triplicated at state and even LGAs!!! Even with bad eggs among the ‘Masses’, the majority are good and cannot be in need of Obasanjo-style ‘Restructuring of the Mind’. Nigerian suffering has already ‘Restructured the Masses’.

    So we must look beyond the ‘Masses’ to answer ‘Whose Mind Needs Restructuring’? The leadership must accept therefore that it is 99% of today’s problem with Nigeria and it must ‘Restructure Its Mind’- at Obasanjo’s’ Command!!! The current governance structure, as mal-practiced by politicians has plunged us into under-development, an unhappy situation. The masses react periodically and predictably. Every time they are answered with ‘Non-negotiable ‘Unity’! But unity was not in doubt except in one or two extreme cases! Can two non-friends, standing side by side be in ‘Unity’?

    NB: Nigerians, discover a new generation of untainted ‘I LOVE NIGERIA’

    Knowledgeable candidates for 2019.

  • Study hard to build your minds, Omatseye tells students

    Study hard to build your minds, Omatseye tells students

    Chairman of The Nation Editorial Board, Sam Omatseye, has advised the Kings University (KU) students to give their best to their studies. He told them never to be discouraged by material challenges, noting that it is only through quality education they could build their minds.

    Omatseye gave the charge at a forum with students of the KU’s Department of English and Literary Studies, at the Institute of African Studies of the University of Ibadan (UI) on Thursday. The celebrated columnist and poet was the guest lecturer at the maiden personality lecture organised by African Studies Graduate Students’ Association.

    Omatseye, who engaged the students in a question-and-answer session, gave them tips on how they could make the best of their efforts to becoming renowned writers. Omatseye’s novel, My Name is Okoro, which narrated Biafran War from a minority angle, became a subject of discussion. The students had the opportunity to ask questions about the work, which is part of the books they are studying in their discipline.

    The author praised the students for asking “vital, relevant, and thoughtful questions”, while encouraging them not to lose focus.

    The students described their time with Omatseye as “enriching”, saying their encounter with the writer would encourage and empower them with information to become successful in their career.

    Their lecturer, Ademola Adesola, hailed Omatseye for creating time to share knowledge with the students. He said: “We hope the seeds of ideas Omatseye has sown in these students would surely germinate and grow into great feats that will make him proud of the time he spent with them.”

    At the forum were a member of The Nation Editorial Board, Mr Femi Macaulay, and former Associate Editor of The Nation, Mr Taiwo Ogundipe.

     

  • CREATIVE MINDS

    CREATIVE MINDS

    Do you love watching cartoons? Who are the people that makes the cartoons? Where do they get their ideas from?

    The people who design cartoons grew up just like you! But most of them develop an interest in drawing and making stories out of their drawings.

    drawings and write a story to go along with it.

     

    Send your drawings to Saturdaychildren@yahoo.com or akinwolererita@yahoo.com .The best drawings will be featured in our next edition.

  • Security on their minds

    Security on their minds

    Security is on the minds of our lawmakers this week as they begin to feel the heat of the Boko Haram terror attacks closing in on their magnificent edifice. To be sure, this is strange. The people’s House and the Upper Chamber should be immune from any and all forms of physical threat. Recall that in the wake of the nationwide protest against increase in petroleum prices, the people were prevented from getting close to their House. Now, our men and women of honour are afraid of just a few terror mongers?

    That is the nature of terrorism. Its goal is to destroy the morale of a people and to weaken their sense of security with its chosen method of random killing and maiming. You might ask: why would any reasonable human being engage in such an obviously immoral act? The answer is simple. Many reasonable people in many places engage in obviously immoral actions. Corruption is immoral. People engage in it. Robbery is immoral and people also engage in it. Not to talk of adultery and other such sinful behaviors. The difference between terrorism and these other immoralities is not just that terrorism involves killing the innocent, but that it is also a form of psychological warfare against the innocent. It creates panic, as is evidenced in the exposed mindset of our lawmakers. It also weakens confidence in the ability of government to secure its people, as is the case now in dear country.

    The last point has been brought to the fore more effectively with the statement credited to the Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) who allegedly stated that his party is not a security agency. Assume that the statement might have been taken out of context, it does not help assuage the feeling of helplessness that citizens have about the current security regime in the country. To be sure, a political party is not a security agency. It is an organisation of like-minded individuals in pursuit of common ideological principles for the governance of a nation. But those principles must necessarily include principles to effectively secure the people once the party succeeds in acquiring power. For what this acquisition of power means is that the people have entrusted to the party and its flag-bearer the responsibility to take care of their security needs for four years. For any political system, the security of the people is the first and foremost task.

    The latest assault by Boko Haram should not have come as a surprise, given its past approach following a government declaration. It followed the former Inspector General of Police to his office after he declared war against the sect. It has flexed its deadly muscle once an official declaration of intent was made. Taking the battle to den of the lion that Jaji is supposed to be must be seen as an undeniable victory for the group. How much more embarrassment can the government take? The Police are incapable. Now the military has been seen as impotent inside its own house? This must explain the frustration expressed by members of the National Assembly.

    The expression of fear by honourable members of the National Assembly over the activities of Boko Haram is natural and instinctive. Everyone, except the suicide bomber, fears the violent death for which he or she delights in and spreads. However, the contagion of fear that Boko Haram represents should not grip the National Assembly as an institution. This is because that institution, along with the Presidency, has the sacred duty to sustain the confidence of the people in times such as this. It is instructive that the party of the President controls the majority in both chambers of the National Assembly. A more effective approach would be for the members to approach the Presidency with concrete recommendations to contain the insurgency.

    The question now must be whether Boko Haram is here to stay and we are all condemned to a life of terror and fear. Are we now in the same league with Somalia? What explains the impotence of government to deal with this threat?

    It is interesting that the National Assembly debate expressed fear of terror attack on the institution when the Executive arm has been reluctant to describe what is going on as terrorism and has in fact lobbied the United States against declaring Boko Haram as a terrorist organisation. If it is not, then what is it? And if the government can deal with it as something other than a terrorist group, then why isn’t it working? This is where citizens must ask questions of their government. It appears that government is out of its wit in this matter. We have a security challenge that must be solved if everything else, including the economy, tourism, and foreign investment must pick up. It is unacceptable for government to throw its arms up and give up on the people.

    I believe that this country is internally blessed with human and material resources to deal with the challenge of insecurity. However, if I am wrong in this confidence in our people, then I would urge that in the matter of our security, government cannot be too proud to seek help from friendly nations. And the first step to doing this is to wake up from our state of denial. We must recognise the fact that we have a security challenge from a terrorist organisation that is determined to undermine the republican system of government that we uphold as the best for our multi-ethnic and multi-national structure. If we give in because we are unable to rise up and meet the challenge head-on, then we must be prepared to accept the inevitable demise of the country as we know it.

    Already the leadership of ACN is appealing to southern governors to wake up and confront their northern colleagues to stop the killings. If Boko Haram succeeds in pitting the South against the North, it would have achieved its foremost objective. Then what would the President and the National Assembly do about their oath of allegiance to protect and defend the constitution?

  • Idle funds, idle minds

    Idle funds, idle minds

    •Billions of education funds languish in Nigeria’s banks

    IN a country where barely half of the population is literate, the news that N44 billion belonging to the Universal Basic Education (UBE) programme has not been utilised is truly disheartening. The revelation was made recently by the Acting Executive Secretary of the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), Professor Charles Onocha, when the House of Representatives Committee on Education visited the commission.

    According to Onocha, the situation arose as an apparent result of the inability of state governments to provide the required counterpart funding that is essential to obtaining funds under the programme. In 2009, N1.3 billion was not accessed, a figure which rose to N3.5 billion in 2010. This year, about N22 billion has not been touched by states that are supposed to benefit from it.

    This is just another of the many anomalies that continue to trouble Nigeria and hamper the attainment of national progress and development. Primary and secondary schools all across the country are in dire need of rehabilitation and facilities. Pupils and students are subject to all kinds of impositions levied upon them to defray the costs of providing chalk, dusters, furnishing and other inputs. In spite of this dire situation, the funds that could have helped to resolve these pressing difficulties are lying unutilised in banks.

    The crux of the problem is the counterpart funding requirement. If a state wishes to access funds from the UBE, it has to provide funds which are either equivalent to the sum desired, or a specified percentage of such funds. While such intentions may be honourable, they do not appear to work effectively in practice, as the current UBE debacle shows. It is obvious that the emphasis on counterpart funding should have been replaced by an emphasis on transparency and efficient utilisation of funds.

    This issue harks back to the skewed structural arrangement of the country. A federation in which the central government is overly powerful is a contradiction in terms. The UBE programme is clearly demonstrative of federal overreach; its involvement in basic education amounts to an unnecessary intervention in an aspect of national life that should have been left to states and local governments. Apart from the counterpart funding requirement, it is almost certain that federal bureaucratic bottlenecks also make it difficult for states to access UBE funds, thereby providing opportunities for corruption that the counterpart funding condition is supposed to prevent.

    The tragedy is that problems like the UBE fiasco have become recurrent decimals running through all aspects of Nigerian life. The Federal Government holds tenaciously to the control of the nation’s police force when it is becoming increasingly clearer that the devolution of policing duties to the states is the way to go. Federal agencies insist on issuing vehicle licences and number plates, regardless of the fact that states are capable of doing it with greater efficiency.

    Instead of taking an objective look at the question of fiscal federalism and related issues, the Federal Government and its ministries, agencies and parastatals persist in continuing with a thoroughly-discredited process riddled with inefficiency and corruption. In the UBE situation, it is obvious that government simply does not have the administrative capacity to effectively utilise the funds at its disposal. This inability is to be contrasted with the governments of states like Lagos, Osun, Edo, Delta, Ekiti and Anambra, all of whom have highly-innovative educational policies which have transformed their states.

    If Nigeria is to move beyond the current situation of federal paralysis, its citizens must look again at the way in which their country is structured so that it can be run with greater efficiency and equity. It is only then that the UBE will cease to create idle minds the way it has generated idle funds.