Doyin Okupe, one of the caterwauling
blights on Nigerian manhood currently littering Aso Rock, said to call
him a bastard if APC survived the first year of its formation. It is
time for Nigerians to obey his instruction and grant him the Chieftaincy
title he requested: Bastard Doyin Okupe. I hope you understand that I
did not call him a bastard. He insisted and who am I not to respect a
man’s wish to be called a bastard? If you want to know how to handle a
man’s calabash, watch him and study how he handles it himself.
Although he is sadly in his sixties – I say sadly because his
behaviour always suggests that he is trapped in a pre-teenage stage of
development – the patriarchs in Ogun state need to summon Doyin Okupe
and flog him in a public assembly. It is rare to see a Yoruba elder in
Doyin Okupe’s station do so much damage to his culture because he either
misunderstands it or his desire for stomach infrastructure stands in
the way of wisdom. “Call me this if that does not happen” is a
commonplace Yoruba cultural formula. Like all cultural formulas, it is
not to be used by fools. Any secondary school kid in Yoruba land knows
that you wield that mode of discourse only when you are absolutely
certain of the results of what you are boasting about. Call me a bastard
if January is not succeeded by February; call me a bastard if PHCN
provides one year of uninterrupted power supply all over the country in
2015; call me a bastard if the EFCC ever prosecutes Olusegun Obasanjo,
Abdulsalam Abubakar, and other beneficiaries of the $180 million
Halliburton scandal. These are three contexts a Yoruba person would deem
appropriate for that cultural formula because it is certain that none
of the propositions would ever happen. However, call me a bastard if a
political party lasts a year? Only a very foolish Yoruba person would
say this.
You know that this person is foolish because the more you slice off
his fingers, the more he insists on wearing diamond rings. Doyin Okupe
is now into the business of comparing his boss with Jesus Christ.
Suddenly, Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, Barack Obama, and Lee Kuan
Yew are no longer enough for these deranged minds in Aso Rock. Oga
Goodluck Jonathan is now better than all these people put together.
Trust Doyin Okupe. He did not even stop at the Pope. He went directly
for Jesus Christ. He even forgot that there is no vacancy for a second
Jesus Christ in Aso Rock. Evans Bipi already named Patience Jonathan
Jesus Christ over a year ago. Patience Jonathan accepted the honour and
returned from Germany claiming to have raised Lazarus from the dead.
Which of the two Jesuses in Aso Rock will step down for the other now?
There is something else I like about Yoruba culture. There is a point
at which that culture determines that somebody’s behaviour has become
so outrageous that you stop blaming him or holding him to account.
Yoruba culture will migrate to the person’s kinsmen and ask them
critical questions. The moment Doyin Okupe started comparing his Oga
with Jesus Christ for the simple reason that what he will eat is
standing in the way of wisdom, you are unlikely to find anybody in
Yoruba land still blaming the man. Instead, questions will be asked of
his kinsmen, his molebi in Ogun state. What did Doyin do? Who did he
offend and what is the scale of his offence that you, his kinsmen, would
fold your arms and watch him dance naked in the public square all the
time? Why did you allow him to cross the market? Does he not have molebi
in this town? What is his olori ebi – family head – doing about his
matter? Are you his kinsmen just going to be looking at him? Won’t you
do something? Ee ni jade si oro Doyin ni? I am sure these questions are
being asked of Doyin Okupe’s kinsmen already.
Doyin Okupe is not the only one who has suffered misadventures
recently in the field of naming. President Jonathan and the career
Jonathanians who worship him on social media are also suffering from a
crisis of identity. One of the rules of naming is that people tend to
associate you with whatever you speak approvingly of. In certain cases,
it could become your sobriquet. If I speak approvingly of football all
the time, people could start calling me Pele or Messi. Whatever you
approve of is usually a pointer to how you wish to be called. I am not
sure that President Jonathan and career Jonathanians understand this
basic rule. We must therefore break it down for them to help them avoid
the pitfall of poor self-naming in the future.
President Jonathan went on prime time TV to proclaim that stealing is
not corruption. He reprimanded those who take corruption too seriously
for misunderstanding ordinary, mere, simple cases of stealing. Watching
him, I told myself that he was very effective in making stealing look
like the new cool in Nigeria. At first, career Jonathanians were stunned
on social media. It was such a huge gaffe on the part of their Orisha
that they initially did not know what to do about it. Then, like a herd,
they started cutting and slicing the statement; defending it;
justifying it; rationalizing it; explaining it; accounting for it;
mitigating it; diluting it. As is usual with career Jonathanians, they
forgot their Orisha who made the error and turned against Nigerians who
dared to scrutinize it.
They hounded the nation. You must accept Oga’s premise that stealing
is not corruption or you’re a hater. Perhaps the most celebrated
instance of Jonathanian defence of the maxim, stealing is not
corruption, happened when I delivered Pastor Tunde Bakare’s 60th
birthday lecture recently in Lagos. Our brother and recent convert to
career Jonathanism, Governor Olusegun Mimiko of Ondo state, was on the
high table with us. He kept wincing in pain and discomfort throughout my
lecture. Stealing is not corruption was one of the planks of my
lecture.
I got a standing ovation after it. Governor Mimiko was asked to
respond. He spent almost forty minutes philosophizing President
Jonathan’s statement. He defended, polished, cleaned up, explained,
rationalized, disinfected. He was sweating. He accused me and the rest
of the country of having not taken the time to research corruption and
stealing. We have not theorized it enough. We have no research archives.
Once we understand the theory of stealing and corruption, we would have
a deeper understanding of President Jonathan’s statement. The audience
booed him.
In essence, for President Jonathan and career Jonathanians, there is
nothing wrong with the statement stealing is not corruption. We got
tired of their harassment and granted them their wish of calling them
what they wanted to be called. Oga Jonathan went to Obafemi Awolowo
University, Ife, and some students shouted “Ole! Ole! Ole! Thief! Thief!
Thief!” You’d think that career Jonathanians would be happy. After all,
they’d spent months on social media screaming themselves hoarse and
saying there is nothing wrong with the President’s beatification of
stealing on national television in broad daylight. If there is nothing
wrong with that statement, why is your mental carburetor suddenly
overheating because some students called your Oga what he wishes to be
called?
Career Jonathanians went into overdrive on social media.
They screamed. They hee-hawed. I laughed really hard, reading and
watching their contortions. At first, they said it did not happen. Then they said that
only a handful of students sponsored by APC screamed at the president.
Then they said that even if it happened, it was rude and unpatriotic to
call the President a thief – a president who had found a moral euphemism
to rationalize stealing on national TV!
As we approach 2015, we must advise President Jonathan, his handlers,
and career Jonathanians on social media: self-naming is a serious
business. This is no time for you to suffer an identity crisis in the
theatre of naming. You cannot say, one minute, that stealing is not
corruption is the greatest philosophical statement of the century and
turn around, the next minute, to burst a vein when the author of the
said statement is called a thief. That is called confusion break bones.
Make up your minds what you wish to be called.
Sourced from Mr Pius Adesanmi
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