The Bible says in proverbs 29:18 that “where
there is no visions the people perish.” This declaration is very true for a
generation that has succumbed to unbelievable levels of mediocrity that they
sing and dance for MM/DCES, Members of Parliament and Presidents who build a
few roads and then endlessly justify all the other failings of government.
There are now large agents of mediocrity across Ghana
who have made a career from justifying the inexcusable failure of the past and
present governments at all levels and count some mediocre projects as
achievements even after some fifty six years (56) of independence; Ghana is a certified
failed country in spite of abundant human and material resources.
The phenomenon of mediocrity is not new, it has
been with us for a considerable length of time; what is new however, is the
extent to which the culture of mediocrity has been consolidated across the Ghanaian
society with large sections of the population becoming the defenders and
justifiers of the mediocrity of government and opposition parties. This is 2013,
where deputy minister can anticipate basking one million dollars before calling
the cat for a fight. This is where one will need a million dollars to be able
to control humankind, not 1809 where one could only boost of his riches by the limitless
number of wives, as well as male children to mould yam mourns. We live in the
21st century, an era that has heralded the most advanced technology ever known
to man. From the internet to face book, YouTube to twitter, solar energy to
wind energy, GPS to space tourism, the world is navigating through
revolutionary technology in all spheres at a dizzying pace. Technology brings
with it possibilities and solutions for all kinds of human challenges, it takes
away the constraint and arduous task of needing to “reinvent the wheel,”
yet in the age and midst of such possibilities, Ghana has regressed into
a failed state lacking the most basic infrastructure.
Sadly, there abound so many soaked in the muddied
waters of mediocrity, willing to applaud and defend the government in the open
glare of colossal failings. Most worrying is the well travelled and educated
elite who are now either the purveyors, enablers or chief defenders of
mediocrity. Ghana is the only country where so called leaders are endlessly
praised and celebrated for doing less than 15% of their job even when the 15%
is mostly of doubtful quality. This trend is evident all across Ghana as governments
construct a several substandard roads, erect some cranky boreholes in a few
communities and get treated to dance troupes and praise singers for failing in
his job. Same goes for the members of parliament who are toasted and celebrated
for patching up a few spots in some badly damaged asphalt roads that continues
to kill thousands of victims annually.
Every year endless hypes and noise is made
about the purported achievement of government; how things are improving;
how this and that president is ‘performing,’ but beneath all that deceit propaganda is the reality of failure across
all strata of governance in Ghana. Neither the neither president nor any
of the ministers are successful. None of them can pass even the most
basic test of good governance and accountability. Government in this time is
all about scamming and mediocrity. They loot public funds, deceive the public
with some mediocre projects and together with a mediocre populace celebrate
their failings as success.
In the era of unprecedented technology and
attendant possibilities, the nation has gone back in time. As a
consequence of mediocrity and corruption, there is no remarkable development
anywhere in Ghana in spite of a sustained oil boom and consequent availability
of financial resources. After more than twenty years of democracy the
nation is littered with bad roads. There is no pipe borne water, no
electricity, no functional hospitals, no functional refineries, no functional
steel plants, no functional public schools, no national airline, no social housing,
no social welfare, no skills and vocational training centers, no functional
railways, no waterways, no modern port facilities. The tragedy of Ghana’s
leadership failure is further appreciated when we ponder the irony of a nation
that is producing crude oil in the world yet imports fuel for local consumption
because the refineries are dysfunctional.
Patchiness and its twin of corruption have
ensured that there is increasing poverty, unemployment and massive
infrastructure deficit at a time the nation is awash with petro-dollars.
It has consigned the president and Ministers to mediocre projects
while ignoring major and massive infrastructural projects that would build
capacity for industrial growth and social investments that will insulate the
citizenry from poverty and destitution. A country with the resources,
population and size of Ghana should have a modern rail system with high
speed trains ferrying goods and persons across the nation, state of the
art feeder roads in excess of six lanes, inland waterways and state of the art
river ports, modern steel plants and refineries, a comprehensive
and free high quality medical system, twenty four hour
uninterrupted electricity, pure and clean pipe borne water, special economic
zones and cluster industrial parks, subsidized education at all
levels, basic social security and safety net, job and vocational
training centers amongst other basic social services and infrastructure
that are indispensable attributes of any functional
nation.
Notwithstanding the mechanics of state failure,
all too present in Ghana, the justifiers and enablers of mediocrity are
everywhere singing praises of government for non performance and giving endless
excuses why the much desired basic infrastructure and social services does not
exist. A nation where so many are ever too willing to defend visionless and
underperforming governments cannot succeed. At a time when so many ambitious
and progressive nations around the world are blazing an audacious trail in
economic, infrastructural and social development, Ghana is behind in time. A
dirty, stumbling, un-ambitious giant of failure consigned to the ignoble depths
of penury.
It must be borne in mind that successful
societies are constructed through the continuous social pressure put on the
leadership by a citizenry disposed to holding their leaders accountable. The
choice is clear, it is either we emancipate ourselves from the veneration of
mediocrity, and put our leaders under enormous pressure to fulfill our
aspirations for economic, social and infrastructural development or continue
with mediocrity and be consumed by the social violence of a failed
dysfunctional nation.
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