The nether reaches of the illiterate mind happens to be dark, mysterious and
complex - and is invariably full of negativity. That is why we must rid our nation of illiteracy
- in order to tap the talents of the many geniuses whose lives it
blights.
A few days ago, an early evening incident that took place where I
live, forcefully drove home to me the urgent need to provide free
education from kindergarten to tertiary level, to all Ghanaians with the
aptitude to study, as soon as practicable.
Determined that I would not tolerate being threatened and intimidated in
my own home under any circumstances - by someone I was being a good Samaritan to, by providing free accommodation for - I called out
the police.
I had literally had enough of lip from an eavesdropping nosy-parker
and freeloader, who wanted to get away with doing as little as possible
around the house.
A desire to help an acquaintance who is an illiterate, has turned out to be one of the worst decisions I ever made.
Invited into my home to occupy the boys' quarters, in the end, it was
as if it was me who had been invited to live with that person, instead
of the other way round.
Alas, as usual my gentle and caring nature had been taken for a sign of
weakness - and I was having to deal with a two-captains-in-one-boat
situation: being forced unto me by a wolf in sheep's clothing.
It is such a pity that arrogance and pride can ruin things for some of
those who desperately need a helping hand in order to lift themselves
out of poverty and progress into Ghana's burgeoning middle class.
A perfectionist and a genius with the hands, that illiterate could so
easily have become an engineer or designer, had the opportunity to
acquire an education come the way of that insolent individual.
It is a sad story that illustrates perfectly why the number of
illiterate Ghanaians must be lessened, and why the provision of free
education from kindergarten to tertiary level is a must in our country -
and vital if we are to advance as a nation.
As a people we must do all we can to take the bold and hard decisions
necessary to make it possible for our nation to provide free education
from kindergarten to tertiary level on a sustainable basis.
The politicians (from across the spectrum) now cynically exploiting the
provision of free secondary education for the masses of our people,
for political gain, must be more responsible in this matter.
They must end the Kweku-Ananse-economics employed as evidence of their
ability to provide fully-funded free secondary education in Ghana.
It is intolerable that the media is allowing them to get away with what
actually amounts to dissembling. We must be told exactly how this
additional burden will be paid for.
Rather than resorting to smoke-and-mirrors economics, politicians must
be bold enough to tell the good people of Ghana about the hard
decisions needed to be taken in order to make it possible to fund free
education at all levels in Ghana.
As things stand, in the real world, even at the secondary level, there
is simply no money available to fund such an undertaking, without
destroying secondary education in Ghana and dislocating our national
economy.
Whatever we do, we must find the money for it by first cutting
unnecessary public-sector spending. And where to cut such spending, is
the question, dear reader.
For example, to conserve taxpayers' money, should we not let market
forces decide the fate of our national currency and the prices of
petroleum products in Ghana - instead of the financial equivalent of
pouring water into a sieve that current interventions represent?
Surely, if we were more sensible and decided that propping up the new
Ghana cedi with precious taxpayers' cash is a mug's game, and that our
central bank and those managing the national economy must be forced to
stop playing it, could we not make some savings in so doing? Over the
years has it not cost us trillions of cedis?
Ditto admitting that allowing criminal syndicates to grow super-rich
smuggling subsidised petroleum products into the nations that border
Ghana is daft and untenable, and must be brought to an end and replaced
with a regime in which prices of petroleum products are determined by
market forces?
Only heaven knows the amount of taxpayers' money poured into this financial equivalent of a blackhole over the years.
So having found some real-world savings in both instances outlined
above, in a nation with limited finances, could we not find other
real-world savings too, in our national economy - and then proceed
to find a revenue-generating funding source which could then be
ring-fenced, as a sustainable funding-source for implementing the
free secondary education policy proposal?
For that reason alone, has the time not come to consider allowing
market forces to decide the fate of our national currency, the prices
of petroleum products, and perhaps abandon the policy of subsidising
other goods and services altogether, to save money to fund free
education in Ghana?
No pain, no gain. We can't eat our cake and have it.
There is a sense of déjà vu in the December presidential and parliamentary election campaign narratives one hears.
When he was campaigning to be elected president, perhaps if Ghanaians
had demanded that Professor Mills outline precisely how he was going to
make the promised drastic reduction in fuel prices, he would never have
been elected to attempt to do the impossible, in a cash-strapped
nation whose people refuse to allow politicians to abandon subsidising
petroleum products.
To ensure that we are not disappointed yet again, ordinary Ghanaians
must simply be told how free secondary education can be funded on a
sustainable real-world basis, before the December polls.
We must not expect to elect politicians to power to do the impossible
without ending up being disappointed by unfulfilled promises. Period. A
word to the wise...
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Email: peakofi.thompson@gmail.com
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