Tuesday 30 January 2018

Did Providence Make Vice President Bawumia Ill So That He Would Undergo A Damascene Conversion In London?

It is often said by the deeply religious that God works in mysterious ways. Indeed. The question then is: Did Providence make Vice President Bawumia ill so that he would travel to the UK, visit the Positive Money UK head office, and undergo a Damascene conversion to the monetary reforms that that advocacy group seeks -  and return to champion the cause of monetary reform and green economics in Ghana: and thus assure a more sustainable future for present and future generations of our people?

Perhaps Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, Bawumia's minder-in-chief in London, who unquestionably (and rightly) seeks a place in the Pantheon of great African leaders for President Akufo-Addo - having now realised that regardless of whatever revisionist propaganda he and his co-conspirators  dream up, his forbear  Dr. J. B. Danquah, will never qualify for such a place because of his repulsive Akan tribal-supremacist beliefs and for being an agent of Western imperialism and lackey of sundry Western intelligence agencies during his day - should arrange for Dr. Bawumia to be hosted by Positive Money UK and have conversations with some of the advocates for monetary reform in Britain.

It will hopefully enable Bawumia to finally step out of the shadow of conventional economic thinking, and commit to growing Ghana's nascent green economy - instead of the ruinous  GDP growth-at-all-costs regardless-of-its-environmental-consequences paradigm  their regime is currently pursuing at such great cost to society generally and Ghana's base-of-the-pyramid demographic in particular.

Perhaps to enable Ghana achieve all 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) by 2030, Providence must indeed have made Vice President Bawumia to be suddenly taken ill, so that he would undergo a Damascene conversion - and commit to monetary reform in Ghana along the lines sought by Positive Money UK and the International Movement for Monetary Reform (IMMR) and also commit to empowering Ghana's nascent green economy. Cool.

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