Friday 4 June 2021

Speaking Truth To Power Is Neither A Crime In Ghana - Nor Is It In The UK Either

 One hopes that the UK's visiting Home Secretary, Priti Patel, will use her favourite Parliamentary  cop-out-phrase, "I can't comment on individual cases", to deter the nosey-parkers here, who think they can use Britain's Home Secretary, to collar some of  us. It won't work, wai. No way. Full stop.


She knows perfectly well that there will be hell-to-pay big-trouble for her, if the UK media gets wind of such an egregious data-privacy-invasion-fishing-expedition,  wai. Clueless sods.
 

Wherever in the world we go to, we will continue to criticise Ghana's big-thieves-in-high-places, and their gormless regime-lackeys, saaaaa,  till Truth-Kingdom cometh, ooooo. We are fearless, wai. Full stop.


Ghana aban, Kofi Thompson is not a criminal, wai - and speaking truth to power is not a crime, koraaaa,  oooo. Yooooooo...


Massa, stop wasting scarce state resources  on someone harmless, who is a patriot who loves Mother Ghana passionately - and still supports President President Akufo-Addo 100 percent: but loathes his party that has now evolved into a criminal organisation in all but name, in order to obtain party-funding. Repeat: Speaking truth to power isn't a crime in Ghana - and neither is it one in the UK,  either.   Who born dog? Haaba.

Sent from Samsung tablet.

No comments: