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Why Ordinary Americans are also Angry with
Goodluck Jonathan
By Farooq A. Kperogi
Posted Sat Jan 14,2012

On Monday January 9, my 7-year-old daughter
and
I joined many Americans from the “Occupy Atlanta” movement
or, as they like to call themselves, “Atlanta’s 99 percent,” to
protest against President Goodluck Jonathan’s revoltingly
conscienceless war on the poor though his thoughtless and
ill-conceived hike in petrol prices.
We converged at the Nigerian Consulate in
Atlanta in symbolic solidarity with the admirably dauntless
Nigerian people at home who have chosen to bracket their
differences and unite in defense of their common humanity
against a notoriously malevolent and incompetent government.
Atlanta is just one of several cities where
ordinary Americans of all races came out forcefully and
passionately to support Nigerians against this embarrassingly
inept, IMF/World Bank-controlled government. Across major cities
in America, scores of Americans are joining Nigerians in America
in demonstrations against the most usurious petrol price hike in
Nigeria’s entire history.
But why would Americans who live thousands
of miles away from Nigeria and who have a reputation for being
provincial and indifferent to world events that have no direct
consequence on their lives be interested in what goes on in our
country?
There are three reasons. First, the
Internet, especially social media, has annihilated the
boundaries of time and space in hitherto unthought-of ways. A
lot of Americans became aware of the desperate conditions of the
Nigerian people at home not through their legacy, mainline news
media, but through online social networks and citizen blogs.
I take delight in saying that my October
22, 2011 article titled
“Fuel Subsidy Removal: Time to ‘Occupy’ Nigeria!” and a
sequel titled
“Biggest Scandal in Oil Subsidy Removal Fraud” were major
catalysts in this awakening. The articles went viral on the
Internet, attracted an unprecedented traffic to my blog, and
caused scores of inquiries to be directed at me Of course, as I
said on my Facebook page, I don't claim any credit for the
“Occupy Nigeria” movement. I think its emergence is the product
of a spontaneous outpouring of righteous anger against a
smothering and insensitive government policy. Of course, several
other Nigerians also wrote many thoughtful articles and analyses
on the cruelty, fraud, and illogic of the Jonathan government’s
inhuman petrol price hike. These disparate initiatives all
coalesced to form a compelling social media narrative of what is
going in Nigeria.
The second reason ordinary Americans
identify with the current struggles of the Nigerian people is
that many of them were intensely scandalized to learn that
Nigerians, 80 percent of whom live on less than $2 a day, were
paying more for petrol than they who live in the world’s
wealthiest nation. The lowest paid worker in America receives
the equivalent of 185,00 naira per month. Nigeria’s current
minimum wage of 7,500 naira translates into $47 dollars a month.
If the Jonathan government honors its promise to increase the
minimum wage to 18,000 naira, that would translate into $112 per
month.
A softhearted American friend of mine who
saw this statistic wept profusely a few days ago. “That’s just
not fair!” she cried.“Someone with a 47-dollar-a-month wage pays
$3.6 for a gallon of gas while a minimum wage worker in Georgia
who receives nearly $8 an hour pays $2.99 for the same? That’s
just wrong on so many levels!”
She would probably have literally cried her
heart out if she knew that the Nigerian government actually pays
millions of dollars to an avaricious cabal of primitive
capitalist vultures to import toxic, low-grade refined petrol
into the country. As I said
in a previous article, the petrol price comparison between
Nigeria and the United States— and other countries— is, in fact,
grossly inaccurate because all of the petrol that is imported to
Nigeria is so low-grade that it’s a criminal offense to use it
in America, Europe, and other parts of the world.
Thirdly, and most importantly, contrary to
the intentional lies being hawked by the economic policy thugs
of the Jonathan administration, the American government heavily
SUBSIDIZES the fuel consumption of its citizen. Most
responsible, socially sensitive governments do.
According to a
TIMEMagazine article of January 3, America’s 50 states
collectively spend $10 billion a year to subsidize the fuel
consumption of their citizens. In America, with all its vast
material prosperity, the surest way for any government to
collapse irretrievably is to encourage any policy that causes
the price of petrol to go up. As TIME put it beautifully, “One
of the fastest ways to alienate voters is to be seen supporting
anything that intensifies pain in the pump.”
American state governments subsidize petrol
prices for their citizens through low taxes on their oil
companies. During the 2008 presidential election, for instance,
Hilary Clinton and John McCain, in fact, advocated a “gas tax
holiday” regime. That meant oil companies would not be taxed at
all for an extended period so that gas prices would come down by
about 18.4 cents a gallon for petrol and about 24.4 cents for
diesel.
According to TIME,“politicians’ refusal to
increase gas taxes in line with inflation and construction costs
starves needed infrastructure of funding.” Sounds familiar? The
perennial reason our governments in Nigeria advance to increase
fuel prices is that the government needs money for
“infrastructural development,” which by the way is a fat lie.
(They should be honest for once and admit that they need more
money to steal). But the point is that no responsible government
starves its people to death because it wants to build
infrastructure. Only the living use infrastructure.

There is an instructive example in the
Midwestern state of Iowa of how a caring government, faced with
a cash crunch, responded to recommendations for an increase in
petrol prices to raise money. I will reproduce parts of the
story, which is from TIME, without authorial intervention:
“In Iowa, which hasn’t raised its tax in 22
years, a citizen advisory panel recommended an 8 cent to 10 cent
bump per gallon in November. Republican Gov. Terry Branstad
quickly took any increase off the table, instead asking his
Department of Transportation to look for savings.
“‘Everyone realizes that we need more
funding for roads and bridges,’ said Tim Albrecht, a spokesman
for Branstad. ‘I don’t think the legislature was especially
willing to put a burden on Iowa’s tax payers at this time.’”
So an American state was in dire need of
money to fund projects that would benefit the people and a panel
made up of professionals not affiliated with the government
recommended that the government increase the pump price of
petrol to raise cash.
What did the government do? It said no. It
said increasing petrol prices by just 8 or 10 percent would
impose an unbearable burden on its citizens. It then said the
state should raise money by SAVING. And this is a state in the
wealthiest country on earth. Do you see any parallels here with
Nigeria?
Well, that’s why every American who is
familiar with what is happening in Nigeria is deeply angry with
Jonathan on our behalf. So don’t give up, Nigerians. The whole
world is watching you, supporting you, and celebrating your
extraordinary gallantry!
Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Journalism & Citizen
Media
Department of Communication
Kennesaw State University
1000 Chastain Road, MD 2207
Kennesaw, Georgia, USA 30144
Cell: (+1) 404-573-969:
Personal website:
www.farooqkperogi.com
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/farooqkperogi
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/#!/farooqkperogi
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