Opinions of Wednesday, 31 March 2004
Columnist: Dadzie, Derrydean
Background
The world has undergone an industrial revolution which has brought about new technologies and increased productivity. Thus, there is the urgent need for more raw materials to feed newly created industries. The Ghana government which has established itself as the world’s most industrialised nation has realised the need to expand its reserves of industrial raw materials. To this end, it has brought together a team of expert explorers and navigators to go beyond Ghana’s geographical boundaries to seek other sources of raw materials like bauxite, timber, oil, gold, salt and other human survival-hang-ons one can think about. After six months of mission abroad, the team made a breakthrough and returned to Ghana with the best news the nation has heard in its economic history. They had actually found a land which they claimed was well endowed in untapped natural resources and was inhabited by a species of creatures the Ghana government later came to recognise as being part of the human race after a thorough research, just because the so-called creatures had different skin pigmentation.
The government, realising the enormous economic potential of the new land which was later known as England and also sensing the need to expand their social, cultural, and economic influence worldwide, sent out a new expert team to re-examine the land. The new team did not only include explorers and navigators, but also all the other experts who have made it to the top of their professions. The list included philosophers, sociologists, anthropologists, surveyors, lawyers, military personnel, engineers, manufacturers and many others. Their main task was to do a feasibility study of England and suggest ways for the Ghana government to harness her natural resources. The mission completed its work in exactly one hundred days; however, they lost two of their members through insects’ bites. The team came out with report from their findings and made some recommendations. Paramount amongst them was the requirement for the Ghana government to take over the land in respect of the general weakness of the inhabitants in terms of weaponry.
The Ghana government upon the team’s recommendations took a quick action and appointed a governor, Sir Derrydean Dadzie to take control of affairs of England. The land was by then declared a sovereign colony extra-ordinaire of Ghana. Sir Derrydean was also to help establish a stable and practicable system of governance in England. Amongst other things, he had the jurisdiction to set up a vibrant economy through any practicable means and facilitate the rebuilding of the social system. The ultimate objective behind Ghana’s taking over England was to control their piles of natural resources and also to export enough minerals and other raw materials to help build Ghanaian industries to boost the economy.
Sir Derrydean Dadzie in Person
Sir Derrydean Dadzie is the world’s finest economist. He graduated from Ghana’s premier university, Ashesi University where he had his Masters in Economics and also had his PhD in International Relations and Social Governance. He is very young and renowned for his clever leadership skills and his in-depth philosophical wisdom. He has no ideological orientation politically, but has decided to tow the same political lines as Thomas Hobbes and Nicollo Machiavelli because of the nature of his new assignment at England. He however has intentions to establish a “Lockean” system of governance in the long term; that is, if he is still alive or remains the governor for forty years. Like Machiavelli, he believes that the end always justifies the means. He also had at the back of his mind that the people of England were neither political nor social. Thus, dealing with them should have a “consequentialist” connotation. That is, he should be judged based on the outcome of his actions and policies and not the process of the action in itself. He is intellectually religious and a staunch adherent of the “abosom som” religion. He always held the opinion that his religion was the only firm foundation that moral change can be laid on. Thus, he sees this as one of the best tools he has in his administrative arsenal and plans to use it effectively.
England in the Eyes of Sir Derrydean Dadzie and the Ghana Government
England in the eyes of the Ghana government was the most environmentally conducive location for all human activities that God (an unseen being supposed to have created the entire universe and all that dwell in it) had created. The place had the best climate and all the resources that could have put them in a good position on the world economic scale; on the contrary, England’s resources were untapped and the people were living in abject ignorance and poverty. They had no philosophy or any sense of history because they did not possess the ability to document their past and in addition most of the thoughts behind their actions were not reflective, rational and systematic. In Ghana’s view, the people had no socio-political identity. They saw this as a potential drawback in the dissemination of their political policies to the people of England. The England natives had an incomprehensibly complex but well organised chieftaincy which had undoubtedly caught on with them very well. Quite the opposite, the current government was corrupt and ineffective. The Ghana government saw this as a latent problem whose solution was not farfetched. Worse of all, the people were hard-knock conservatives who were stuck to their heritage like glue. They were unwilling to change their questionable practices which included human sacrifices and cruel punishments.
The Ghana government was of the view that, their questionable cultural practices and the wasteful utilisation of their natural resources were legitimate reasons for them to take over the control of England. The natural resources were virtually lying waste and the human resources were being wasted. Trees that could serve as timber for manufacturing industries were being worshipped, and rocks that could serve as sources of minerals were used as sacred sites for the worship of their gods and animals that could also serve as sources of food and leather were declared totems. This was in the eyes of Sir Derrydean a clear definition of monumental wastage. Human beings who could be put to good industrial use were being sacrificed or traded to the priest of the land as appeasements for an ancestor’s folly. Sir Derrydean, thus, justified slavery on this basis. He believed these useful creatures could serve as labourers or slaves to put into operation the intellectual works of the Ghana people. This, Sir Derrydean thought, would bring about productive outcome both to the England people and the Ghana government.
Ideal Government as Sir Derrydean Hoped to Implement
He was of the view that, to rule this people, an element of authority was fundamental. To him, this element of authority had three primary features that were relevant: negotiation, coercive power and physical power. He planned to implement an internal definition of roles amongst his workforce and thought task stratification will be another distinguished feature of his administration. He believed in social order and was ready to use any means possible to achieve it. To him development could only thrive on stable socio-political order. Sir Derrydean’s perception of authority included total control over everybody, property and all forms of leadership. He shared Thomas Hobbes’s view of the Leviathan. He believed that people should trade their rights to the Leviathan (a sovereign overseeing the wellbeing of the people involved in the social contract) for protection and ensuring the smooth carrying out of civic duties. In his case, Sir Derrydean considered himself as the Leviathan and saw the administrative staff and the garrison the Ghana government gave him as his arms.
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