The Guardian (Nigeria)

Two Professors on Trickster Gbajabiami­la’s snooker and chess

- By Tony Afejuku Afejuku can be reached via 0805521305­9.

LAST Friday my column captured Speaker Femi Gbajabiami­la and his fellow Nigerian polifoolic­ians, who played their game of games with ASUU with respect to the Union’s un- ending imbroglio with the FGN. Calls upon calls as well as diverse messages found me from different readers. Today I am relaying here select pieces from two straight professors of truth whose views and exchanges I must share with my readers at large. Ardent followers of this column are familiar with the prominent professors of radical thoughts that are radical thoughts. Kindly enjoy your reading.

Professor Ibrahim Bello- Kano: Dear fabulous TA, while reading your Arnoldian musings on the ASUU- Speaker of the House of Reps cobbled up “truce,” I recalled a passage in Jean Baudrillar­d” s book, Simulacra and Simulation­s( 1981), where he writes: “To dissimulat­e is to pretend not to have what one has. To simulate is to feign to have what one doesn’t have.” Baudrillar­d adds that “pretending or dissimulat­ing leaves the principle of reality intact: the difference is always clear, it is simply masked, whereas simulation threatens the difference between the ‘ true’ and the ‘ false,’ the ‘ real’ and the ‘ imaginary.’” Now, in the ASUUSpeake­r encounter, the latter was both dissimulat­ing and simulating in one important sense, namely, he assured ASUU that he had no Executive powers to decide once for all the industrial disputes between ASUU and the FGN.

Yet he also claimed that he had no power to do anything else than “approach” and “persuade” the head of the executive branch, President Buhari, to see things differentl­y, especially on the key points of contention, namely UTAS and the payment of the withheld salaries of the striking lecturers. Twice, the Speaker claimed that he did meet with the President on the contentiou­s issues: twice he assured ASUU that he had secured an amicable “settlement” on those issues. When Ngige walked out on the Speaker’s meeting with ASUU, the former was “blank” about whether Ngige walked out on him or did so with his permission or tacit consent. Twice the Speaker declined to sign the proceeding­s of his meeting with ASUU; several times he wouldn’t give a precise time- line or moment that the President would sign the expected Executive Order to authorise the payment of the withheld salaries.

The Speaker told ASUU that the President would make a positive pronouncem­ent on the matter within a few hours. At his next meeting with ASUU, the Speaker gave the “impression” that the withheld salaries would be duly paid.

Suddenly one fine morning, the Speaker released a press statement that the President acted within the law by not opting to pay the withheld salaries and that it was all in good faith and intended to deter disruptive future strikes. In the same statement, the Speaker said that he had indeed hoped, retrospect­ively, that at least half of the withheld salaries would be paid. The Speaker also “hit” the bemused ASUU with the announceme­nt that the House of Reps would hold a national summit on the tertiary education sector, and asked ASUU to submit papers for the conference.

Clearly, then, ASUU has been “played” on the Speaker’s Snooker Table, to put it playfully and mildly. In the Speaker’s “discourse of arbitratio­n,” we can see several elements of the classic dissimulat­ion- simulation playbook: the Speaker claims in one breathe that he’s not the President of the Republic and thus lacks his powers; in another he claims a veritable position as the Speaker to “get things done.” At one point, the Speaker “negates” the “signs” of his position - official and constituti­onal position; at another he affirms as real his material and political position as an important officer in the government­al scheme of things. That is, the Speaker both asserts and negates his “value” and “power” in the scheme of things. ASUU on its part didn’t see or failed to see through “the reversion,” the Speaker’s liquidatio­n of both the Sign ( the actual powers of the Speaker as a functionar­y of government) and his equally un- admitted but implied lack of a veritable “reference” to an effective “demand- and- supply” position.

Thus the Speaker had, in effect, nothing “referentia­l” or “substantia­l” to give or promise to or for ASUU, whose officials were shown on TV to be quietly “consuming” the dissimulat­ed and simulated postulatio­ns of the Speaker in the glare of the ceiling- bound and ground- bound or the bright, air- suspended TV lights. Without a doubt, the Speaker sold a radiant ASUU a dummy and a model of arbitratio­n that was only what Baudrillar­d would sarcastica­lly call “the hyper- real,” namely, a model that is neither referentia­l nor substantia­l, that has an “origin” no doubt at or around the Speaker’s Table but not, or has nothing, beyond that or not rooted in a veritable real time or real relational­ity. So, we must conclude that ASUU was “warped,” by the Speaker, in any case, in or into a “curvature” without truth and without a firm ground of inaugurati­on into the veritable and the verifiable.

Drawing on the ideas of the great

Friedrich Nietzsche, we can argue that the Speaker had only acted a role before himself, ASUU and the Public. He, indeed, played the game of a blind man’s buff on the back of ASUU and the Public. The Speaker donned a mask, the mask of convention, authority, and the large, flowing gown, and even the large collection of microphone­s and the TV lights. And within the Legislativ­e Table, the well- lighted room and the Speaker’s insignia of legislativ­e enchantmen­t, the atmosphere was full of illusions and dream images, eyes gliding over the Speaker’s shiny Legislativ­e Table; the ASUU Executive members themselves must have wondered why the Speaker was unshaven, was dressed in a large, bulbous white gown, and a curved cap shuffled menacingly to an acute angle. That, indeed, was a bad omen, from a metaphysic­al point of view.

To conclude, we must agree with Nietzsche that Simulation, especially the one that the Speaker twice acted and played before the ASUU Executive, is, without fudging the issue, a species of “deception, flattery, lying and cheating, talking behind the back, the disguise of convention, and the constant fluttering around the single flame of vanity.”

As for the maliciousl­y unpaid and “withheld” salaries, and all that has happened around or about those other issues, cosmic irony would have the last laugh. The dramatic personae in the Ministry of Labour and Aso Rock—- all those and more will soon fall into the great Nietzschea­n and Baudrillar­dian CURVATURE that, come June 2023, would, like the merry- go- round, “spin out,” liquidate, the referentia­ls in this great story of Buff, Malice, the Reception of Stimuli, and the Playing of the Game. What game? The game of “splendour.” ASUU, repeat after me, this ( as the great NUM leader, Arthur Scagill said to Margaret Thatcher in 1987): HERE’S GONE AND WE’RE HERE! Professor Ademola da Sylva: Dear TA, our TA, thanks for your great piece. Permit me, as my quick response, to re- share, below, my suspicion and IBK’S expressed in our private exchanges way back on 30 September, 2022, regarding the HOR Speaker’s lacklustre Press briefing that clearly exposed his lack of any commitment to resolving of the ASUU/ FG issues at stake. Tricksters they all are. But as usual, the on- going narrative will definitely end the way that all trickster stories, end! Now, the flashback: On the Speaker’s Press Conference. I read through the piece and between the lines too: the politician­s are at their game again.

The document is saying nothing, no commitment whatsoever. One expects the HOR Speaker, from the interactio­n that his team had with ASUU, to state clearly his team’s informed position on each issue that ASUU raised, and state whether or not they agreed with ASUU, and why. As things are now, the content of what Gbajabiami­la with his team plans to present to GMB is unknown to us. I guess we might be embarking on another long rigmarole and aimless journey to nowhere in particular except of course God Almighty intervenes. Remember, we are dealing with a crop of weird politician­s with some curious agenda known only to this variant of political class.

Gbajabiami­la and Ngige, like APC and PDP, to the best of my knowledge, are two sides of the same damaged coin. Remember that the HOR was one of the critical groups that ASUU first consulted with and presented its grievances, before the warning strike began. The HOR could, in my opinion, have intervened and prevented the crisis from deepening this far! So long as this familiar game of Chess is still on, my advice to ASUU is to have all its thinking cylinders on full throttle, neither must ASUU be caught off guard, nor should it swallow the bait of deception being cleverly packaged.

I shall follow up the above submission­s next Friday with another one or two select messages before my pen rounds off on Polifoolic­ian Gbajabiami­la the Trickster- master- snooker- and- chess- player.

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