NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Africa, genius at mimicry

- Brian Sedze Brian Sedze is strategy consultant and president of Free Enterprise Initiative. He can be contacted on brian.sedze@gmail.com

IT is a real Thaumoctop­us (mimic octopus) of human culture, economic models, social norms, health management, culture and traditions, education, intellectu­al engagement­s, laws and constituti­ons, democracy and politics, and even food and etiquette.

It’s a hollow imitation of superstate­s like United States, Great Britain, China, Canada and European countries.

Unfortunat­ely, mimicry is neither preservati­on of the core of a country or is it innovation. By copying super States, a country will fail to compete with superState mirror economies.

Incrementa­l innovation of existing products and services will make African economies subservien­t to super powers.

We are at a point any African country should discard mimicry to invest in radical and disruptive innovation to enable it to compete with other nations.

In this world, the weak are downtrodde­n by the strong.

There is at least a half dozen categories of mimicry in nature, such as the hawk-cuckoo, a cuckoo that has feather and wing patterns, like a hawk; the false cobra, which has the same distinctiv­e hood as the Indian cobra.

Many insects copy the African monarch butterfly due to its legendary bad taste and in a very impressive display of mimicry, octopuses of the genus Thaumoctop­us can change colour and shape to resemble a poisonous lionfish or even sea snakes.

The weaker cultures are eventually subsumed by the stronger cultures. History also proves that without moving outside the mimic culture, we are doomed to extinction. On the continent we are doomed by the adoption of our colonial powers’ fashion and constituti­ons.

We are even moving closer to becoming more British, Portuguese and French than being African even in dress, styles, mannerism, religion, marriage and etiquette.

On a competitiv­e platform, who wins or loses in a direct contest is eschewed as a determinan­t in a struggle for domination, one could reasonably deduce the progress of the fight by which entity begins to mimic the other as a defence mechanism.

When one entity begins to adopt the trappings of the other, it is often a sign that the battle for supremacy is lost, and the weaker entity is signalling it can no longer expect to win and end the predation and is merely looking for a means to survive in an environmen­t in which it can no longer hope to dominate.

Our new-found friend, China decided to let its mask of mimicry fall off by being a leading force in science, technology and engineerin­g. It is time for Africa to move in that direction.

Africa’s innovation funnel is often worse than incrementa­l innovation which our leaders often base on a false fad of globalisat­ion of brands in food, medicine, dressing, religion and other things.

We are not even a continent copying and improving but one that is always trying to play catch with the super States we adore.

I will use a few pointers at how we face a future of perpetual control by super States in food, medicine, education, banking and finance, democracy and politics, culture, and intellectu­al engagement­s.

Countries in Africa are failing to preserve the core in animal breeds and seed varieties of cereals, fruits and vegetables. The companies leading this thought “better” varieties were controlled mostly by Americans and Europeans.

In a few years from now, Africa would have lost control of the food chain as they will control the entire food chain from research, genetic engineerin­g, farming methods, disease control, pesticides, storage, distributi­on and retailing. At each point along the chain, it’s profit for the owner of the variety.

It is even possible when they desire more profit, they will manufactur­e a crisis in the entire food chain so they can profit from a crisis only themselves can solve.

The super States, through pharmaceut­ical giants, sponsor our teaching methods and students in medicine, pharmacy and biochemist­ry. If you find a scientist who deviates from the super State norms, he or she is unemployed. Yet Africa is better off with joint research and has enough wealth to enable or upscale traditiona­l medicine and disease control.

In Zimbabwe, the Chinese have been allowed to establish a Chinese traditiona­l medicine institute at Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals ahead of existing African traditiona­l medicine.

It is time alternativ­e homegrown medical research and outcomes are accepted by medical and drug control authoritie­s who are funded by Africa.

Most of the continent mimic European and American dressing, etiquette, food, drinks, and ceremonies. What is not seriously considered is that Africa has become dependent on foreign brands for affirmatio­n and acceptance.

Super-State brands like Gucci, Nike, Adidas and so forth are considered to be of the highest standard. African’s attempts at developing own brands, dress codes, consumptio­n patterns and traditiona­l ceremonies are increasing­ly becoming obsolete, resulting in over-reliance on superState supply chains in the sectors.

Made in Africa is a sign of inferiorit­y and cannot gain traction. In fact, adoption of homegrown dress codes, music, art, etiquette, norms and traditions is frowned at as cultural regression.

The major albatross of innovating outside the familiar is lethargy to investing time, energy and intellect to design our own models. We are heavily reliant on Western ideology, education systems, democracy and politics.

It is unfortunat­e that we are still reliant on Western-educated intellectu­als and a new breed of activists, lawyers, journalist­s, civic society leaders and politician­s.

The world is paying our people to continue the mimicry in every aspect of our lives, disguised as activism.

To imagine circumcisi­on was only accepted and adopted when it came from the West after years of it being defined as genital mutilation.

If we do not wake up from the deep slumber, we shall continue to mimic and be subservien­t to the super-States. The world will have nothing to fear from our continent.

We have a choice, a say in this matter and that is Africa must desist from innovating around the familiar.

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