NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

False equivalenc­e in Alkebulan

- Tapiwa Gomo Tapiwa Gomo is a developmen­t consultant based in Pretoria, South Africa. He writes here in his personal capacity.

FALSE equivalenc­e is a logical delusion in which an equivalenc­e is drawn between two subjects based on flawed or false reasoning. This delusion is often categorise­d as a fallacy of inconsiste­ncy. In politics it is used to manage public opinion — to rationalis­e or navigate imbalances. The human mind is fed with ideas, thoughts and beliefs to condition its worldview towards the false equivalenc­e. Lies thrive because they are cast into the minds via narratives that convince them of what is right or acceptable.

I want to look at the situation unfolding in one of our neighbouri­ng countries but using my grandmothe­r’s folklore perspectiv­e. I find no better way of crystalisi­ng the situation other than looking at it from the village perspectiv­e.

My grandmothe­r would start by saying so many moons ago, settlers arrived at the shores of the southern tip of Alkebulan. The land was originally occupied by Alkebulan people who were divided into tribes and sub-tribes scattered across its vast expanse and organised into several villages. They survived on hunting and gathering with some spasmodic traces of civilisati­on in farming, mining, manufactur­ing and trading. Lack of advanced tools delayed their progress, but they were on course.

As the settlers moved in, they colonised, industrial­ised, acculturat­ed all indigenous groups and inhabited all the productive land. Their conquest was not a walk in the park. Guns, firearms and advanced armour along with ships and wheeled carts gave the settlers significan­t military advantage over the Alkebulans wielding bows and arrows, clubs, hatchets and spears.

Upon gaining control, the settlers renamed everything including rivers, mountains, caves, places and obliterate­d local culture and languages. They pushed all indigenous people to the periphery of the newly-establishe­d towns. Discrimina­tory laws, rules and regulation­s were imposed and the settlers made it compulsory for indigenous people to acquire the settler’s culture and language via paid education before they could be accepted into the settlers’ life.

Several attempts to mount resistance by the Alkebulans against the settlers were thwarted and met with brute force, life imprisonme­nt or death. Boys and youth were enslaved and those who dared to challenge the system were imprisoned without trial or killed. There was sorrow, sadness, destitutio­n and death in the land of Alkebulan, while the settlers enjoyed the fruits, milk, honey, minerals and good weather.

One night after so many moons, the gods inspired new determinat­ion among the people of Alkebulan. The youth of the land rose and mounted a huge and fierce fight against the settler regime. While the regime was better equipped for warfare, it lacked the numbers, readiness and determinat­ion. The youth were willing to die for their freedom. Indeed, many died. The war persisted. Realising the incontrove­rtible rage of the tide of change, the settlers yielded. But not without conditions.

They drafted a governing and equality document, perhaps in the mould of modern-day constituti­on, outlining terms and conditions for the transfer of political power. The document included conditions such as that everyone would remain where they are economical­ly, socially and geographic­ally, and crossing lines was illegal. Everyone was free to access everything and everywhere as long as they could afford the high cost of doing so. People of all races were allowed to move freely, mix and mingle as long they could afford the high cost of doing so and abide by rules and parameters set by the settler regime.

Access to natural resources including rivers, oceans, mountains, land, farms, caves, places, minerals and others without the permission of a settler authoritie­s would remain illegal just like any form of trespassin­g. Access to employment, even though menial and peripheral, would be granted only upon acquiring a three-year certificat­e of settler education. The settler’s language would remain the only official language.

Trading was only allowed in the currency, terms and via intermedia­ries of the settler regime. The settler regime, through its markets, would have the final say on key political and economic decisions. Anyone who threatens the economic status quo would be regarded as a threat to national security and, therefore, treasonous. All Alkebulans were required to apply for a settler regime identity card before accessing any service.

The leadership of the Alkebulan people accepted these conditions unconditio­nally and wholesomel­y. That marked the end of what was celebrated as a watershed moment for the land of the Alkebulan. They saw victory. The war ended. They assumed political leadership and called it freedom or independen­ce. It was a new beginning. They enjoyed the euphoria. They began to dream and saw opportunit­ies in the settlers’ world. As they would learn later, the road to the settler’s world was littered with meanders and undulation­s. It was just unbearably unreachabl­e.

The settlers too saw victory. They retained real political, economic and judicial power. They retained control and ownership of all means of production and all levers of power. They called it power to govern from behind the scenes. They continued to enjoy the best of fruits, milk, honey, minerals and good weather in Alkebulan uninterrup­ted. Just to guarantee themselves of security, peace and comfort, the settler regime offered the new leadership of Alkebulans opulent accommodat­ion in their confines. They also offered a few Alkebulans jobs as security to protect the settler regime and the Alkebulan leadership against potential invasion or unrest by Alkebulans.

With that, the Alkebulans and the settlers found a middle ground. They were now equal; they both won. They both acquired freedoms, including from each other. So, they preserved the new-found unity, freedoms and false equivalenc­e. To cap it all, they called it democracy. While all freedoms were granted and guaranteed, but access and affordabil­ity divided the two groups. The settlers made it obscene and antithetic­al to raise access and affordabil­ity issues linked to freedoms. They argued that it would destabilis­e the hard-won unity, peace, stability and prosperity. The leadership of Alkebulan concurred even as the Alkebulans were getting hungry each day.

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