As time passes, the reality of the imperial intent of the Glasgow Flop26 edicts are slowly being exposed, and African voices continue to rise.
From Nigeria, ‘Tope Fasua, an economist who formed his own party to run for President in 2018, writes a strong denunciation, titled, “Climate Agenda: Will Black Africa Be Forever Dependent?” A long op-ed, it was published by the Premium Times, a paper with known Soros connections, not known to challenge the establishment. Fasua strikes hard at his contemporaries for so easily accepting the “depopulation” of climate change edicts honing in on the common factor: FEAR (caps in original). Ultimately, Fasua says, “we should consolidate our friendship with China, Turkey and whichever nations show us some respect and have some genuine interest in our progress.”
From South Africa, Rhodes Scholar John Kane-Berman, former CEO of Institute of Race Relations, writes on “The Injustice of ‘Climate Justice.’” Again chastising his countrymen for their willingness to accept servitude, Kane-Berman writes, “South Africans have long berated the iniquities of imperialism, but it seems that we are happy to comply with Western eco-imperialism. The policies that rich green governments wish to inflict upon developing countries, South Africa included, will do far more harm than the travel ban that has caused such an outcry.” “Climate justice,” he says, is nothing more than “a nice term for a set of arrogant, economically damaging, cynical, cruel, and inhuman policies.”