By Reporter
The foundation for the building of any strong nation combines a perfect mixture of government and private sector influence in national development and discourse. The actual concept of democracy was simply an ideology created to empower the private sector and reduce the influence of government in economic activities by dictating whose policies aid private sector growth and independence. The full text of these ideals never seemed to have reached the shores of our beloved Uganda, the fax machine which delivered the document was obviously out of ink as all was seen by Ugandans is the word-Government.
Government Etuyambe is our national anthem in Uganda while we enjoy everything that comes from the United States of America, a nation built and controlled 90% by the private sector. “The government of Uganda has not brought any meaningful development” says the man on the streets of Kampala, enjoying seeing mansions in Nigerian movies not knowing they were built 100% by private sector efforts. He sits there thinking Nigerian government is much better than his not knowing that Nigerians have no security at all, can’t be outside later than 7pm at night, have no electricity in their homes, no running water yet command the largest and most vibrant economy in Africa. Can you imagine if they also had Ugandan government?
The 10 Point Program by President Museveni is by far the most clear cut blueprint on nation building with focus on private sector participation in economic development yet it seems the only aspect of it that Ugandans know is …government shall support you. We are so concerned about what the neighbor will say that we just don’t act here. The leper by the pool of Bethesda is a classic comparison to Uganda as he kept complaining for 30 years while others were getting healed by the same pool.
There is ABSOLUTELY NOTHING happening outside of Kampala, Uganda. The rest of the country is just a combination of undeveloped land. Ugandans see investment in their own community as the responsibility of the government or the opportunity for a foreigner to invest. Ugandans have more confidence to invest in another country than in Uganda, a nation that has had real peace for more than 30 years. A nation that borders countless others with opportunity for market expansion, a nation with the most unbelievable weather for an African country, one with the most fertile land and one whose leader will do anything for. How someone doesn’t want to invest here is beyond belief!
I am calling on all Ugandans to turn a new leaf as we provide private sector opportunities to bring prosperity into the country. It is for your own good that you heed this call and join us to overturn this ugly report or watch black people from various nations including the US, UK, Nigeria, Jamaica, etc come here and make you a foreigner in your own country.
We are a leading Africa’s first Economic War and it will culminate in the establishment of the Black Wall Street in Uganda. The Black Wall Street is the engine of capital generation for the industrialization of the African continent through the pro development corporations listed on it and the dividends they pay through the risk-free investment scheme of the Black Wall Street. The Black Wall Street is designed to rival Wall Street in New York which is currently a $21 Trillion dollar market value by the addition of more pro-development corporations and more dividend recipients from all over the developing world. The Black Wall Street was seeded by the signature ”Tablets and Dollars” program of Development Channel, Uganda Poverty Alleviation Program (UPAP). The Black Wall Street community is to be built on 2.5 Square miles of land and will consist of 11 of the highest skyscrapers in Africa with over 10,000 live-in work force drawn from the African American community where the name Black Wall Street was derived from a tragic racial past.
The Black Wall Street will make Uganda, the economic capital of Africa and the developing world, the only status, the legacy of President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni deserves!.
Watch the space for the announcement of the ground breaking of the Black Wall Street.
Charles N. Lambert, Nigerian born British Citizen, Leader of Africa’s first Economic War adopted Uganda as his home country in November 2017.