Of ‘shitholes’ and ‘shitty’ jibes
President Donald Trump
in his pushback against Michael Wolff’s damaging book, Fire and Fury, touted himself ‘a very stable genius.’ He truly must
be. Because with just another of his famously unguarded weigh-ins, he has
elevated a hitherto unprintable obscenity into a pervasive print word. That
must surely count for a streak of genius! And it wasn’t that he did anything
outside of character when he cast his latest slur on those axes of the world
he’s negatively fixated with; he had never been reputed for moderating his
xenophobic hubris.
The United States leader
was lately reported labelling African nations and the southern American states
of Haiti and El Salvador “shithole countries.” That, he allegedly did, during a
parley on immigration at the White House with a bipartisan group of senators penultimate
week. Although he offered tame denials, saying the language he used at the meeting
“was tough, but this (‘shithole’) was not the language used,” the remark fitted
so well with his personality that many took it as given he did use those words.
And really, antecedent
should be a reliable guide. This latest remark that was first reported by The Washington Post matched with
previous blusters attributed to Mr. Trump. In December 2017, for instance, The New York Times scooped an
immigration meeting that was held in June, where Trump reportedly remonstrated
40,000 visas issued to Nigerians because once they have seen the U.S., they
would never “go back to their huts” in Africa. At that meeting he also deplored
the 15,000 immigrants from Haiti that year, grumbling that they “all have AIDS.”
The White House vigorously denied those claims, but credibility deficit weighed
too heavily on its side.
That is not recalling
the many ‘Trumpscript’ narratives before Trump took office, like when he
allegedly said African-Americans were lazy and good at nothing other than
gallivanting and making love. And there was the alleged rally in Wichita, Kansas
where he purportedly vowed to get rid of Nigerians to make America great again
if he won the presidency, saying: “Why can’t they stay in their own country?
Why? I’ll tell you why: because they are corrupt. Their governments are so
corrupt they rob the people blind and bring it all here to spend. And their
people run away and come down here and take our jobs! We can’t have that!”
With such pedigree, the
‘shithole’ comment that came to light recently isn’t anything new. Only that
nobody ever gets cozy with insults; and so, there’s been sheer outrage in the
global community over Trump’s latest remark – not the least, expectedly, from
those nations he called out.
The African Union (AU)
was “frankly alarmed” by Trump’s statement. “Given the historical reality of
how many Africans arrived in the United States as slaves, this statement flies
in the face of all accepted behavior and practice,” its spokesperson said. Individual
countries as well weighed in. Botswana slammed the American leader as
“reprehensible and racist,” saying it had summoned the U.S. ambassador to
clarify whether Botswana is one of those being regarded as “shitholes.” Haiti’s
envoy to the U.S. called the comment “regrettable” and deriving from “clichés and
stereotypes rather than actual fact.” In the week following the remark, some
countries including Nigeria and South Africa summoned respective American
ambassador for clarification of the Trump statement. Even the United Nations
(UN) human rights office deplored the comment as “shocking and shameful,” and
to boot “racist.”
It is noteworthy, though,
that the U.S. leader’s comment by no means reflected his country’s collective
value. Many Americans openly recoiled at the remark, ruling that it fell far
below the ethical standard of the United States presidency. Among other
interventions, the Haiti envoy to the U.S. was reported saying he had been
“bombarded by emails from the American public apologising.”
There is much that can be
said in deconstructing the extreme narcissism of Mr. Trump, which flies in the
face of even the most basic norms of international engagement. But we really
shouldn’t bother with that, because he will sooner than later return with
another rant in affronting slight of persons whose genetic make-up he seems
simply unable to muster any regard for. With his fixation, the American
president is better left to his self-doting world. Rather, since Nigeria is numbered
among African nations he smeared in one brushstroke as “shithole countries,” we
should turn inwards to interrogate just how ‘shitty’ we may have gotten.
‘(Trump’s) rant should fire
up Nigerian leaders now and into the future to earnestly salvage our country
from the ‘shithole.’’
The Spectator Index headed up on its twitter handle last week with
a gloomy pointer: it reported that Nigeria ran-up after war-torn Yemen as the
world’s lead nations with the worst record of electricity supply in 2017. In a
survey of 137 countries that the Index attributed to the World Economic Forum
(WEF), Nigeria ranked in infamy ahead of natural disaster-prone Haiti and
conflict-ridden Lebanon, which came in at the third and fourth places. Insurgency
wracked Pakistan fared better at the 23rd position while South
Africa held the 41st spot. If you wanted some guide on how this
survey profile impacted practically, you got one in the Central Bank’s business
expectations report issued last week, which showed that 62.6 percent of
surveyed firms cited poor electricity supply as a major constraint to their
operations in the fourth quarter of 2017.
And electricity is by no
means the only factor locating Nigeria on the backwater of civilisation, going
by earlier tweets on The Spectator Index’s
handle. A survey attributed to the United Nations (UN) placed this county second
in infant mortality ranking with 89 deaths to 1,000 live births. In the survey,
Nigeria trailed only Angola having 96 deaths, and fared worse than Pakistan (69
deaths), Kenya (59), India (41) and South Africa (38). Another WEF survey on
infrastructure quality in 2017 placed Nigeria at the 131st spot
among 137 countries. Other than developed nations in that survey that
expectedly ranked better, Nigeria also trailed Turkey, Indonesia, Mexico,
Pakistan and Brazil, among others.
Yet another 2017 survey
of math and science education quality in 137 countries by the WEF placed
Nigeria at the 118th spot. And the country ranked 127th
in security out of 137 countries in another 2017 survey by the WEF. In yet
another survey by the International Telecoms Union (ITU), 25 percent of the
Nigerian population were found connected to the Internet in 2017, compared with
other relatively disadvantaged countries like Brazil (59%), Turkey (58%), China
(53%) and India (29%). And that isn’t mentioning the challenge of corruption
going by the last Perception Index (2016) published by Transparency International,
which placed Nigeria 44th behind North Korea, Somalia, South Sudan, Iraq
and Zimbabwe; but ahead of Iran, Russia, China, India, Turkey and South Africa
among others.
These and many more
survey reports had previously been announced by The Spectator Index. And just to be sure, the Index isn’t by any
means a political or partisan platform. It frequently announces survey reports
on sundry issues including global unemployment, HIV infection rate, economies
and GDP growth rate and, indeed, popularity surveys on prominent world leaders.
And so, even though we
could justly take umbrage with Trump’s racist rant, that isn’t what we really
need. The rant should rather fire up Nigerian leaders now and into the future
to earnestly salvage our country from the ‘shithole.’
Comments