How long do you think it takes to change culture. For a real sustainable culture change, I say it takes long time. And that is what history tell us.
What does history tell us about corruption. You may not like it but history of corruption (including in Chicago and Britain) tells us it solves itself as long as the economy is growing. So it must be frustrating to watch endemic corruption ravage the country but unlike you, my history lessons, tell me to check the gdp growth, and if people are become more wealthier (could be an extra chicken this year) in spite of
corruption, there is hope that in 100yrs (history say so..not 5yrs)...corruption will no longer exist.
There are of course stuff that can do with immediate actions...easy quick wins...but some of the more serious ones like tribalism, corruption,poverty, inequality and insecurity cannot be solved easily.
Sorry but I draw blank in anything Cambodia. I only remember it for heroic US movies for some war there with Veitnam. In fact Cambodia in our place referred to pit latrines...given the US evil shelling that was going there.
Pundit,
I agree that history has a lot to do with Africa's condition. But I cannot use it to excuse the weekly corruption scandals plaguing Kenya for instance. That one vooke will tell you it's the genes. I will just call it a bad culture.
There is a thread on this forum about Cambodia. Because it's a country whose recent history mirrors just about any that you can pick from Africa. A country that did not suffer the relative isolation in its ancient history that sub-Saharan Africa did.
What I am saying is that most current problems have more immediate and ready explanations than ancient history.
Chicago and Britain were manufacturing things that the world needed. There is still corruption in Chicago, but it's not a viable avenue. Not because of GDP, but because it is costly.
If your theory is valid, then corruption did not emerge suddenly Kenya. And it will go away with time and GDP growth.
Looking at pre-colonial Kenya. Some obvious questions. Was Arap Samoei stealing from the Nandi? How about the laibons? Were Kikuyu elders thieves?
Put another way. When did corruption become acceptable to the Negro?
I don't know the answer to that. But I think it happens in less than a hundred years. It takes hold because it is rewarding.
I can't place it anywhere in a precolonial context. Is it because the African was relatively content?
How long has the African really been incorrigibly corrupt? I think it's a few decades max.
It seems to me that the corrupt behavior comes with the modern state. Maybe they pick it from colonial administrators.
The colonial state was built to exploit the native. Not to bring him up. It was okay to rob the people.
It seems that the Negro inherits that without changing the purpose of the state. Either way, the behavior cannot be older than 100 years.