It really disgraceful to read some of you attribute race to stuff. That is just nonsense. There is nothing white about being ethical, no-corrupt, discipline and have so called maintenance culture. These are stuff that are learnt.
You are well within your rights to complain about "disgraceful" writing. But perhaps people are simply going by the evidence.
In my case, I wrote about the lack of a "maintenance culture". If you here evidence to the contrary, then let's have it. To start you off, let me give you an example, to which you may respond:
Take the SGR. The Japanese consultant hired by the EAC had this to say to them: "Your obsession with gauge is misplaced; what you folks need to work on is maintenance. You can learn from us there.". [And he then gave examples.] And the facts: When the SGR is complete, it will do at most 120 kph. Now, once you exclude the "bullet train lines", Japan has mostly narrow-gauge lines---thousands of kms---on which they do up to 130 kph. Question: has the railway lines Kenya got at independence been an example of anything other that eating and a lack of maintenance? Last I heard, South Africans (or other externals) had to brought in to keep those lines going.
Let's have your argument for that case. And then proceed to the general case where you argue that "maintenance" is not an issue for us.
Over centuries they've got better.
And, surely, in centuries we too will be better.
But why should it take centuries? We don't have to go through what they went through for "centuries". Today we can read the same books as they do, access the same information and accumulated knowledge as they do (especially thanks to their invention known as the internet), send our kids to sit in the same classes as they do, etc. We can (and do) learn the same engineering, law, medicine, systems of governance, etc. as they do, benefitting (one hopes) from their accumulated knowledge and experience. And precisely because, rather than start from scratch, we get directly to the products of centuries of effort elsewhere. Why, then, should we have to wait for centuries?
Was exactly is it that we lack that means we must wait for "centuries"? [The comments that you object to may be seen as a partial answer to the latter question.]
We benefit form centuries of history in other places, technology being the most obvious example. Why can't we do so in other cases? For example, Kenyan law is the result of centuries of legal development in England. So is the basic civil service. So is ... Etc. etc. etc. We are not starting "from scratch", so why the need for centuries? Today, every Kenyan, from His Excellency in Stat House to the
manamba in Nyalgunga has something to say on the social and economic evil that is virulent corruption? For a solution, what will the "centuries" bring that we don't already have?
In any case, our own "visions" don't anticipate waiting forever. In Kenya we have a (pie-in-the-sky) Vision 2030 (
not Vision 3020). Fundamentally quite possible, but it won't happen. Why is it pie-in-the-sky that won't happen? Why is it that when it comes to enjoying the benefits of centuries of scientific and technological development elsewhere, we are ready to do so (and actually do so) right now, but when it comes to how we govern ourselves and run our daily lives, it's "look! it took them centuries to get there!"? Schoolkids with no food, no classrooms, dying of diarrhea and what-not, ... but, looky looky!, they will all have laptops!!! [What is missing there?] A mobile phone in the pocket, but the stomach is empty. Can't run a basic railway line? No problem; let it go to hell, and then borrow money to build a spanking new one. Dot, dot, dot.
I think it pains all of us to say "we can do this, but we are messed up in this and that way". But to my mind, it is the first step in changing and moving forward. We simply have to acknowledge these unpleasant realities and then work for change. Simply insisting that the reality is different won't do. People can talk all they want about "Africa Rising", Africans are as capable as anyone else, blah blah blah, but where's the matching reality? We should move from what we say for our self-esteem and start working on a matching reality that will be self-evident. And that reality needs to change----not as a "show" to the rest of the world, but because Africans desperately need the change. We are like alcoholics: we need to give up the self-comforting narrative that justifies the bottle and face a hard, sober reality ... and engage in reconstruction. In compute geek-speak, bootstrap the thing instead of moving the screen to where the light is better.
The only way forward for us is to change ourselves. And it is not a matter of technology, or climate, or help from others (too much about turning West or East for "help"), or centuries of this and that, or whatever. We can do it right now, if we are minded to. Which we are not.