Nigeria today is the consequence of the choices we made in the past—political, economic, and social. When we ruptured the First Republic with our political intolerance and victimisation of opponents, we opened the gates for political violence in the Middle Belt and Western Region. That turbulence provided the opportunity for various shades of military governments, a civil war, a shift from parliamentary to presidential rule, and a subversion of the negotiated federal constitution that was the foundation of our independence.
When we chose to enthrone corruption as a way of life, we enthroned mediocrity and drove away merit. As a result, we watch our resources squandered, our institutions weakened, and our youths forced into despair.
When we chose to ignore education, we created a generation of half-prepared leaders and citizens, breeding unemployment, poverty, insecurity, and hopelessness. Similarly, when we chose short-term ethnic and sectional gains over the long-term national interest, we planted seeds of suspicion, disunity, and underdevelopment.
Choices always carry consequences—positive or negative. A nation that chooses discipline, integrity, and justice builds a culture of progress, peace, and prosperity. A people that choose hatred, greed, and intolerance inevitably reap conflict, poverty, and decline.
The challenge before Nigeria today is to rethink our choices. We must learn from our history and realise that the destiny of a nation is never determined by fate but by the collective decisions of its people and leaders. If we choose to be responsible, patriotic, and visionary, the consequence will be a Nigeria that works for all. If we continue in the path of corruption, impunity, and short-sighted politics, we will condemn future generations to the same cycles of crisis.
Therefore, let us weigh our choices carefully. Let us place the nation above self, merit above mediocrity, and justice above prejudice. The Nigeria of our dreams will not fall from the sky—it will be the natural consequence of the right choices we make today.
CHOICES AND CONSEQUENCES BY DR. YEMI FAROUNBI
