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Reflective stickers: Prelude
to mark of the beast?
Crispin Oduobuk
crispinoduobuk@gmail.com> Sept 2, 2006
"The very next thing may be a directive
from the almighty Road Safety that everybody who wishes to drive must wear
a blue overall with reflective name tags above the left breast pocket and
little bells tied to the right wrist!"
Please close your eyes and read the following special
announcement: "From now henceforth, all motorists wishing to ply Nigerian
roads must paint their vehicles green-white-green. In addition, the number
999 must be boldly written on the upper right corner of both the front and
back bumpers."
Sounds ridiculous, not so? Well, brace yourself; we may
get there sooner than you know. And why not? In a country of lots of
apparently blind people like ours, semi-blind folks in all manner of
uniforms need only wave some document from the Federal Government Printer
and the rest will bow down and worship!
Hoodwinking on a gargantuan scale!
If this is not the case, how do we, a country of
incredibly intelligent people, explain the inane reflective car sticker
scam being perpetrated by the Federal Road Safety Corps with little
resistance from a populace that ought to guard its freedoms vigilantly?
Is there a vehicle that comes out of the factory
without some reflective point on its rear lights? What is wrong with
seeing that those are in order? Must we allow this
'fall-in-line-because-Big-Brother-is-watching-you' attitude to take over
our lives as if we're now citizens of George Orwell's phenomenal 1984?
The very next thing may be a directive from the almighty Road Safety that
everybody who wishes to drive must wear a blue overall with reflective
name tags above the left breast pocket and little bells tied to the right
wrist! Now where would this drivers' uniform be obtained? Your guess is
correct!
A dangerous precedent
All this tom-foolery reminds your correspondent of
something once gleaned in a long-forgotten book. It seems that circa 1928,
the royal Japanese police force of the era created a department for
dangerous thoughts. How those with dangerous thoughts were supposed to be
fished out, one couldn't be bothered to find out. It seemed dangerous
enough that the very idea of a department for dangerous thoughts had not
only been considered but was brought into existence. How many of the
Japanese emperor's supposed enemies would have met their downfall on
account of the department of dangerous thoughts is an open-ended matter.
Why is this important here? Well, a little bird has
been whispering in this corner of conspiracies in certain quarters to
establish a department to arrest those with intentions to drive
dangerously. How those with intentions to drive dangerously would be
identified isn't a big secret. You need only look at their bumpers: No
reflective stickers and you've got it—those are the very ones with
intentions to drive dangerously! A simple enough arithmetic, not so? Oh
what interesting times we live in!
The devil's advocate?
Why is there a possibility that this seemingly absurd
notion is already being put into action in these shores without anyone
crying blue murder? Well, because we all tend to act as if it's somebody
else's problem. "Oh, I'm too busy!" "I've got to attend to my business."
"I have family issues to deal with!"
Good for you, people. But watch out, soon we may all
wear blue overalls, have a bell tied to our wrists and have all our names
prefaced by something weird like NIG/999/dash, dash, dash. Is this too
extreme for you? Is your correspondent too much of a devil's advocate?
Well.
Recall that several months ago, your correspondent
wrote: "More than greed, unwillingness on the part of most Nigerians to be
provoked enough into any sort of action is why the third term agenda will
succeed." That the third term agenda failed was largely because many
Nigerians were provoked enough by the temerity of the plan to express
their anger in various ways to their representatives who attentively shot
the agenda down. So is there a point in killing an ant with a sledge
hammer? You bet there is! Hit that ant too softly, it would develop
resistance and before you know it, it's a mighty ant!
Apathy! Apathy! Apathy!
So why are more people not screaming publicly about
this car sticker scam? Again, let's stroll down memory lane as we did
above because it's "typical, when you think of it. Nigerians, for the most
part, are incredibly docile and cowardly. We are cheated in our places of
work; our landlords fleece us; our leaders literally sell us out at every
turn. Yet what do we do? Nothing!
"We fold our hands. We murmur and grumble. We pray! If
a man cannot fight for justice for himself in his own place of work, how
is he ever going to find the courage to fight for collective justice? You
see it now? Apathy! Thieves could auction Nigeria inch by inch—and they
are those that would argue that the process is already on—and her citizens
would shrug and carry on as if nothing untoward has happened."
Too much of a good thing is...
To that you may add the fact that we may well be turned
into slaves in our own land and many of us would still shrug and continue
worrying about only our families and businesses.
Lest the point be mistaken, this should be made
abundantly clear: Every vehicle already comes with reflective points on
its rear lights.
Secondly, there is indeed too much of a supposedly good
thing—it obviously becomes a bad thing! Thirdly, letting government
agencies hide behind loosely-worded enabling acts to corral and herd us
like cattle may very well confer that status on us. And if they're already
doing it with stickers, what's to stop them from doing it with numbers? So
now open your eyes, turn 999 upside down and give yourself something to
think about.
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