Connect with us

Africa

Taxation Without Representation -By Dr Austin Orette

In a normal democracy, taxation without representation should never be tolerated. They must be voted out of office. We have a responsibility and duty to use our voting power to fight unjust laws. Taxation without representation is unjust. Those voted into power will never respect the citizens until the citizens learn to punish errant politicians by voting them out of office. This responsibility is sacred and must be exercised with diligence.

Published

on

Dr Austin Orette

The grandiosity of Nigerians when they discuss events and situations can be very funny. If the leaders use this kind of creativity in proffering solutions, we may be able to solve some of the problems that plague Nigeria perennially.

There seems to be a sublime affectation for new lingos when the system is being set to punish Nigerians. It is a kind of Orwellian speak.

Recently, there was no electricity throughout the country. The usual culprit and government spoke; people came out to tell us the power failure was due to the collapse of the National grid. Does it really matter what is collapsing? This is just an attempt by some government bureaucrats to sound intelligent.

Intelligence is becoming a borrowed commodity from the IMF or World Bank. What does it mean when you tell Nigerians that the national grid collapsed? Is that supposed to be a reassurance, or it is said to give the assurance that they know something about the anemic electricity, and we should get used to the darkness. This is a language that is vague and beckons the consumer to stop complaining. Does that statement mean anything to Nigerians who pay bills and don’t see the electricity they paid for? If they see it, it comes with an irregular voltage that destroys their newly purchased appliances. Just tell or stay quiet like in the past.

Telling us that a grid collapse is a lie. We have no national grid. Do these people know how silly their language sounds? Nigeria produces less than 10,000 megawatts of electricity for a population of 200 million people. How do you permutate this to give constant electricity to 200 million people? It is an insult to call this low output a national grid. What is so national about using a generator to supply electricity to 200 million people? It is simple mathematics. If you calculate this to the minute, it should not surprise you that every Nigerian will receive electricity for the duration of the blink of an eye. They are paying for total darkness, and someone is telling them they have an electricity grid.

Advertisement

If you can call the 10,000-megawatt national grid collapsed, it means you don’t have the mind set to solve the electricity problem in Nigeria.

To put it in perspective is to understand the basic fact that the electrical output of Nigeria is pre-industrial. Without acknowledging this fact, we will never find solutions as every mediocre will come and confuse Nigeria with lingos that make them sound important.

It is very shameful for those in the know to always use grandiose language to obfuscate the real issues.

South Africa with a population of sixty million produces about 200,000 megawatts of electricity daily. Nigeria produces less than 10,000 megawatts. Why South Africa makes it easy to lift the poor from poverty, Nigeria is trying to tax the poor into poverty.

The architects of the new tax plan saw the poor as rich because they could afford a generator.

Advertisement

A non-existent subsidy was removed, and the price of fuel went through the roof. Now the government says they are rich. What will they get in return for this tax extraction? Why do successive Nigerian governments always think the best way to develop Nigeria is to slap the poor into poverty? What are the avenues for upward mobility when youth corps members are suddenly seen as rich taxpayers? Do these people know how difficult it is to start a business in Nigeria?

After all the rigmarole from Abuja to my village, I cannot get a government certificate without a-shake down from government bureaucrats and area boys. The government that is so unfriendly to business wants to tax my non-existing businesses. Are these people in their right state of mind? Why do they think that taxing the poor is their best revenue plan? A plan like this can only come from a group of people who have no inkling of what Nigerians are going through. People can’t eat and the government is asking them to share their meager rations with potbellied people in Abuja.

Teach the people how to fish, then you can share in their harvest. If an individual does what the government is doing to Nigerians, it will be called robbery, and the individual will be in prison. When the government taxes people, there is a reciprocal exchange. What is being done in Nigeria does not represent fair exchange.

Nigerians have never gotten anything good from their government except individual wealth that is doled out in Abuja for the selected few.

The question is, will Nigerians have a good electricity supply? NO. Will they have security of persons and properties? No. Will they have improved health care? NO. Will there be good roads? No. Will they have good schools and good education? No.

Advertisement

Taxation is not good governance. A policy like this should never be rushed without adequate studies. Once again, our legislators have let us down. They have never shown the people the reason they were elected and to be re-elected. They are not playing their roles as the watchdog and representatives of the people. Anyone who voted for this tax bill deserves to lose their positions as Senators and Members of the House of Representatives.

We are not in a military regime anymore. Nigerians must start learning how to exercise their franchise. This taxation issue must be litigated at the ballot box. The members of the National Assembly have shown by their assent that they don’t represent the people.

In a normal democracy, taxation without representation should never be tolerated. They must be voted out of office. We have a responsibility and duty to use our voting power to fight unjust laws. Taxation without representation is unjust. Those voted into power will never respect the citizens until the citizens learn to punish errant politicians by voting them out of office. This responsibility is sacred and must be exercised with diligence.

Dr Austin Orette writes from Houston, Texas

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Oluwafemi Popoola Oluwafemi Popoola
Africa6 hours ago

The Mirabel Confession and Simi’s Reckoning -By Oluwafemi Popoola

What complicates this narrative for me is that I genuinely admire Simi’s artistry. There is something profoundly disarming about Simi’s...

Sahara-Reporters Sahara-Reporters
Africa1 day ago

Two Decades of Truth Without Borders: Celebrating 20 Years of Sahara Reporters’ Fearless Journalism -By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo

It has reported on political crises, economic developments, and cultural shifts, providing alternative perspectives on African and global affairs. Its...

Phebe Ejinkeonye-Christian Phebe Ejinkeonye-Christian
Africa1 day ago

From Inclusion To Action: Making TVET Work For Women -By Ejinkeonye-Christian Phebe

Moving from inclusion to action requires a shift in perspective – from viewing women’s participation in TVET as an optional...

Hope Uzodimma Hope Uzodimma
Africa1 day ago

Gov Hope Uzodinma: Harassment of Joseph Ottih and Family Must Stop -By Leo Igwe

Again this is a case of state religious persecution. The police forcefully removed his Agwu. The Ottihs have the right...

Oluwaleye Adedoyin Grace Oluwaleye Adedoyin Grace
Africa2 days ago

Social Media Trials VS. Due Process In Nigerian Law: The Mirabel Case -By Oluwaleye Adedoyin Grace

From a legal perspective, I present these observations as my personal analysis and assumption the final determination rests with the...

Tony Agbons 24.12.24 Tony Agbons 24.12.24
Africa2 days ago

Standing on the Shoulders of Giants -By Tony Osakpamwan Agbons

In building a society where progress and the good of all is the gold standard, the moral barometer has to...

Voters Voters
Africa2 days ago

2027 Is Around the Corner — Must Nigeria Fear Electoral Violence Again? -By Collins Faida Ezra

As 2027 approaches, Nigeria must make a choice. Political leaders must commit publicly to peaceful campaigns. Security agencies must act...

Forgotten Dairies2 days ago

The Republic of City Boys: When Politics Becomes Playground -By Vitus Ozoke, PhD

The tragedy is not that these men are boys. The tragedy is that they seem proud of it. Until that...

Osun State Osun State
Forgotten Dairies2 days ago

Still On The 2026 Osun Governorship Election -By Abiodun Akaraogun

The APC candidate - a two-time Commissioner for Finance and former Managing Director/CEO of the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA)...

Nigeria-Election Nigeria-Election
Forgotten Dairies2 days ago

2027—And They Will Deceive Us Again -By Prince Charles Dickson Ph.D

And the children; my God, the children are not in school. They trek to the minefields instead, those treacherous places...