Tuesday 27 November 2012

THE THOUGHTS OF A GREAT PRESIDENT AND A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE


THE THOUGHTS OF A GREAT PRESIDENT AND A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE


Sow a thought, and you reap an action; sow an action, and you reap a habit; sow a habit, and you reap a character; sow a character, and you reap a destiny – Charles Reade.

A person’s thought is central to that person’s actions, habits, character, and destiny. Consequently, a great or failed destiny flows from a person’s thought. Thus the thought of a president or a potential president is a good basis for electorates to know the kind of a president that person would be. While admitting that good thoughts alone do not guarantee prudent and wise exercise of a political power; it can never be glossed over. In this article, we will review certain thoughts of Nelson Mandela of South Africa and Jimmy Carter of the USA to make out how their thoughts contributed to their great leadership exploits.

Firstly, great presidents acknowledge the truth that greatness is not in duration but in depth. This means that one’s affective attitude (such as passion, courage, confidence and a commitment to principles) towards the achievement of that person’s God-given purpose is more important than the amount of time it takes to accomplish that purpose. Studies have shown that many people select leaders who fight for what is right, often under very difficult circumstances and who also care for the needs of their people. This means that great leaders selflessly fight for right causes with the aim of securing the good welfare of their people. To such leaders, holding a political office is a means to ending the right causes they fought for. Ex-president Nelson Mandela’s name is usually published alongside true greats like Mother Teresa, Ghandi, Martin Luther King Jnr. and others because of his good thoughts. He once said, “When my ultimate aim was achieved, it was time to move on to a higher calling. Ironically, the day I was inaugurated into office as president, I knew my job was already done and therefore began preparing to leave. In that regard, you may say that my very first day in office was also my last day. In my mind, I had already begun packing out”. Unfortunately, this thought has eluded many so-called political leaders particularly in Africa. Consequently, they have believed the lie that spending many years in a political office is a guarantee that they will accomplish their purposes. On the contrary, they usually achieve the opposite!

Great presidential candidates on their part focus on their God-given visions, not criticisms. Although criticisms of all forms can be turned into political assets, a true potential president will primarily focus on her vision. This was so with candidate Jimmy Carter. Carter had good thoughts about criticisms when seeking the highest political office of USA. He acknowledged both the good and the bad twists of criticisms and determined to keep his eyes on his vision. At one breath, he saw some positivity in some criticisms marshaled against him: “I want to be tested in the most severe way. I want the American people to understand my character and weaknesses, the kind of person I am.” He was however quick to deduce the real motives of his destructive critics in the following words: “My critics don’t want to stop Carter. They want to stop the reforms I am committed to. They want to stop the people of this country from regaining control of their government. They want to preserve the status quo, to preserve politics as usual, to maintain at all costs their entrenched, unresponsive, bankrupt, irresponsible political power”. Therefore, a real presidential candidate sees criticisms as a test of one’s character and vision. Focusing on one’s vision in the midst of intense criticisms is central to greatness.

Secondly, great presidents continue to keep in mind that they are still human beings no matter the feats they attain or the great heights they reach. This trait enables them to acknowledge their weaknesses and yet be committed to their visions. Besides, it enables them to accept the truth that they cannot take the place of God in human affairs. That God, like governments, is the only person who can do for the people what they cannot do for themselves. Thus real presidents concentrate on what is humanly possible and trust God for the impossible things. Unfortunately, some so-called leaders bestow upon themselves titles such as “Messiah”, and “Saviour”. Nelson Mandela is among the few exception: ‘While it is nice to be appreciated, I shudder at the continuous reference to me as “living legend” or “Secular Saint” or any other such references and the near-worshipful adulation that invariably seems to creep in with it. That was one of the things that worried me – to be raised to the position of a semi-god – because then you are no longer a human being. I wanted to be known as Mandela, a man with weaknesses, some of which are fundamental, but a man who is committed’.

Great presidential candidates are not afraid of electoral ‘defeat’.  Common sense makes it obvious that only one person can be a president of any nation at a time. Regardless of their convictions and visions, real presidential candidates are more than willing to concede ‘defeat’ if they are not elected. They consider their “rejection” as a ‘de-feat’, never a defeat. ‘De-feat’ in the sense that they were not given the opportunity to attain some desired feats. In other words, electoral defeat only denotes a lost opportunity to magnify one’s influence. “I am running for president,” Carter said, “because I have a vision of a new America, a different America, a better America, and it is not shared by those who are trying so hard to stop my campaign…I see an America with a president who does not govern by vetoes and negativism, but with vigor and vision and positive, affirmative, aggressive leadership.” Despite his good thoughts for America, candidate Jimmy Carter was willing to accept the ‘de-feat’ of his vision for America: “…I feel like I’m doing the best I can, and if I get elected president, I’ll have a chance to magnify my own influence, maybe in a beneficial way. If I don’t get elected president, I’ll go back to Plains”. Mitt Romney is commended for conceding ‘defeat’ in one of the most aggressive electoral contests in living memory. For Kofi Annan, the “willingness of a loser to accept defeat gracefully, and the victor to show respect for the losing side, is one of the hallmarks of a stable democracy”.

A person’s thought is a replica of that person. This is because the thoughts of any person denote that person’s actions, habits, character and destiny! Messrs Nelson Mandela and Jimmy Carter are among the great presidents this world has ever witnessed. The secret to their great leadership heights is that they had good thoughts concerning the presidency of their respective nations. We must therefore scrutinize the thoughts of any person who is seeking to govern the affairs of Ghana. Remember, a person’s thought is imbedded in his actions, character and habits.

Richard Obeng Mensah, author of If You Think of Your Opposition You Lose Your Position .The writer is an award-winning author of 7 books and over 250 articles.  He is also a certified life and leadership coach, a lawyer, a legal academic and a blogger.  Blog: www.richard-obeng-mensah.blogspot.com   Email: richardobengmensah@gmail.com © 27 November 2012.

Saturday 10 November 2012

VOTE FOR HONESTY


VOTE FOR HONESTY

Election is a formal decision making. The decision is based on choosing one person or group of persons instead of other(s). The people to choose from may all appear capable and daring.  It is also about choosing between two good or two evils, but usually not between the obvious good and obvious bad. It is said that the good has some bad stuff and the bad also has some good stuff. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, a poet, wrote, “There are two kinds of people on earth today, just two kinds of people, no more, I say. Not the good and the bad, for ’tis well understood. That the good are half-bad and the bad are half-good…Not the sinner and saint, for it’s well understood…the two kinds of people on earth I mean are the people who lift, and the people who lean”. This means that it is better to choose people who can honestly add positive value to your personality and society as a whole. Lean people are energy suckers and unproductive, avoid them! Choose honest people who are lifters. But if you were to choose between a lifter and an honest person, go for the latter.

Nature abhors leadership vacuum so the electorates must make a decision. Certainly, there is no wisdom choosing from two obvious devils. Choosing from the two obvious good is also very difficult. However, as already pointed out, the choice is usually between the two less obvious good. One great guide to the electorates in making this decision is the issue of honesty. “Honesty,” so goes a good saying, “is the best policy”. Honesty truly is the chief of policies. This means personalities or policies on their own are not valuable if they are devoid of honesty.

Honesty is the quality of being fair, morally upright, and truthful. And a real partisan politician or political party must possess this quality. Governing a nation or representing a constituent demands more than political manifestoes, policies and a team to execute them. It is more about being honest in words and deeds. Without honesty, a team will loot or mismanage resources or both; political manifestoes are mere slogans; and policies remain theories. For ex-president Jimmy Carter, the people in any nation deserve to have government as good, honest and moral as they are. It is said that more than eighteen months before he won the presidential nomination, Carter travelled the fifty states, preaching the need for moral revival in high places. The basic issue of 1976, in the view of the Democratic nominee, was the decay of morality and decline of honesty in government. He said, “The people of the country feel they’ve been betrayed. They don’t understand why something is going on in our nation’s government that is a matter of embarrassment and shame. The competence of government is not an accepted characteristic any more. No matter what a person hopes to do ultimately in life, no matter what his top hope or aspiration might be, he feels, generally, that Washington is an obstacle to the realization of that hope, rather than an asset to be tapped in the future, in the consummation of that hope”.

Ghanaians indeed “deserve to have government as good, honest and moral as they are”. The political system of Ghana should no more be made to be viewed as a breeding ground for greed, oppression, corruption, political unrest and dishonesty! An election is more than infrastructure, access to education, free quality education, agriculture, health-care, industrialization or employment. We must address the decay of morality and honesty in our government and society in general. We need moral revival in both high and low places. The political system of Ghana must be an asset, not an obstacle. Dear reader, vote for honesty. You can know them by their fruits, not policies!


Richard Obeng Mensah, author of If You Think of Your Opposition You Lose Your Position .The writer is an award-winning author of 7 books and over 250 articles.  He is also a certified life and leadership coach, a lawyer, a legal academic and a blogger.  Blog: www.richard-obeng-mensah.blogspot.com   Email: richardobengmensah@gmail.com © 10 November 2012. Updated on 7 December 2020.

Monday 5 November 2012

TOWARDS FAIR, FREE AND PEACEFUL GENERAL ELECTION


TOWARDS FAIR, FREE AND PEACEFUL GENERAL ELECTION

Ghana is a sovereign nation; not a political party!

Elections have been a principal means of selecting leaders in most nations. It follows that elections should generally raise the hopes and aspirations of the electorates. This is because they provide the means for the electorates to either retain the respective leaders representing them or vote such representatives out of office. Thus elections create the needed atmosphere for the electorates to judge the stewardship of their representatives. They mark the tenure of office of one regime and begin another. Therefore, election periods should enhance retrospective reflections. Besides, it should create an atmosphere of love and unity instead of fear!

Fairness is vital to every peaceful election. To achieve fairness, all stakeholders need to honestly demonstrate impartiality. Impartiality generates confidence and trust. We can demonstrate impartiality by seeking the best interests of Ghana, not any political party. Ghana is a sovereign nation; not a political party! All political parties exist because of Ghana. They exist to influence the electorates with their best policy alternatives and implementation machinery. Stakeholders such as state institutions and the media should, for example, impartially educate or inform the electorates on such policies and machinery. Voting decision, like choosing a life partner, must be based on adequate information, never on emotions, ‘love’ and sentiments towards a particular political party or candidate. Besides, voting decision should be devoid of ethnocentrism.

Freedom is another key factor to ensuring peaceful election. There should be an atmosphere of freedom before, during and after the elections. The days where security forces were used to intimidate electorates, especially those in the hinterlands, are over! It must be noted that security officers are neither electoral officers nor political party agents. Their presence in any electoral area should safeguard the freedom and safety of the electorates as well as the election machinery, and nothing else. Security officers should always operate in the consciousness that they only exist to protect lives and property. Besides, right information breeds freedom. Freedom is all about knowing the truth. The NCCE and all other stakeholders must disseminate the right information to the electorates to inform their decisions. Political parties should also desist from negatively influencing some electorates with money, ‘gifts’, and dirty propaganda machinery.

Love and unity are central to any peaceful election. Real peace is a product of love and unity among the populace. Praying for the peace of Ghana is good but prayer alone does not guarantee peace. If prayer alone holds the key to peace Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Rwanda would have escaped their unfortunate national wreckages. Prayer is most effectual where love and unity exist among the populace. All peace-making agents of Ghana should therefore emphasize on the need for all electorates to relate with one another as one people with a common destiny. Every real election should unite people towards a common aspiration, never to sow discord and disaffection among them. The best political party is not necessarily the party with juicy manifesto but the one whose actions and inactions enhances peace and prosperity of Ghana. Any real political party or partisan politician primarily focuses on free, fair and peaceful election; electoral victory is secondary. Any electoral victory outside these factors is a whitewash robbery. Remember that if you get to any position under qualified you survive there by cheating. What a shame!

Richard Obeng Mensah, author of If You Think of Your Opposition You Lose Your Position.
borncapy@yahoo.com/www.richard-obeng-mensah.blogspot.com