Monday

Wake Up Call to Africa: Unite Before It’s Too Late

Wake Up Call to Africa: Unite Before It’s Too Late

Unite Africans, Before It’s Too Late

Brothers and sisters of Africa,
History has already shown us what happens when we are divided. The slave trade tore millions from our lands. Colonialism stripped us of wealth and dignity. Even today, powerful nations still take our minerals, our oil, our labor — while our people remain in poverty.

Now imagine a future crisis (virus) where the survival of others depends on us — on our blood, our bodies, our very existence. Do you think or believe that those who once enslaved and exploited us will suddenly play fair? Or will desperation and racism return us to chains in a new form — biological slavery?

The warning signs are already clear:

  • When foreign powers bypass the African Union and cut secret deals with corrupt leaders.
  • When they send soldiers in the name of “protection” but control our resources.
  • When the poor are used as guinea pigs while promises of development vanish.
  • When our voices are silenced in global media, and resistance is painted as “selfish.”

If Africa does not stand as one, we will be broken apart again, piece by piece. Divided nations are easy to exploit. United Africa is unshakable.

This is the moment for a new Pan-Africanism:

  • The African Union must act as one body, refusing foreign powers that play divide-and-rule.
  • We must control our science, patents, and medical systems, so Africa is never just a supplier of raw life but the owner of its future.
  • We must demand fairness publicly, transparently, and boldly — before secret deals sell out our children’s future.
  • We must educate and alert our people to recognize the traps hidden in sweet promises of aid and protection.

The time is now. Not tomorrow, not when the crisis comes.
Unite, Africa, or perish divided.

This is not just about politics. This is about survival.
If we fail to act, the next chapter of history may record us as the generation that allowed Africa to be drained of its life to save others — while our own people were left weak, voiceless, and forgotten.

But if we act with unity, courage, and wisdom, history will remember us as the generation that finally broke the cycle — and made Africa the master of its own destiny.



Let’s break down a worst-case scenario, rooted in history and today’s global power realities.


Worst-Case Scenario: Exploitation & Survival for Others - Allegedly

Phase 1: Desperation & Panic

  • A virus devastates white populations, spreading fast. Governments declare states of emergency.
  • Media frames Africa as the only hope, but not as equal partners — instead as a resource pool.
  • African leaders are approached with promises of aid, debt relief, and protection in exchange for blood.

Phase 2: Divide and Rule

  • Western powers exploit Africa’s weak unity. They strike bilateral deals with individual countries instead of negotiating with the African Union.
  • Some corrupt leaders accept small payments or promises of political support in exchange for mass blood collection.
  • Propaganda convinces the world that Africans are “heroically donating to save humanity”, while in reality the system is coercive.

Phase 3: Militarization

  • As the crisis deepens, “voluntary trade” becomes forced extraction.
  • Military bases in Africa (which already exist in places like Djibouti, Niger, and Kenya) are used to secure “blood supply lines.”
  • Resistance is labeled as terrorism or “endangering global survival,” justifying armed intervention.

Phase 4: Exploitation of Africans

  • Blood banks are set up in African countries, operated and guarded by foreign powers.
  • Africans — especially the poor — are pressured or tricked into donating far more than is safe.
  • Some may be kidnapped, trafficked, or subjected to medical harvesting without consent.
  • Wealthier Africans might buy protection, but ordinary people suffer most.

Phase 5: Population Decline & Social Collapse

  • Over-harvesting weakens communities. Anemia, malnutrition, and death rates climb.
  • Local healthcare collapses as doctors and hospitals are repurposed for the global crisis.
  • Social unrest grows, but rebellions are brutally suppressed with military technology.

Phase 6: New Form of Colonization

  • Instead of gold, oil, or diamonds, Africa’s biological essence becomes the extracted resource.
  • Foreign corporations take control of the process, patenting treatments made from African blood and selling them back to their own citizens.
  • Africans themselves receive little benefit — often excluded from advanced treatments, living in poverty while their blood heals others.

Phase 7: Legacy of Exploitation

  • Even after the crisis ends, Africa is left weaker: depopulated, medically exploited, and with leaders who betrayed their people.
  • The global order stabilizes, but Africa remains the sacrifice zone — thanked publicly, forgotten privately.
  • History repeats: just like the slave trade and colonialism, Africans provide survival for others at the cost of their own lives and dignity.

Why This Worst Case Is Plausible

  • History shows that in desperation, powerful nations exploit the weak.
  • Military presence in Africa is already strong.
  • Racism in global institutions can normalize exploitation under “humanitarian” language.

Good — because in reality, the worst-case scenario doesn’t happen overnight. It creeps in through warning signs that often look “reasonable” at first. Here are the red flags Africans should watch for in such a crisis:


Warning Signs of Exploitation

1. Humanitarian Language Hiding Extraction

  • Western governments and media start saying:
    “Africans must donate blood to save the world.”
  • Appeals to morality are used to pressure Africa without offering real, equal partnerships.

2. Bilateral Deals Instead of African Unity

  • Instead of negotiating with the African Union (AU), foreign powers cut private deals with weak or corrupt leaders.
  • Example: one president signs away mass blood rights in exchange for military support or cash.

3. Militarization of Aid

  • Foreign troops and “medical security forces” are deployed to “protect supply chains.”
  • Underneath, it means Africa is losing sovereignty over its land and resources.

4. Media Narratives That Silence African Voices

  • Western media celebrates “donations from Africa,” but African journalists and activists are censored.
  • If Africans protest exploitation, they’re portrayed as selfish or standing in the way of saving humanity.

5. Patents & Profit Extraction

  • Pharmaceutical companies patent treatments derived from African blood, sell them back to their populations at huge profits, while Africans remain untreated.
  • If Africans don’t have full legal ownership of the process, it’s a red flag.

6. Disappearance of Transparency

  • Negotiations happen behind closed doors. Citizens don’t know what their governments are signing.
  • Aid arrives, but it’s unclear what Africans are truly receiving in exchange for their blood.

7. Targeting the Poor First

  • Blood “donations” start in poor rural areas or refugee camps.
  • Incentives like small bags of rice, money, or medicine are used to exploit desperate communities.

8. Criminalization of Resistance

  • African activists, journalists, or leaders who demand fair terms are arrested, silenced, or branded as threats to global security.

9. Escalating Pressure

  • What begins as “voluntary” quickly becomes enforced through laws, economic sanctions, or even military actions against countries that refuse.

Final Thought

If these signs appear, it would mean the crisis is sliding toward a new form of colonization — biological exploitation.

The only defense would be:

  • African unity (AU acting as one bloc).
  • International alliances (partnering with Asia, Latin America, etc.).
  • Transparency (all deals made public).
  • Ownership of science (Africans controlling patents and production).

🌍 Africa, wake up. The world will not wait. Unite now, or never.


Written by Promise Ndukwu
🔗 Published on MySongsLover