Gadhafi Told Me This About Colonialism Before They Killed Him

1 month ago
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👉 Referenced video featuring Moussa Ibrahim, former Minister of Information under Muammar Gaddafi found on insatagram : https://www.instagram.com/p/DLKv3dcI2FW/

👉 The Organic Guy Podcas Link: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/oW7qCl_8uws

In this powerful episode, TJ reacts to an impassioned speech by Moussa Ibrahim, the former Minister of Information under Gaddafi’s Libyan government. Ibrahim delivers a searing indictment of Africa’s food dependency, exposing how a continent that holds 60% of the world’s uncultivated arable land still imports $43 billion in food annually. TJ breaks down how this is not an accident—but a continuation of colonial economic policies that were never dismantled, only repackaged for modern exploitation.

TJ explains how Ibrahim connects food insecurity to neocolonial control, calling out institutions like the World Bank for promoting “market efficiency” while African nations import basic staples they could easily grow. Countries like Nigeria import rice, Senegal buys onions from Europe, and Malawi relies on maize aid. Ibrahim argues that this is not efficiency—it’s economic suicide. TJ unpacks how such dependency weakens sovereignty and leaves Africa vulnerable to both foreign manipulation and internal elite capture.

Drawing on the speech and its powerful message, TJ expands on the urgent need for land reform—returning land to farmers rather than foreign agribusinesses or domestic oligarchs. He discusses the importance of investing in irrigation, storage, seed protection, and agroecology, while rejecting GMO monopolies and IMF-driven austerity. For TJ, this isn’t just about agriculture—it’s about political freedom.

This analysis is essential viewing for anyone concerned with Africa’s future. As Ibrahim insists, Africa’s real revolution won’t happen in courtrooms—it begins in the soil.

#Africa #AfricanUnity #AfricanSovereignty #Geopolitics #PanAfricanism #Neocolonialism #EconomicFreedom #FoodSovereignty #LandReform #Agroecology #AgriculturalJustice #DebtTrap #IMF #WorldBank #SustainableAfrica #AfricaFuture #LocalFarming #SeedSovereignty #TradeJustice #AfricanGeopolitics #SouthSouthCooperation #MultipolarWorld #AfricaRising #SoilRevolution #MoussaIbrahim #TheSubiShop

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