Land, Resource of Self and Other Natural Resources: What of Economic Warfare?
- By kwende ukaidi
- •
- 29 Jun, 2024
- •
Celebrating Afrikan Economy Math to Bring About Results

The
warmongering ‘culture’ of invasion, conquest, enslavement, colonisation and so
on has long been the disfunction of others that mean the Afrikan ill. In this,
the area of ‘economics’ can become a weaponised vehicle in the offensive to exploit
or destroy Afrikan life.
According to a mainstream source:
“Economic warfare or economic war is an economic strategy utilised by belligerent nations with the goal of weakening the economy of other states. This is primarily achieved by the use of economic blockades. Ravaging the crops of the enemy is a classic method”.
Another mainstream source offers the following detail:
“Countries engaging in economic warfare seek to weaken an adversary's economy by denying the adversary access to necessary physical, financial, and technological resources or by otherwise inhibiting its ability to benefit from trade, financial, and technological exchanges with other countries”.
As well as targeting particular areas of function, the strategies of operation in economic warfare can take a variety of forms. For example, just as military warfare can employ guerrilla tactics, so too can equivalent tactics be used in an ‘economic’ assault. One mainstream source, highlights this with the example of a particular country in the following way:
“Faced with perceived containment, China is pursuing a set of economic engagement strategies that resemble guerrilla tactics to strengthen its global position. Whether it succeeds will shape the future of globalisation and the relationship between national security and the global economy”.
In relation to Afrikan life, the obvious question becomes what strategies of security are determined by the Afrikan to effect establishment, maintenance and maximal security of their rightful economic base (Afrikan land + Resource of Self and Other Natural Resources = Functional Afrikan Economy)?
Only Afrikan souls can furnish themselves with the answer to such a question through self-determined effort and practical upright application of self. Indeed, to even conceive of rightful economic functioning and its security, a level of self-knowledge amongst Afrikan souls is vital. Certainly, the recovery and safeguarding of self-knowingness is something that Afrikan souls can take progressive steps forward to realise from whatever locale, station, level or status.
The continual fleecing of Afrikan resources by others through economic warfare or by other means is far from conducive to the optimal flourishing of Afrikan life throughout its various levels. Rather, it is acutely oppositional in dire and destructive ways. This primary people of creation surely have a duty and responsibility to themselves to realise their thriving self-economy and protect it accordingly. After all, civilisation is not of happenstance.
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