EMMANUEL MACRON'S LESSON TO AFRICA


Nobody expected to see him, seven months ago, leading the great France. Not because of his age as is often believed. Our continent had much younger and inexperienced heads of state.

But in a country like France where people subscribe to politician politics, becoming President of the Republic without having made his classes in a party to know how to say red when everyone sees blue has something to surprise.

Of course, he did the famous National School of Administration but this was only an introduction to the practice at work in a ministerial cabinet.

With his election we learn even better about the life of the child of Amiens. The child was initiated to reading by his grandmother. Before twenty years he knew all the books which marked the centuries in France. In his tastes Honoré de Balzac was not quoted.


All those who love literature, the true one, have probably met this author and have read it abundantly. With Balzac it is ambition. With Balzac one absolutely wants to mark his time. Are called Balzacien all young people who have great ambition. Almost all Balzac's characters are ambitious. In addition, their particularity is to pay court to women older and even much older than them, like all the mistresses and lovers of the author.

For Balzac, the twenty-year-old woman asks you all. The thirty-year-old woman gives you everything. An older woman brings you her true love and especially her experience. It is believed that you are thirty years old but the experience of life that gives you this woman makes you rise to double your age. One can not be an enthusiast of literature, especially of literature and even less of Balzac and have obtuse minds.

So it is through literature that he understands that party politics can only hurt his country. When one says yes it is absolutely necessary that the other say no. It can never move a country forward. By not counting on a traditional party but by creating his party that can rally all the French, for the development of the country, he has just begun a style of governance that will make an oil stain. And this is the greatest lesson he gives Africa.

Everyone knows the disaster that the party regime has created in our continent. In addition to systematic criticism, without any reflection, we added tribalism and regionalism. With the style of rapprochement between the new President Macron and all the parties in his country, I think that it will soon be possible to see African governments calling on the cadres of the opposing parties to be part of the government and to take charge Of the administrative posts. Macron urges us to "return" to our single party.

When I say back, it means thinking, so see the disadvantages and advantages of this system that nobody would like to see, come back. The single party has done its day. But if we want a harmonious development, with the participation of all the sons of the country, we must absolutely add a single dose of party to our systems of government.

That is, a large majority of the country's citizens, Despite their belonging to opposition parties, feel concerned by the development policy of those who lead and participate in this work, without forgetting their criticism and their proposal. That the political parties do not see that of: "Rise for me to get there.

The challenges of this world are so numerous that it is possible to choose the division as the focus. Living with modesty, wisdom and intelligence can only come from reading, literature and religions all that the modern world, devoured by television programs, the new catechesis. If already in a country 70 or 75% of the population unite to adhere to a development program the country would make a quantum leap.

But literature also learns that, in spite of all your efforts, irreducible people will unfold themselves with harshness, Wickedness and bitterness. You can not do it. Act without recoil so that the silent and acting majority recognizes your tasks and confuses the detractors.

Honoré de Balzac has shown the way to success and even the failure that everything is possible in this world. And that it would be imperative that the African continent, especially Black Africa, begin to put into practice the passing of power like those established in the age classes. Waiting for it, let's enjoy the first lesson that Emmanuel Macron gives us: less policy for more development. So goes Africa. See you next week.

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