Who Hillary Clinton Epp?, By Reno Omokri

My people are just too sentimental and forget how she dithered and resisted naming Boko Haram as a terrorist group. We have forgotten how she led the effort to use the Leahy Law to frustrate Nigeria’s efforts to buy weapons from the US and when we could not buy from them she and her contemporaries also frustrated our efforts to buy from Israel.

On Election Day 2016, I urged all my friends to go out and vote for Donald Trump with the following message:

“Get out and vote for the unborn fetus. Get out and vote for the God ordained marriage between a man and a woman. Get out and vote against transgender bathrooms. Get out and vote against Roe V. Wade. Get out and vote for Donald J. Trump! He might not be perfect, but he will promote those conservative values that have kept a check on the moral fabric of society and nominate conservative Supreme Court Justices.”

So many African Americans and Black Africans have been appalled by my support for Donald Trump ever since my interview on the BBC on November 1, 2016 when I called for Africans and others eligible to vote in the US elections to vote Donald Trump.

And why were my people so appalled? Because we are an emotional people who take decisions based on what we want right now rather than what we want eventually.

Most African Americans voted for Hillary because they bought into the lie peddled by the mainstream media that Trump is a racist. Most Black Africans supported Hillary because they did not want Trump to clamp down on immigration into the US.

But my people failed to take into account the big picture!

What are our cultural values as a race? Do we as Black people, whether African American or Black African, really support gay rights and gay marriage? Trust our copycat culture, if Hillary had been elected she would have strengthened the gay marriage lobby and her Supreme Court nominees would have made it a reality, and the next thing you know, we would want to copy it hook, line and sinker.

As a race, we suffer disproportionately from abortions more than any other races in America. African Americans and Black Africans make up 13 percent of the US population, yet 37 percent of all abortions in the US are done by Black women. It has gotten to the point where the most dangerous place for a Black child to be is in its own mother’s womb!

Can we afford to continue with such a shameful record? We need someone that is committed to ending Roe V. Wade and outlawing the practice of on demand abortion. I believe in a woman’s right to choose but that right is asserted by any woman the minute she chooses to have unprotected sex.

But let me get technical. What did Hillary Clinton do for Nigeria or Africa when she was Secretary of State?

My people are just too sentimental and forget how she dithered and resisted naming Boko Haram as a terrorist group. We have forgotten how she led the effort to use the Leahy Law to frustrate Nigeria’s efforts to buy weapons from the US and when we could not buy from them she and her contemporaries also frustrated our efforts to buy from Israel.

The annoying thing is that it was her disastrous intervention in Libya that led to the escalation of the Boko Haram insurgency because the overthrow of Gaddafi destabilised much of North and West Africa by putting sophisticated light weapons in the hands of non-state actors like Boko Haram.

And yet when we as a nation were faced with the consequences of her actions she would not help us. Nigeria was reduced to buying weapons for cash on the black market.

The thing is that Gaddafi may have been a nasty piece of work but at least he made Libya stable. Today, ISIS has a foothold in Libya and from there supports insurgents like Boko Haram and al-Shaabab who are causing instability in Nigeria and Kenya.

My big question to Nigerians especially is this: Who Hillary Clinton Epp? Our follow follow is too much. In real economic terms, what did we stand to gain from Hillary Clinton?

Though I have been a life-long Republican since first coming to America as a nine year old, I suspended that status in 2008 to support a fellow Black man, Barack Obama, out of purely primordial reasons (he is Black, as I am) but to be honest, what has Africa and Nigeria gained from eight years of Obama in the White House?

He never visited Nigeria. He never packaged any special economic package for Nigeria or Africa. Say whatever you want to say about former President George W. Bush, no other US President has been as radical in his support of Africa as Bush, number 43, was!

For giving more than $5 billion in humanitarian aid to Africa annually, President Bush is on record as having given more assistance to Sub-Saharan Africa than any other president, including President Obama!

AIDS and Malaria are some of our biggest challenges in Africa and Bush met us at the point of our needs.

Before President George W. Bush intervened in the fight against HIV/AIDS, only 100,000 Africans were on anti-retrovirals, but in 2003 he set up the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and by the time he left office in 2009 that number had grown to two million.

When Congress resisted his efforts for funding to the tune of $1.2 billion to fight malaria in Africa in 2007, Bush persuaded them by saying, “There’s no reason for little babies to be dying of mosquito bites around the world.”

Now I ask you, what similar efforts have President Obama and Hillary put forward while they had power? Yes Obama has held meetings like the first US/Africa Leaders Summit and the US Africa Business Summit but would we eat summits? What came of these other than talk, with Obama mostly talking down on African leaders in a way he would never do with Asian leaders.

At least with Trump we know that he would take on ISIS and other radical Islamic groups, and that includes Boko Haram!

Moreover, Trump has pledged to curb China’s global dominance and to do that he would have to match China dollar for dollar in Africa; and when China and the US compete, Africa gains.

But be that as it may I am very proud to have publicly supported Donald Trump from the beginning to the end.

Where are all those people who insulted me for my support for Donald Trump? They all seem to have gone missing in the ‘other room’!

Reno Omokri is the founder of the Mind of Christ Christian Center in California, author of Shunpiking: No Shortcuts to God and Why Jesus Wept and the host of Transformation with Reno Omokri.

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1 Comment

  1. Good piece of article. Just that the truth is too hard a pill for our sentimens but is it true that Africa gains when China and America competes?

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