Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Dangerous AI Power Grab Hiding Behind Billionaire IPOs

The next monopoly may not sell oil or banks—it may control intelligence itself. Too much power in too few hands rarely ends with applause.


The AI kings want your money, not your voice. SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic are building IPO systems where founders keep most of the power, even when public investors provide the cash. Investors may buy shares but still sit quietly in the back seat.


Wall Street may be cheering a future monopoly on intelligence. A tiny group of tech elites could end up controlling tools powerful enough to shape jobs, truth, elections, education, and war. Too much power in too few hands usually ends badly.



Founder worship has burned investors before. WeWork crashed. Theranos fooled smart people. Enron collapsed under weak oversight. Smart founders can build empires, but unchecked power can turn genius into expensive chaos.



AI safety talk sounds good until profit enters the room. OpenAI and Anthropic promise ethics and safety, yet billion-dollar investors and founder influence still shape decisions. When money talks, idealism often whispers.




Governments are moving too slowly while AI races ahead. Regulators are struggling to keep up with technologies that could affect up to 300 million jobs globally. Removing corporate guardrails now is like speeding downhill after cutting the brake line.


On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  “Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series. 


The AI Kings’ IPO Trap and the Dangerous Game Behind the AI Gold Rush

 


AI billionaires are rushing to IPO while quietly rewriting the rules so nobody can stop them. Tomorrow may belong to a few unelected tech kings—and your future is collateral.

I have watched enough of Wall Street’s magic shows to know how this story usually begins. A brilliant founder arrives carrying what looks like fire stolen from heaven. Investors gather like hungry worshippers, staring wide-eyed as the prophet promises to rewrite history. Somebody whispers, “This changes everything.” Somebody else shouts, “Get me in before it’s too late.” Suddenly caution disappears faster than free food at a college conference. Common sense takes a vacation. The media begins polishing halos. Regulators blink like sleepy security guards at a midnight robbery. Then the money starts moving, and once money starts dancing, morality usually leaves through the back door.

That is exactly why the looming IPO wave involving SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic should make serious people nervous. Everybody sees dollar signs. I see something else—a dangerous experiment in corporate power wrapped inside seductive promises about humanity’s future. The public is being invited to buy shares in firms building technologies that could reshape jobs, politics, warfare, education, medicine, and truth itself, while the founders quietly redesign corporate governance to make sure ordinary investors sit in the passenger seat with duct tape over their mouths. The fox is not merely guarding the henhouse anymore; he now owns the alarm system, hired the guards, and wrote the farm rules.

SpaceX may become one of the largest public offerings in modern history, and Elon Musk understands power better than most politicians pretending to lead countries. Nobody should be naïve about what is happening here. Reports tied to the firm’s IPO structure suggest that Musk and insiders will hold shares carrying roughly 10 times the voting power of ordinary stock. In plain English, public investors can bring truckloads of cash, but Musk still controls the microphone, the steering wheel, and the emergency brakes. This model did not appear out of thin air. Alphabet used it. Meta used it. Mark Zuckerberg still controls Meta’s voting power despite owning only a minority share of the company’s economics. Public investors own pieces of the machine, but founders control the direction. Democracy stops at the corporate front door.

Some defenders shrug and say founder control helps innovation. Fine. Let us entertain that argument for a second. They claim short-term investors care too much about quarterly profits, while visionaries need freedom to think decades ahead. There is some truth buried in that argument, just enough truth to make the lie attractive. The global financial crisis of 2008 proved that companies can look perfect on paper and still collapse like cheap lawn chairs in a thunderstorm. Lehman Brothers had committees, oversight, governance frameworks, and enough polished paperwork to wallpaper a football stadium. Yet the company still crashed spectacularly, helping trigger a financial meltdown that erased nearly $16 trillion in American household wealth. Good governance alone does not guarantee good judgment.

But here comes the dangerous twist in Silicon Valley’s logic. Because traditional governance sometimes failed, the new kings of AI seem to believe less accountability is somehow smarter. That argument deserves laughter, not applause. Saying oversight failed before, so let us weaken oversight further, makes about as much sense as saying seat belts failed in some crashes, so cars should remove them completely. That dog will not hunt.

Look at Musk’s recent behavior and the pattern becomes difficult to ignore. After a Delaware court challenged his massive Tesla pay package because of concerns surrounding weak board independence, Musk moved SpaceX incorporation to Texas, where business courts are generally viewed as friendlier toward directors and founders. Then came the merger involving xAI, tightening Musk’s influence over technologies that touch rockets, satellites, and artificial intelligence. None of this is accidental. It is corporate chess played by a man who knows exactly where the kings and pawns stand. Meanwhile, if SpaceX enters Nasdaq using fast-track listing rules, index funds could be forced to buy shares quickly, leaving active investors with little leverage to demand stronger governance protections. By the time critics ask tough questions, the train may already be speeding down the tracks.

Then there is OpenAI, perhaps the most fascinating contradiction in modern capitalism. This is the company that once sounded like a philosophy club worried about humanity’s survival. It spoke endlessly about safety, ethics, and protecting civilization from dangerous AI. Then came the Sam Altman drama in late 2023, and suddenly everybody saw what happens when ideals collide with power. The board removed Altman, apparently believing governance rules still mattered. Employees revolted. Microsoft leaned heavily. Investors panicked. Within days, Altman returned looking less like an executive and more like a political survivor who had just won an election nobody thought possible.

That moment exposed something brutally simple. Founder influence often defeats theory. Corporate documents may look noble, but real power usually belongs to whoever controls loyalty, relationships, and money. OpenAI later transitioned into a Public Benefit Corporation structure, while maintaining nonprofit oversight mechanisms. Sounds reassuring at first glance. But scratch the surface and things look less comforting. The nonprofit still technically controls board appointments, yet overlap between board members and operational leadership raises obvious questions. The people supervising the machine increasingly sit close enough to touch the controls. It starts to resemble a referee who also happens to play quarterback for one of the teams.

Anthropic presents itself as the careful adult in the room, the company obsessed with AI safety rather than reckless expansion. Its Long-Term Benefit Trust sounds thoughtful, even admirable. Independent experts supposedly influence governance over time to ensure safety remains central. Wonderful slogan. But slogans are cheap. Fine print matters. Trustees hold short terms and consult leadership regarding appointments. More importantly, shareholders retain power to dismantle the trust through supermajority voting. And let us not pretend Amazon and Google, major financial backers, are investing billions merely for spiritual fulfillment. These companies want influence, leverage, and profit. Nobody writes billion-dollar checks because they suddenly discovered sainthood.

Why does all this matter? Because frontier AI is not another social media app selling digital nonsense to teenagers. Goldman Sachs estimated in 2023 that generative AI could affect up to 300 million jobs globally. McKinsey projected trillions of dollars in annual economic impact. This technology already drafts legal documents, writes code, diagnoses medical conditions, creates propaganda, manipulates images, and influences public conversations with frightening speed. Entire industries are bracing for disruption. Workers fear replacement. Governments struggle to keep pace. Regulators often look like grandparents trying to understand cryptocurrency after two glasses of wine.

Yet amid all this uncertainty, corporate governance is moving in the opposite direction of caution. Humanity is being asked to trust a handful of founders whose power increasingly resembles monarchy dressed in startup clothing. That should concern anyone paying attention. We have seen this movie before, and it rarely ends with applause.

Remember WeWork. Adam Neumann sold investors dreams, yoga-flavored business language, and grand promises about reinventing work. The valuation soared toward $47 billion before reality punched through the ceiling. Governance collapsed under scrutiny because the emperor had ambition larger than accountability. Theranos offered another painful lesson. Elizabeth Holmes wrapped fantasy science in black turtlenecks and inspirational language while respected board members nodded politely. Investors and regulators learned the hard way that charisma is not evidence.

Of course, Musk, Altman, and Anthropic’s leadership are smarter than those examples. Nobody denies their intelligence. But intelligence alone has never protected humanity from arrogance. Some of history’s greatest disasters were engineered by clever people absolutely convinced they knew better than everybody else. A brilliant fool still breaks things—he simply uses expensive tools.

The Musk versus Altman legal feud offered the public a rare backstage pass into the world of AI’s elite. Weeks of arguments exposed uncomfortable realities involving ambition, betrayal, ego, and shifting promises. The case ended procedurally, but the damage was done. Behind the polished speeches about humanity stood ordinary human weaknesses. Pride. Competition. Fear. Greed. The same ingredients that have wrecked kingdoms, companies, and countries for centuries.

Investors are beginning to notice the danger. Institutional groups, including public pension funds, increasingly push for limits on dual-class share structures because concentrated power rarely ages gracefully. They understand something ordinary investors often forget during IPO mania: unchecked authority eventually grows comfortable ignoring criticism. Markets love founders until founders stop listening. By then, shareholders usually discover they own tickets to a show where somebody else controls the script.

I am not arguing that SpaceX, OpenAI, or Anthropic will fail. They may become some of the most influential companies humanity has ever built. Musk may push civilization deeper into space. Altman may transform how people work and learn. Anthropic may genuinely advance safer systems. But hope is not governance. Admiration is not accountability. Good intentions are not insurance policies.

Governments should stop acting like nervous spectators at a billionaire talent contest. Regulators must understand that the greatest danger surrounding AI may not be some rogue machine suddenly waking up and deciding humanity is unnecessary. The greater danger may be painfully human—a tiny priesthood of founders controlling technologies powerful enough to shape civilization while operating behind governance systems specifically designed to limit outside interference.

That is the real scandal hiding inside these IPOs. Wall Street sees opportunity. I see concentrated power moving quietly behind smiling press releases. Investors may rush into these offerings chasing fortunes, and maybe many will make money. But somewhere between the excitement and the opening bell, a dangerous question remains hanging in the air like smoke after a gunshot:

Who exactly elected these men to decide what tomorrow looks like?

 

Separate from today’s article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Thursday, May 21, 2026

The Ebola Virus Is Winning: No Vaccine. No Control. No Mercy

 The Democratic Republic of Congo is bleeding from war while Ebola spreads without a vaccine. The scariest part? The world looks broke, distracted, and tired.




The world is sleepwalking toward another Ebola disaster, and this time the timing stinks like a corpse in tropical heat. In eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, people are already dying in mining towns, roadside clinics, and crowded border communities while politicians in rich countries argue about budgets, visas, and optics. Ebola does not care about any of that nonsense. The virus cares about blood, panic, weak governments, broken hospitals, and human stupidity. Right now Congo has all 5 in bulk supply.



In eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, armed groups, broken roads, corrupt checkpoints, and weak local authority are helping Ebola move faster than doctors can contain it.




The Democratic Republic of Congo is facing a dangerous outbreak because medics know the Ebola playbook, but the Bundibugyo strain has no licensed vaccine and no quick test.



In rich countries like the United States, China, and Europe, border bans may calm voters, but they will not stop Ebola. Viruses do not respect passports, borders, speeches, or political theater. Yes - President Donald Trump’s administration has tightened travel restrictions connected to the outbreak. Jean Kaseya of Africa CDC warned that borders alone cannot stop epidemics. He is right. Viruses do not care about passports, campaign slogans, or election-year talking points. Ebola moves through bodies, fear, chaos, and neglect.


If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “BriefBook Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: BriefBook Series.



Ebola Is Back, the Guns Are Still Loaded, and the World’s Wallet Is Closed

 


In eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, armed groups, broken roads, corrupt checkpoints, and weak local authority are helping Ebola move faster than doctors can contain it. Border bans in rich countries may calm voters, but they will not stop Ebola. Viruses do not respect passports, speeches, or political theater.

 

The world is sleepwalking toward another Ebola disaster, and this time the timing stinks like a corpse in tropical heat. In eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, people are already dying in mining towns, roadside clinics, and crowded border communities while politicians in rich countries argue about budgets, visas, and optics. Ebola does not care about any of that nonsense. The virus cares about blood, panic, weak governments, broken hospitals, and human stupidity. Right now Congo has all 5 in bulk supply.

Since April, bodies have been dropping in Mongbwalu, a rough gold town in Ituri province where people first blamed witchcraft. That is how ugly outbreaks often begin in poor places abandoned by the modern world. A woman collapses. Somebody bleeds from the nose. Rumors spread faster than medicine. Then a nurse recognizes the signs nobody wants to hear: Ebola. Suddenly everybody remembers that this virus can kill up to 50% of the people it infects. Fear enters the room like an armed robber.

By May 20th, Congo had recorded nearly 600 suspected cases and 139 deaths. Those are the official numbers. In outbreaks like this, official numbers are often about as trustworthy as a politician’s campaign promise. Experts at World Health Organization and researchers from Imperial College London believe the virus has probably been circulating for months already. Uganda has reported cases. Rwanda has tightened border crossings. Health officials fear spread into Burundi and South Sudan. An American doctor infected in the region had to be evacuated to Germany. Ebola is already knocking on several doors at once.

The ugly irony is that the world actually learned how to fight Ebola after the West African catastrophe of 2014-2016 killed more than 11,000 people. Vaccines were developed. Rapid testing improved. Health workers became better at tracing contacts and isolating patients. Back then, the epidemic exposed the world’s health system like a drunk man falling naked into traffic. Governments promised they would never again be caught unprepared.

Now comes the punchline: this outbreak is using the Bundibugyo strain, not the more common Zaire strain. There is no licensed vaccine for it. No rapid diagnostic testing either. Samples from eastern Congo must travel roughly 2,000km to Kinshasa for confirmation. Days pass before results come back. By then, infected traders, truck drivers, miners, and refugees may already have crossed borders, hugged relatives, shared meals, or boarded overcrowded buses. A virus does not need a passport when chaos stamps the visa.

This is where the situation becomes dangerously absurd. Medics know what to do, but they cannot properly do it because eastern Congo is not merely poor. It is a war zone stuffed with militias, corruption, collapsing roads, and men with guns who think burning clinics is a political strategy. More than 100 armed groups operate across Ituri and the Kivus. During Congo’s 2018 Ebola outbreak, militants attacked treatment centers run by Médecins Sans Frontières. Some clinics were burned down entirely. Imagine trying to contain one of the deadliest viruses on Earth while dodging bullets and negotiating roadblocks from teenage gunmen high on power and paranoia.

Farther south, the M23 rebel group has tightened its grip over parts of eastern Congo while the government struggles to maintain control. Aid workers complain that supplies are delayed by officials demanding payments. Goma airport remains closed, forcing humanitarian staff to take exhausting detours through neighboring countries. Even before Ebola intensified, clinics near Goma were already battling measles outbreaks. Now health workers are being asked to fight epidemics inside a battlefield with shrinking resources. That is not public health. That is medical trench warfare.

Then comes the part rich countries do not like discussing openly: money. Western governments spent years preaching about “global health security.” Then budget season arrived, and suddenly the sermon changed. American funding that once supported surveillance teams, public education, and protective equipment has been slashed. The International Rescue Committee reportedly reduced operations in Ituri from 5 areas to just 2 after funding cuts in 2025. Washington later promised $13m for the Ebola response. That amount sounds large until you remember America spent billions fighting Ebola after the 2014 disaster scared Western capitals into panic mode.

Britain and Germany are also cutting aid spending while pretending the world’s diseases will politely stay inside poor countries. That fantasy is laughable. COVID-19 already taught humanity that microbes travel business class while politicians hold press conferences. Yet here we are again, acting shocked that underfunded health systems in conflict zones might produce another international crisis.

Meanwhile, distrust is spreading almost as fast as the virus itself. Some locals still believe Ebola is fake. Others rely on ginger tea, garlic, rumors, and superstition. During the 2014 epidemic, misinformation turned entire villages against health workers. Patients escaped treatment centers. Families hid infected relatives. Some healthcare workers were attacked. Fear and denial became unpaid assistants to the virus. History now looks ready for a rerun nobody asked for.

And let us be brutally honest: the world is far less psychologically prepared now than it was a decade ago. COVID-19 poisoned trust in governments, health agencies, and science itself. Every outbreak now collides with conspiracy theories, political tribalism, and social-media nonsense. One side screams panic. Another screams hoax. The virus quietly keeps multiplying while humans argue like drunks in a parking lot.

Jean Kaseya of Africa CDC warned that border restrictions alone will not stop Ebola. He is right. Walls may stop migrants. They do not stop microbes. Viruses slip through cracks created by war, corruption, hunger, weak leadership, and international indifference. Right now those cracks in central Africa are wide open.

What scares me most is not just Ebola itself. It is the combination of Ebola, war, aid cuts, weak states, public distrust, and global fatigue arriving together like gang members stepping out of the same getaway car. Any one of those problems is dangerous. Together they form a biological powder keg.

And powder kegs do not send warning emails before exploding.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Monday, May 18, 2026

Publicly Anti-Sugar, Privately Eating Cake at 2 A.M.

 The human body literally needs glucose to survive, yet society talks about sugar like it is cocaine hiding inside a birthday cake. In plain terms, sugar did not destroy humanity. Human greed, overeating, and food corporations turned sweetness into a billion-dollar addiction machine that now fuels obesity, diabetes, and endless health problems.

Sugar became the perfect scapegoat because people prefer blaming one ingredient instead of admitting that modern eating habits have become completely out of control.


If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “BriefBook Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: BriefBook Series.

Our Sweet Enemy: Sugar Didn’t Betray Us — We Turned It Into a Street Criminal

Sugar became the fall guy for a society addicted to overeating, junk food, and fake wellness. The real poison is corporate food greed, emotional binge eating, and people treating their stomachs like all-you-can-eat amusement parks.

Sugar has become the easiest criminal to arrest in modern society. Mention sugar today, and people react like you just released a cobra into a daycare center. Everybody suddenly turns into a street-corner nutrition prophet. “Sugar is poison.” “Sugar kills.” “Sugar is toxic.” Meanwhile, the same people saying this are swallowing caramel frappes large enough to drown a goat, inhaling donuts at midnight, and eating “healthy” granola bars packed with enough hidden syrup to keep a hummingbird awake for 3 business days. The loudest preacher in town is often the one hiding whiskey under the bed.

Let us stop acting stupid for one minute. Sugar is not some mysterious white powder cooked inside a cartel laboratory. Sugar is chemistry. Sugar is carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Glucose and sucrose are organic compounds that help fuel life itself. The human body literally runs on glucose. Your brain depends heavily on it. Your muscles use it. Your cells burn it for energy. Remove sugar completely from the human system, and the body begins acting like a city during a blackout. Confusion. Weakness. Fatigue. Collapse. Nature itself refuses to quit sugar. During starvation, the body starts breaking down glycogen stores and muscle tissue just to keep glucose circulating in the blood. That is how desperate the body is to keep sugar alive inside you.

Yet modern society talks about sugar like it is Satan wearing a chef’s hat. The hypocrisy would be funny if it were not so ridiculous.

Back in the 1700s, the average American consumed roughly 4 pounds of sugar yearly. Today, estimates place annual sugar consumption above 100 pounds per person when added sugars in processed foods are included. That is not “a sweet tooth.” That is industrial-scale gluttony wearing yoga pants and pretending to care about wellness. The problem is not the teaspoon of sugar inside coffee. The problem is that food corporations transformed sugar into a weaponized business model. They shoved it into bread, ketchup, cereal, yogurt, sports drinks, pasta sauce, frozen meals, and snacks marketed to children using dancing cartoon animals with psychopathic levels of enthusiasm.

A child wakes up today and eats sugar before even brushing his teeth. Sugary cereal for breakfast. Sugary juice box for school. Sugary snack after lunch. Sugary soda after dinner. Then society acts shocked when obesity rates explode like fireworks in a gasoline factory.

The World Health Organization says global obesity has more than doubled since 1990. Nearly 3 billion people worldwide are overweight or obese. But instead of discussing overeating, sedentary lifestyles, emotional binge eating, stress addiction, and corporate food engineering, society wants a clean villain. So sugar became the public punching bag. When everybody spits on one man in the village, either he stole something, or the villagers are hiding their own sins.

And trust me, the villagers are hiding plenty. The sugar industry itself helped create this disaster. In the 1960s, internal documents later revealed that sugar lobby groups funded research designed to downplay sugar’s link to heart disease while shifting blame toward fat. That revelation poisoned public trust for decades. Americans discovered that parts of nutrition science had been massaged like a corrupt boxing scorecard. So naturally, the backlash came hard. People felt deceived. Betrayed. Hustled.

But here is where the conversation becomes dishonest.

There is a massive difference between sugar and excess sugar. There is a massive difference between eating fruit and drinking 4 giant sodas daily. There is a massive difference between balanced eating and industrial food addiction. Society keeps mixing these things together because outrage sells faster than truth. A calm explanation never trends. Panic does. Fear does. “Sugar is killing your children!” gets more clicks than “Maybe stop drinking 7 milkshakes weekly.”

And social media made everything worse. Every week, another self-declared health warrior appears online looking like a gym mannequin dipped in coconut oil, screaming about “clean eating” while secretly promoting protein bars loaded with disguised sugar under fancy names like brown rice syrup, maltodextrin, agave concentrate, evaporated cane juice, and fruit solids. Same sugar. Different lipstick. A thief who wears a suit is still a thief.

The real problem is not sweetness. The real problem is human appetite without discipline. That truth makes people uncomfortable because it destroys the victim narrative. It forces people to admit something ugly: many of us eat emotionally, not biologically. People eat because they are lonely. Angry. Exhausted. Stressed. Bored. Depressed. Modern life is a pressure cooker with Wi-Fi. Sugar simply became the cheapest legal sedative available.

And corporations knew it.

Scientists understand that sugar stimulates dopamine release in the brain. It produces pleasure and reward signals. Food companies exploited that knowledge with the precision of casino owners designing slot machines. Ultra-processed food was engineered not merely to taste good, but to make stopping difficult. Once the public realized this, sugar became the enemy. But the deeper problem was greed masquerading as convenience.

Still, let us stop pretending sugar itself is useless. Athletes rely on glucose during intense activity. Hospitals use glucose solutions in medical care. Emergency medicine uses sugar to treat hypoglycemia. The body converts carbohydrates into glucose because human survival depends on energy transfer. Roughly 45% to 50% of the dry weight of many foods consists of carbon because carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are carbon-based molecules. Carbon is not the villain. Sugar is not the villain. Excess and manipulation are the villains.

But society loves theater more than honesty.

Look at modern grocery stores. Entire aisles look like crime scenes sponsored by marketing departments. Neon-colored drinks. Giant snack bags. Frosted pastries carrying enough calories to fuel a snowplow. Then politicians appear on television pretending they are horrified by obesity statistics. Please. These same societies subsidize industries producing mountains of cheap processed food because unhealthy calories are profitable. Everybody wants to cash the check, but nobody wants to own the funeral.

Even artificial sweeteners failed to become the perfect escape route. Some studies and health organizations now question whether non-sugar sweeteners truly help long-term weight control. So society sits trapped inside nutritional confusion. Sugar is demonized. Artificial sweeteners are distrusted. Processed food dominates shelves. Obesity climbs higher. Diabetes spreads faster. And average consumers stand inside supermarkets looking like exhausted gamblers trying to choose the least dangerous slot machine.

I find the moral performance around sugar especially hilarious. Somebody rejects dessert dramatically at a restaurant like they are rejecting organized crime.

“No thanks. I don’t consume sugar anymore.” Wonderful. Alert the Nobel committee.

Meanwhile, that same person sleeps 4 hours nightly, drinks alcohol every weekend, never exercises, and lives under enough stress to bend steel beams. Health is not a Disney movie where killing one villain saves the kingdom.

The truth is uglier and simpler than the health industry wants to admit. Human beings need glucose. Human beings do not need industrial excess. Those are two separate realities. Society keeps blending them together because nuance is boring and outrage pays rent.

Sugar helped build empires. Sugar plantations fueled colonial wealth. Millions of enslaved Africans were forced into brutal labor because sugar generated enormous profits. People once called sugar “white gold” because nations fought over it like wolves fighting over fresh meat. The same society that once built fortunes from sugar now talks about it like radioactive waste. That irony could choke a horse.

So no, I am not buying the cartoon version of this debate anymore. Sugar did not sneak into kitchens wearing a ski mask. Human beings created a culture of overconsumption, corporate manipulation, emotional eating, and endless appetite. Sugar simply became the most visible face inside a much darker system.

And now society wants to execute the mascot while protecting the circus.

 

This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief BookSeries”. Read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 


Blackout Republic: Nigeria’s Economy Is Dying Under Generator Smoke and Government Lies

 


Nigeria’s economy is choking under generator smoke while politicians sell recycled excuses. Factories are dying, investors are fleeing, and citizens pay crazy electricity bills for darkness. No serious nation survives on blackout, diesel fumes, and government propaganda disguised as reform.

I come from a country where people celebrate electricity like a World Cup goal. A transformer hums back to life, and suddenly neighbors scream, “Up NEPA!” like prisoners hearing the gates of freedom creak open. That is Nigeria: Africa’s biggest oil producer running on candles, generators, and lies fattened by politics.

Nigeria has more than 230 million people, yet the country struggles to generate around 4,000–5,000 MW of electricity on many days. Egypt pushes beyond 55,000 MW. South Africa hovers around 50,000 MW. Both countries have smaller populations. Nigeria’s estimated electricity demand sits between 40,000 and 50,000 MW, but the country operates like a giant trying to breathe through a cracked straw. A goat tied to a tree cannot pretend to be a lion of the forest.

This disaster has been strangling Nigeria for decades, and everybody knows it. The tailor knows it. The welder knows it. The frozen-food seller knows it. The barber knows it. The factory owner knows it. Only the politicians behave like tourists who mistakenly entered the wrong country.

The Nigerian economy is bleeding jobs because electricity in Nigeria behaves like an unreliable girlfriend. It appears suddenly, disappears without warning, and returns acting innocent. Meanwhile businesses die quietly in the dark.

Go to Aba. Go to Kano. Go to Onitsha. Go to Lagos industrial areas. The soundtrack of Nigerian commerce is not machinery. It is generators coughing black smoke like dying dragons. Thousands of small businesses spend fortunes on diesel and petrol every month just to survive. In some places, fuel costs have become higher than rent. Factory owners now calculate diesel prices with the fear of men checking hospital bills after surgery.

And the cruel joke? Nigeria sits on some of the largest natural gas reserves in Africa. That is where the satire becomes poison. A country floating on gas cannot power homes. A nation exporting crude oil cannot keep factories alive. Africa’s so-called giant still sweats in darkness while smaller economies move forward. At some point, incompetence graduates into organized sabotage.

Nigeria’s politicians love grammar. They hold conferences inside brightly lit hotels powered by generators and announce “strategic reforms.” Nigerians clap bitterly because they have heard this movie before. Privatization came. Tariff hikes came. “Power sector recovery plans” came. Committees came. Consultants came. Foreign loans came. Yet darkness still sits comfortably inside Nigerian homes like a permanent tenant.

The power sector privatization of 2013 was marketed like salvation descending from heaven. Nigerians were told private investors would rescue the grid. More than a decade later, many distribution companies still operate like roadside kiosks wearing corporate suits. Transformers explode after rainfall. Transmission lines collapse. National grid failures happen so often that Nigerians barely react anymore. Imagine a country where total grid collapse has become normal news. That is not a power sector. That is a national embarrassment with cables.

Then comes the wickedness called estimated billing. Ah yes, the famous Nigerian miracle where people pay for electricity they never saw.

A woman lives in darkness for 3 weeks and still receives a bill fat enough to finance a wedding reception. A barber closes shop daily because of blackout but receives “estimated consumption charges” that look like punishment for committing armed robbery. Citizens buy transformers, buy poles, buy cables, repair damaged equipment themselves, yet electricity companies still send outrageous bills like mafia debt collectors.

Let us stop decorating nonsense with grammar. That is fraud. No serious economy survives like this.

Manufacturers keep fleeing Nigeria because stable electricity is the heartbeat of industrialization. China understood this. India understood this. Vietnam understood this. Even Bangladesh understood this. Factories do not run on motivational speeches and presidential promises. Steel plants cannot melt iron with press conferences. Textile industries cannot function on prayer vigils.

Every blackout kills productivity. Every blackout destroys confidence. Every blackout quietly pushes another investor toward Ghana, Egypt, Rwanda, or Kenya.

And the consequences are vicious. When factories shut down, unemployment rises. When unemployment rises, crime expands. When productivity falls, inflation bites harder. Food becomes expensive. Services become expensive. Life itself becomes expensive. Electricity failure is not just an inconvenience in Nigeria. It is an economic death sentence spreading slowly across generations. Meanwhile the rich protect themselves inside gated fortresses powered by giant generators and solar systems. Senators sleep under cold air conditioners while ordinary Nigerians fan themselves through humid nights like exhausted refugees inside their own country. The children of politicians study abroad in countries with uninterrupted power while Nigerian students read under rechargeable lamps that die before midnight.

That is why public anger keeps growing. Nigerians are tired of hearing fairy tales from leaders who never experience the suffering themselves.

And let us be brutally honest: corruption is sitting at the center of this mess like a fat king on a stolen throne. Contracts are inflated. Equipment disappears. Funds vanish. Agencies blame one another. Distribution companies blame generation companies. Generation companies blame gas suppliers. Government blames vandals. Everybody blames everybody while ordinary Nigerians inhale generator smoke like unpaid factory workers in a Dickens novel.

Even the generators themselves have become symbols of national failure. Nigeria imports millions of generators because the public electricity system behaves like a collapsing circus. Hospitals run generators. Churches run generators. Mosques run generators. Banks run generators. Hotels run generators. Weddings run generators. Funerals run generators. At this point, generators deserve seats in the Nigerian Senate because they do more work than many politicians.

The saddest part is that Nigeria actually has the resources to fix this disaster. The country has sunlight powerful enough for massive solar expansion. It has gas reserves capable of supporting large-scale thermal plants. It has a huge market that should attract energy investors naturally. But investors fear instability, policy confusion, corruption, and regulatory chaos. Nobody wants to pour billions into a system where rules change like weather forecasts.

So the darkness continues.

Young Nigerians keep leaving the country because survival itself has become exhausting. Entrepreneurs burn out mentally and financially trying to run businesses inside an economy powered by noise and fumes. The national grid supplies a fraction of what the economy truly needs, yet politicians still speak as if Nigerians should applaud mediocrity because “progress is being made.”

Progress?

No country industrializes while its citizens live half in light and half in darkness. No economy becomes globally competitive while businesses waste fortunes generating private electricity individually. No nation becomes an economic tiger when welders, pharmacists, cold-room operators, tailors, and factories spend half their income fighting blackout demons.

Nigeria’s electricity disaster is no longer just an infrastructure problem. It is now a weapon of economic destruction.

Until billing fraud is crushed, infrastructure rebuilt, regulation enforced, and corruption punished seriously, the economy will continue bleeding industries, jobs, productivity, and hope. Investors will keep escaping. Businesses will keep shrinking. Factories will keep dying. And politicians will keep standing before microphones announcing another “bold reform agenda” while the country sinks deeper into generator hell. A nation cannot chase prosperity while dragging darkness behind it like a chained corpse.

 

On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  “Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

The Dangerous AI Power Grab Hiding Behind Billionaire IPOs

The next monopoly may not sell oil or banks—it may control intelligence itself. Too much power in too few hands rarely ends with applause. T...