I refuse to accept ordinary thinking and people who keep complaining about how things are in Zimbabwe and yet they continue to do nothing.
The words we chose establish our life experience. We can complain all we want about corruption and particularly the seeming aloofness of President Robert Mugabe to how social conditions are fast deteriorating, or we can be part of the solution and start to think the extraordinary and act outside our imaginary limits.
Things cannot continue on the current path, this must be evident to all. This, of course, includes even those in ZANU(PF) who must continue to pretend that they are in control and have a plan; don't be fooled; they think exactly like everyone else and must put up pretences or they will be branded as sell outs. I actually feel sorry for some of these people who are, like flies, caught in a spider's web of greed and fear. It must be a terrible thing to know that your boss is wrong and no, because he feeds you, you must keep quiet. It seems to me that the MDC-T is aspiring for the same, but I digress.
Our challenge right now is to create new income streams for the country and at least get our economy going and pay the wage bills. One solution lies in sorting out the land issue which we can do with speed to re-establish some sanity and confidence in the economy.
I listened to Professor Erik Steenfeldt Reinert, the Norwegian economist with development economics and economic history as his specialties and author of the book, How Rich Countries Got Rich ... and Why Poor Countries Stay Poor (2007), who visited last week courtesy of the Norwegian Embassy and the CZI. His message was lucid and clear; that the problems we are facing are not unique at all. Countries such as Argentina managed to get out of the same rut, but this requires a grand plan including sincere and effective implementation of the solutions. In fact, in his opinion, Zimbabwe can bounce back very quickly.
I agree with that and I think that what is critical, is us having the management competency and the will to actually come up with economic solutions divorced from party politics and predatory state capitalism peppered as indigenisation and empowerment.