Joseph Mbele

Joseph Mbele

This channel deals mostly with cultural and educational topics in the context of globalization.

Is It Racism?

Is It Racism?

How I Write Books

How I Write Books

Why is My Book Not Selling?

Why is My Book Not Selling?

Self Publishing

Self Publishing

Authentic Writing

Authentic Writing

Why I Write Books

Why I Write Books

Speaking Gigs

Speaking Gigs

Diversity Fatigue

Diversity Fatigue

Пікірлер

  • @deckiedeckie
    @deckiedeckie9 күн бұрын

    How long before South Afrika reverts to white control??

  • @user-bh8is9pz7s
    @user-bh8is9pz7s9 күн бұрын

    Dear sir, I am much obliged to you for making such curious videos. I am a russian student, interested in African culture, poetry and modern issues, african students face during their living and studying abroad. I would be sincerely glad to purchase some of your books, but, unfortunately, most of the payment methods are forbidden for Russian banks due to the sanctions. Could you, please, tell me your working email address? I will write you a letter for us to discuss this issue and to find the way I will be able to buy the books of yours. Best regards.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @user-bh8is9pz7s thank you very much for your message. I am delighted that you are interested in African culture, poetry, and such things, as well as the experiences of African students abroad. Those are central concerns of mine. I am really happy to know you and to know that you are interested in my work. I am sorry that there are those challenges related to sanctions. My email address is [email protected] Feel free to contact me.

  • @derxiong8304
    @derxiong830414 күн бұрын

    Congratulations! God bless you in Jesus' name. Amen!! 🙏🏽🙌🏽✈️🌸⭐💒🌄🌱💞🍰✨🌻🌷💖🌟🐑💗👑✝️🎈😇🕊️🕯️🌹

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion12 күн бұрын

    @derxiong8304 thank you very much. Blessings to you too.

  • @Changamira
    @Changamira20 күн бұрын

    Remember that African's were never met as one of the Black Americans once upon a time. Same difference here. 'When in Rome' You want Africans to greet you like you're on of them, honestly there's no short cuts but to learn the language(s)/cultural nuances.

  • @Kamau2012
    @Kamau201224 күн бұрын

    Great discussion. What many people fail to understand is everything is mainly in our minds. The hustle culture in a developed "foreign country" is crippling yet people simply want relocate and repeat. I guess when culture disintegrates people's goal change drastically.

  • @rainyfoxmedia
    @rainyfoxmedia25 күн бұрын

    I think you have every right to say what you are saying whether anyone agrees or disagrees, I am sure as a professor you may know that African Americans were stripped of their identity to Africa and its ethnic groups, only a hand full still have identity with their ethnic groups from Africa like the Gullah Geechee people of South Carolina, etc So many African American do not want to be called by that name they prefer the word Black American etc.. and do not understand, because in America everyone is Black or White, many African Americans don't want to have the word African to describe them and don't understand that White Americans also refer to themselves as Irish American or Italian American Welch, etc...I also think that there are a few that go to Africa to build the rest want to enjoy life without racism, but what many African Americans don't know is that in Africa they have Ethnic racism (Tribes) but Ultimately whenever people migrate it always creates a better world in the long run

  • @johncurry-jf6jc
    @johncurry-jf6jc26 күн бұрын

    Black Americans are not migrating to Africa, there is large number of Black Americans leaving Africa for a number of reasons, Africans are Fleeing Africa in droves those that can for the same reason, for Black Americans their has been land scams, business scams, property deals go bad, and some have even lost their lives, you are telling Black Americans to go to Africa and you yourself are part ones Fleeing Africa, Africa has far too many problems that we can’t do anything about, Africa needs to fix Africa and that will start with better Leadership

  • @arnoldjohnson7779
    @arnoldjohnson777926 күн бұрын

    Bro. Mbele your understanding is great. I just became aware of how the slave trade effected East Africa. Your words are wisdom.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @arnoldjohnson7779 thank you very much for your comment.

  • @bwiseafricam
    @bwiseafricam26 күн бұрын

    This conversation is putting the cart before the horse. One cannot talk about the transatlantic slave trade without first talking about the european slave trade by the barbary pirates. The history you tell is not our history, but his-story of our history. Spinning this narrative as history for the indigenous ascendants is very onesided and a part of the problem.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion26 күн бұрын

    @bwiseafricam, there is no historical account that is not an interpretation. History is a contested field, and all historical accounts are, to use your term, spinning. It has been that way since time immemorial.

  • @eddiethorne6461
    @eddiethorne646126 күн бұрын

    What European that were slaves and their children where born into slavery and for generations ?

  • @bwiseafricam5255
    @bwiseafricam525525 күн бұрын

    @@eddiethorne6461 Europeans were enslaved by the Barbary Pirates of North Africa before and during the transatlantic slave trade, these two historical accounts ran paralleled. Research European Slave Trade

  • @bwiseafricam5255
    @bwiseafricam525525 күн бұрын

    ​@@africonexion Correct, but your reference to American history lacks validity. Your interpretation is skewed because you do not have the perspective of an Indigenous American. It would benefit you to gain more knowledge about the Americas pre-colonization. I believe we need to incorporate our own truths without relying on distortions from colonizers. There are many reasons why afro-migrations occur. We are currently in our fourth great migration. Research Afro-migration.

  • @eddiethorne6461
    @eddiethorne646125 күн бұрын

    @@bwiseafricam5255 ,i did some research on the Barbary Slave Trade.I had never had a chance to research some of the details about it before and i was glad to find out that the slave trade there ended because European nations developed strong-powerful navies that were able to protect merchant ships and they were able to protect the people from enslavement.That is historically different from the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade.That ended for the most part because of a Civil War that killed more Americans than any war in American history.After that the majority of the freed slaves were still not free.The Black Codes,the KKK,JIM CROW and sharecropping prolong the journey to freedom.

  • @balewaalimayu4925
    @balewaalimayu492526 күн бұрын

    Very good Baba Thanks for the truth some of us here in US who are Black like me We love you

  • @gibson2675
    @gibson267526 күн бұрын

    Dont forget Liberia

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion26 күн бұрын

    @gibson2675, yes, what happened in Liberia with the influx of Black Americans freed from slavery in the USA offers great lessons.

  • @eddiethorne6461
    @eddiethorne646126 күн бұрын

    @@africonexion ,Professor lets not also forget about Rwanda and the genocide that happened there as well.At least 100,000 people died in a month and that was not all.There were other tribal wars as well.

  • @eddiethorne6461
    @eddiethorne646126 күн бұрын

    And that was just one generation ago.

  • @kilabob1200
    @kilabob120027 күн бұрын

    Thank you for the ino, Dr. Mbele!

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @kilabob1200 thank you very much.

  • @bekisiphotshili2566
    @bekisiphotshili256627 күн бұрын

    I am glad this Professor has come to his senses. He was gung-ho about getting foreigners into our countries without even thinking.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @bekisiphotshili2566, I was thinking, all along. It is possible, however, that my thinking was faulty. I am not going to discount that.

  • @mavisburgess1656
    @mavisburgess165627 күн бұрын

    Sorry My Brother••• its like this.. Whenever you have nothing Good to say.... Please say nothing? 😢😢

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion27 күн бұрын

    @mavisburgess1656 this is my forum and I alone decide what to share. In my desire to tell the truth as I know it, and to elicit free discussion, I talk about the good and the bad.

  • @jahiissa65
    @jahiissa6527 күн бұрын

    I am also a professor of history and Africa. This person is sooo wrong in his analysis and often sounds like A Eurocentric African.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion27 күн бұрын

    @jahiissa65 the only way to show you are a professor is to respond to my views with arguments and analyses of your own. Merely proclaiming yourself a professor and merely claiming that I sound like a Eurocentric African, without any proof, is worthless.

  • @FoodForTheSoulGlobal
    @FoodForTheSoulGlobal27 күн бұрын

    Professor Mbele I believe your work on the cultural differences between Africans and Americans is very important. Having had the pleasure to host your lectures twice here in Tanzania where I have been living for the last eight years and to have read your books has been very informative and helpful. However I do believe that there is much that you still need to understand about African Americans. In my experience and from what I’ve heard from others, when we come to the continent as black Americans or people of African descent from the diaspora, we are not often seen as being African. We are seen only as foreigners. Many Africans, yourself included professor Mbele, do not really understand the African-American experience of living in a culture of such racism and oppression that still exists to this day. I encourage you to do some more research. Look into Michelle Alexander, who wrote the book The New Jim Crow and Dr Joy DeGruy Leary who wrote Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome. This is a good place to start if you really want to be able to understand and to speak to and speak about African-Americans from a place of understanding. Thank you, Ama Opare

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion27 күн бұрын

    @FoodForTheSoulGlobal, what a pleasant surprise to see you here. I was about to write you, to let you know that I am coming to Tanzania again last week of July. We could get together again with your remarkable community from the diaspora. Because you actually have read my books and heard me speak extensively, your views about my work carry enormous weight, and I thank you very much. For anyone who might be interested, the books are "Africans and Americans: Embracing Cultural Differences" and "Chickens in the Bus: More Thoughts on Cultural Differences," available here: www.lulu.com/spotlight/mbele On the issue of Black Americans being seen as foreigners in Africa, here is an example of what I have said in the past, under the title "When Africans Call African Americans White People": kzread.info/dash/bejne/aoic2dqriJWflaw.html I am aware that I still have much to learn, and I am learning. There can be no end to learning. We should all be involved. As matters stand, there is much ignorance among Africans about their own history and the history and present circumstances of Blacks in the diaspora, and there is much ignorance among Blacks in the diaspora about their own history and about African history and present circumstances. Many problems and misunderstandings stem from this ignorance. Again, thank you very much.

  • @doinggarveytv5894
    @doinggarveytv589425 күн бұрын

    Peace Dr. Mbele! How much do you know about the white man you are consistently around? How much studying did you do of them? This information definitely tells me that you've never really associated yourself with FOUNDATIONAL BLACK AMERICANS(FBA) since you were granted your paperwork by the white to live in America. Since only consider us as your test subjects instead of your Brothers and Sisters tells me a lot about your association with us. As you know you've benefitted a lot from the sacrifice of our FBA Ancestors. Yes, you do have a lot to learn about us kidnapped Afrikans and FBAs. We're BUILT DIFFERENT. ❤️🖤💚💯✊🏿

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion24 күн бұрын

    @@doinggarveytv5894 thanks for your message. I was born and raised in Tanzania. From a young age, we were taught, in Swahili, "binadamu wote ni ndugu zangu," meaning "all human beings are my kin." We learned from our President, Julius Nyerere, the kind of lesson Martin Luther King Jr. taught in this country, that everybody deserves to be judged by the content of their character, not by the colour of their skin. That is how I view people. People of any race can be my brothers and sisters. The "white man" in this predominantly white institution where I work has been, all these years, professional and respectful, just like me. Growing up, I always wanted to be a teacher, and I love teaching. I am happy to be in an institution that affords me whatever I need to be an effective teacher. It is true that the sacrifices of your FBA ancestors made it possible for me to work here. I know the history of slavery in this country, and the hard and costly struggles for emancipation, for civil rights, and so on. On the other hand, African Americans who are moving to Africa are able to do so because of the sacrifices of my ancestors on the continent. Think about the many uprisings in the German colonies, the British colonies, the French colonies, the Portuguese colonies. Think about the decades of struggle by South Africans against apartheid in South Africa, a country which is now one of the top destinations for African Americans. You started by asking how much I know about the white man I am constantly around. So far, I have shared my knowledge in two books: "Africans and Americans: Embracing Cultural Differences" and "Chickens in the Bus: More Thoughts on Cultural Differences." In these books, I share what I know, so far, about "the white man." More importantly, I am still learning, for learning is a life long process, and there is no one who can know everything about anybody or about any race.

  • @couproduc
    @couproduc27 күн бұрын

    African Americans have been coming back to Africa for more than 200 years. Paul Cuffe father was a Ghanaian and his Mother was a Native American. He owned ships and sailed Blacks to Sierra Leone

  • @darrellgamble00
    @darrellgamble0027 күн бұрын

    Tanzania is my home now. I have all those reasons for that: the good life, the struggle, the culture, language, integration into the society. It's not all our nothing. I came for all of it. I only come to the states for business. My wife and kids are happily on the continent. I'm built for this. The beauty of it as well as the flaws. America's advantage is the infrastructure, material things. But the situation otherwise is hell on wheels. And yes, racism is a chief driver. I've been through hell with that in corporate America. I speak Spanish and had a choice to do South America or the Caribbean but the future is Africa. I want to spend the rest of my building the bridges necessary for our watu wetu kufika nyumba yetu. Best decision of my life. Thanks for the channel. I enjoy each chat.

  • @leedclinton5026
    @leedclinton502627 күн бұрын

    Unfortunately because of the circumstances of history, many Africans born in America have been socialized against themselves. The Africans that know better (like myself) recognize Africa as our ancestorial home. We understand that we must assimilate into the culture of whatever African country we decide to expatriate to.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion27 күн бұрын

    @leedclinton5026, thank you for your comments. Your views are similar to mine. In fact, regarding assimilating into the culture that I have created an online course for American Americans moving to Africa, which is appreciated by those who are using it: joseph-s-site-c20e.thinkific.com/courses/your-first-course

  • @Torpedopot
    @Torpedopot27 күн бұрын

    Many Africans have been socialized against themselves

  • @Torpedopot
    @Torpedopot27 күн бұрын

    Anytime you have billions of people they can’t open up consistent factories to produce goods and services to alleviate poverty something is mentally wrong

  • @eddiethorne6461
    @eddiethorne646127 күн бұрын

    @@africonexion ,a lot of black and Colored Americans are moving to Brazil,Colombia,the Dominican Rep.and Mexico.There was a black man named Robert Robinson the moved to the USSR or Russia in the 1930`s.He wrote a book titled My 44 years in the Soviet Union.Also the former Civil Rights leader who was one of Martin Luther King`s associates move to Guinea and changed his name to Kwane Toure.He also married an African.Before he changed his name his name was Shockey Carmicheal.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion27 күн бұрын

    @@eddiethorne6461 thanks. I know about the legendary Paul Robeson and Kwame Toure.

  • @AuntieCheri
    @AuntieCheri27 күн бұрын

    Hey!!! What a suprise!

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion27 күн бұрын

    @AuntieCheri, thanks for stopping by. What a pleasant surprise 😊

  • @starwarsfighters
    @starwarsfightersАй бұрын

    love it! i was in tanzania once for a month with my grandmother because she works for the church mission in germany , the people and the country are just awesome definitely visiting again soon . So hearing you talk reminds me of this wonderful time i had there. And you have a very calming voice ! Keep it up ! <3

  • @africonexion
    @africonexionАй бұрын

    @starwarsfighters thank you very much for your comments. I am delighted that you visited my country and that your grandmother works there. I am delighted that you had such good experiences there. Do visit again, and you are always welcome to visit my KZread channel.

  • @doinggarveytv5894
    @doinggarveytv5894Ай бұрын

    Why would we want to come to the Continent? Why did you want to be Europe and not Tanzania? Was the white world you live in hetter than Tanzania? Is the infrastructure better in the predominantly white state in America? We want to come home to build because we weren't able to come home easily after being in slavery after 300 years. You actually sound like a typical African educated in America or Europe. I hear no Black Power Consciousness in your observation of us. ❤️🖤💚💯✊🏿

  • @africonexion
    @africonexionАй бұрын

    @doinggarveytv5894 I advice you to first do your homework. If you want to talk about me, familiarize yourself with my work. Closely follow my KZread channel. Read my books. Refrain from making premature, uninformed judgements.

  • @doinggarveytv5894
    @doinggarveytv5894Ай бұрын

    @@africonexion I have your book and read it. I didn't read anything about you being a part of any Black Power movements in America. I didn't read anything about your personal interaction with us kidnapped Afrikans from America. Please refresh my memory if I've missed something.

  • @brandycoke713
    @brandycoke713Ай бұрын

    A person can only be born in one place how They can be African and American

  • @doinggarveytv5894
    @doinggarveytv5894Ай бұрын

    You can't relate to us kidnapped Afrikans because, your not building in our community. Your association seem to be with the white America. What Black American kidnapped slave's activities have you participated in? These laws were implemented by your Colonizers and your leaders who put it in your Constitutions. Everything you do in Afrika is influenced by the Colonizers. Us kidnapped Afrikans from America are only here because, your Ancestors captured, kidnapped, sold and helped put us on the boat. You actually sound your Ancestors. We lost our whole identity because of our people who sold us out. It seem to be the same attitude by the leaders and many of our people on the Continent today. If Afrika and it leaders were to look at us kidnapped Afrikans from America as an asset rather than a threat, Afrika would be more progressive. What culture are you talking about? Do you mean the corruption, the Colonized mind, the deceptions? You sound like you don't know we're Afrikans. We just have been uprooted by you and the Conquerors. We know about Afrika more than Afrikans know the Continent. Why are you still in Europe and not back home in Tanzania? Didn't us kidnapped Afrikans provide a way to come study and gain an education in America? Have you ever met Dr. Ben, Dr. Clark or Dr. Amos Wilson? Have you ever read any of their literature? ❤️🖤💚💯✊🏿

  • @africonexion
    @africonexionАй бұрын

    @doinggarveytv5894 thank you for taking your time to express so many ideas and sentiments. It is not possible to respond on this page to all the things you have said because you have said so many things. Unfortunately, many of the things you say are not based on facts but are hearsay and false beliefs. Nevertheless, I see what you say as useful topics for my future talks on this channel. I genuinely thank you for generating these topics even though what I will do is mostly correcting or refuting what you say. It will be necessary for me to do this because some of the ideas and sentiments you express are quite common among certain sections of the African American community. However, I wish to assure you that my talks will be consistently sensitive and respectful, because I know the history of what African Americans have gone through and what they are still going through.

  • @diasporaconnecttanzania3521
    @diasporaconnecttanzania35212 ай бұрын

    Absolutely true! Thank you for sharing. Great video!

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion2 ай бұрын

    @diasporaconnecttanzania3521 thank you very much, and I have to let people know how much I admire your channel for telling the truth as you see it as someone who loves Africa.

  • @diasporaconnecttanzania3521
    @diasporaconnecttanzania35212 ай бұрын

    Greetings Professor Mbele, thank you for sharing and spreading the well needed information to the people

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion2 ай бұрын

    @diasporaconnecttanzania3521 thank you very much. Indeed, I am doing whatever I can to spread the information that I know helps those who acquire it, since I am getting solid feedback. I have put together my best ideas and advice in my online course: joseph-s-site-c20e.thinkific.com/courses/your-first-course

  • @thenigeriannomad
    @thenigeriannomad2 ай бұрын

    Hello Mr Joseph! I bought your book not too long ago. great stuff. I would like to interview you on my channel. Please let me know if you are interested . I feel it would bring a lot of fresh audience to your channel and your proucts

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion2 ай бұрын

    @thenigeriannomad thank you very much. I greatly appreciate your interest in and appreciation for my work. I would be delighted to appear on your show. Fortunately, I finished teaching for the semester and I am now available any day. You can reach me by email: [email protected]

  • @kingmaafa120
    @kingmaafa1202 ай бұрын

    I’d love to discuss this with you I fwd my information to you Ase

  • @kingmaafa120
    @kingmaafa1202 ай бұрын

    From what I now know trust me it’ll be better in Africa okay Some things I cannot discuss openly

  • @africonexion
    @africonexionАй бұрын

    @kingmaafa120, thank you very much for sharing your view. I readily agree with you. My life embodies the African and the American experience simultaneously. I know both sides intimately. In terms of social life, social relationships and connectedness, Africa is far better than the USA. Americans themselves admit this, if they have had a chance to visit Africa. For the many years I have been in the USA, I have been involved in offering cultural orientation to Americans going to Africa. I talk with them before they go, and I hear from them after their return. Again and again, they express their surprise at how welcoming and how happy the Africans are. Americans visiting Africans in the village, wonder how people can be so happy despite lack of material things that Americans consider essential for happiness. I talk about these things in my book, "Africans and Americans: Embracing Cultural Differences" www.lulu.com/spotlight/mbele

  • @mayaannora8765
    @mayaannora87652 ай бұрын

    Promo>SM

  • @valentinelah8798
    @valentinelah87982 ай бұрын

    Thank you both for this episode. By the way, the volume is too low, at least for me. I had to find a quiet moment, 2am, to listen to it. I appreciate your views on the cultural challenges you talked about. I think fear provided a very strong motivation for people to want to maintain some cultural norms. Cruelty may be and outcome, but probably not the primarily desired one. Addressing the specific fears may pave the way for better understanding and more tolerance. Cultures were established with intentions, misguided or not, of fostering a safe future for the communities. It is still the same today.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion2 ай бұрын

    valentinelah8798 thank you for your observations. I appreciate them all and would like to do something about the volume.

  • @tumainitemu7074
    @tumainitemu70743 ай бұрын

    The humble Joseph

  • @anyohshiri
    @anyohshiri3 ай бұрын

    I read the book and love it. It’s liberating and it cuts across all cultures.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @anyohshiri, thank you very much for your feedback.

  • @onlybusiness118
    @onlybusiness1183 ай бұрын

    im from cameroon too! like #1

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @onlybusiness118 welcome to my KZread channel.

  • @zander9418
    @zander94183 ай бұрын

    Professor MBELE. You are the best!

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @zander9418 thank you very much.

  • @LeninMcDonalds
    @LeninMcDonalds3 ай бұрын

    Found your channel on my own as I wandered the youtube lands that lay beyond algorithmic dictates. I think I might pitch a tent and stay here for a bit :). Thank you for your videos, sir.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @aloknr2430 thank you for your heartwarming message. My KZread channel welcomes you and everyone else to bring their tents, including migrants and escapees from other channels 😅

  • @venantkapinga103
    @venantkapinga1033 ай бұрын

    Nakupata vizuri Prof

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @venantkapinga103 nafurahi kusikia hivyo.

  • @venantkapinga103
    @venantkapinga1033 ай бұрын

    Happy Easter Prof Nipo Mbinga hospitali ya mji known as mbuyula nisaidie kuvipata Vitabu

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @venantkapinga103 asante kwa ujumbe. Naifahamu hiyo hospitali na nimeshafika hapo. Vitabu vinapatikana Dar es Salaam, kwenye duka liitwalo A Novel Idea, lililoko sehemu iitwayo Slipway, Msasani. Duka hili liko pia Arusha, katika TFA Center, barabara ya Sokoine.

  • @MhdjfiFgh
    @MhdjfiFgh3 ай бұрын

    Good video

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion9 күн бұрын

    @MhdjfiFgh thanks.

  • @simonphabiano9050
    @simonphabiano90503 ай бұрын

    🎉Asante sana Mwalim

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @simonphabiano9050 karibu sana.

  • @artus198
    @artus1983 ай бұрын

    Africans must save that continent from Desertification...once soil fertility is gone, you will lose everything. #savesoil

  • @sabri5460
    @sabri54603 ай бұрын

    FOR SOME WHO ASK ABOUT JOBS IN AFRICA I GOT A LITTLE TIP FOR YOU; PEOPLE WHO REALLY THINK THEY MADE SERIOUS CONSIDERATION TO SETTLE IN AFRICA SHOULD NOT EXPECT TO FIND JOBS ፡ IN HOTELS FAST FOOD RESTAURANTS IN HUGE WARE HOUSES LIKE IN USA.....!! ONLY OR IN MOST CASES THOSE WHO ARE ABLE TO SET THEIR BUSINESSES( SMALL OR BIG!) AND/OR THOSE PROFESSIONALS( SKILLED!) MEDICAL DOCTORS ENGINEERS .....TEACHERS.... COUL MAKE IT BIG NOT BY BEING EMPLOYEED BY ANY ENTITY BUT SETTING THEIR OWN BUSINNESS!! YOU WANNA DIG RAW MINERALS FROM THE GROUND GO THERE!!!

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @sabri5460 thanks for sharing that advice. I hope people will keep a note of it.

  • @marianialvaro7603
    @marianialvaro76033 ай бұрын

    Hey Joseph if you ever happen to organize a book club of sorts, I would be interested to participate

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @marianialvaro your message has really touched me. Thank you very much. I will not let you down.

  • @yusterngoye3282
    @yusterngoye32823 ай бұрын

    Utabdawazi unaathari zipi kisiasa

  • @nasserossareh3910
    @nasserossareh39103 ай бұрын

    Thanks, Prof. I somehow understand the cultural integration and the challenges one faces in that regard. However, I am also concerned about the political life in most countries in Africa. Could you please offer a realistic elaboration on the political life of citizens in a few African countries by name (the good, the bad and the ugly)? Do people have to keep their mouths shut and say nothing or do they have civil and political liberties comparable to those in the US society?

  • @francisleonetti1120
    @francisleonetti11203 ай бұрын

    Sure now that you’ve voted in a slew of imbeciles and tried ruining the U.S., now you’re going to move! You’ll be back!

  • @ramekgwedanieltjikila1534
    @ramekgwedanieltjikila15343 ай бұрын

    Thank you Ntate Mbele. Your surname is so South African'ish, but after all, we are all Bantu people

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @ramekgwedanieltjikila1534, thanks. Yes, the Mbele surname is common in South Africa. However, you find Mbeles in other countries as well, such as Tanzania and Cameroon.

  • @derekm4819
    @derekm48193 ай бұрын

    Africans are fleeing Africa by the hundreds of thousands annually, trying to get virtually into any nation they can legally or illegally as immigrants/migrants.. With that said, why would a non-African flee into Africa. That's akin to running into a burning building or boarding a sinking ship.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @derekm4819 you are free to believe whatever you wish about Africa, but the fact is that there are perhaps hundreds of thousands of people from different continents who are running to Africa every year, having discovered its abundant opportunities. Apart from African Americans, there are Chinese, Europeans, Russians, Middle Easterners, Indians, Australians, and so on. They all want a piece of the cake that is Africa. As I say in my video and other videos on my KZread channel, for the past few years, I have been following the movement of African Americans to Africa. They go to many countries, such as Gambia, Senegal, Ghana, Rwanda, Tanzania, and South Africa. There are KZreadrs among them, whom you can follow. Knowing what a big phenomenon this is, I have found ways to work with these African Americans, and this includes the course I am talking about in the video above.

  • @derekm4819
    @derekm48193 ай бұрын

    @@africonexion A few people going or moving to Africa to try taking advantage of resources Africans have ignored, or routinely manipulated out of is ok for those few people. Personally, I'd never move into a dysfunctional country the natives all wish to flee. To me that's the same as moving into a burning building or a sinking ship.

  • @derekm4819
    @derekm48193 ай бұрын

    @@africonexion Yet millions of Africans flee or seek to flee the continent despite being abused and or unwelcome in most places they flee to.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @@derekm4819 the African Americans who move to Africa know what they are doing. Usually, they visit a country several times, or they visit several countries, and then they move there. I wonder if you have been to any African country. If you have not, I wonder why anyone should take you seriously, instead of listening to the people who have actually moved there and live there.

  • @africonexion
    @africonexion3 ай бұрын

    @@derekm4819 Your concepts: "dysfunctional country," "burning building" and "sinking ship," as characterizations of Africa are interesting. I listen to African American KZreadrs who have migrated to Africa, and they are basically proclaiming the USA a "dysfunctional country," a "burning building," and a "sinking ship." I hear them regret why they didn't leave earlier, and they are urging African Americans to come out and see Africa for themselves. I can give you names of some of these KZreadrs.

  • @Phil-964
    @Phil-9643 ай бұрын

    I keep hearing about people moving to Africa, but what is the economy like and what is the best country to move to? What about jobs? Nah I think I’ll just stay in America.

  • @thabomathe5603
    @thabomathe56033 ай бұрын

    Yip you better have signed a contract before moving here or else you're stuffed.

  • @bayarea650warrior
    @bayarea650warrior4 ай бұрын

    Black Americans are not all from Africa. There are indegenous too. They been here before columbus. Update your files

  • @derekm4819
    @derekm48193 ай бұрын

    Most Black Americans are aboriginal Americans. Millions did not arrive on so-called slave ship/sail boats. The TransAtlantic slave trade story is another lie told by the habitual liars/colonizers.

  • @stephenconteh8214
    @stephenconteh82143 ай бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @kieshacallahan5508
    @kieshacallahan55083 ай бұрын

    Here we go lol

  • @derekm4819
    @derekm48193 ай бұрын

    @@kieshacallahan5508 Educate yourself. www.raceandhistory.com/historicalviews/ancientamerica.htm