The first of this two-part article had hardly gone out than a flurry
of vitriol against the person and character of the subject hit the
waves.In newspaper reactions, on Sahara Reporters and Premium Times blogs,
everywhere, the anti Ben Bruce feeling, especially amongst the youth,
was overwhelming.
And going by the reactions that greeted the first part the verdict of
the youth is that Ben is a charlatan and this second part may as well
be pointless. Amazing, I escaped being tarred along with the guy whom I
had never met but felt touched by his messages.
Nigerian youth are angry. And it is important we quickly summarize
their issues with Ben before going into what this second part set out to
present in the first place.Ben Bruce is believed to be a fake. His words don’t match his
actions, they claim. At the recent launch of his book he committed two
“unpardonable” crimes, one directly against the youth (University
students) he had invited and the other against his “buy Naija”
preachment.
The students who had attended the launch at his invitation
were treated with disrespectand the promised “free copies” of the book
was mere words, not a copy for any of them.Then worse, the beautifully printed and well-bound book was printed
in America with foreign exchange. To come and talk “buy Naija” the least
expected of him would have been for the book itself to be locally
printed, “abi if beta printer no dey ya Bayelsa, dem no boku for Somolu
or Ibadan?” Ben needed to walk the talk, they admonish.
Perhaps the most vitriolic of the anti-Bruce reaction was a lengthy
diatribe by Modiu Olaguro, “a youth corps member (who) teaches
mathematics at Jebba,” published on the Sahara Reporters blog and
titled, “Ben Murray Bruce, the Janus-faced Naira Activist” wherein Modiu
characterized Ben as an “unprincipled politician who has an incorrect
sense of patriotism.”
Another, Egoigwe, who claims to know Ben Bruce from way back in “his
vacation job days at Domino Stores, Yaba (his father’s supermarket and
their golden goose), to St Gregs and down to Silverbird and Marathon
Ventures, he had always been a dedicated and unrepentant hypocrite,”
says Ben “has always craved the limelight, fame and fortune…” and
concluded, “Ben Bruce is a walking advert of everything Western.
From his cowboy Stetson hats, cars, beauty pageants to cinema house
down to his shoes and cloaks, they all scream “My Wannabe Nigga!” Ben
Bruce is a walking portfolio of deceit that stutters in dubious
decency.”I see too much bad belle, if you ask me. Being born with the
proverbial silver spoon in the mouth and living the part shouldn’t be a
crime; neither should craving “limelight, fame and fortune,” provided
such craving is not pursued fraudulently.
Nor should having political
ambition, even a vaulting one at that. But certainly it would be a
“crime” against morality if one is a fake and does not genuinely have
the interest of the public one wants to serve at heart.Against the volume of abuses and denunciation heaped on Ben, there
were two lonely voices of support. One was from Jay who wrote: “Ben
Murray-Bruce might not be the absolute political radical or activist we
want but he is by far the best of what we have at the moment.
If he
indeed printed his book in the USA, I see little sense in it but maybe,
just maybe that shouldn’t overshadow what his message is.” And one from a
Javscong on Premium Times who wrote: “The ‘patriotism’ is actually in
Ben’s DNA.Anyone who knew the father will attest to the fact that he was a very
humble and deeply patriotic man. In his last days, despite his wealth
and the promptings of all his children, papa refused to be taken abroad
for treatment. He opted to be treated by his doctor of many years. I
remember visiting him in hospital, virtually next door to his house.
When I asked him, papa, don’t you think it will be better if you went
abroad? His response was stunning: “are those doctors better than
Denloye?” Ben is just following in the father’s footsteps and there is
more to come from him.”We may now visit Ben’s other “Just want to makecommonsense”
interventions via his blog: Benbruce.org to see how much commonsense he
is making.
So far they include “Wailing on the Economy” in January 2016, where
he took umbrage at the CBN’s restriction on using of Nigerian
credit/debit cards from paying for goods/services abroad. Contradiction?
Ben says in that article: “I buy majority of the books I read online.So you could imagine my shock when I tried to purchase some
leadership and management books from a foreign bookshop (emphasis mine)
online only to find that my account, which is well funded, would not
work!
Then I got an email from my bank explaining to me that due to the
realities of our economy, my ATM card is being restricted. I was
shocked!” But Ben, what happened to our Nigerian Glendora or Booksellers
bookshops? This is all part of the story. You can’t be crying for your
candy when you just said candy is bad for the tooth!
But typically he figured and lumped some good points of his message
with the bad reflecting a mind weak in clarity. Poignantly he asked,
“What do Nigerians who are in foreign hospitals for life threatening
illness do if they can’t access funds via ATM? What do Nigerian students
schooling abroad and who depend on their parents to fund them via naira
ATM do? How do bloggers pay for hosting if ATMs will not work on
foreign sites? Is this the anti Social Media Bill via the backdoor? What
do thousands of young Nigerians who promote their businesses to the
world via Facebook/Twitter Ads do?”
Mr. Murray Bruce further listed a number of bad consumerist habits of
the Nigerian, especially the elite class to which Ben himself can claim
to belong. Nigeria is the biggest consumer of Moet & Chandon
champagne, he laments.But, for a notable celebrity and renowned beauty pageant promoter,
how are we to know if fridges in his home or offices are not full of
same product he preaches against? Religious pilgrimages next came for
bashing. “In the past 50 years, Nigeria has paid for maybe a million
people to go on pilgrimage. Imagine if we had paid for a million people
to start businesses instead!”
And there, Mr. “Commonsense” Bruce’s run of popular sentiment
stopped, laundering Jonathanism, he said: “I advise the present
administration to swallow its pride and instead of vilifying NgoziOkonjo-Iweala, should consider consulting her for advise on how she
was able to coordinate the economy in such a way that Nigeria enjoyed
seven years of economic stability in which our currency maintained its
value and workers were paid on time and regularly too.”
Haba, Ben Bruce! The question is to be asked: is this guy real? But
then, Ben is a staunch PDP member and senator and should be excused for
seeing an opportunity to pick up the fallen ladder (or umbrella) of PDP
to climb on to possible higher political position. His piece of December
29, 2015 titled “When an Election Becomes an Execution!” falls in this
category, and not worthy of commenting upon.
Just before that, on December 15, 2015 he had written one titled
“Five Thousand Naira is Possible,” and said of the APC government’s
intention to introduce “Unemployment Allowance” to the unemployed youth,
“I give my whole hearted support to this policy and I promise that I
will do all I can possibly do to make it a reality.” Ben asserts that,
“it is possible to fulfill this promise,” and went on trying to show
how.
Proposing that the policy should be open “only to graduates who have
passed out of the NYSC programme and should be accessible for no longer
than two years after passing out from the programme,” he thus sees the
lack of reliable database argument as no challenge, positing that with
the cashless policy already in place, “every graduate has a bank account
with a Bank Verification Number (BVN) to be complemented by any or all
of: Permanent Voter Card, National ID Card, and NYSC records.
Rather simplistically, he believes transactions in the individual
bank accounts should be sufficient to determine who is employed and who
is not! Funding? O, well, that can come from inflicting “unemployment
tax” on the employed and the wealthy.
Then in February this year, Mr. Ben Bruce, wanting to play the
non-partisan “statesman” tried to warm his way into the favour of
President Muhammadu Buhariby pleading that Nigerians should be more
patient with the president because, “nations grow over time not
overnight,” and that “Nigerians elected a man not a magician.” Premium
Times further quoted the senator as saying: “My idea of opposition isn’t
to attack Buhari\APC.
Opposition to me is proffering alternative
solutions/ideas for the betterment of Nigeria”. Ben, however, quickly
revealed the ulterior motive to such altruism when he cautioned against
attacking preceding governments. “The more you attack your predecessor
the more the bar is set for you. Know how slippery a road is before
knocking those who slipped on it,” he said.
For someone with a PR bent Ben Bruce disappoints with his approach so
far and needs a lot of working upon. A few days ago, I was drawn by a
link provided on Dele Momodu’s Facebook status to a Ben Bruce video
that’s part of his all-media “Just making commonsense” campaign
offensive.
Ben, whoever is your scriptwriter (and you are not free from
blame either) should be mindful of correct usage of the English
language, especially when you are going on video for global reach via
the Internet. When I heard him say: “…yet, we are asking this country
(Gt. Britain) to borrow us money”… bla bla bla. I cringed. That is
“Nigerian English.” It should be “…yet we are asking this country to
lend us…” You can’t say, Britain or America borrowed us money. Lend to;
borrow from. Bruce must bring that video down and correct it please. The
world is watching!
I started the first part of this article quoting my first notice of
the man when last year as senator-elect he had vowed to lead a campaign
for the reduction of the present, in his words “unjustifiable”, salaries
and allowances of the National Assembly members. He had then promised
to sponsor bills that would force the Nigerian leadership and government
officials to fly “down-to-earth” classes and “live a humble lifestyle.”
Indeed, Ben Bruce had then sworn to publish names of senators who
dissent to the bills, for their constituencies to take note! The
question is: nine months down the line how many bills has this senator
proposed? What campaign has he led against continuing excesses of the NA
as reflected in the recently purchased exotic cars for the senate
leadership?
There is evidently something that doesn’t add up with how Ben looks
and talks and who he is and how he acts. But he still has my sympathy. I
see a young guy – well, he’s just turned 60 so he is not so young after
all – with a lot of political ambition but going about it with the
wrong foot forward. One, you cannot take the Nigerian youth for a ride;
you need them on your side. Two, your words must match your actions.
Three, you must look the part. There must be sincerity about you.
If Mr. Ben Bruce is not to give credit to those who doubt his
sincerity and who denounce him as a charlatan, then he has to up the
ante by putting to practice what he preaches. And the place to start is
in the National Assembly. We eagerly wait for the bills he will be
proposing and their aftermath. He has the charm. Good luck, Ben.
And that’s saying it the way it is.
—————
Op-ed pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of Amen's Blog
Tunde Fagbenle can be reached on: aisoaba@gmail.com
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