Featured Post

The Art of Adaptation: Unveiling the Wisdom of The Bat and The Weasels

Image
  The Art of Adaptation: Unveiling the Wisdom of The Bat and The Weasels “It is wise to turn circumstances to good account.” — Aesop In the world of fables, we often find animals acting out the deepest parts of our humanity. These creatures, symbols of instinct and survival, carry lessons older than time itself. The Bat and The Weasels , retold from the mind of Aesop and reimagined through the lens of Gye-Nyame Journey, isn’t just a tale for children—it’s a guide for those grown folks who still seek mastery. When the World Has You Cornered Here’s the setup: A bat falls to the ground and is caught by a weasel. The weasel hates birds. So the bat, slick with the tongue, says, “I’m not a bird—I’m a mouse.” The weasel lets him go. Later, the same bat falls again. This time, a different weasel catches him. But this weasel hates mice. So what does the bat say? “I’m not a mouse—I’m a bird.” And he gets set free again. Now, you could say the bat was being dishonest. But hold on. Let’s go de...

Out the Mud? Nah. The Myth of Capitalist Merit and the Power of Perspective

Out the Mud? Nah. The Myth of Capitalist Merit and the Power of Perspective

Great Day, Family!
This is Brother Ha2tim coming through with another blog—not just any blog, but one born from lived experience, cultural awareness, and unapologetic truth-telling. I'm experimenting with a powerful technique, and I invite you to take notes. What you’re about to read started while I was ironing clothes and recording my thoughts. Through technology, my words were transcribed, refined with the help of Baba AI (a digital extension of the Gye-Nyame mindset), and shaped into this message for the Journey.

Let’s get into it.


The Tool Is Not the Threat—Your Lack of Use Is

People keep asking, “Are robots or AI going to take my job?” Family, the truth is deeper: you won’t lose your job to AI—you’ll lose it to the person who knows how to use AI. The tool isn't your enemy. Your resistance to using it is.

I’m pushing out more content than ever because I’ve embraced the tools of the age. This blog, for example, started as a voice note. That's part of my system: I speak my truth, transcribe it, and refine it using AI trained specifically in the ways of Gye-Nyame. That’s efficiency. That’s evolution.


Let’s Talk Guilt and Growth

Now, let me confess—I’m guilty. Guilty of falling for one of the biggest myths that’s ever been sold to us.

When I was younger, I idolized the so-called “self-made men”—the Rockefellers, the Carnegies, the JP Morgans. I bought into the story that they “got it out the mud,” that their success came from hard work and hustle. I repeated that same hustle mentality to my people. “Get yours,” I said. “Just follow the steps, and it’ll all come together.”

But now, at 57 years old, I see it clearly. I was misinformed—and I passed that misinformation along.


The Lie of Capitalist Merit
Let’s be real: capitalism was never meant to work for all of us. It is a system that requires an underclass. In fact, it can’t function without one.

The foundation of capitalism wasn’t built on hard work—it was built on genocide, enslavement, theft, and exploitation. That’s not poetic license; that’s historical fact.

Take it back to ancient Sparta. A small warrior class thrived because an enslaved underclass did all the labor. Sound familiar? The Spartans didn’t need to hustle; they inherited the structure. Just like the so-called “robber barons” of the industrial age didn’t “build” anything from scratch. They inherited capital, land, laws, and labor systems forged through blood.

And guess who paid that cost?

Family, they didn’t get it out the mud. They got it from us.


Our Blood Built the Foundation

This country—and by extension, the modern world—was built off our sacrifice. Indigenous genocide cleared the land. African enslavement built the wealth. The wealth built the corporations. The corporations created the infrastructure. And then, they turned around and told us to “pull ourselves up by our bootstraps.”

Family, they didn’t get it out the mud. We are the mud.


What They Don’t Want You to See

The system doesn’t want you to have a historical context. Why? Because without it, you believe you’re deficient. That your struggle is personal failure. That your poverty is due to a lack of hustle.

But nah. Your only “flaw” is that you’re not a murderer, thief, kidnapper, or colonizer. That’s what the system rewarded to get to where it is now.

That’s why you can’t win at their game playing by their rules. Every path they used to gain power—once successful—was declared illegal or immoral for anyone else.

They got to sacrifice lives for wealth. We’re told to sacrifice our dreams for survival.


We Don’t Need a New System—We Need Our System

So what’s the solution? We don’t need to emulate capitalism. We need to replace it—with a system rooted in humanity, not hierarchy.

And for those afraid of what happens when Black folks start building new systems: don’t be. Because history has shown—we’ve always been just. Always communal. Always inclusive.

That’s why our young people don’t storm the streets seeking revenge. We carry pain, but we also carry perspective. What we build won’t just heal us—it’ll uplift everyone.


Capitalism Requires Inhumanity—We Don’t

To succeed in this current framework, you have to stop seeing people. You start seeing widgets, digits, and data. You reduce life to profit margins. You sacrifice humanity for hierarchy.

But family, that’s not us. That has never been us.

So let’s remember: to move forward, we must understand how we got here. Let’s reclaim our narrative, rebuild our systems, and redefine success in our own image.

This is Brother Ha2tim, signing out. Keep building. Keep learning. Keep living on purpose.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to pour Libations

GNJ Mall - April 27

Unlocking Your Potential: The Seven Steps of Gye-Nyame's Learning Journey