
CAMEROON: A Case of Social Engineering by the Neo-Colonialist Faction in France's Political Establishment
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Virtual Voice

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About this listen
In a world where attitudes and behaviors that were taboo not long ago are now acceptable in a world where the future is frightening to many, we appear to be the helpless onlookers of a process we have no control over. So, finding out that there are underlying efforts by governments, the media, or private groups to influence particular attitudes and social behaviors on a large scale, for the purpose of producing desired results or certain characteristics in particular segments of the population, would be shocking to many people.
It is even more shocking when the social engineers are nefarious and the intentions and goals of their social construct of an entire country are realized, sapping away the dynamism and creativity of a people with the potential to be among the society of progressive and developed nations.
This account provides an insight into the social experiment on Cameroon that began more than seven decades ago, which transformed it from a center of liberation fervor in the first half of the twentieth century into a bastion of comprador-ship where two unpopular figures — Ahmadou Ahidjo (1958-1982), and his agreed-upon successor Paul Biya (1982-Present Day) — held Cameroon hostage as heads of state that the social engineers put and maintain in power, thus disarraying the country and driving its dynamic people into despondence and exile.
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