In the bustling city of Onitsha, Anambra State, where markets roar louder than sermons, a professor, a custodian of knowledge and supposed guardian of integrity, became the chief priest of vote buying. With the calmness of a lecturer marking scripts, he distributed wads of naira like examination handouts, teaching the people that democracy is a market where conscience is sold at wholesale price. In a country praying for progress, this academic sage reduced elections to a classroom experiment in corruption, proving that degrees cannot disinfect greed. Perhaps next semester, his course will be outlined with title: Democracy 101: Buying and Selling Votes Made Easy.
Are we building community or destroying it?
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