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What are the red flags to always look out for in a relationship?
From my personal experience, I can’t keep up with someone who can’t seem to make their own independent decisions. Letting friends or family control their life. If they accept their family or friends manipulating or blackmailing them into surrendering control of the relationship, you can bet this wilRead more
From my personal experience, I can’t keep up with someone who can’t seem to make their own independent decisions. Letting friends or family control their life. If they accept their family or friends manipulating or blackmailing them into surrendering control of the relationship, you can bet this will be a way of life. Partners who won’t demand independence in running their own love life won’t fight for your relationship when you need them to, and there won’t be stability if everything must be approved by mother and father or their circle of friends. You won’t have a partner, you’ll have a child in the body of an adult. Likewise, people who let their friends speak for them or make decisions for them are too unstable to be trusted and to embark on romances with. I had an ex who let his friend direct everything, including how often we could see each other. The friend took great delight in “grounding” him from seeing me and in ruining planned dates by insisting on tagging along, and also wanted to know every detail of what we did when he wasn’t there to supervise my boyfriend and I. I don’t care to date a puppet so that ended very fast.
See lessWhy does it seem like a lot of African countries are so under developed?
One of the major causes is that a lot of African nations have had or still have a big obstacle of tribalism. A lot of Africans are loyal to their tribal/ethnic identities and subsequent traditional leaders rather than their nations. They see themselves as nations within their nation. Only modernizatRead more
One of the major causes is that a lot of African nations have had or still have a big obstacle of tribalism. A lot of Africans are loyal to their tribal/ethnic identities and subsequent traditional leaders rather than their nations. They see themselves as nations within their nation. Only modernization and multicultural environments should play a role in eliminating this problem.
See lessAlso, African governments— The political leaders of a lot of African countries are totally corrupt, almost close to the level of kleptocracy. This hinders social development as the funds supposed to invested in development projects just vanish into thin air without a trace. Political education has to be introduced in institutions of basic education in Africa as it is usually the uneducated people who try their luck in politics and they are often supplemented by more uneducated and corrupt people in the military.