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Burkina Faso also pulled themselves out of the International Criminal Court with similar logic. They said America, Isreal, Russia, and China all get to do basically whatever they want globally while Burkina Faso is constantly slapped with sanctions
Now those sanctions are because that country is one of the most dangerous on the planet, so it's hard to take the military leader at his word. Even if he had a valid point
One of the most infuriating aspects of western imperialism and corruption is how douchebag leaders in non-western countries can point at it and say "See? This is why you need the kind of strong ruler who is willing to massacre unarmed protesters."
What did they do to beat out Russia and America?
I think it's hard for any American to accuse any country of being "the most dangerous on the planet" when you look at history.
Does that say "the most dangerous ever" or just "most dangerous"? I'm not sure what history has to do with the present.
America has shown consistently for decades that it will kill people in order to preserve it's economic interests. They've been the most dangerous country on the planet since at least the 1950s if not sooner.
No those sanctions are because Europe lost control of their resources and were not compensated. Those sanctions are for a lesser country fighting back without permission.
Burkino Faso, unironically, has done nothing wrong in their search for freedom.
Ye...eah, that seems like a bit of "doing something wrong" to be actively regressing on personal freedoms.
Poor Christian country has anti homosexual laws? Well it didn't break free from colonialism then!
If you aren't free to oppress someone, are you truly free? (/s)
Some 30% of Burkinabés are Christian or Catholic. It could be argued that homophobia in Burkina Faso is a result of western colonialism via mission trips and schools.
Even assuming that this has anything directly to do with religion which is already a big leap it is a Muslim majority country that had no laws against homosexuality prior to or right after independence from France... Sorry but this sounds like a pretty difficult one to pin on western colonialism.
To put it simply, when western forces colonize a people, they simultaneously suppress and frame their traditions as barbaric and prop up their own western values as civilized. The colonized people experience unconscionable violence from these western forces, seeing first hand the inhumanity being caused in the name of 'civility'. Naturally, as anti-colonial resistance mounts, the most anti-West voices gain the most momentum, seen as less corruptible to those western forces and more unwavering in their resistance. So it's no surprise that reactionary attitudes on civil rights come as a reaction to western colonialism.
It's only once a people are able to reclaim their sovereignty that civil rights movements are able to build, fight for, and win those rights domestically. Without being co-opted by foreign powers with the only goal of destabilization.
I wasn't aware of the connection myself until I read Fanon's works at length
No doubt it and many other historical events will affect many things later on but it's still not really a reasonable position to assume that has to be it even with lots of evidence that makes it seem unlikely in a particular case. Colonialism did not introduce anti-homosexual attitudes to the African continent. Islam, which arrived before the western colonialists also has them but wasn't the first appearance of that there either.
This history of lgbt acceptance and religion is complicated, but that is beside the point here.
Colonialism and Imperialism are absolutely to blame for the reasons described prior, they have significantly halted progress made in civil rights within their target countries. A foreign power mass executing your people makes it difficult for the conversion to be anything but liberation.
If you want to learn more about the psychology of colonialism on the colonized, and how that influences social beliefs and revolutionary resistance, read anything Frantz Fanon.
Sorry but colonialism being to blame here seems like an a priori assumption with you and not anything that you've actually factually established.
I certainly don't have a problem with the idea of colonialism or other parts of history having very long lasting and diverse effects but it's just not the case that we can say it is the root cause of any given issue absent of any real evidence for such a claim.
My analysis is based on Fanon, how well read are you on anti-colonialism?
A military dictatorship isn't particularly representative of freedom.