Francis Kway is a brilliant young brother and much of what he said is true. The sad thing about most of our people is that we tend to look for faults in our brothers rather than finding the good in them. As a consequence non-melanated people win since their goal is to keep us in conflict while they reap the benefits of our shortcomings. This is largely why slavery and colonization started and why it continues til this day. The same goes for spirituality we must start by respecting others beliefs and come to the understanding that if we believe in a higher power then we are tasked to LOVE our brother as we LOVE ourselves. And if we commit to this then we can achieve anything!!!
All African Americans also are not doing poorly in the US either. As a collective Black Americans are the wealthiest Black people on Earth. I'm not against mutually beneficial opportunities or building relationships regarding business with Ghana. There does however to be mutual respect and understanding between both African Americans and Ghanaians. There were no immigrants in the US besides Europeans when African Americans arrived. African Americans were here since the inception of the US. The immigrants the guest talks abound came hundreds of years after the country was already built into a successful nation. The US largely became successful due to extreme economic gain from the trans Atlantic En-slaved trade and African Americans forcibly working for FREE in horrible conditions. There definitely were uprisings of enslaved people in the US that is not taught in US history. Due to colonization in Africa and the Black Diaspora being separated due to the trans Atlantic enslaved trade, there need to be more conversations about this which include African Americans. I'd also like to know more about what Ghanaians are doing to build Ghana collectively? Is there cohesiveness between the African Americans currently in Ghana and Ghanaians?
I like this guy's explanation of how slavery started, which is exactly my perception of how the whole thing started. Today, there is still indirect slavery through our African leaders to them. Great interview.
You cannot be serious. Africans who sold their people were weak minded gullible abs literally pawns. Europeans knew this. They tried it with other cultures ie Native Americans and Chinese people and they fought back! The Chinese kicked them out of their country at one point.
Thank you soooo much Brother, for articulating this Patriotism issue in the US, very well said!! I wish Candance Owens can hear this, she is sooo desperate to want to be accepted into the Patriotism club that she would deny that racism and institutional racism exist!!! by so doing strengthening the hands of the oppressor!! Watching from Texas
@@Nurse_villa She is sadly and African American lady who lives in the US and literally denied that the officer who killed George Floyd did any wrong because George was a thug. In a lot of her speeches she blatantly see nothing wrong with police brutality who unjustly murdered their black victims.
BPO (Business Process outsourcing) would do well in Ghana. Its actually one of the fastest growing industry in Nigeria with big partnership like Teleperfomance. The only thing is it will take alot time to train your initial workforce up to that standard of customer service and work ethic we are custom to in the West.
@CaptHayford this is another amazing interview & info. put out w/ @FrancisKway. I'm watching for 3rd time & sharing! Agree w/practically everything he said...but not all 😊 #Africa #Afrika #Alkebulan #Unity #One Africa ⚫️ 🖤♟️🏴
At one point the host and guest have a conversation about why many Black Americas want to stay in the US and not relocate to Ghana. African Americans have nearly 500 years of history, culture, and community in the US that we are PROUD OF. We not only created a culture in the US we have our own communities, universities, businesses, museums that highlight who we are etc. African Americans leaders and elders that came before us FOUGHT for legal representation and rights we have with their lives. This extends beyond Civil Rights to the Black Panthers and so on. Furthermore African Americans built the US literally and built its economy. That's a documented Fact. So asking why so many of us aren't relocating to Ghana, doesn't make sense to me. We have a culture and a country. If some African Americans want to relocate to African countries for mutually beneficial reasons that's great. Others are obtaining success in the US and helping our fellow African Americans here which we have always done and strengthening our communities which is fantastic. There is room to do both.
@JasNakira-bs5nx our culture in the U.S. is not what it used to be. I don't feel safe around my people. Our women aren't focused on family and values. We need to hit the reset button.
No one denies anything you've said. Stay put and enjoy the great life you have in the States. Those of us who find value in connecting with Africa will also do so. It's a free world and each of us is free to make the choices that suit him or her. Peace.
There are over 40 million and counting Black Americans in the US. We live in all types of communities across the US. We can reset in our own country if needed. Do some research on Ghana. All skin folk definitely are not kin folk. There's a lot of scamming, corruption land seller scammers, Black Americans being charged crazy fake inflated prices there, the average Ghanaian wants to leave and come to the US or UK I've heard them say this. Black Americans are seen often as a cash cow to them due to the conditions of Ghana. I understand how you feel but always remember you have a community and culture that is AMAZING! Get around different types of Black Americans that you are safe with. Continuously building our Black American community is super important. I do also urge you to travel to various African countries and see his things are there for yourself.
I will. I've been to African countries. Definitely visit and do what's best for you. Don't be naïve tho, be smart, vigilant and always remember you have a country, that is the most successful economically on the planet due in large part to your Black American heritage and ancestors.
I respectfully disagree. We have a ton of amazing Black American men and women in the US. We have various communities throughout the country. We aren't a monolith. I respect your opinion but the US is a huge country. We are over 40 million strong. I love our culture and Black American people and always will! Definitely look at various videos about our experiences in Ghana and other African countries. You'll see various different opinions. Definitely travel also and form your own opinions and thoughts as well.
In America most black men and women are in defense mode when they go to work in a city or get off work or even sometimes when they just go shopping for house hold needs. It's hard to not have some type of defense mode especially walking or working in San Francisco. It's sad really to live a life in fear. Yes, it's even worse to have a built in fear of police even when you have friends and family that are in the force.
He became successful in the US due to the opportunities he received in the US. It's important to point that out. His mindset regarding business is also a US mindset. Also, there are currently thousands of African Americans in Ghana now. Some have built homes there. Why is the host saying none want to come to Ghana??
It's enslaved and he definitely is talking greasy and disrespectful about the institution of people being enslaved. Him attempting to give a pass to Africans for selling their people is crazy. By selling their people they literally also dealt their countries a huge colonial blow that Africans are still trying to recover from. The guy talking would not have been granted the opportunity to live or thrive in the US if it wasn't for Black Americans. He'd be in Ghana wishing he could come to the West. Where is the discussion about how the average Ghanaian citizen is doing???
@JasNakira-bs5nx FACTS. It also feels like Africans are trying to give us more blows by coming to the west, riding our coat tails while at the same time trying to cozy to the Caucasians. Africans owe us reparations too. AS A COLLECTIVE WE NEED TO ORGANIZE AND PUNISH THOSE WHO HAVE WRONGED US. STOP BEING FRIENDLY TO OUR OPPRESSORS.
@JasNakira-bs5nx you can stay in America and say whatever you want. Those who have been in Ghana understand what he is saying about what really happened in Ghana colonial times.
Great interview! For me as an African American,, his comments on African and African American relationships, slavery and history are on point!
Francis Kway is a brilliant young brother and much of what he said is true. The sad thing about most of our people is that we tend to look for faults in our brothers rather than finding the good in them. As a consequence non-melanated people win since their goal is to keep us in conflict while they reap the benefits of our shortcomings. This is largely why slavery and colonization started and why it continues til this day. The same goes for spirituality we must start by respecting others beliefs and come to the understanding that if we believe in a higher power then we are tasked to LOVE our brother as we LOVE ourselves. And if we commit to this then we can achieve anything!!!
All African Americans also are not doing poorly in the US either. As a collective Black Americans are the wealthiest Black people on Earth. I'm not against mutually beneficial opportunities or building relationships regarding business with Ghana. There does however to be mutual respect and understanding between both African Americans and Ghanaians.
There were no immigrants in the US besides Europeans when African Americans arrived. African Americans were here since the inception of the US. The immigrants the guest talks abound came hundreds of years after the country was already built into a successful nation. The US largely became successful due to extreme economic gain from the trans Atlantic En-slaved trade and African Americans forcibly working for FREE in horrible conditions. There definitely were uprisings of enslaved people in the US that is not taught in US history. Due to colonization in Africa and the Black Diaspora being separated due to the trans Atlantic enslaved trade, there need to be more conversations about this which include African Americans. I'd also like to know more about what Ghanaians are doing to build Ghana collectively? Is there cohesiveness between the African Americans currently in Ghana and Ghanaians?
Great interview
Positive energy
Inspiring
Thank you
🔥
❤
I like this guy's explanation of how slavery started, which is exactly my perception of how the whole thing started. Today, there is still indirect slavery through our African leaders to them. Great interview.
You cannot be serious. Africans who sold their people were weak minded gullible abs literally pawns. Europeans knew this. They tried it with other cultures ie Native Americans and Chinese people and they fought back! The Chinese kicked them out of their country at one point.
Good interview 👍🏿 lots of useful information. This brother is on it !!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I learned a lot from this excellent interview. Thanks, brothers.
Did you subscribe and share ?
Great interview he speaks with a lot of insight….I would love to connect with him when I make it to Ghana
Thank you soooo much Brother, for articulating this Patriotism issue in the US, very well said!! I wish Candance Owens can hear this, she is sooo desperate to want to be accepted into the Patriotism club that she would deny that racism and institutional racism exist!!! by so doing strengthening the hands of the oppressor!! Watching from Texas
Where is Candace Owens from?
@@Nurse_villa She is sadly and African American lady who lives in the US and literally denied that the officer who killed George Floyd did any wrong because George was a thug. In a lot of her speeches she blatantly see nothing wrong with police brutality who unjustly murdered their black victims.
@@BarbaraF272 wow I'm going to search her on UA-cam just wild
Wow! Another great interview!
BPO (Business Process outsourcing) would do well in Ghana. Its actually one of the fastest growing industry in Nigeria with big partnership like Teleperfomance. The only thing is it will take alot time to train your initial workforce up to that standard of customer service and work ethic we are custom to in the West.
Amazing conversation ✌🏿☺️
Hello there Webnation from San Diego California
@CaptHayford this is another amazing interview & info. put out w/ @FrancisKway. I'm watching for 3rd time & sharing! Agree w/practically everything he said...but not all 😊
#Africa #Afrika #Alkebulan #Unity #One Africa
⚫️ 🖤♟️🏴
And that’s totally fine too , I am glad you enjoyed, but 3rd time ??? 😂😂😂
❤ Amazing interview!
Great interview, how do we follow him to learn about trading?
At one point the host and guest have a conversation about why many Black Americas want to stay in the US and not relocate to Ghana. African Americans have nearly 500 years of history, culture, and community in the US that we are PROUD OF. We not only created a culture in the US we have our own communities, universities, businesses, museums that highlight who we are etc. African Americans leaders and elders that came before us FOUGHT for legal representation and rights we have with their lives. This extends beyond Civil Rights to the Black Panthers and so on.
Furthermore African Americans built the US literally and built its economy. That's a documented Fact. So asking why so many of us aren't relocating to Ghana, doesn't make sense to me. We have a culture and a country. If some African Americans want to relocate to African countries for mutually beneficial reasons that's great. Others are obtaining success in the US and helping our fellow African Americans here which we have always done and strengthening our communities which is fantastic. There is room to do both.
@JasNakira-bs5nx our culture in the U.S. is not what it used to be. I don't feel safe around my people. Our women aren't focused on family and values. We need to hit the reset button.
No one denies anything you've said. Stay put and enjoy the great life you have in the States. Those of us who find value in connecting with Africa will also do so. It's a free world and each of us is free to make the choices that suit him or her. Peace.
There are over 40 million and counting Black Americans in the US. We live in all types of communities across the US. We can reset in our own country if needed. Do some research on Ghana. All skin folk definitely are not kin folk. There's a lot of scamming, corruption land seller scammers, Black Americans being charged crazy fake inflated prices there, the average Ghanaian wants to leave and come to the US or UK I've heard them say this. Black Americans are seen often as a cash cow to them due to the conditions of Ghana. I understand how you feel but always remember you have a community and culture that is AMAZING! Get around different types of Black Americans that you are safe with. Continuously building our Black American community is super important. I do also urge you to travel to various African countries and see his things are there for yourself.
I will. I've been to African countries. Definitely visit and do what's best for you. Don't be naïve tho, be smart, vigilant and always remember you have a country, that is the most successful economically on the planet due in large part to your Black American heritage and ancestors.
I respectfully disagree. We have a ton of amazing Black American men and women in the US. We have various communities throughout the country. We aren't a monolith. I respect your opinion but the US is a huge country. We are over 40 million strong. I love our culture and Black American people and always will! Definitely look at various videos about our experiences in Ghana and other African countries. You'll see various different opinions. Definitely travel also and form your own opinions and thoughts as well.
Fact .Truth word❤
Great Conversation✌🏾
In America most black men and women are in defense mode when they go to work in a city or get off work or even sometimes when they just go shopping for house hold needs. It's hard to not have some type of defense mode especially walking or working in San Francisco. It's sad really to live a life in fear. Yes, it's even worse to have a built in fear of police even when you have friends and family that are in the force.
👏🏾👏🏾
He became successful in the US due to the opportunities he received in the US. It's important to point that out. His mindset regarding business is also a US mindset.
Also, there are currently thousands of African Americans in Ghana now. Some have built homes there. Why is the host saying none want to come to Ghana??
What you mean no one wants to come to Ghana
Not american education but western education system
We both use “Yo”😂
Must contactme can give you my story. From ABURI and am in Michigan. Got a greater story to tell...much love
Send us an email
Zita off?
SWAY IS IN NO POSITION TO SPEAK ON SLAVERY. HE IS NOT OF THAT STOCK.
It's enslaved and he definitely is talking greasy and disrespectful about the institution of people being enslaved. Him attempting to give a pass to Africans for selling their people is crazy. By selling their people they literally also dealt their countries a huge colonial blow that Africans are still trying to recover from. The guy talking would not have been granted the opportunity to live or thrive in the US if it wasn't for Black Americans. He'd be in Ghana wishing he could come to the West. Where is the discussion about how the average Ghanaian citizen is doing???
@JasNakira-bs5nx FACTS. It also feels like Africans are trying to give us more blows by coming to the west, riding our coat tails while at the same time trying to cozy to the Caucasians. Africans owe us reparations too.
AS A COLLECTIVE WE NEED TO ORGANIZE AND PUNISH THOSE WHO HAVE WRONGED US. STOP BEING FRIENDLY TO OUR OPPRESSORS.
@JasNakira-bs5nx you can stay in America and say whatever you want. Those who have been in Ghana understand what he is saying about what really happened in Ghana colonial times.
I've been to Ghana and other countries as well. What really happen was BS stop making ridiculous excuses for what Africans did.
@JasNakira-bs5nx be specific. What tribes and family were you told participated in the transatlantic slavery?
$5 million in 2 years? LOL! Yeah right...
It's possible
@@Nurse_villa LOL! I don't believe in fairytales.
@@JonGreeny yeah you must see the amount of dollars people are just giving away...I don't know what world you live in definitely far from a fairy tail
@@Nurse_villa With no link to the source however..
@@JonGreeny yeah well that's all part of keeping a certain amount of people controlled and on a certain level
Wow! It was such a great inspirational interview 👏 🙌.