By Nneka Okumazie
For some people, all they will ever become is what money can make them.
For them, the power of everything money can do makes everything about money.
They often measure to money and measure for money. They talk for it and ensure it is what is seen about them.
Many of these people have money above all culture in some of the countries the people there have described as unbearable.
In most of these countries, the same reason government does not work is the same thing outsiders are about, bringing the country to a contiguous halt.
Government is all about who can grab for self and interests, around power, resources and money.
This same reason is why many organized crimes exist and several kinds of harmful practices across the private sector.
Money will never develop any country. Though some continue to say money is what is lacking.
Money will never change anything about anyone because if there are real changes at any point, money may have enhanced it but was never cause.
Things that look like changes that money made does not change; they are just more of how money keeps itself important.
For many things done because there was money to do it, they are many times purposeless. There are also others that should be been important, but because money was more important in that project, it also became purposeless.
If in some developing country, someone lives in a nice apartment or drives a cool vehicle, making that individual seem important, the importance of the individual is to whom, and what purpose does it serve, and for what it serves, what does it change, affect or improve?
The comfort that is lived in many of these places is a false peak.
It keeps them there and there is rarely much else to find meaning for.
Money continues to dictate how to be seen to have it, going around in circles, absent of progress, but ensuring participants are unaware.
Money, for what it can, makes people become a sunset. Money stays important using people as tools to itself.
[Ecclesiastes 6:7, All the labour of man is for his mouth, and yet the appetite is not filled.]