Whenever you get opportunity to get exposure anywhere in the world take it, especially if it improves your skillset, income etc. Of course if you have it good in Ghana then you okay, but if you are educated and your skills can earn you more outside Ghana do not hesitate, do it. If Ghana want to retain it skilled people, then it should have a policy of paying well for their skills.
How about you understand what’s needed of you and you pay yourself well. That’s the conversation here. Paying yourself. All others can go and work elsewhere
@@nellsawere as said if you are in Ghana and you doing well or can do well then you okay. Why have skills that pays you better and may be also have you a good life and you will be wasting it in Ghana or anywhere else.
@@Boameooo1000 Quite interesting assertion. I believe what nellsawere is trying to convey is that if one has a skill-set or is naturally brilliant in solving problems and creating careers, jobs, or even being inventive/innovative, it is best to do it in your own domain than to take it elsewhere where it may only benefit him/her or the nation one has migrated to. Besides, going somewhere, you will be on someone's payroll but if you establish it yourself, you will pay yourself and others too. One of the reasons why we suffer in Ghana is because we do not like to be creative and when we are, we allow ourselves to be limited and mostly take our blessings to help develop other nations. Now like you also mentioned, if you need to go elsewhere to enhance or even learn new skill-sets, then that is a different ball game.
The fact that both him and homegrown Kwabena Obeng Darko are saying the same thing should be sufficient proof. Young Ghanaians must understand that nobody is going to save them except themselves. Fleeing to the West that is increasingly hostile to African immigrants is not a viable or sustainable solution.
Are you suggesting that ordinary people would better argued solutions to the problems they are faced with? If so why not get straight to addressing those problems? Why wait to be interviewed?
@@JonGreeny Your initial comment implies that representation of ordinary people would be more fitting to interview in respect to solutions to the problems the people are faced with. And I asked, if so, why not just attend to those problems, instead of waiting to be interviewed about them?
@@mohmhk Do you honestly expect me (just one individual) to handle the myriad of problems ordinary Ghanaians in the diaspora encounter on a day to day basis?
Any country on earth which have politically corrupt elite leaders will also find citizens leaving that country; in Ghana, one has to be bribed to be employed in the police service, fire service, military service, teaching service, etc. I wish our brothers in the diasporas would start speaking true to the power(govt)
I agree but we must stop enabling and fight against such practices. I have noticed most people who bribe to get into careers, employment, entity are not passionate about them and eventually tarnish the image of the system. If that is contrary to my observation, then most of them are just working with the trauma they experienced in getting the position so they feel others should feel the same too.
After 23 years in Europe , i want to go back home.
🤙🏿
Then I guess you should be making a lot of money as most people say they went for capital 😊.
Fantastic brains, ghanaian/American,another addition to the ghanaian law of fame
Europe is at a stage, where decline is happening. Africa seems to be the future according to most experts
you are very right, i am young man with a successful business in Ghana and Liberia. there future us bright for Africa, just open your eyes guy!
Bad leadership.is the issue .
This is on point. Thanks for the reinforcement.
Whenever you get opportunity to get exposure anywhere in the world take it, especially if it improves your skillset, income etc. Of course if you have it good in Ghana then you okay, but if you are educated and your skills can earn you more outside Ghana do not hesitate, do it. If Ghana want to retain it skilled people, then it should have a policy of paying well for their skills.
How about you understand what’s needed of you and you pay yourself well. That’s the conversation here. Paying yourself. All others can go and work elsewhere
@@nellsawere as said if you are in Ghana and you doing well or can do well then you okay. Why have skills that pays you better and may be also have you a good life and you will be wasting it in Ghana or anywhere else.
@@Boameooo1000 Quite interesting assertion. I believe what nellsawere is trying to convey is that if one has a skill-set or is naturally brilliant in solving problems and creating careers, jobs, or even being inventive/innovative, it is best to do it in your own domain than to take it elsewhere where it may only benefit him/her or the nation one has migrated to. Besides, going somewhere, you will be on someone's payroll but if you establish it yourself, you will pay yourself and others too. One of the reasons why we suffer in Ghana is because we do not like to be creative and when we are, we allow ourselves to be limited and mostly take our blessings to help develop other nations. Now like you also mentioned, if you need to go elsewhere to enhance or even learn new skill-sets, then that is a different ball game.
The fact that both him and homegrown Kwabena Obeng Darko are saying the same thing should be sufficient proof. Young Ghanaians must understand that nobody is going to save them except themselves. Fleeing to the West that is increasingly hostile to African immigrants is not a viable or sustainable solution.
Revealing
You interview people who are not representative of the ordinary Ghanaians or blacks in the diaspora.
I agree
Are you suggesting that ordinary people would better argued solutions to the problems they are faced with? If so why not get straight to addressing those problems? Why wait to be interviewed?
@@mohmhk I don't understand what you are trying to say.
@@JonGreeny Your initial comment implies that representation of ordinary people would be more fitting to interview in respect to solutions to the problems the people are faced with. And I asked, if so, why not just attend to those problems, instead of waiting to be interviewed about them?
@@mohmhk Do you honestly expect me (just one individual) to handle the myriad of problems ordinary Ghanaians in the diaspora encounter on a day to day basis?
Any country on earth which have politically corrupt elite leaders will also find citizens leaving that country; in Ghana, one has to be bribed to be employed in the police service, fire service, military service, teaching service, etc. I wish our brothers in the diasporas would start speaking true to the power(govt)
Yes that's fact and me and you have to fight and fix that.
I agree but we must stop enabling and fight against such practices. I have noticed most people who bribe to get into careers, employment, entity are not passionate about them and eventually tarnish the image of the system. If that is contrary to my observation, then most of them are just working with the trauma they experienced in getting the position so they feel others should feel the same too.