Kwame Nkrumah, the first prime minister (1957-1960) and president (1960-1966) of the Republic of Ghana, was the leader of the first sub-Saharan African nation to gain its independence. He subsequently became a leading figure in the campaign for the United States of Africa. Nkrumah was born on September 21, 1909, in Nkroful, Gold Coast. The son of a goldsmith, he attended mission schools at Accra and government training colleges at Achimota (1926-1930) where he prepared to be a teacher.
In 1935, Nkrumah left for the United States where he attended Lincoln University (1935-1939) and the University of Pennsylvania (1939-1943). A gifted student, by 1943 Nkrumah had earned multiple bachelor’s and master’s degrees in economics, sociology, education, theology, and philosophy. Then, in May of 1945, Nkrumah departed for London, England, where he studied as a Ph.D. student at the London School of Economics. While in London, Nkrumah held key positions in anti-colonialist and Black-nationalist organizations and authored controversial papers calling for African independence and unity. In 1945, Nkrumah co-founded the Pan African Congress, which became an influential voice against colonialism in Africa.
In 1947, Nkrumah returned to the Gold Coast and became general secretary of the newly-founded United Gold Coast Convention. However, in 1949 Nkrumah split with the organization over its political objectives and formed the Convention People’s Party (CPP). During his tenure as head of the CPP, Nkrumah protested British rule and led numerous petitions for self-government. Imprisoned by the British in 1950 for his political activities, Nkrumah was released in 1951 when his party won the general election in a landslide victory. He subsequently was elected prime minister in 1952.
As prime minister, Nkrumah led an aggressive campaign for independence and achieved it in 1957. Three years later, he formed a new government, the Republic of Ghana. A devoted Pan-Africanist, Nkrumah forged alliances with both Guinea and Mali and sought to create a league of African states with its own government. To help achieve this goal, in 1963 he and other African leaders formed the Organization of African Unity. Choosing to remain neutral in political affairs outside of the African continent, Nkrumah initially gained tentative support from both the United States and the Soviet Union, receiving economic and technical aid from both countries.
Vigorously suppressing political dissidents, Nkrumah almost immediately was branded a dictator by his political opponents. Then, in 1961 a firestorm of protest erupted after he appointed himself supreme commander of the armed forces and absolute head of the CPP. Nkrumah subsequently outlawed all other political parties.
In 1966, Nkrumah’s government was overthrown by a coup d’état while he was on a trip to Beijing, China. Taking refuge in Guinea, Nkrumah spent the rest of his life in exile. He died in Bucharest, Romania on April 27, 1972.
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Starting to hate programming and love making art. 30 years of my life wasted making the divs line up just right or mangling useless data for accountants and pill pushers.
Welcome to the gang, neurotically focusing on exactly which functions to type and where in a text file for 40+ hours/week is such suffering
I only do programming as a hobby on personal projects I want to work on, so it will never be tainted for me
unless someone paid me to do it some day. but I think that's unlikely.
When I was a kid I wanted to be a professional game developer but I ended up becoming a machinist due to various problems in the industry (at the time, you had to fly out to Cali for interviews / work at the big firms, everything outside the big firms was focused on ad-tech integration, and game development in particular was exceptionally exploitative). I don't do software development very often, but when I do, it is driven purely by curiosity or personal initiative.
I actually do make programs at work, but programming toolpaths for CNC machines with a combination of CAD/CAM software and a little bit of manual post-processing is a completely different paradigm from software development. While there might be some rudimentary variables / conditionals / jumps involved, the bulk of it involves considering the capabilities of the tooling and the material properties of the work-piece, then optimizing for safety / repeatability / speed. I've fallen into a niche of basically doing tool-room work. Lots of one-off projects to modify fixtures, tooling, and gages. It is interesting work at least, and when I do occasionally end up hacking on Godot or maintaining the Mastodon instance, it is different enough where doesn't feel like I have brought my work home with me.
sounds cool. I wonder if I'd be good at that stuff, but I know literally nothing about it and I don't have any post high-school education
Ironically, I use coding (including web frontends) as a hobby to escape from my accounting job.
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Unfortunately I think programming is tainted forever for me
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