The men and women who hold the real power-the Nkalas of the world-do not break the law; they merely bend it until it breaks for them. They teach their children and their protégés the "bad manners" of true governance: how to steal without risk, how to rule without accountability, and how to turn public service into a perpetual engine of dynastic wealth.
The men and women who hold the real power-the Nkalas of the world-do not break the law; they merely bend it until it breaks for them. They teach their children and their protégés the "bad manners" of true governance: how to steal without risk, how to rule without accountability, and how to turn public service into a perpetual engine of dynastic wealth.