እዚህ ድሮ ያልኩኝ የወጣትነት ዕድሜዬ ዘመንን ነዉ። እኔም የዕድሜ ባለጸጋ እየሆንኩኝ ስለሆነ ያኔ ድሮ ይመስላል።
የኢትዮጵያ ስልጣኔ ድሮ፥
በቅርቡ የደኩኝ፣ ለገበያ የተመላለስኩበት፣ እና ሁለተኛ ደረጃ የተማርኩበት ከተማ ዉስጥ ታዋቂ የነበረ የመኪና ጋራጅ ባለቤት የኤርትራ ክፍለ ሃገር ኢትዮጵያዊ ነበረ ሲባል ሰምቻለሁ።
የከተማዉ ሁለተኛ ደረጃ ትምህርት ቤት የኣንድ ወቅት ዳይሬክተር ወይም ሬጅስትራር የኤርትራ ክፍለ ሃገር ኢትዮጵያዊ ነበር።
በዚህ ከተማ Gላ ባይ አፍ እላፊ በቅጽበት ወገቧ በዱላ ይቀጣ ነበር።
በስራ ምክንያት በዚህ ከተማ እና በአክሱም ከተማ ኖሮ የምያዉቅ ኢትዮጵያዊ የሁለቱም ከተሞች ባህል ተመሳሳይ መሆናቸዉን እና እንደወደዳቸዉ ይናገር ነበር።
ስጋ ለመብላት በስመዓብ ብሎ ማፍሰስ ነበር።
ኮሌጅ የተማርኩበት የደቡብ ኢትዮጵያ ከተማ ዉስጥ ታዋቂ ከነበሩት ሆቴሎች ዉስጥ ኣንዱ የኤርትራ ክፍለ ሃገር ኢትዮጵያዊ ነበር ሲባል ሰምቻለሁ።
ወደ ኮሌጁ ስመመላለስ ስናርፍባት የነበረች ሻሸመኔ ከተማ ዉስጥ ከታወቁት ሆቴሎች ኣንዱ የኤርትራ ክፍለ ሃገር ኢትዮጵያዊ ነዉ ሲባል ሰምቻለሁ።
እነዚህ ከብዙ ምሳሌዎች ጥቂቶች ናቸዉ።
የኢትዮጵያ ስልጣኔ ዘንድሮ፥
የድሮ ኢትዮጵያዊ የዘንድሮ ኤርትራዊ አዳማ ወይም መቀሌ ሄዳችሁ መኖር የምትፈልጉ እስቲ እጃችሁን ኣዉጡ ብሎ ይጠይቀናል። ጥያቄዉን ኣንብቤ ሳልጨርስ ቋቅ ብሎኝ ለፍቶ ኣዳሪ ነዉ ብዬ ዋጥ ኣደረኩ።
ኦሮሞ ነኝ ባይ እራሱን Gላ ማለት ሱስ ሆኖበት ሰነበተ።
የድሮ ኢትዮጵያዊ የዘንድሮ ኤርትራዊ ሰዉ ማለት ለስላሳ ቀይ ስጋን ቆርጦ በአዋዜ ጠቅሶ ኣለመቅመስ ነዉ ይለናል።
በስመዓብ ብሎ ከማፍሰስ እና ለስላሳ ቀይ ስጋን ከመቁረጥ የቱ የበለጠ እንደሚከብድ ኣያብራራም። ሃገሩ በሙሉ በሰመዓብ ብሎ በማፍሰስ ስጋ መብላቱን ያቁም እና እንደ ህንዶች ቨጅቴርያን ይሁን ነዉ ምክሩ?
Re: የኢትዮጵያ ስልጣኔ ድሮ እና ዘንድሮ
"Ethiopianist" is a term that is often used in reference to foreign scholars who studied Ethiopia and its 76 years of history.
One such scholar was Professor Donald Levine from the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago. He died on April 4, 2015 after a long illness. He was 83. (May he Rest in Peace)
Back in 2011, in an interview with Abebe Gellaw on ESAT TV, Professor Levine recalled a conversation he had with one of his Ethiopian students which he described as a moment that revealed to him the mindset of the Ethiopian elite-- an educated class of people burdened by an inferiority complex so massive that no amount of education could save them, nor their country.
Here's an excerpt from Professor Levine's interview....

One such scholar was Professor Donald Levine from the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago. He died on April 4, 2015 after a long illness. He was 83. (May he Rest in Peace)
Back in 2011, in an interview with Abebe Gellaw on ESAT TV, Professor Levine recalled a conversation he had with one of his Ethiopian students which he described as a moment that revealed to him the mindset of the Ethiopian elite-- an educated class of people burdened by an inferiority complex so massive that no amount of education could save them, nor their country.
Here's an excerpt from Professor Levine's interview....
"..... I'll tell you an experience I had that signaled to me that terrible times were ahead for Ethiopia.
I had a student in Chicago, an Ethiopian (and this was around 1970-71), he was the son of an elite family, and he said "...a lot of us are thinking we should do what they did in Russia to modernize."
And I said to him, do you know that in Russia what Stalin did cost the lives of 20 million people?
He replied, "well, they had like 200 million people in Russia. So 20 million dead out of 200 million is 10%. Ethiopia has around 30 million people, and 10% of that is roughly 3 million people. Well... 3 million dead Ethiopians would not be too high of a price to pay for progress."
When he said that my heart stopped, because he's representative of the educated group. Ethiopians were so embarrassed to be poor, and to be backward, they thought how can we modernize as fast as possible, and if that means killing 3 million people, so be it!
I'm afraid that kind of thinking is still to be found even today. Much of the leadership today are forcibly removing millions of Ethiopians from their ancestral lands to pave the way for foreign-owned slave plantations. In the name of what? In the name of 'progress.' In the name of what Russia did. And when the Ethiopian ruling elite say 'blood must flow', it's always the other ethnic groups' blood must flow...."

Re: የኢትዮጵያ ስልጣኔ ድሮ እና ዘንድሮ
Does your numskull know or understand what he wrote about the Exodus?
Fiyameta wrote: ↑12 Aug 2025, 12:49"Ethiopianist" is a term that is often used in reference to foreign scholars who studied Ethiopia and its 76 years of history.
One such scholar was Professor Donald Levine from the Department of Sociology at the University of Chicago. He died on April 4, 2015 after a long illness. He was 83. (May he Rest in Peace)
Back in 2011, in an interview with Abebe Gellaw on ESAT TV, Professor Levine recalled a conversation he had with one of his Ethiopian students which he described as a moment that revealed to him the mindset of the Ethiopian elite-- an educated class of people burdened by an inferiority complex so massive that no amount of education could save them, nor their country.
Here's an excerpt from Professor Levine's interview....
"..... I'll tell you an experience I had that signaled to me that terrible times were ahead for Ethiopia.
I had a student in Chicago, an Ethiopian (and this was around 1970-71), he was the son of an elite family, and he said "...a lot of us are thinking we should do what they did in Russia to modernize."
And I said to him, do you know that in Russia what Stalin did cost the lives of 20 million people?
He replied, "well, they had like 200 million people in Russia. So 20 million dead out of 200 million is 10%. Ethiopia has around 30 million people, and 10% of that is roughly 3 million people. Well... 3 million dead Ethiopians would not be too high of a price to pay for progress."
When he said that my heart stopped, because he's representative of the educated group. Ethiopians were so embarrassed to be poor, and to be backward, they thought how can we modernize as fast as possible, and if that means killing 3 million people, so be it!
I'm afraid that kind of thinking is still to be found even today. Much of the leadership today are forcibly removing millions of Ethiopians from their ancestral lands to pave the way for foreign-owned slave plantations. In the name of what? In the name of 'progress.' In the name of what Russia did. And when the Ethiopian ruling elite say 'blood must flow', it's always the other ethnic groups' blood must flow...."![]()