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Rwabwogo’s Discourses on Ugandan Society

Birondwa Frank

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Odrek Rwabwogo Pan African Congress

I have followed Rwabwogo’s approach to societal transformation for a while now, through his online channels and his book, Fat Cats & African Farmers: Speeches & Stories. As an entrepreneur, I admire his commitment to transforming what could otherwise remain theoretical ideas into practical, market-ready goods, services, and leadership principles.

The term “transformation” has been thrown around a lot in our political discourse, but it has a more grounded meaning in science. Those with a bit of biology know about altering organisms in their genetic makeup(DNA), resulting in the acquisition of new traits, creation of new organisms. Chemistry demonstrates transformation when hydrogen and oxygen are seperated from water. Physics describes how matter changes states—solid, liquid, gas. The same logic that governs transformation in science also applies to transformation of society: real change requires a reconfiguration of the base structure. Rwabwogo uses the approach of ideological teachings and well-researched messaging to convey what Uganda’s economic transformation really needs —a change in mindset that begins at the family, individual to foster transformed citizens.

To give context, transformation here refers to moving Ugandan society from low productivity, high dependency, and ideological fragmentation to a state marked by high productivity, self-sufficiency, and a unified national ideology among political thinkers —differing only in methods, not vision. The goal is to enable the average citizen to make intellectual, economic, and cultural shifts, leading to a surge into the lower and upper middle-income population, through the production of standardised industrial goods, services & leadership practices.

Ideological Grounding is neccessary for Societal Transformation

Rwabwogo’s philosophy resonates with the great Western thinkers in its emphasis on substance over form. Its Uganda’s moment of the classical struggle before the first industrial revolutions in the west (18th – 19th century shift from manual production to manufacturing). Unlike populist leaders who manipulate ethnicity & poverty, Rwabwogo advocates transformation rooted in ideological clarity. For Uganda, the path of populism—appealing to ethnic identity, religious denomination identity, and to a less extent intellectual identity, has stiffled real development, much like how noise disrupts the focus needed in a scientific laboratory. Rwabwogo asserts that genuine transformation on a societal levelis about influencing behavior rather than merely enacting policies.

Our history is punctuated by phases of struggle. By the 1960s, the struggle had narrowed down to ending primitive colonialism. Ironically, while direct control of territory may have ended, the ideological colonialism persists in Uganda and in Africa.  In the 1980s, the battle evolved to confronting dictatorships & puppet governments. By 1990s the struggle centred on controlling the  exploitative elites who undermined genuine independence. Some opposition figures in Uganda partially understand the problem but often apply populist rhetoric that appeals to ethnicity, ignorance, social misery of the lower class and greed of the middle class. Without ideological clarity, political movements devolve into sectarianism, and divert people to unprincipled conflicts, as seen in our neighboring region.

The Work of Transformation: A Societal Laboratory

True transformation demands intellectual rigor. Reforming outdated educational curricula, schools, and universities is one step. Reforming culture to embrace a Pan-African view of ethnicity. Using software technology to implement transparency in local and national government processes to prevent corruption before it happens, rather than simply creating anti-corruption agencies.  The intellectual labor required for transformation, encompasses Ugandans contributing knowledge for national advancement in Political System, Economic System, Social and Cultural system, International Policy System

Resisting Foreign Exploitation

We must dismantle the structures left behind by imperialists that exploit trade, labor, education, and language for imperial gain, leaving African societies weakened. Transformation means dismantling these structures that persist in our systems. I recently read about President Museveni’s 1971 thesis, Fanon’s Theory of Violence: Its Verification in Liberated Mozambique, which reflects the ideological roots of the NRA/NRM movement. But now what is role of this ideology, in the context of ruling a complex, industrialising Uganda.

For Uganda to progress, every citizen must be invested in the intellectual work of transformation. Only through widespread, rooted ideological understanding can violence cease to be the default mechanism for peace. Whether it’s Nyanzi’s literary protests or Kyagulanyi’s ethno-nationalistic rallies, these by themselves do no solve the inherent need for comprehensive societal transformation. It is one thing to know

Muhoozi vs. Rwabwogo

Ugandan millennials like the gossip columns, better than serious textbooks. But I’m sorry this article isn’t about the publicized spats between Rwabwogo and Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba. It’s about the ideology each represents. I read Battles of the Ugandan Resistance: A Tradition of Maneuver by Muhoozi Kainerugaba—a well-written Ugandan military book that reads a lot like an autobiography of Gen. Salim Saleh and Fred Rwigyema, linking seamlessly with other works like Uganda’s Revolution, 1979-1986: How I Saw It by Pecos Kutesa and Sowing the Mustard Seed by Yoweri Kaguta Museveni. These books shed light on the ideology and decisions that built the UPDF into one of Africa’s greatest armies.

For true transformation, however, Uganda needs more than military reform. Scientists, technologists, business leaders, cultural and religious figures, and psychologists each play a role. Each sector must produce reformists who align with Rwabwogo’s ideological approach. Detractors claim he is overstepping long-established institutions, yet these institutions, with their lack of tangible societal impact, have no “performance authority.” Part of transformation by necessity includes dismantling old structures handed to us by those with imperial interests, now led by “intellectuals” who lack original thought.

Addressing Uganda’s “Knowledge” Deficit

Unfortunately, many Ugandans don’t read to know—they simply “know things!” This focus on hearsay overshadows substantive issues. In these books, you’ll find the ideas that built UPDF and Uganda into their current forms.

Globally, the U.S. and China clash over intellectual property, with military and economic tensions regarding alleged theft of American intellectual capital. Meanwhile, the U.S. exploits foreign countries’ resources while luring intellectuals to its borders, effectively appropriating intellectual property.

Arab societies, for example, thrive by upholding a unified religious ideology. Asian societies are more organized due to their emphasis on hard work and academic excellence. Europeans adopted an imperialist ideology. Uganda, too, needs a unifying ideology to truly transform society.


Summary and Conclusions

  • The Problem: Ugandan society suffers from low productivity and income. Politicians often exploit ethnicity for leadership, hindering progress.
  • The Solution: Focus on ideological change, akin to scientific transformation seen in biology, chemistry, and physics. Citizens must understand their roles in societal transformation.
  • The Rwabwogo Factor: Emotion- or ethnicity-based political approaches are flawed; Rwabwogo’s intellectual approach offers a refreshing alternative.
  • Historical Context: Past struggles for independence (1962) and democracy (1986) were incomplete. Colonial structures persist and must be dismantled.
  • The Opposition: While some opposition figures understand the problem, they falter by relying on populist ethnic nationalism.
  • The Need for Action: Uganda needs citizens who understand the problems and actively seek solutions, as Rwabwogo does.
  • Colonial Legacy: Colonial systems of exploitation linger, distorting education and resource use.
  • Museveni’s Thesis: Museveni’s work on Frantz Fanon highlights the risks of violence without ideological transformation.
  • Cultural Deficiency: Our cultural environment doesn’t promote critical thinking, an essential component of transformation.

Conclusion: Uganda needs a movement for ideological education to empower citizens in driving societal transformation.

Frank Birondwa M.
Pan African, Entrepreneur
birondwa@revolutionmedium.com

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Opinion

Direct Democracy as a Trojan Horse for Imperialism

Birondwa Frank

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Yoweri Museveni Tibuhaburwa Kaguta (Photo by Hajarah Nalwadda/Getty Images)

When Plato and the Enlightenment philosophers sat down to map out the ideal Republic, they came face to face with a problem: the “uninformed mass.” They idea that a raw headcount of masses as a governance strategy quicly became a means for the rise of leaders with “talents for low intrigue” who can play a crowd like a fiddle while leading them off a cliff. I’m thinking of this in the context of our Elections in Uganda but also relevant to recent ones in Tanzania, Kenya, etc.

We consider the United States the world’s leading democracy, yet in that country “masses” do not elect the President. They never have since the founding of the states. They masses simply elect “Electors”—an elite intermediary designed to filter out impulsive, populist madness while staying on course with national interests. The U.S. is not a direct democracy; it is a carefully crafted elite representative republic.

If you were to take the raw, unfiltered direct elections currently practiced in Uganda and transplant them into the United States tomorrow, the superpower would collapse in a single election cycle. The “mob” would bypass the institutions, and the delicate balance of the union would shatter. No questions about it.

So if the West cannot fathom the idea of a raw headcount that you’re voting a president, why do they export it, often at the cost of war, to former colonies of imperial powers. Because they know that without intermediaries, elections become a psychological war. Direct Presidential Elections are not the “best” way to govern, but they are the easiest method to destabilize a nation. Masses oblivious of the interests and forcesthey come with in a country, add foreigh funds through comprador politicians

In the African context, this is exacerbated by the “ethnic pulse.” When you have a raw headcount in a society where people naturally gravitate toward their “own,” you aren’t electing a leader; you are conducting a census of which tribe is the largest. By forcing a Presidential system—a winner-take-all prize—on former colonies, the West essentially weaponized ethnicity. It is a system that invites secessionism as a political tool because, in a raw headcount, the minority is not just outvoted; they are erased.

Uganda: From Good to Great, or Back to Warlords?

Change and Time are two sides of the same coin. For 40 years, Uganda has moved from the chaos of any “interested warlord” seizing power to a qualitative baseline of stability. But we are at a crossroads. Meaningful change must move from “good” to “great,” not backward to the era where the economy and the suffrage of citizens were run down by the whims of a strongman.

We cannot afford to be “wishful thinkers” dreaming of a Uganda that never existed. We must deal with the one that exists now.

The Missing Ingredient: Where are the Makers?

The ultimate tragedy of this political toy-playing is our economic stagnation. History doesn’t side with the dreamers; it sides with the builders.

  • Why are the Ugandan rich merely traders in foreign goods?

  • Why have our elites become “middlemen” for the world instead of owners of factories?

  • Where did the knowledge of manufacturing go?

While we bicker over a flawed Presidential system designed to keep us in a cycle of “low intrigue,” we have forgotten how to build. We are practicing the politics of the 18th century while failing the economics of the 21st. It is time we stop toying with the “raw headcount” and start designing a qualitative state that values knowledge over noise.

Comprador politicians are local political figures or elites who act as intermediaries for foreign economic or political interests, benefiting personally by facilitating foreign capital and policies that often serve imperial or neo-colonial powers

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Opinion

Book Review: Compelled to Action: Struggle for Self-Determination by Maj. Gen. Katirima Manoni Phinehas

Birondwa Frank

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COMPELLED TO ACTION Struggle For Self-Determination, Authored by Maj. Gen

Compelled to Action

Major General Katirima Manoni Phinehas’s Compelled to Action is not a typical war memoir. It is a disciplined strategic account of one of post-colonial Africa’s few successful revolutions, told from the inside by a key architect. Dispelling any notion of romantic idealism, it presents the Ugandan bush war as a necessary, rationally organized response to a failed state, offering a masterclass in the mechanics of liberation.

The Revolutionary’s “Class Suicide”
The book’s central, powerful idea is “class suicide.” Katirima frames the decision of educated elites to abandon the path to bourgeois comfort for the uncertainty of guerrilla warfare as a deliberate, radical rupture. His heart “beating like a machine gun” symbolizes this visceral clash between intellectual training and the raw reality of armed struggle. This was not a reckless leap, but a compelled action—a rational response by students and professionals to blocked political participation, economic exclusion, and systemic state collapse. The revolution’s potency stemmed from this fusion of peasant grievance with intellectual and working-class discipline.

Discipline as a Template for Success
The memoir’s core value is its forensic focus on revolutionary organization. Katirima traces the FRONASA–UPM–PRA–NRA continuum not as a triumphalist march, but as a deliberate learning process. He underscores the pillars that distinguished this struggle:

  • Ideological Coherence: Grounding action in a clear political programme (e.g., the Ten-Point Programme).

  • Political Education: Building shared purpose across class lines to manage internal contradictions.

  • Rural Mobilization: Earning legitimacy and building power from the ground up, not from foreign capitals.
    This emphasis on internal agency and strategic discipline provides a critical blueprint, contrasting sharply with the many African liberation movements that failed after victory.

An Honest Anatomy of Struggle
Katirima’s narrative is notable for its sober honesty. He avoids triumphalism, acknowledging the costs, fears, and miscalculations inherent in guerrilla warfare. He does not obscure the tensions within the revolutionary coalition but shows how a shared political purpose was used to manage them. This grounded approach strengthens the book’s credibility as a serious political document, not just a personal story.

Pan-African Significance
From a continental perspective, the book functions as a pivotal case study. The NRA/NRM’s success in seizing and consolidating state power stands as a rare exception in post-colonial Africa. Katirima’s account implicitly asks a profound follow-up question: Why have so few revolutionary movements achieved this, and why do even successful ones struggle with lasting transformation? It moves beyond nostalgia to offer an instructive, clear-eyed examination of the prerequisites for—and the enduring challenges of—genuine self-determination.

The Strategic Core of a Revolution
Compelled to Action is an essential and compelling read. Its accessible prose and strategic clarity make it indispensable for anyone seeking to understand not just Uganda’s history, but the practical mechanics of revolutionary change. Katirima provides the critical link between the why of rebellion (compulsion, “class suicide”) and the how of its success (discipline, ideology, organization). For students of African politics, military strategy, or liberation theory, this book is a foundational text—instructive, intellectually grounding, and sharply relevant.

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