Ghana - The Believing Self Criminalizes the Embodiment of the Other, Erasing Identity Through Law

Event Baseline: Ghana's parliament passed a bill criminalizing LGBTQ+ promotion and identification, mandating prison sentences of three to ten years.

The tribal self, enslaved to a rigid belief system, projects its fear onto the queer other. It cannot tolerate an identity that defies its conditioned map of reality. So it seeks to erase that other through the state's violence, locking it away in cages.

This is the operating system error of a group that mistakes its ideology for universal truth. The illusion of the 'self' demands conformity, and any deviation is a threat to be destroyed. Such a move does not purify society; it multiplies division, driving the other underground while inflating the self-righteous ego.

Unless this mechanical failure is seen, Ghana will fracture deeper. The law is a death warrant for love, a confession that the believing mind would rather kill the body than question its own phantom.