• FourteenEyes [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    According to a comment:

    ========= Summary:

    1. Isolation & Access
    • Sahara Desert blocks north-south connection

    • Smooth coasts lack natural harbors

    • Rivers blocked by rapids/waterfalls near coasts

    1. Triple Transport Trap
    • No deep-water ports

    • No ocean-navigable rivers

    • Most landlocked countries globally (16)

    1. Disease & Agriculture
    • Only continent fully spanning tropics

    • Tsetse fly prevents livestock use

    • Limited, fragmented farmland

    1. Resource Paradox
    • World’s richest mineral deposits

    • Highest transport costs globally

    • Geography prevents efficient resource use

    This creates a devastating cycle: Rich resources can’t efficiently reach markets, limiting development, which in turn prevents infrastructure improvements that could overcome geographic barriers.

    ================

    These are of course totally unresolvable issues and colonialism and crippling foreign debts imposed upon conquered natives have absolutely nothing to do with the lack of programs controlling tsetse flies or developing farmland or building roads through those nasty natural barriers or anything like that, just pure geographical determinism as as result of the world materializing as it currently is 72 hours ago

    • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      2 days ago

      Cool, some Jared Diamond style geographic determinism.

      It’s so easy to imagine an alt history version of this explaining why Europe is so underdeveloped:

      1. it’s cold half the year, plummeting productivity
      2. the lack of sunlight causes mass vitamin D efficiency
      3. the lack of key resources stymies progress
      4. the intertwined borders cause regular wars which destroy progress
    • fox [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      2 days ago

      Unfortunately due to a quirk of evolution any time you try to build a train in Africa it gets attacked by lions, just an unavoidable thing that happens and a perfectly good reason why there’s less infrastructure

      • Llituro [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
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        2 days ago

        The minute African nations start building a pan African railway, the crackers are going to swarm out of the woodwork with overwhelming concern for the “pristine natural environments of the African continent” mark my words

    • KobaCumTribute [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      2 days ago

      There might be some small merit to analyzing “why, 500 years ago, was sub-saharan africa not as built up as Europe, China, or India were at the same point in time” where you could point to environmental factors making large scale, bureaucratic, agricultural states with long range logistics and trade more difficult but even that relies on the incorrect assumption that Africa didn’t also have that, which it did. It may not have been the same as those systems were on the Asian continent (including Europe, despite Europe being a relative backwater) and the Indian subcontinent, but there were still large scale trade networks and large agricultural civilizations mining iron and forging steel.

      And of course everything after that is explained by “European imperial powers did it, with guns and/or the threat of guns and/or local comprador fucks collaborating with European empires for personal gain at everyone else’s expense.”

      • FourteenEyes [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        2 days ago

        The thing is 500 years ago northern Africa was arguably more developed than Europe was at the time, had thriving mineral trades, and African goods were regarded as being of exceptionally high quality

        Remember that the richest man in recorded history was an African king