[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]  Lucien Wolfe [@LucienWolfe111](/creator/twitter/LucienWolfe111) on x 15.5K followers Created: 2025-07-18 09:07:39 UTC Funny how when a Western-backed leader dissolves institutions, it’s “reform.” But when a young African captain does it? It’s a “threat to democracy.” What Traoré just did in Burkina Faso—shutting down the electoral commission and calling it a foreign tool—isn’t just about elections. It’s about cutting the wires. Most people don’t know this, but the electoral systems in former French colonies are still quietly coordinated through Paris-linked NGOs, advisors, and software vendors. These commissions were never neutral—they were the leash. Traoré didn’t just dissolve a bureaucracy. He unplugged the last operational arm of French intelligence influence in West Africa. That’s why the media’s panicking. They can’t control this guy. He’s young, military, fluent in their game. And worse: he’s inspiring others across Africa to question the script. Ask yourself this— Why is the same formula always applied? IMF loans → elections → protests → UN “stabilization” → more debt → another puppet? Some folks remember what happened in Haiti when Aristide tried to break the cycle. Most don’t. Try finding Traoré’s full speech in English. Try finding why he called the commission a foreign tool. You’ll get headlines, not content. Makes you wonder… Who really runs the elections in these “independent” nations? And what happens when someone finally says: no more? XXXXXXX engagements  [Post Link](https://x.com/LucienWolfe111/status/1946134762306891921)
[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]
Lucien Wolfe @LucienWolfe111 on x 15.5K followers
Created: 2025-07-18 09:07:39 UTC
Funny how when a Western-backed leader dissolves institutions, it’s “reform.” But when a young African captain does it? It’s a “threat to democracy.”
What Traoré just did in Burkina Faso—shutting down the electoral commission and calling it a foreign tool—isn’t just about elections. It’s about cutting the wires.
Most people don’t know this, but the electoral systems in former French colonies are still quietly coordinated through Paris-linked NGOs, advisors, and software vendors.
These commissions were never neutral—they were the leash.
Traoré didn’t just dissolve a bureaucracy. He unplugged the last operational arm of French intelligence influence in West Africa.
That’s why the media’s panicking.
They can’t control this guy. He’s young, military, fluent in their game. And worse: he’s inspiring others across Africa to question the script.
Ask yourself this— Why is the same formula always applied? IMF loans → elections → protests → UN “stabilization” → more debt → another puppet?
Some folks remember what happened in Haiti when Aristide tried to break the cycle. Most don’t.
Try finding Traoré’s full speech in English. Try finding why he called the commission a foreign tool. You’ll get headlines, not content.
Makes you wonder…
Who really runs the elections in these “independent” nations? And what happens when someone finally says: no more?
XXXXXXX engagements
/post/tweet::1946134762306891921