27/05/2026
The Network School and the Kush Project
The Kush Project is a Pan-African micronational movement and ancient Kush re-establishment initiative. Many people are initially taken aback when they hear of our vision: to build a global network of Africans and people of African descent that will, over time, evolve into a sovereign nation founded upon the unclaimed land of Bir Tawil.
What many skeptics fail to realize is that this kind of bold, unconventional thinking is already unfolding across the world in different forms. Across continents, communities are reimagining governance, citizenship, economics, and identity beyond the limits of the modern nation-state.
One such example is the Network School (or Network State, as they envision it becoming upon completion). Started by a group of founders and technologists, they are building a digitally connected citizen network that is gradually converging physically in Forest City, an underutilized urban development in Malaysia, with long-term ambitions of sovereignty and self-governance.
There are striking parallels between the Network School and the Kush Project:
1. Both movements began online, building real-world human networks with long-term aspirations toward sovereignty and autonomous governance.
2. While the Network School focuses primarily on digital entrepreneurship and technology-driven economic systems, the Kush Project seeks to cultivate collective investment rooted in the African philosophy of Ubuntu — the understanding that individual prosperity is inseparable from communal prosperity.
3. Both projects recognize that sovereignty is not declared overnight. It is achieved through carefully mapped stages of growth, institution-building, cultural cohesion, economic cooperation, and shared purpose.
Projects of this nature are emerging all over the world. As Africans, we have a historic opportunity to shape our own future through the Kush Project and present a distinctly African vision to the world — one grounded in:
1. Pan-African unity and civilizational consciousness
2. Collective and Ubuntu-centered economic empowerment
3. African spirituality and the principles of Ma’at as a moral and philosophical foundation beyond imposed religious divisions
The success of the Kush Project will not depend on a few founders or leaders alone. It will depend on the willingness of every member to see this vision as their own personal responsibility and historical mission. Each chapter must become more than a gathering point; it must become a center of innovation, culture, strategy, investment, and community building. Members are therefore encouraged to actively contribute ideas, initiatives, partnerships, and solutions that can strengthen and grow their chapters. The future we envision cannot be handed to us — it must be collectively imagined, built, defended, and expanded by all of us together.
08/05/2026
This analysis video is one that is very objective and well packaged in decoding the African situation.
In all the points made, this is the most fundamental: international integration threshold is truly uncertain.
Why?
Because as things stand right now, it is primarily spearheaded by the politician, who are beneficiaries of the disunity.
What we are doing in the Kingdom of Kush is to shift the responsibility for integration from the politician to the people.
How we're doing this is:
1. We've found a historical focal point for grounding our mission: the Ancient Nubian Kingdom of Kush. Kush inspires African greatness.
2. We're building Kashta Chapters across the continent. Collective (Ubuntu) investment, real people-to-people networks, programs implementation and cultural renaissance, one according to their practices.
3. The Joy of Ma'at: spirituality over religion. African Spirituality, no matter where it is found, is anchored on truth, order, balance, harmony, justice and prosperity.
Africans want unity and integration, we are hoping our politicians will do it - they won't - so we're creating systems and structures which will make Africans themselves the drivers of the want.
The African Union was set-up to fail when it was created, when a group of heads of states went for a slow longer-term integration efforts instead of making it outrightly powerful; as AU is currently convened, it must struggle and wiggle before it can achieve what it was meat to do.
So the people must organise, create integration systems and push from the ground up.
The Silent Giant Why a United Africa Could Become the Final Superpower | Prof. Jiang Xueqin
The Silent Giant: Why a United Africa Could Become the Final Superpower | Prof. Jiang Xueqin📝DESCRIPTIONAfrica is the most underestimated force in modern ge...
01/05/2026
What is happening in South Africa? 🇿🇦
01/05/2026
Kashta Chapters and Freedom: The Vision of the Kush Project
-Qore Omollo
,
For generations, Africans across the continent and the Diaspora have dreamed of unity, dignity, restoration, and true self-determination. But history teaches us that real freedom is not built through declarations alone. It is built through organization, economic strength, discipline, education, and shared vision.
This understanding is central to the Kush Project.
Many people see Kush only as a cultural or Pan-African movement, but the deeper mission is to help Africans build sustainable systems rooted in cooperation, accountability, and collective prosperity.
History gives us important lessons. Nations like Kuwait and Norway secured long-term stability not simply through resources, but through strategic investment, institution-building, and disciplined planning.
The Kush Project seeks to apply these lessons to African realities.
Our greatest resource is not what lies under the soil, but our people: the intelligence, resilience, creativity, labor, and entrepreneurial spirit of Africans worldwide. This is why the Kashta Chapter system is so important. Chapters are not just social groups; they are communities built around cooperation, investment, education, culture, and empowerment.
Through the chapters, we aim to:
* Support entrepreneurship and local initiatives
* Build strong community networks
* Promote Ma’at principles and restorative justice
* Encourage education, leadership, and accountability
* Strengthen Pan-African cooperation
The Kush Project rejects dependency and short-term thinking. We believe lasting progress must be built patiently through transparency, discipline, shared responsibility, and collective effort.
Above all, Kush is about building a civilization framework rooted in the 7 Principles of Ma’at: Truth, Justice, Harmony, Order, Balance, Reciprocity, and Prosperity.
This is why we build the Chapters first.
To the Joy of Ma’at.
17/04/2026
You can make propaganda videos with AI, but you can't make this stuff up! Someone needs to start taking Iran seriously.
27/03/2026
Colonialism was a crime. Crimes attract penance.
Silence is complicity, rejection is propagation.
Slavery fits the same bracket.