Globalization is like a bottle of Coca-Cola thrown into a remote community in a bushman’s story in the famous African movie of 1980s called “the Gods must Be Crazy.” While globalization is not a bad thing, the engine behind the process for the past decades has been neoliberalism. The world has reached a climax at which neoliberalism is no longer tolerated even in the United States as witnessed in the “occupy wall street” protests, the rise of Trump error with withdrawal policies and similar others from all over the world. Yet, we do not understand what made inhabitants of Sub-Saharan Africa, predominantly impoverished black people, so lenient to neoliberal regimes. At times, they have even fought in fierce civil wars to protect such regimes only for a few pennies. This is contrary to their fellows elsewhere whose living standards are still higher than those in Sub-Saharan Africa. The bottom line is that, it has taken only a few tough years initiated during the global recession of 2007 and sustained by the on-going Global financial crisis, for people in the Global North and North Africa to launch powerful uprisings against neoliberal forces. Perhaps, the most powerful ones were started in Egypt and Tunisia. The rise of the Donald Trump era in USA and the Brexit movement in the UK all signify a withdrawal from the conventional neoliberal era. The western world sought to dominate the world but recent trends indicate a shift away from such an approach. The western world has decided to throw away their “coca cola” bottle through cutting themselves from the rest of the world. At the onset of the Trump’s era a ban on immigration was put in place to supposedly protect Americans from the Muslim world. However, something is wrong with Africans and African gods. For sure African gods, whom many Africans take refuge from, must have gone crazy, if not mad, to allow so many Africans to tolerate exploitation, extreme poverty and hunger for as long as it can be remembered. Some Africans would say “amen” to a corrupt African leader who tells them to blame the west for their misfortunes. It is believed that in the past the African gods punished rebellious community equally and all felt the pinch. However, the gods have been bribed by African corrupt neoliberalism regimes. The gods allow only a few to live as gods on earth while others suffer. The time has come for Sub-Saharan Africa, predominantly black, to rebel against the crazy gods and learn from their fellows elsewhere. The time has come for black Sub-Saharan Africans to throw away neoliberal policies and their associated regimes. The time has come for Sub-Saharan Africans to make use of globalization tools to create a colourful humane world for blacks, whites and yellows. It is time to create a beautiful world where people of all colours are seen everywhere in the world