• You drop money for your church ⛪️ alter
    You call am seed.
    I drop money for 3 road junction
    You call am ritual.

    You put on rosary for neck
    You call am holy beads.
    I put on cowries/sea shells for neck
    You call am demonic.

    You go church collect white handkerchief and sticker places for your house and shops doors,
    You call am spiritual protection.

    I put alligator pepper and bitter kola for strategic places for my house and shops.
    You call am diabolic.

    You rub anointing oil for your head,
    You call am holy act.
    I use alligator pepper roll round my head, you call am satanic.

    You burn incense and candles for ur church, you call am holy act
    I burn incense and candle for my house, you call am occultic.

    You Dey call on Abraham,Isaac and Jacob, you say na holy act.
    I call my dead father,grand father, great grandfather, you say I Dey worship the dead.

    You go to pastors for vision, you call am prophecy
    I go to Dibia afa for vision, you call am satanic.

    You go church go collect water, you call am holy water
    I go my village river go collect water, you call am marine spirit.

    Your pastor carry your go river, you sey na baptism.
    My village chief priest carry me go river you sey na diabolical act.

    You carry goat go church, you sey na thanksgiving
    I carry goat go my village shrine, you say na demonic sacrifice.

    You put on church Ribbon for hand,you sey na for protection.
    I put on beads for hand, you call me juju man.

    You get the statue of Jesus and Mary for ur church, you kneel down with tears in ur eyes you bow down, you call am honoring Mary.

    I sit-down In front of a sacred tree with my kola nut for hand speaking boldly with confidence, you say I Dey worship idol.

    As you Dey point me one finger
    Check u go see say na 3 of ur finger dey point you back.

    #fypviral
    copied
    DiDibia Ugoawelle Ngozi
    You drop money for your church ⛪️ alter You call am seed. I drop money for 3 road junction You call am ritual. You put on rosary for neck You call am holy beads. I put on cowries/sea shells for neck You call am demonic. You go church collect white handkerchief and sticker places for your house and shops doors, You call am spiritual protection. I put alligator pepper and bitter kola for strategic places for my house and shops. You call am diabolic. You rub anointing oil for your head, You call am holy act. I use alligator pepper roll round my head, you call am satanic. You burn incense and candles for ur church, you call am holy act I burn incense and candle for my house, you call am occultic. You Dey call on Abraham,Isaac and Jacob, you say na holy act. I call my dead father,grand father, great grandfather, you say I Dey worship the dead. You go to pastors for vision, you call am prophecy I go to Dibia afa for vision, you call am satanic. You go church go collect water, you call am holy water I go my village river go collect water, you call am marine spirit. Your pastor carry your go river, you sey na baptism. My village chief priest carry me go river you sey na diabolical act. You carry goat 🐐 go church, you sey na thanksgiving I carry goat go my village shrine, you say na demonic sacrifice. You put on church Ribbon 🎀 for hand,you sey na for protection. I put on beads for hand, you call me juju man. You get the statue of Jesus and Mary for ur church, you kneel down with tears in ur eyes you bow down, you call am honoring Mary. I sit-down In front of a sacred tree with my kola nut for hand speaking boldly with confidence, you say I Dey worship idol. As you Dey point me one finger Check u go see say na 3 of ur finger dey point you back. #fypviral copied DiDibia Ugoawelle Ngozi
    Love
    1
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  • A single night of partial sleep deprivation can drive insulin resistance up by 25%.
    Sleep is beyond rest…it plays a major role in how your body manages your blood sugar.
    Research shows that one night of poor sleep can drive insulin resistance up by 25%.
    (Similar to what you see in early stage type two diabetes).
    A particular study shows young adults who slept only four hours per night for six nights experiencing this shift.
    While you chase the bag, remember that .
    Rest is not optional.
    Keeping and staying fit is not optional.
    Sleep helps your brain, your body metabolism and your long term health.
    (Reflect on your health! Once you lie on hospital bed, the bag will be worthless.)

    #COPIED
    A single night of partial sleep deprivation can drive insulin resistance up by 25%. Sleep is beyond rest…it plays a major role in how your body manages your blood sugar. Research shows that one night of poor sleep can drive insulin resistance up by 25%. (Similar to what you see in early stage type two diabetes). A particular study shows young adults who slept only four hours per night for six nights experiencing this shift. While you chase the bag, remember that . 📌Rest is not optional. 📌Keeping and staying fit is not optional. 📌Sleep helps your brain, your body metabolism and your long term health. (Reflect on your health! Once you lie on hospital bed, the bag will be worthless.) #COPIED
    Love
    1
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  • "The heart was made to worship—until it finds God, it will chase shadows and call them light. Copied.
    "The heart was made to worship—until it finds God, it will chase shadows and call them light. Copied.
    Love
    1
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 70 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • "The heart was made to worship—until it finds God, it will chase shadows and call them light. Copied.
    "The heart was made to worship—until it finds God, it will chase shadows and call them light. Copied.
    Like
    1
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  • When No One Wins: Lessons from the Python and the Cobra

    In the wild, a python once fought a king cobra. The python used its strength to squeeze the cobra tightly—so tightly it couldn’t breathe. At the same time, the cobra bit the python and released its deadly venom. In the end, both of them died. One died from poison. The other from suffocation.

    No one won. No one walked away alive. It was a fight that ended in tragedy for both.

    Sadly, this is how many people live today. Not in the jungle—but in families, friendships, churches, and even workplaces.

    * In families, brothers stop talking to each other for years over land and other disputes.
    * In friendships, people compete instead of celebrating one another’s wins.
    * In marriages, silent treatment and harsh words do more damage than healing.
    * Even in church, we see people gossiping, backbiting, or holding grudges—all while quoting Scriptures and Ministering powerfully.

    Why? Because like the python and cobra, many are fighting battles where both will lose. Pride and jealousy are slowly killing what could have been beautiful.

    The Bible is clear on this:
    * “Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.” – Proverbs 16:18
    * “A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.” – Proverbs 15:1
    * “If you bite and devour each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each other.” – Galatians 5:15

    Real-Life Reflections:
    1. In marriages – One spouse wants to be always right, the other refuses to say sorry. They stop talking. Days become weeks. Weeks become years. A small misunderstanding, mixed with pride, becomes a big wall of barrier between the two.

    2. Among friends – Someone gets promoted or engaged, and instead of being happy, the other grows cold and starts spreading rumors.

    3. In ministry – A young preacher is rising, and the older one feels threatened instead of mentoring him. Insecurity replaces love.

    In the end, no one wins. Just like the python and cobra—one with the venom of gossip, the other with the pride that suffocates unity.

    So, what can we do differently?
    * Choose peace over ego.
    *“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God.” – Matthew 5:9
    * Choose humility over pride.
    Jesus, though He was God, humbled Himself and served (Philippians 2:5–8). If the Son of God could kneel to wash feet, surely we can say, “I’m sorry” or “You go first.”
    * Choose love over competition.
    “Love does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud.” – 1 Corinthians 13:4

    * Choose healing over hurting.
    Let go of that grudge. Make that call. Say what needs to be said—kindly.
    You don’t always have to win the argument, the fight, or the position. Sometimes, choosing peace is the win. Because when we tear each other down, we all lose. But when we choose love, everyone grows.
    *Don’t be the python. Don’t be the cobra. Be the peacemaker.*

    Copied
    When No One Wins: Lessons from the Python and the Cobra In the wild, a python once fought a king cobra. The python used its strength to squeeze the cobra tightly—so tightly it couldn’t breathe. At the same time, the cobra bit the python and released its deadly venom. In the end, both of them died. One died from poison. The other from suffocation. No one won. No one walked away alive. It was a fight that ended in tragedy for both. Sadly, this is how many people live today. Not in the jungle—but in families, friendships, churches, and even workplaces. * In families, brothers stop talking to each other for years over land and other disputes. * In friendships, people compete instead of celebrating one another’s wins. * In marriages, silent treatment and harsh words do more damage than healing. * Even in church, we see people gossiping, backbiting, or holding grudges—all while quoting Scriptures and Ministering powerfully. Why? Because like the python and cobra, many are fighting battles where both will lose. Pride and jealousy are slowly killing what could have been beautiful. The Bible is clear on this: * “Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.” – Proverbs 16:18 * “A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.” – Proverbs 15:1 * “If you bite and devour each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each other.” – Galatians 5:15 Real-Life Reflections: 1. In marriages – One spouse wants to be always right, the other refuses to say sorry. They stop talking. Days become weeks. Weeks become years. A small misunderstanding, mixed with pride, becomes a big wall of barrier between the two. 2. Among friends – Someone gets promoted or engaged, and instead of being happy, the other grows cold and starts spreading rumors. 3. In ministry – A young preacher is rising, and the older one feels threatened instead of mentoring him. Insecurity replaces love. In the end, no one wins. Just like the python and cobra—one with the venom of gossip, the other with the pride that suffocates unity. So, what can we do differently? * Choose peace over ego. *“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God.” – Matthew 5:9 * Choose humility over pride. Jesus, though He was God, humbled Himself and served (Philippians 2:5–8). If the Son of God could kneel to wash feet, surely we can say, “I’m sorry” or “You go first.” * Choose love over competition. “Love does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud.” – 1 Corinthians 13:4 * Choose healing over hurting. Let go of that grudge. Make that call. Say what needs to be said—kindly. You don’t always have to win the argument, the fight, or the position. Sometimes, choosing peace is the win. Because when we tear each other down, we all lose. But when we choose love, everyone grows. *Don’t be the python. Don’t be the cobra. Be the peacemaker.* Copied 👌
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  • Types of Behaviors That Can Push a Faithful Man Away

    React before you read

    A faithful, committed man is a blessing, but even the strongest man can grow distant if he’s constantly met with disrespect, manipulation, or emotional neglect. Here are some types of behavior that can damage a good relationship:

    1. The Constant Critic
    If you never acknowledge his efforts and always find fault, it wears him down. No one thrives under constant negativity.

    2. The Manipulator
    Using guilt, silence, or emotional games to control him breaks trust. Faithfulness needs emotional safety, not power plays.

    3. The Self-Absorbed Partner
    A relationship is about mutual care. If it’s always about your needs, your feelings, your drama, he’ll feel invisible.

    4. The Disrespectful One
    Speaking down to him, mocking him in public, or belittling his efforts can kill a man’s spirit. Respect is the foundation of love.

    5. The Flirtatious Teaser
    Constantly entertaining attention from other men, especially to provoke jealousy, undermines the trust you expect from him.

    6. The Emotionally Distant
    If you shut him out, don’t open up, or act like you don’t need him, he may stop trying to connect at all.

    Bottom Line:
    No one’s perfect, but lasting love takes effort from both sides. A faithful man deserves a woman who values that loyalty and nurtures it in return, with honesty, love, and respect. Copied.
    #apostlewilliammiyeraye
    Types of Behaviors That Can Push a Faithful Man Away React before you read👏 A faithful, committed man is a blessing, but even the strongest man can grow distant if he’s constantly met with disrespect, manipulation, or emotional neglect. Here are some types of behavior that can damage a good relationship: 1. The Constant Critic If you never acknowledge his efforts and always find fault, it wears him down. No one thrives under constant negativity. 2. The Manipulator Using guilt, silence, or emotional games to control him breaks trust. Faithfulness needs emotional safety, not power plays. 3. The Self-Absorbed Partner A relationship is about mutual care. If it’s always about your needs, your feelings, your drama, he’ll feel invisible. 4. The Disrespectful One Speaking down to him, mocking him in public, or belittling his efforts can kill a man’s spirit. Respect is the foundation of love. 5. The Flirtatious Teaser Constantly entertaining attention from other men, especially to provoke jealousy, undermines the trust you expect from him. 6. The Emotionally Distant If you shut him out, don’t open up, or act like you don’t need him, he may stop trying to connect at all. Bottom Line: No one’s perfect, but lasting love takes effort from both sides. A faithful man deserves a woman who values that loyalty and nurtures it in return, with honesty, love, and respect. Copied. #apostlewilliammiyeraye
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  • When people die, we say: “Do not speak ill of the dead.”

    But today, I ask one question: what of the living the dead ruined?

    What of the lives they shattered?

    The voices they silenced?

    The dreams they wasted?

    What if the dead ruled with cruelty and departed, leaving a trail of victims too damaged to ever recover?

    What if their legacy is the reason some died untimely, violently, and unnecessarily in the first place?

    Muhammadu Buhari is gone.

    And once again, a bleeding nation is being asked to perform its most dangerous ritual: FORGET!

    But I remember.

    I remember citizens waving flags and singing the anthem
    gunned down at Lekki Tollgate by soldiers, under his government that saw a demand for dignity as defiance.

    The streetlights went off.
    The cameras looked away.
    The bullets rained down mercilessly on unarmed citizens!

    He was Commander-in-Chief!

    Families are still grieving. Many are still missing.

    His government denied their murder.

    They made us question the evidence of our own eyes.

    They spat on our memory and dared us to forget.

    I remember the Shi’ites
    fathers, sons, women, children
    dragged through dust, crushed under boots,
    for daring to march and pray differently.

    I remember the violent burial of justice
    when DSS agents invaded judges’ homes at midnight, Gestapo-style,
    without warrants, without shame, without consequence.
    Till date, no justification.
    And the judiciary never stood the same again.

    I remember the hundreds of “repentant” Boko Haram terrorists he released back into society
    with fanfare, jollof rice, sewing machines, starter packs, and smiles
    while widows of slain soldiers clutched folded flags and death certificates.
    While children from burnt villages grew up without homes,
    without fathers,
    without mothers,
    without answers.

    I remember the grievous collapse of the economy
    the deepest plunge into abyss this nation had witnessed in recent history
    while Buhari repeatedly abandoned the country, disappearing for weeks without remorse, without explanation.

    As inflation soared, the Naira crumbled into disgrace, and food prices became horror stories,
    he remained absent.

    Absent while businesses folded.

    Absent while the World Poverty Clock declared Nigeria the Poverty Capital of the World.

    He watched from a distance, aloof, detached, unmoved
    and whenever he spoke, it was either denial or pure condescension.

    No strategy.

    No empathy.

    No shame.

    I remember the wickedness of his final days in office
    a Naira redesign wrapped in the disguise of reform,
    announced without foresight,
    without care for the poor, the sick, the elderly, or the rural.

    People died not for lack of medicine,
    but because they couldn’t use or access their money to purchase it.

    Aged parents wept bitterly in the streets, under the hot sun,
    for days that turned into weeks, because their own money was locked away.

    And Buhari, the Chief Architect of that doomsday policy
    the man under whose watch lives wasted like scraps of paper
    was the single biggest beneficiary of public goodwill in our democratic history!

    Yet they say, “Do not speak ill of the dead.”

    Why?

    Because he is now under the earth?

    Was he not godlike in power while we suffered under his rule?

    Since when did death become a bleach that wipes away how people lived?

    Since when did dying canonize men who had no empathy for the living?

    He died in London
    not in Zaria, not in Enugu, not in Jos
    but in a foreign hospital most Nigerians cannot even dream of, let alone afford.

    And his media aide, Femi Adesina, looked Nigerians dead in the face and said,
    "Buhari could have long died if he used Nigerian hospitals...due to lack of medical competence..."

    The sheer cruelty of the Nigerian ruling class in full glare!

    So, who should use Nigerian hospitals?

    Who should suffer the lack of "medical competence"?

    The aggrieved masses, from whom you now demand silence or empathy for the dead?

    The one who ruled for 8 YEARS over bad hospitals, empty pharmacies, and unpaid doctors?

    And when his time came, he fled, as usual, the very system he created.

    He ran from his own legacy.

    How many Nigerians can run from bad governance?
    How many of you reading this can afford London clinics?

    But again, they say: “Do not speak ill of the dead.”

    Do not remember your pain.
    Do not remember your trauma.
    Do not remember the loved ones you buried.
    Do not remember the blood that dried on our streets.
    Do not remember your truth.

    But I do remember.
    And I will not be silent.

    He governed like a ghost
    distant, cold, silent
    except when denying responsibility.

    He left a nation poorer, angrier, and more broken than he met it.
    He stole our time.
    He wasted our growth.
    He stifled our voice.

    And now, they want to steal our memory too?

    Nigeria is a tragedy dressed in resilience.

    We are too forgiving.
    Too adaptive.
    Too FORGETFUL.

    We hug trauma like tradition.

    We laugh in hunger...in pain!

    We move on too fast, too far, before our wounds even scab.

    We’ve normalized cuddling and being ruled by people who do not love us.

    Leaders who weaponize our silence.

    Who live lavishly off our forgetfulness.

    Who take and take and take
    because they know:
    When they die, we’ll still say “rest in peace.”
    We’ll still honor their ignoble memory and whisper: “Don’t speak ill of the dead.”

    And so we never name shame.

    We never call wickedness exactly what it is.

    We never hang failure around the necks of those who earned it.

    And that is why it never ends.

    That is why they never stop taking us for granted.

    Let Buhari’s name NEVER be uttered with reverence.

    Let his memory haunt the halls of power.

    Let his people carry the burden of the name that emptied a nation.

    Let every living and future president, governor, senator, judge, and minister know:

    If you ruin lives, you will not be remembered in peace.

    We will not lie for you.

    We will not absolve you.

    We will not let death whitewash your legacy.

    We will not silence our truth for the comfort of your memory.

    ---
    This post is about us.

    About Nigeria.

    And how we keep burying our trauma under the cloak of politeness.

    We say: “Let the dead rest.”

    But did the dead let us rest?

    We say: "Respect the dead."

    But did the dead respect the living?

    We must stop confusing cowardice for civility.
    We must stop mistaking silence for grace.
    We must be comfortable with painful truth, demanding accountability, and having tough conversations!

    We must make it clear:

    To die in disgrace must be a warning to the living.

    A nation that does not shame the wicked will keep giving birth to monsters.

    I want a country
    where our children have a future they can trust.

    Where they look up to their leaders and not just up at airplanes far in the sky.

    Where our brightest minds don’t flee to be second-class citizens elsewhere.

    Where hospitals heal, not kill.

    Where doctors and health personnel are well paid
    and not told to go learn tailoring, like Buhari's own Health Minister once said,
    without fear of any rebuke from his boss, the President!

    Where leaders are true stewards, not shameless, heartless predators.

    And if that future must begin with truth,
    then let it begin here.

    Buhari failed this country.
    Spectacularly.
    Shamelessly.
    Fatally.

    He squandered hope and enormous goodwill, the kind never seen before.

    That is his legacy, and I will not pretend otherwise.

    Because when death becomes a sweet deodorant for wickedness,
    we teach the living that legacies don’t matter
    and that is how nations die long before their people do.

    And to those of you who say, “He’s gone now. Let’s move on. Let’s focus on our own legacy…”

    I say: we cannot build clean legacies atop the graves of unaccounted wickedness.

    To move forward without reckoning is not wisdom; it is willful amnesia. It is dangerous, faux morality!

    The dead may be gone, yes. But their choices still live with us.

    Their impact outlives their breath.

    And the way we remember them tells the living what history will one day say of them too.

    “Do not speak ill of the dead?”

    Then, let the dead live better.

    Let them lead with conscience,

    remembering the day they'll take their final breath.

    Enough of political correctness that earns us nothing.

    Enough of false civility that brings us more chains and despair.

    Enough of this culture of respectability we have pushed too far into sheer docility.

    Let the dead rest, if they so deserve.

    But let the truth never sleep.

    My name is Ayo Atitebi, and I am my father's child!
    Copied.
    When people die, we say: “Do not speak ill of the dead.” But today, I ask one question: what of the living the dead ruined? What of the lives they shattered? The voices they silenced? The dreams they wasted? What if the dead ruled with cruelty and departed, leaving a trail of victims too damaged to ever recover? What if their legacy is the reason some died untimely, violently, and unnecessarily in the first place? Muhammadu Buhari is gone. And once again, a bleeding nation is being asked to perform its most dangerous ritual: FORGET! But I remember. I remember citizens waving flags and singing the anthem gunned down at Lekki Tollgate by soldiers, under his government that saw a demand for dignity as defiance. The streetlights went off. The cameras looked away. The bullets rained down mercilessly on unarmed citizens! He was Commander-in-Chief! Families are still grieving. Many are still missing. His government denied their murder. They made us question the evidence of our own eyes. They spat on our memory and dared us to forget. I remember the Shi’ites fathers, sons, women, children dragged through dust, crushed under boots, for daring to march and pray differently. I remember the violent burial of justice when DSS agents invaded judges’ homes at midnight, Gestapo-style, without warrants, without shame, without consequence. Till date, no justification. And the judiciary never stood the same again. I remember the hundreds of “repentant” Boko Haram terrorists he released back into society with fanfare, jollof rice, sewing machines, starter packs, and smiles while widows of slain soldiers clutched folded flags and death certificates. While children from burnt villages grew up without homes, without fathers, without mothers, without answers. I remember the grievous collapse of the economy the deepest plunge into abyss this nation had witnessed in recent history while Buhari repeatedly abandoned the country, disappearing for weeks without remorse, without explanation. As inflation soared, the Naira crumbled into disgrace, and food prices became horror stories, he remained absent. Absent while businesses folded. Absent while the World Poverty Clock declared Nigeria the Poverty Capital of the World. He watched from a distance, aloof, detached, unmoved and whenever he spoke, it was either denial or pure condescension. No strategy. No empathy. No shame. I remember the wickedness of his final days in office a Naira redesign wrapped in the disguise of reform, announced without foresight, without care for the poor, the sick, the elderly, or the rural. People died not for lack of medicine, but because they couldn’t use or access their money to purchase it. Aged parents wept bitterly in the streets, under the hot sun, for days that turned into weeks, because their own money was locked away. And Buhari, the Chief Architect of that doomsday policy the man under whose watch lives wasted like scraps of paper was the single biggest beneficiary of public goodwill in our democratic history! Yet they say, “Do not speak ill of the dead.” Why? Because he is now under the earth? Was he not godlike in power while we suffered under his rule? Since when did death become a bleach that wipes away how people lived? Since when did dying canonize men who had no empathy for the living? He died in London not in Zaria, not in Enugu, not in Jos but in a foreign hospital most Nigerians cannot even dream of, let alone afford. And his media aide, Femi Adesina, looked Nigerians dead in the face and said, "Buhari could have long died if he used Nigerian hospitals...due to lack of medical competence..." The sheer cruelty of the Nigerian ruling class in full glare! So, who should use Nigerian hospitals? Who should suffer the lack of "medical competence"? The aggrieved masses, from whom you now demand silence or empathy for the dead? The one who ruled for 8 YEARS over bad hospitals, empty pharmacies, and unpaid doctors? And when his time came, he fled, as usual, the very system he created. He ran from his own legacy. How many Nigerians can run from bad governance? How many of you reading this can afford London clinics? But again, they say: “Do not speak ill of the dead.” Do not remember your pain. Do not remember your trauma. Do not remember the loved ones you buried. Do not remember the blood that dried on our streets. Do not remember your truth. But I do remember. And I will not be silent. He governed like a ghost distant, cold, silent except when denying responsibility. He left a nation poorer, angrier, and more broken than he met it. He stole our time. He wasted our growth. He stifled our voice. And now, they want to steal our memory too? Nigeria is a tragedy dressed in resilience. We are too forgiving. Too adaptive. Too FORGETFUL. We hug trauma like tradition. We laugh in hunger...in pain! We move on too fast, too far, before our wounds even scab. We’ve normalized cuddling and being ruled by people who do not love us. Leaders who weaponize our silence. Who live lavishly off our forgetfulness. Who take and take and take because they know: When they die, we’ll still say “rest in peace.” We’ll still honor their ignoble memory and whisper: “Don’t speak ill of the dead.” And so we never name shame. We never call wickedness exactly what it is. We never hang failure around the necks of those who earned it. And that is why it never ends. That is why they never stop taking us for granted. Let Buhari’s name NEVER be uttered with reverence. Let his memory haunt the halls of power. Let his people carry the burden of the name that emptied a nation. Let every living and future president, governor, senator, judge, and minister know: If you ruin lives, you will not be remembered in peace. We will not lie for you. We will not absolve you. We will not let death whitewash your legacy. We will not silence our truth for the comfort of your memory. --- This post is about us. About Nigeria. And how we keep burying our trauma under the cloak of politeness. We say: “Let the dead rest.” But did the dead let us rest? We say: "Respect the dead." But did the dead respect the living? We must stop confusing cowardice for civility. We must stop mistaking silence for grace. We must be comfortable with painful truth, demanding accountability, and having tough conversations! We must make it clear: To die in disgrace must be a warning to the living. A nation that does not shame the wicked will keep giving birth to monsters. I want a country where our children have a future they can trust. Where they look up to their leaders and not just up at airplanes far in the sky. Where our brightest minds don’t flee to be second-class citizens elsewhere. Where hospitals heal, not kill. Where doctors and health personnel are well paid and not told to go learn tailoring, like Buhari's own Health Minister once said, without fear of any rebuke from his boss, the President! Where leaders are true stewards, not shameless, heartless predators. And if that future must begin with truth, then let it begin here. Buhari failed this country. Spectacularly. Shamelessly. Fatally. He squandered hope and enormous goodwill, the kind never seen before. That is his legacy, and I will not pretend otherwise. Because when death becomes a sweet deodorant for wickedness, we teach the living that legacies don’t matter and that is how nations die long before their people do. And to those of you who say, “He’s gone now. Let’s move on. Let’s focus on our own legacy…” I say: we cannot build clean legacies atop the graves of unaccounted wickedness. To move forward without reckoning is not wisdom; it is willful amnesia. It is dangerous, faux morality! The dead may be gone, yes. But their choices still live with us. Their impact outlives their breath. And the way we remember them tells the living what history will one day say of them too. “Do not speak ill of the dead?” Then, let the dead live better. Let them lead with conscience, remembering the day they'll take their final breath. Enough of political correctness that earns us nothing. Enough of false civility that brings us more chains and despair. Enough of this culture of respectability we have pushed too far into sheer docility. Let the dead rest, if they so deserve. But let the truth never sleep. My name is Ayo Atitebi, and I am my father's child! Copied.
    Like
    1
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  • BREAKING: NIGERIAN SENATE APPROVES CREATION OF 12 NEW STATES!

    In a landmark move aimed at deepening federalism and bringing governance closer to the people, the Nigerian Senate has passed the final reading for the creation of twelve new states across the six geo-political zones of the country.

    This historic development follows an extensive nationwide consultation by the Senate Committee on State Creation, signaling a bold step toward equity, inclusion, and balanced development.

    1. SOUTH WEST
    Ijebu State – From Ogun State
    Ibadan State – From Oyo State

    2. SOUTH EAST
    Anim State – From Anambra and Imo States
    Adada State – From Enugu State

    3. SOUTH SOUTH
    Toru-Ibe State – From parts of Ondo, Edo & Delta States
    Obolo State – From Akwa Ibom State

    4. NORTH EAST.
    Savanna State – From Borno State
    Amana State – From Adamawa State

    5. NORTH WEST
    Tiga State – From Kano State
    Gurara State – From Southern Kaduna

    6. NORTH CENTRAL
    Okura State – From Kogi State
    Apa State – From Benue State

    This decision reflects the Senate’s commitment to fairness, unity, and national progress.
    It is a long-awaited response to agitations for better representation, improved governance, and accelerated development at the grassroots.

    The official gazette is expected soon.
    A new chapter in Nigeria’s federal structure is about to begin.
    #NewStates
    #NigeriaRising
    #SenateUpdate
    #DevelopmentMatters
    #UnityInDiversity.
    COPIED.
    BREAKING: NIGERIAN SENATE APPROVES CREATION OF 12 NEW STATES! In a landmark move aimed at deepening federalism and bringing governance closer to the people, the Nigerian Senate has passed the final reading for the creation of twelve new states across the six geo-political zones of the country. This historic development follows an extensive nationwide consultation by the Senate Committee on State Creation, signaling a bold step toward equity, inclusion, and balanced development. 1. SOUTH WEST Ijebu State – From Ogun State Ibadan State – From Oyo State 2. SOUTH EAST Anim State – From Anambra and Imo States Adada State – From Enugu State 3. SOUTH SOUTH Toru-Ibe State – From parts of Ondo, Edo & Delta States Obolo State – From Akwa Ibom State 4. NORTH EAST. Savanna State – From Borno State Amana State – From Adamawa State 5. NORTH WEST Tiga State – From Kano State Gurara State – From Southern Kaduna 6. NORTH CENTRAL Okura State – From Kogi State Apa State – From Benue State This decision reflects the Senate’s commitment to fairness, unity, and national progress. It is a long-awaited response to agitations for better representation, improved governance, and accelerated development at the grassroots. The official gazette is expected soon. A new chapter in Nigeria’s federal structure is about to begin. #NewStates #NigeriaRising #SenateUpdate #DevelopmentMatters #UnityInDiversity. COPIED.
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  • just saving it here
    #copiedpost #fypシ#foryouシ #fypシ゚viralシfypシ゚ #highlightseveryonefollowersby
    just saving it here #copiedpost #fypシ゚ #foryouシ #fypシ゚viralシfypシ゚ #highlightseveryonefollowersby
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  • Lecturer Dies in Hotel Room After ‘Hot Sex Match’ With 200-Level Student in Kogi State

    Dr. Olabode Abimbola Ibikunle — known as one of the strictest lecturers at Kogi State University, Anyigba — has passed away. And it reportedly happened in a hotel room.

    According to reports, Dr. Ibikunle — a married man with children — checked into a hotel three days ago with a beautiful Ebira lady, who is a 200-level student of Social Studies Education.

    Sources claim that the man filled his system with energy drinks, as though he was about to play in a Champions League final.

    But unfortunately, just as the action started, it was said that the first round went well… but as the second round was about to begin, the man died.

    An alarm was raised. The girl, who is currently in police custody, reportedly told authorities that she doesn’t know how Dr. Ibikunle died. However, police suspect foul play — they’re even questioning whether she may have poisoned him.

    Meanwhile, students of Kogi State University are celebrating the death of one of their strictest lecturers. They’ve been trending the incident online with humorous captions.

    Photos show what the students have been saying.
    #Copied
    #fyp #Kogi #NasRepresenter
    Lecturer Dies in Hotel Room After ‘Hot Sex Match’ With 200-Level Student in Kogi State Dr. Olabode Abimbola Ibikunle — known as one of the strictest lecturers at Kogi State University, Anyigba — has passed away. And it reportedly happened in a hotel room. According to reports, Dr. Ibikunle — a married man with children — checked into a hotel three days ago with a beautiful Ebira lady, who is a 200-level student of Social Studies Education. Sources claim that the man filled his system with energy drinks, as though he was about to play in a Champions League final. But unfortunately, just as the action started, it was said that the first round went well… but as the second round was about to begin, the man died. An alarm was raised. The girl, who is currently in police custody, reportedly told authorities that she doesn’t know how Dr. Ibikunle died. However, police suspect foul play — they’re even questioning whether she may have poisoned him. Meanwhile, students of Kogi State University are celebrating the death of one of their strictest lecturers. They’ve been trending the incident online with humorous captions. Photos show what the students have been saying. #Copied #fyp #Kogi #NasRepresenter
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  • *SOUTHEAST TRADITIONAL RULERS COUNCIL ABOLISHES "EZE NDIGBO" TITLE FOR IGBO LEADERS IN DIASPORA*

    The Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers has officially abolished the use of the title "Eze Ndigbo" by Igbo leaders residing outside Igbo land. This decision was announced in a communique signed by His Royal Majesty, Eze (Dr.) E.C. Okeke, CFR (Eze Imo), His Royal Majesty, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe (Leader), and the chairmen of the Traditional Councils of Enugu, Anambra, Abia, and Ebonyi States.

    OFFICIAL RESOLUTION ON THE TITLE FOR IGBO LEADERS IN DIASPORA

    The Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers appreciates the efforts of Igbo leaders in Diaspora in unifying Ndigbo and fostering peaceful coexistence with host communities. Their commitment to promoting Igbo culture and traditions is highly commendable. However, the council deems it necessary to provide clarity regarding the use of the title "Eze" outside Igbo land.

    Clarifications on the Use of the Title “Eze”

    1. “Eze” is a sacred traditional title exclusively reserved for recognized traditional rulers in the Southeast, as sanctioned by Igbo customs, culture, and state legislation.

    2. A true “Eze” is enthroned and coronated by his community or kingdom following traditional rites, divinations, and sacred ancestral ceremonies.

    3. An “Eze” must have a kingdom or community to govern. The title is not honorary or symbolic; it signifies rulership over a defined territory.

    4. The “Ofo” is a symbol of authority bestowed upon a traditional ruler by his people, signifying his spiritual and cultural legitimacy.

    5. The title of “Eze” cannot be conferred on individuals residing outside Igbo communities. It is not a political or ceremonial title but one deeply rooted in Igbo tradition and heritage.

    Introduction of the Approved Title: "Onyendu Ndigbo"

    To resolve the long-standing controversy surrounding the improper use of the title “Eze Ndigbo” outside Igbo land, the Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers has unanimously approved “Onyendu Ndigbo” (Igbo Leader in Diaspora) as the official designation for any Igbo leader in foreign lands or outside Nigeria.

    All Igbo leaders in Diaspora are required to adopt this new title immediately. This directive extends to all official documents, signposts, letterheads, and public representations.

    Implications of Non-Compliance

    Failure to comply with this directive, especially after a competent court ruling on the matter, will be considered a serious act of defiance, misconduct, and disregard for Igbo traditional authority and judicial pronouncements. Compliance, on the other hand, will foster better recognition, reconciliation, and cooperation between Igbo leaders abroad and traditional/government authorities at home.

    Final Words from the Southeast Traditional Rulers Council

    The Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers welcomes all Igbo leaders in Diaspora into this new era of cultural unity and mutual respect. We extend our hand of fellowship to all Igbo leaders abroad and urge them to embrace this resolution for the collective growth and advancement of Ndigbo.

    As custodians of Igbo heritage, we must work together to uphold the dignity of our culture and traditions, ensuring they are respected and preserved at all times.

    *COPIED*
    *SOUTHEAST TRADITIONAL RULERS COUNCIL ABOLISHES "EZE NDIGBO" TITLE FOR IGBO LEADERS IN DIASPORA* The Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers has officially abolished the use of the title "Eze Ndigbo" by Igbo leaders residing outside Igbo land. This decision was announced in a communique signed by His Royal Majesty, Eze (Dr.) E.C. Okeke, CFR (Eze Imo), His Royal Majesty, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe (Leader), and the chairmen of the Traditional Councils of Enugu, Anambra, Abia, and Ebonyi States. OFFICIAL RESOLUTION ON THE TITLE FOR IGBO LEADERS IN DIASPORA The Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers appreciates the efforts of Igbo leaders in Diaspora in unifying Ndigbo and fostering peaceful coexistence with host communities. Their commitment to promoting Igbo culture and traditions is highly commendable. However, the council deems it necessary to provide clarity regarding the use of the title "Eze" outside Igbo land. Clarifications on the Use of the Title “Eze” 1. “Eze” is a sacred traditional title exclusively reserved for recognized traditional rulers in the Southeast, as sanctioned by Igbo customs, culture, and state legislation. 2. A true “Eze” is enthroned and coronated by his community or kingdom following traditional rites, divinations, and sacred ancestral ceremonies. 3. An “Eze” must have a kingdom or community to govern. The title is not honorary or symbolic; it signifies rulership over a defined territory. 4. The “Ofo” is a symbol of authority bestowed upon a traditional ruler by his people, signifying his spiritual and cultural legitimacy. 5. The title of “Eze” cannot be conferred on individuals residing outside Igbo communities. It is not a political or ceremonial title but one deeply rooted in Igbo tradition and heritage. Introduction of the Approved Title: "Onyendu Ndigbo" To resolve the long-standing controversy surrounding the improper use of the title “Eze Ndigbo” outside Igbo land, the Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers has unanimously approved “Onyendu Ndigbo” (Igbo Leader in Diaspora) as the official designation for any Igbo leader in foreign lands or outside Nigeria. All Igbo leaders in Diaspora are required to adopt this new title immediately. This directive extends to all official documents, signposts, letterheads, and public representations. Implications of Non-Compliance Failure to comply with this directive, especially after a competent court ruling on the matter, will be considered a serious act of defiance, misconduct, and disregard for Igbo traditional authority and judicial pronouncements. Compliance, on the other hand, will foster better recognition, reconciliation, and cooperation between Igbo leaders abroad and traditional/government authorities at home. Final Words from the Southeast Traditional Rulers Council The Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers welcomes all Igbo leaders in Diaspora into this new era of cultural unity and mutual respect. We extend our hand of fellowship to all Igbo leaders abroad and urge them to embrace this resolution for the collective growth and advancement of Ndigbo. As custodians of Igbo heritage, we must work together to uphold the dignity of our culture and traditions, ensuring they are respected and preserved at all times. *COPIED*
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  • The Harsh Truths About MEN Nobody Wants to Admit.

    1. Men are only loved based on what they provide.
    A man without money, status, or value is invisible to society—even to his own family.

    2. Men don’t get sympathy, only expectations.
    A struggling man is mocked, not helped. The world doesn’t care about his pain—only his productivity.

    3. If a man fails, he is on his own.
    No safety net, no pity. A failed man is seen as useless, even by those who once praised him.

    4. Men are only as good as their last achievement.
    Your past success means nothing if you can’t maintain it. The moment you fall, you become irrelevant.

    5. Nobody teaches men how to deal with emotions.
    Society says “Be a man,” but never explains how to handle pain, stress, or heartbreak.

    6. Men are judged by results, not effort.
    Nobody cares how hard you try—if you don’t succeed, you’re just making excuses.

    7. Men must build themselves from scratch.
    No handouts, no shortcuts. A man must create his own value or be ignored.

    8. Men’s problems are seen as complaints.
    If a man speaks about his struggles, he’s called weak. If he stays silent, he suffers alone.

    9. Men are replaceable.
    In relationships, jobs, and even families—if a man can’t provide, he’s discarded like an old tool.

    10. A man’s worth is always conditional.
    No matter how much he loves, gives, or sacrifices, his value is always tied to what he can do.

    This is the brutal reality. A man must level up, stay strong, and never expect handouts. Because in the end… Nobody is coming to save you.

    Copied
    The Harsh Truths About MEN Nobody Wants to Admit. 1. Men are only loved based on what they provide. A man without money, status, or value is invisible to society—even to his own family. 2. Men don’t get sympathy, only expectations. A struggling man is mocked, not helped. The world doesn’t care about his pain—only his productivity. 3. If a man fails, he is on his own. No safety net, no pity. A failed man is seen as useless, even by those who once praised him. 4. Men are only as good as their last achievement. Your past success means nothing if you can’t maintain it. The moment you fall, you become irrelevant. 5. Nobody teaches men how to deal with emotions. Society says “Be a man,” but never explains how to handle pain, stress, or heartbreak. 6. Men are judged by results, not effort. Nobody cares how hard you try—if you don’t succeed, you’re just making excuses. 7. Men must build themselves from scratch. No handouts, no shortcuts. A man must create his own value or be ignored. 8. Men’s problems are seen as complaints. If a man speaks about his struggles, he’s called weak. If he stays silent, he suffers alone. 9. Men are replaceable. In relationships, jobs, and even families—if a man can’t provide, he’s discarded like an old tool. 10. A man’s worth is always conditional. No matter how much he loves, gives, or sacrifices, his value is always tied to what he can do. This is the brutal reality. A man must level up, stay strong, and never expect handouts. Because in the end… Nobody is coming to save you. Copied
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