• I entered CBN and NNPC; both were filled with northerners.
    And you wonder why the country is stagnant?

    Graduates can’t find jobs, yet these organizations hand them out based on connections and tribe, not competence.
    Many of them don’t even show up to work.

    This country, Nawa!

    From Vivian Nora
    I entered CBN and NNPC; both were filled with northerners. And you wonder why the country is stagnant? Graduates can’t find jobs, yet these organizations hand them out based on connections and tribe, not competence. Many of them don’t even show up to work. This country, Nawa! From Vivian Nora
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  • Sporting fans are saying Viktor Gyökeres would've been considered a legend had he left "honourably". They're saying he is ungrateful for the way the club treated him. They didn't forget to add that he's just a player who put on their shirt like Slimani. Nothing special about him,he won't be happy at Arsenal.

    These guys think life is like a Nigerian movie where ghosts ask for help.

    It's a classic heartbreak bitterness dressed up as “honour.” Sporting fans acting like they raised Gyökeres from a baby goat to a lion, forgetting he literally carried them like Jesus with the cross every weekend. But now that he's going, suddenly he's “just a guy who wore the shirt”? Slimani levels? That’s selective amnesia on steroids.

    They want Gyökeres to go back and say goodbye properly before they forgive him.

    The truth is:
    __He gave them one of their best seasons in recent memory.
    __He's leaving this way because the club played him.
    __He didn’t fake love,he just moved where ambition lives.
    They're just salty because he chose to level up and didn’t look back. They wanted a fairy-tale ending. Instead, they got a Here We Go. And the worst part? Deep down they know Arsenal fans will cherish him more than they ever did.
    Let them heal. As it pains them, e go sweet us
    Sporting fans are saying Viktor Gyökeres would've been considered a legend had he left "honourably". They're saying he is ungrateful for the way the club treated him. They didn't forget to add that he's just a player who put on their shirt like Slimani. Nothing special about him,he won't be happy at Arsenal. These guys think life is like a Nigerian movie where ghosts ask for help. It's a classic heartbreak bitterness dressed up as “honour.” Sporting fans acting like they raised Gyökeres from a baby goat to a lion, forgetting he literally carried them like Jesus with the cross every weekend. But now that he's going, suddenly he's “just a guy who wore the shirt”? Slimani levels? 😂 That’s selective amnesia on steroids. They want Gyökeres to go back and say goodbye properly before they forgive him. The truth is: __He gave them one of their best seasons in recent memory. __He's leaving this way because the club played him. __He didn’t fake love,he just moved where ambition lives. They're just salty because he chose to level up and didn’t look back. They wanted a fairy-tale ending. Instead, they got a Here We Go. And the worst part? Deep down they know Arsenal fans will cherish him more than they ever did. Let them heal. As it pains them, e go sweet us 🔴⚪🔥
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  • If you have any sympathy as a Nigerian, shred it with this man. He's indeed a hero.
    If you have any sympathy as a Nigerian, shred it with this man. He's indeed a hero.
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 33 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
  • "Let's us hear the conclusion of the whole matters:fear God and keep HIS commandments: for this is the whole duty of man"Ecclesiastic 12:13
    "Let's us hear the conclusion of the whole matters:fear God and keep HIS commandments: for this is the whole duty of man"Ecclesiastic 12:13
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  • Let's have this debate for the day
    Can a woman feed the house without any complains
    Let's have this debate for the day Can a woman feed the house without any complains
    Like
    1
    1 Σχόλια 1 Μοιράστηκε 96 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
  • Let's have this debate for the day
    Can a woman feed the house without any complains
    Let's have this debate for the day Can a woman feed the house without any complains
    Like
    1
    1 Σχόλια 1 Μοιράστηκε 58 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
  • *Son:* Daddy, I fell in love & want to date this awesome girl.
    *Father:* That's great son. Who is she?
    *Son:* It's Sandra, the neighbor's daughter.
    *Father:* Oh hoo, I wish you hadn't said that.
    I have to tell you something son, but you must
    promise not to tell your mother.
    Sandra is actually your sister.

    The boy is naturally bummed out, but a couple of months later
    *Son:* Daddy, I fell in love again and she is even
    hotter
    *Father:* That's great son. Who is she?
    *Son:* It's Angela, the other neighbor's daughter.
    *Father:* Oh ho, I wish you hadn't said that.
    Angela is also your sister.
    This went on couple of times and the son was so
    mad,
    he went straight to his mother crying.
    *Son:* Mum I am so mad at dad! I fell in love with
    six girls but I can't date any of them because daddy is their father
    The mother hugs him affectionately and says:
    My love, you can date whoever you want.
    Don't listen to him. He is not your Father.
    Son Fainted... :p

    What is the moral lesson for the marrieds/ couples?
    *@ UMUTAYI* *UWOUMUTAYI*
    *Son:* Daddy, I fell in love & want to date this awesome girl. *Father:* That's great son. Who is she? *Son:* It's Sandra, the neighbor's daughter. *Father:* Oh hoo, I wish you hadn't said that. I have to tell you something son, but you must promise not to tell your mother. Sandra is actually your sister. The boy is naturally bummed out, but a couple of months later *Son:* Daddy, I fell in love again and she is even hotter *Father:* That's great son. Who is she? *Son:* It's Angela, the other neighbor's daughter. *Father:* Oh ho, I wish you hadn't said that. Angela is also your sister. This went on couple of times and the son was so mad, he went straight to his mother crying. *Son:* Mum I am so mad at dad! I fell in love with six girls but I can't date any of them because daddy is their father The mother hugs him affectionately and says: My love, you can date whoever you want. Don't listen to him. He is not your Father. Son Fainted... :p What is the moral lesson for the marrieds/ couples? *@ UMUTAYI* *UWOUMUTAYI*
    Like
    1
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  • *This match no be here oo*

    *DEFINITION OF STUPIDITY*

    Violent Fight broke out at a viewing center in Enugu after the CHELSEA-PSG match which Chelsea won 3-0

    Man U fans that gathered to mock Chelsea 's expected defeat ended up being mocked and they resorted to exchanging blows and breaking bottles

    Is there no limitations to Foolishness????
    *This match no be here oo* *DEFINITION OF STUPIDITY* Violent Fight broke out at a viewing center in Enugu after the CHELSEA-PSG match which Chelsea won 3-0 Man U fans that gathered to mock Chelsea 's expected defeat ended up being mocked and they resorted to exchanging blows and breaking bottles Is there no limitations to Foolishness????
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  • Positivity all around me to the glory of almighty God for this beautiful company Brando group of company, Brando for life
    Positivity all around me 👍🥰❤️ to the glory of almighty God 🙏 for this beautiful company Brando group of company, Brando for life
    Love
    1
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  • I found this video which I want to share with you: https://phoenix-browser.com/F8thHNbAfRn
    I found this video which I want to share with you: https://phoenix-browser.com/F8thHNbAfRn
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 27 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
  • In 2017, a conspiracy theory that Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari had died in a London hospital and was replaced with a body double called ‘Jubril’ from Sudan surfaced in popular discourse. This occurred after Buhari had spent three months undergoing medical treatment in London for an undisclosed illness. The President’s location outside of Nigeria, in the country that was its former colonizer, gave shape to different versions of the conspiracy theory, with suggestions that British Nigerian political elites were behind the replacement of the President and were hiding his alleged death.
    Anxieties around the President were initially provoked by a tweet on 19 May 2017, in which Eric Joyce, a British politician, tweeted that the President was dead. President Buhari had last been seen in public two weeks earlier. Eric Joyce’s tweet triggered Nigerians who were looking to escape a repeat of the power vacuum that had been experienced in the country after the death of a previous sitting president, Umaru Yar’Adua, who died in similar and somewhat mysterious circumstances in 2010.
    Narratives that the president was a clone emerged in public discourse following President Buhari's public reappearance and return to Nigeria from the UK in August 2017. The first identified online appearance of the clone conspiracy theory was a YouTube video created by Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), a secessionist group in southeastern Nigeria, in September 2017. The group had been seizing opportunities during election windows to insert itself into broader political debates by whipping up regional sentiments of marginalization and political apathy. It had used a range of mainstream and social media channels to call the attention of the international community to its agitations and the illegal detention/trial of its leader. The body double conspiracy theory was picked up in the Nigerian media and widely spread through different forms of popular communication in Nigeria, resulting in Buhari publicly acknowledging and confronting the conspiracy theory. On 2 December 2018, Buhari insisted during an event in Poland, ‘It’s [the] real me, I assure you.’ The IPOB leader responded, tweeting:
    If Buhari is not dead and replaced by Jubril from Sudan, why won't the Nigerian government sue Eric Joyce, a former British lawmaker, for peddling lies? They can’t because they know I am speaking the truth. @AsoRock @ericjoyce @NGRPresident @UKParliament @NGRSenate @WhiteHouse t.co/qqrKHPmtNy
    In this article, this conspiracy theory that President Buhari was a clone is addressed as an opportunity to question the superficial confidence with which conspiracy theories have been dismissed as aberrations and negative externalities of digital ecosystems and their supporters as threats to an ostensibly deliberative public sphere. While not pitched in defense of conspiracy theories, it seeks to examine them without the comfortable protection of post-enlightenment normativity and to remind us how injunctions to ‘speak civilly’ or ‘think rationally’ tend to reproduce tropes from a colonial past, dismissing or erasing other forms of knowledge/reasoning used to make sense of the world to speak to power.

    The arguments and analyses we advance here are closely related to those we presented in a previous article (Gagliardone et al.,
    Citation
    2021), where we empirically illustrated how this explorative, rather than normative, approach allows us to grasp how individuals do not simply fall for, embrace, or support a conspiracy theory but can ‘do’ specific and distinct things with/through them. In that article, we comparatively analyzed how conspiracy theories circulating at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic were seized by some Nigerian users and politicians as opportunities to criticize the ruling party, while in South Africa the same conspiracy theories became a vehicle to voice deep-rooted resentment towards the West and corporate interests.

    In 2017, a conspiracy theory that Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari had died in a London hospital and was replaced with a body double called ‘Jubril’ from Sudan surfaced in popular discourse. This occurred after Buhari had spent three months undergoing medical treatment in London for an undisclosed illness. The President’s location outside of Nigeria, in the country that was its former colonizer, gave shape to different versions of the conspiracy theory, with suggestions that British Nigerian political elites were behind the replacement of the President and were hiding his alleged death. Anxieties around the President were initially provoked by a tweet on 19 May 2017, in which Eric Joyce, a British politician, tweeted that the President was dead. President Buhari had last been seen in public two weeks earlier. Eric Joyce’s tweet triggered Nigerians who were looking to escape a repeat of the power vacuum that had been experienced in the country after the death of a previous sitting president, Umaru Yar’Adua, who died in similar and somewhat mysterious circumstances in 2010. Narratives that the president was a clone emerged in public discourse following President Buhari's public reappearance and return to Nigeria from the UK in August 2017. The first identified online appearance of the clone conspiracy theory was a YouTube video created by Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), a secessionist group in southeastern Nigeria, in September 2017. The group had been seizing opportunities during election windows to insert itself into broader political debates by whipping up regional sentiments of marginalization and political apathy. It had used a range of mainstream and social media channels to call the attention of the international community to its agitations and the illegal detention/trial of its leader. The body double conspiracy theory was picked up in the Nigerian media and widely spread through different forms of popular communication in Nigeria, resulting in Buhari publicly acknowledging and confronting the conspiracy theory. On 2 December 2018, Buhari insisted during an event in Poland, ‘It’s [the] real me, I assure you.’ The IPOB leader responded, tweeting: If Buhari is not dead and replaced by Jubril from Sudan, why won't the Nigerian government sue Eric Joyce, a former British lawmaker, for peddling lies? They can’t because they know I am speaking the truth. @AsoRock @ericjoyce @NGRPresident @UKParliament @NGRSenate @WhiteHouse t.co/qqrKHPmtNy In this article, this conspiracy theory that President Buhari was a clone is addressed as an opportunity to question the superficial confidence with which conspiracy theories have been dismissed as aberrations and negative externalities of digital ecosystems and their supporters as threats to an ostensibly deliberative public sphere. While not pitched in defense of conspiracy theories, it seeks to examine them without the comfortable protection of post-enlightenment normativity and to remind us how injunctions to ‘speak civilly’ or ‘think rationally’ tend to reproduce tropes from a colonial past, dismissing or erasing other forms of knowledge/reasoning used to make sense of the world to speak to power. The arguments and analyses we advance here are closely related to those we presented in a previous article (Gagliardone et al., Citation 2021), where we empirically illustrated how this explorative, rather than normative, approach allows us to grasp how individuals do not simply fall for, embrace, or support a conspiracy theory but can ‘do’ specific and distinct things with/through them. In that article, we comparatively analyzed how conspiracy theories circulating at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic were seized by some Nigerian users and politicians as opportunities to criticize the ruling party, while in South Africa the same conspiracy theories became a vehicle to voice deep-rooted resentment towards the West and corporate interests.
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 25 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
  • I found this video which I want to share with you: https://phoenix-browser.com/JgBIfYwJRvc
    I found this video which I want to share with you: https://phoenix-browser.com/JgBIfYwJRvc
    0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 22 Views 0 Προεπισκόπηση
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