|
Mustay (m)
|
What tha' hell! I kind of like this weather(harmattan) compared to the sunny-side-of-life season we had recently. I'm loffin it this way and need I reminder on how to take care of ma skin during this season. Thank Goodness we need not declare holidays because of the weather(remember Iran's snow  )
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
. . . . . I really won't say I missed this site 'because irrespective of ma 'busy' status, I'm really vexed with the absence of the NEW POST REPLYING YOURS link that used to appear whwnever you log in.  Seun says it's due to TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES - my foot I say  (Un)Fortunately, I didn't really get to see up to 60% of the Nations' cup games, I was HAPPY  Nigeria lost but was vexed for two reasons - I lacked interest in the match even before kickoff. Moreover due to my schedule, I got home at some minutes past six that day and when I heard the shouts of "GOAL", I turned the T.V on, saw the goal and switched it off again  Later on, while wondering while the neighbourhood was quiet, I switched the TV on again; saw 1-1 Nigeria vs Ghana. Now, that was the answer!  Well what vexed me there was that 1 minute after I turned the T.V on, Ghana scored   My second 'vexing' reason is that even if we lose, maladministration will still continue at the GLASS HOUSE. All the same, it was a thing of pride to see Egypt lift the trophy once more - in GRAND STYLE   
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Remembering yesterday was Valentine, it's just annoying how we make-believe things here. Now, it's just a commercial exploitative agenda - chikena. Well, abami-eda(Fela) don talk am say we sabi 'suffering  and smiling  ' How all of a sudden people show love. Abeggggiii the history has no correlation with us here. Anyway, it depends on which school of thought you belong to  Well, I gatz to go now. I'm kind of 'back-to-this-journal' after these posts. 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Men, if the government of Fashola can 'modify' the existing structure of the mile2- badagry road, then I 'll give his administration 3 gbosas!  Honestly, the major players of that route (commercial operators, private car owners, taxis etc) have been psyched up to become 'barbarians'. Traffic laws are new inventions on that route and the 'enforcement' officers (police, army, navy, customs) are the major traffic offenders there - and to think the route is an i international route  It's simply a shame to my country 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Wow!
I just get lazy these days to write here.
Thank Goodness! It rained thursday night and I had a very good night rest  I mean for the past few weeks, it has become a routine to bath nothing less than 3 times a day, if not 4 but 5! It's just crazy that under the hot sun, I wish I could just remove my clothes and my body too.  Now that our president is 'free' from these court 'wahala', I hope he can do 'something' tangible by adding some GAS!  The BRT bus lane 'll be commisioned this month and one hopes there 'll be 'sanity' on our lanes since there is a separation of lanes.TRUTH BE SAID written - most drivers on our roads understand not simple traffic laws.  Most of our accidents are ignorant-caused  
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
I was in a bit of confused mood this morning, trying to sort out some decisions about my tasks . . . just taking a look outside - THE RAIN AGAIN!!!  It's so wonderful how I quickly sorted out my problems - I mean; the rain changed my countenance changed. The rain makes me feel happy, but I bet when it begins to spoil my day, that might change  I was shocked to see the giant-killing Barnsley team beat us, but no problem; I take solace in the fact that Man u lost thus, all BIG TEAMS 've dropped out  It's another week and I 've to modify my dress code vis-à-vis the weather - one just hopes it doesn't get SUNNY and HOT 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
I saw the Apprentice Africa again! Loffly show with some errors  Some peeps say we too dey copy-copy all of these shows from obodo oyinbo but I see nothing wrong if we modify GOOD THINGS. Reading comments about the substandard fuel imported by Oando, what came to my mind was - had it been kerosine, surely many many many people will suffer the consequences 'because in times were gas supply is in shortage, the average man and the poor man will both use KERO-  May God help us to help ourselves. I saw the test-running of the BRT buses and I was quite disappointed - must people always hang in buses   can't one sit down comfortably without having to smell the other's armpit? from what I saw, it seems there are two categories - RED BUS means no standing; BLUE BUS means every man's bus
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
 |
Heat
« #103 on: March 17, 2008, 06:56 AM » |
|
I'm so sorry for my self  Thank Goodness yesterdaywas a Sunday- I spent a few hours typing a mail to a newspaper and before I went out of the house, I took my bath thrice . When I came back, I took my bath thrice too  There was no magic the AC/Fan could play to cool off ma body  I simply don't understand these days - why do I feel all of a sudden SWEATY? I never used to be like this in January, so why the sudden change? PERHAPS I NEED TO GO CHECK MA BODY I am told the reason for this is due to the fact that last week's test-running of the BRT was a FREE one and if ythe bus is the last for the day, people will definitely hang in both BUSES I saw the test-running of the BRT buses and I was quite disappointed - must people always hang in buses  can't one sit down comfortably without having to smell the other's armpit? Well, the fact that there is a holiday this wednesday makes me happy  The title race is getting hotter and although, I couldn't see our match, I still have this feeeling ARsenal might end up 3rd  When you think about their fixtures with Us, Bolton,Manu, Tottenham et al, one gatz to pity 'em   The color is BLUE  
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
In civilised societies, heads would 've rolled. Tomorrow will be the seventh day since a plane which departed Lagos last saturday for Cross River lost communication. During the week, our 'beloved' minister fed us wrong information which was also fed to him by his subordinates! Talk about square pegs in round holes. Playing with human lives ain't a joke and this just exposes the lag in our system. Perhaps if the number of passengers was about a hundred, the issue would 've been treated seriously.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Some days ago, the inefficiencies of the DEPARTMENT OF PETROLEUM RESOURCES (DPR) were exposed too as ALCOHOLIC PETROL was imported into the Lagos despite passing DPR's tests. Most people that bought the fuel had vehicle breakdown, machine problems etc. It's bad to know some people receive income for work not done. Need I write - am excited about ADAMS OSHIOMOLE's victory yesterday. Yesterday looked like a monday to me perhaps 'because we had a WEDNESDAY break. I wonder how next tuesday will be! Happy holidays.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
I woke up about 1hr 30 mins ago and what did I dream of - CHELSEA 1 - 0 ARSENAL. Luckily for me, I have no weekend lectures today due to the holiday. What a Sunday! Hope it turns out well!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
I just woke up and this morning I feel EXCITED. Yesterday was ma Bday and this week had been characterized of me feeling so weak; I've been under the weather. Being sick isn't something to look forward to because right now, I feel there's everything to LIVE FOR!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Am not just happy about Amodu's appointment as coach of the super eagles, but am delighted with NFA's plans on the conditions of work Amodu 'll work in. All he needs is support from the fans and most especially the media. He has to be confident in handling his job and my prayer is that some myopic people don't put in TRIBAL SENTIMENTS in his team selection. The time has come when we treat our own with respect. Made in Nigeria for Nigerians!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Some months ago, BIBANKE & FIRE ON THE MOUNTAIN were the tracks that made me buy her album but now am addicted to 95% of the tracks on ASA's album. The disc has been in ma CD player for weeks now and I've not even bothered removing it. Her use of language has really got me ADDICTED!!! It's nice that some Nigeria musicians still have sensible lyrics. " e ba mi kira fun ASA yi!" 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
 |
6 nah!
« #110 on: April 17, 2008, 02:31 PM » |
|
It rained LIONS AND BEASTS today! The rain was something else, the day suddenly changed to evening and the wind was FIERCE, I was afraid a natural disaster was coming. May God continue to FORBID I say, abi? I've heard of it before but I finally saw it today! 1 2 3 4 5 5. I tried so hard to convince myself but the guy's fingers were 6. So weird it seems!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
There's presently a global food crisis as the prices of foodstuffs have increased. Countries no longer want to export again and one of the causes is GLOBAL WARMING  Anyway, we go survive! but there are these species of ants that seem to eat up every food we have in the house. Just a crumb of bread dropped on the floor will showcase a scene of MIGRATION! these ants peeve me and they finished my MILO  they didn't just stop there, they destroyed my shirt!!! I had not worn the cloth before and the day I decided to 'launch' it, I was £*^&    God help us!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
The first story, I read it in the papers; the second, I saw it on the news. Members of the 2 families died as a result of generator fumes. The one I read in the newspaper was about a family in Ogun state – the 2.5kva generator was left on overnight as a ‘solution’ to the erratic power supply in the area. The other I saw was another family in Rivers state – the generator was left working (in a room near the kitchen!) from dusk to death dawn. Here, only one person survived while in the former; the mother died while the father and children were able to regain consciousness. I thought it was due to illiteracy but what do you say when in the second story (Rivers) the father was a teacher!  I never use a product without reading the manual – even if it’s a battery! I don’t know why ignorance is preferable to some people because there’s no generator that doesn’t have the warning written boldly on it: DO NOT USE INDOORS DUE TO DANGERS OF CARBON MONOXIDE POISONING People blamed NEPA for the deaths but the lawyers would tell you – IGNORANCE IS NO EXCUSE UNDER THE LAW. People should avoid doing dangerous things in order top seek an alternative solution. The power situation has been really awful. On the radio, newspapers, TV, streets, people complain about the situation. Last week on a radio show on Cool FM, a lady called in to say the generator sellers were behind this situation has they are having a swell time now. After one year, the Yar’ Adua government keeps assuring us that the problem would soon end Patience is really running out. The fumes and smoke this generators generate to spoil the environment is a serious matter. I am sure the same Nigerians who spend alotta money on the care AND MAINTENANCE of these machines would surely pay promptly only if we had constant power supply. 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
What happened yesterday was similar to France vs Italy in the final of the world cup where Zidane was sent out for head butting Materrazi. The hero goes down to zero! It was a bad loss yesterday for me but mehhn, LIFE MUST MOVE ON!  Drogba disappointed me but the woodwork just wouldn't let the ball in!    The tension in penalties could kill! WE lost to man united and I just couldn't sit there watching man u receiving the trophy - I changed the channel to the news broadcast and trust British stations - that's exactly what they wanted me to see again  Abyway, football is nothing but a game!  
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
One thing I like about this government of Fashola which I didn't vote for) is the attempt to beautify Lagos - an indirect way of the past attempts of "MAKE LAGOS CLEAN".  It's a good project but I do not think enough has been done to carry the people along. Most people are not oriented and we still these dirty habits with us. From the Lawyer to the Welder, people display their dirty habits in the public everyday. Even those with flashy cars that you assume have some ettiquettes commit the same offence of dirtying the environment (throwing refuse out of their vehicles). These projects should be in the curricula of all schools - from nursery to tertiary 'because it makes no sense when an educated man knows the dangers of a dirty envitronment but still display his 'dirty skills'. It's time to make our environment clean - we need not be forced to stay at home every last saturday for an excercise in order to be responsible citizens.  It starts with me and you - try not to make LAGOS your environment dirty. We 've too many diseases to battle and a clean environment is a preventative cost!
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Am pissed off these days when I see these 'celebrities' being crazier than the 'non-celebrities' in support of football clubs - especially premiership clubs. Before writing this, I 'googled' to see that Mode 9, an ardent supporter of Arsenal has a single titled, “Arsenal Anthem”; Saheed Osupa has a CD titled “Blues 4 real”, Durella has a single titled "Am a gunner" et al. It 'vexed' a news reporter so much that Dekunle Fuji was described as 'unpatriotic' when he overemphasized his support for Arsenal. The newspaper said Nigerian celebrities are meant to be ambassadors for the PROJECT NIGERIA; which I quite support. Last week too, on a TV programme, these 'stars' were just irritating with their support. On the other hand, it's like they are exploiting the fan base to see if they can get more support. e.g. If Star A is an arsenal fan, Naija Arsenal fans might like his music  Please o! they should learn how to support the likes of Kano Pillars - afterall there's no place like home  Before we know it now, being a supporter will be like going via the stress of obtaining the British visa  Make these celebrities take am easy 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
Just drank a bottle of Coke and was about to throw the bottle away - I saw the promo design on the cover but like all promos, I didn't bother checking the cover since am already used to the "BETTER LUCK NEXT TIME" kind of lines. The browser was annoying so that's what probably made me open the crown cork to see that I won  . I don't know even what I won; just knew I was meant to text a number to a code 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
It might not be so right posting this now since the rest of Africa might have not heard the result but the only time I can stand up while watching T.V is when it's a football game. Funny enough, the last boardroom session was the best I saw  (probably 'because my contestant won  ) the CEO acknowledged his 'errors' and it turned out to be fun! While the CEO was previewing the 'journey so far', I felt kind of sad when an episode was shown about the ART GALLERY task when Kathleen talked about "Africa without boundaries or borders; united as one. . . " There are so many things our brains could do if our governments are committed - Zim Zim, Sudan, Ethiopia etc- problems everywhere  I'll continue to bank with Bank PHb  'because they are goodbetterBank PhB   Congrats to Isaac - the "Barrack Obama" of Africa (according to Mimi Fatolu) and Africa's Apprentice
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
 |
new virus
« #119 on: June 28, 2008, 08:49 PM » |
|
Hi All, > > > > > > > > > > > > Anyone-using Internet mail such as Yahoo, Hotmail > , and > > AOL and so on. > > This information arrived this morning, direct from > both > > Microsoft and Norton > > > > Please send it to everybody you know who has > access to > > the Internet. > > > > You may receive an apparently harmless e-mail with > a > > Power Point > > > > Presentation ' Life is Beautiful' > > > > If you receive it DO NOT OPEN THE FILE UNDER ANY > > CIRCUMSTANCES , > > and Delete it immediately > > > > If you open this file, a message will appear on > your > > screen saying: > > 'It is too late now, your life is no longer > > beautiful.' > > > > Subsequently you will LOSE EVERYTHING IN YOUR PC , > And > > the person who > > Sent it to you will gain access to your name, > e-mail > > and password . > > > > This is a new virus which started to circulate on > > Saturday afternoon. > > > > AOL has already confirmed the severity, and the > anti > > virus > > software's are not capable of destroyin it. > > > > The virus has been created by a hacker who calls > > himself 'life owner'. > > > > PLEASE SEND A COPY OF THIS E-MAIL TO ALL YOUR > FRIENDS, > > > > And ask them to > > > > PASS IT ON IMMEDIATELY! > > > > > > THIS HAS BEEN CONFIRMED BY SNOPES > > What can I say?
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
 |
write up
« #120 on: July 03, 2008, 04:43 PM » |
|
There's this write-up I stumbled upon today titled On Loving ‘The Intern’ Reality TV Show ; Considering the disillusionment of the youths in Nigeria, and the problems bedeviling the average Nigerian, I think it is right to say the reality TV show- 'The Intern' is hitting the nail right on the head. While I may not agree with some of the approach or methods used; and I may find the boss- Charles O'tudor, a bit tiring and somewhat unsuitable for a corporate show like that; dreads apart, he always seem to be lost and unsettled with those young, smart, and intelligent youths in his zeal to cut the Fortune 500 corporate personae. Maurice-Jones, his personal assistant may seem a better boss. But in all that is fair, the show is significant and important in the kind of environment we find ourselves.
Unlike most reality shows, 'The Intern' is focused on building young entrepreneurs and career individuals who will, in the nearest future, begin to man and bring about success in the corporate and business sectors of our country.
What really does other reality shows set to achieve, especially the famous Big Brother show? We've had our own feel of what Big Brother can offer (à la Big Brother Nigeria). The die-hard fans of BBN will tell you the show is to unleash talents. However, that isn't the only thing that gets unleashed on the show; we see other 'skills' like lust, betrayal, promiscuity, mistrust all being unleashed live on screen; and in the name of civilization it is branded entertainment!
I observe that they are apparent success stories from the BBN show. Everyone is always quick to mention Ebuka and how he's been riding on victory's back ever since. But let's ask ourselves: for someone like Ebuka do you believe life would have denied him success? He is smart, intelligent, handsome, and a lawyer; like all other similar stories of success e.g. Frank Edoho of WWTBAM, Karima Onitiri of MTV Uncensored, and Mike Magic of Idols West Africa, Ebuka would have gone for the audition of 'Friends and Foes' and he would have clinched the job whether he was a BBN former housemate or not. Same goes for Joan and her aspiring Nollywood career. Instead of moving to BBN she would simply have moved to Winnie's (isn't that where all the upstarts get their big breaks?) and get a role strictly on merit. But now, thanks to BBN, there's that issue she may have to explain to her daughter- why she kissed a strange man live on TV!
And as for Katung and his $100,000, it could turn out in two ways: he can play away his fortune and get broke in a couple of years to come; or he may start a business or invest the money. However, I'm afraid he may find it difficult appreciating the virtues of hard work, commitment, and diligence as it applies to life (how many time does $100,000 fall on ones' laps?).
No doubt without big brother none of these people may have been discovered 'yet', but at what collective price to the society? So we discover a few talents and degrade some thousands or even millions- penny wise pound foolish if you ask me.
These are some of the unrealistic scenario most reality shows present to us.
The BBN-like shows thrive here because most youths are interested in music and entertainment, nothing wrong with that. But in a country where graduates cannot differentiate between a triangle and a rectangle (true life experience); and where a third year undergraduate, as I heard, could not solve a simple arithmetic as 16 minus 2, what business do we have promoting frivolities that will in no way build our nation?
Don't look at the Americans, they can afford to have ten people on an Island tempting and lusting over one another just for the heck of it, after all they are not burdened with issues like epileptic power supply, deplorable roads, poor facilities, and below average educational institutions. Their economy is buoyant so they can as well focus on whatever trivialities that satisfy their vanity.
But if at all we are hoping to build and groom a new Nigeria with new breed of leaders then we have to set our priorities right. The youths are desperate to take over, but unfortunately they aren't politically, economically, socially, mentally, academically sound enough to convince the older generation to step aside. For every outstanding Nigeria youth there seem to be too many nincompoops. And sadly, these are people who have dedicated years pursuing a degree or diploma in higher institutions, yet they come out and cannot tell their left from their right.
But then 'The Intern' gives me hope, seeing those young bright people makes me proud. On 'The Intern' the casts are presented with real challenges, real frustrations, real opportunities, real battles which is synonymous to what transpires in the real world.
These young people will translate all the lessons gained on the show and use it for the betterment of themselves, their families, and their environment. Isn't that where it all begins- leadership, professionalism, and success?
On the other hand if music or modeling is your interest- nothing's wrong with that. But why, I pray thee, should our lyrics be full with lewdness? I heard a song just a few days ago, it was saying to me: 'Let's get dirty (pronounced deree). The lyrics went on: 'let me stick it in… make it hard… make it rough…' How degrading can we possibly get?
The videos of course are not complete without the girls dancing seductively. Why should women accept such demeaning status in our entertainment industry?
Except someone can convince me that our problem in Nigeria is sexual in nature, and that our failed attempts at enjoying sex to its greatest potential is actually responsible for our sorry economic state, then I shall continue to advocate that we concentrate on the areas of our society that needs improvement. 'The Intern' has proven to be a great show for the whole family. I believe these ten will foster the virtues of leadership, accountability, professionalism and team-work which are vital to the development of a nation and which Nigeria is in dire need of.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
I'm sorry to put another excerpt here again but after reading topics on the Religion section of this forum (you get surprised when you see people writing brilliantly in other sections but when they come to the Religion board ), I share some views with this writer. Funny enough after this article, another writer countered these views saying he was not a 'good christain'; then another doctor wrote in to counter and so it became a 'debate' on The Guardian Newsaper. Religion is a sensitive issue but: How religion is underdeveloping NigeriaBy Rotimi Babatunde ANY society that prioritises ignorance will fail to live up to its potential. That was the crux of Damola Awoyokun's piece "The Next Einstein and the Expressway Churches" published in The Guardian of May 22. In contemporary Nigeria, the miracle-hawking Pentecostal churches are the bastions of the crude tendency to ignorance. For them, God is Mr. Fix-It-All who will descend in full glory to solve all our personal and national problems. Consequently, diseases are cured not by demanding for a well-equipped public health care system and functioning research laboratories but by prayers. Accidents are prevented not by good motorways, effective traffic policing, and sane road habits but by prayers. Examinations are passed not by diligent study but by praying. Armed robbery attacks are foiled not by a revamped police force and the provision of enough jobs for the unemployed but with prayers. What these churches find primary is being dabbed on the head with anointing oil by pastors speaking with false American accents, with each pastor clad in a designer suit and wearing a gold wristwatch that costs more than the average monthly income of his impoverished congregation. Seek ye first the anointing oil of a prosperity preacher and every other thing shall be added: this is the prevailing creed. Mention must also be made of how these establishments encourage corruption by placing the tags of miracles on suddenly-acquired wealth. Questions are not asked about the provenance of the riches, as evidenced by the recent case of an employee who looted money from the coffers of his workplace, an upscale hotel in Victoria Island, and donated it to one of the more visible miracle churches in Lagos. The only thing that matters is the paying of one's tithe, even from fraudulent funds. Obviously, when a delusion afflicts a sizable chunk of the population, people tend to forget it is a psychosis and they begin calling it a religion. A delusion though remains a delusion even when championed by millions of believers. Remember: the fact that millions once believed the earth was flat did not make it less spherical. Regrettably, Jude Fashagba's piece "Einstein and the People of Faith" published in The Guardian on Sunday of June 1 failed to engage with these relevant issues. Rather than writing a worthwhile response to Mr. Awoyokun's submission, Mr. Fashagba preoccupied himself with stringing together disconnected and evasive sentences. Resorting to such a stratagem is the only option when one has a bad product to sell, and there are few products less marketable than Mr. Fashagba's pitch that science and faith are not oppositional. Science foregrounds observable evidence as it is basis for understanding the world; faith, in contrast, privileges the unquestioning adherence to a body of received claims even when unsupported by evidence. A committee of the National Academy of Sciences recently said "the goal of science is to seek naturalistic explanations for phenomena, within the operational rule of testability" while St. Paul wrote in the Book of Hebrews that "faith is the assurance of things hoped for and the certainty of things not seen." Anyone who fails to see a fundamental difference in both approaches needs to get himself a better education. Science is a continuous process of empirical inquiry, not a static body of knowledge. That is why there is something known as the scientific method. Science does not fear change because its method is served, not compromised, by new insights; religion, on the other hand, finds nothing more frightening than new ways of thinking which it labels heresy. Those who revised Dalton's atomic theory were not burnt at the stake by scientists; prelates of the medieval Church murdered Giordano Bruno for querying the validity of their theology. It is because of this open-mindedness that science has explained and predicted the universe better than any religion and, despite the lamentations of people like Mr. Fashagba, will continue to do so. Since Jude Fashagba is a staunch believer in miracles, he could consider it a major miracle that his write-up did not choke on the barrage of its diversionary questions. The Bible teacher wondered if Albert Einstein was the atheist he was "painted" to be. It is on record that Einstein considered all religions to be childish superstitions. The scientist wrote: "The word god is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honourable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish. No interpretation no matter how subtle can change this." Attempting to exhaustively answer Jude Fashagba's avalanche of questions would only succeed in dignifying his pathetic red herrings. He could spend his time more profitably in researching answers to his endless questions rather than indulging in the voyeuristic sport of "googling" out Mr. Awoyokun's name on the internet. And what connection does a person's accomplishment have with the validity of his or her statements? It is instructive to remember the case of James D. Watson, a Nobel Prize winner in Medicine, who was fired from his prestigious position in 2007 after making racist statements that lacked any scientific backing about the intelligence of black people. Perceptive human beings know how to separate a person's r�sum� from the validity of his or her assertions. Clearly, Mr. Fashagba is not so discerning. At this juncture in our national life when Nigeria is troubled by a myriad of social and economic problems, what the citizens need is clear-sighted reasoning and not mystical abracadabras. In the decades during which religious fervour has gained ascendancy in Nigeria, it has become obvious that blind faith is creating more problems rather than solving the ones on ground. Witness the routine traffic hell caused on the Lagos-Ibadan expressway by the Pentecostal business centres situated along the route. And the ongoing case of Pastor King. And the Miss World and the Danish cartoon riots. And many other cases too numerous to list. Religions do not encourage reasoning; instead they promote rationalisation, something entirely different. This was why St. Augustine, a prominent theologian of the Church, said: "I believe so that I can understand." Blind faith comes first and then justifications for it follow. For the centuries Europe followed that precept, its citizens were locked in the Dark Ages, and only when the Renaissance ruptured that dogmatic mode did Europe begin making intellectual progress. In the liberal era of Averroes, Al-Razi, and Avicenna, learning was far more advanced in the Islamic world than in the West; not until religious suffocation came in the wake of Al-Ghazali's attacks on rationalism did that civilisation fall way behind. The fate of the forerunner who tumbled into a pit should suffice to instruct those coming behind, says an African proverb. In relation to the matter at hand, one can only hope it does. Jude Fashagba should be advocating the entrenchment of a logical and evidential attitude in the decision making process of Nigerians, both in our personal and public lives, not the opposite. We are bored with seeing political figures consecrated in public by religious leaders, only for us to watch in horror as these public officers go ahead to spend eight years looting the treasuries and committing atrocious human rights abuses. Mr. Fashagba is also an architect. I hope he does not believe that the epidemic of collapsed buildings in Lagos was caused by the machinations of evil spirits. If he does, it will be of great relief to all if he restricts himself to designing his personal residence and to his other profession of Bible teaching. In his second calling, he could promise his congregation a thousand miracles and deliver zero. None of his credulous flock would find it necessary to bring him to book.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
 |
!!!!!!!
« #122 on: July 14, 2008, 05:08 PM » |
|
Last weekend, the network was crazy! Woke up some minutes after 7 am; my phone under the pillow; no network signal! ''twas around 7 pm I found signal  Sunday too - there was signal but the damn network was errorful. error in connection. Anywayz, i just bought another bottle of coke today after the last time and found the recharge card thingy there again. The last time, I was credited with 50 naira after sending a text of 10 naira - net of 4o naira In fact I saw a letter on the dailies where a reader urged Coca-cola to reveal the amount won on the canter ( after all, everyone who opens the crown will get 50 naira; then the 6000 naira credit might just be a lie) - well, na them sabi! I have a headache so I 'd to buy the coke to take the medicines - I HATE TAKING MEDICINES WITH WATER  I just thank goodness that the tanker drivers' suspended their strike otherwise 
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mustay (m)
|
The more reason why I hate okadas  The accident that occured across my street yesterday would win an award for BEST STUNTS but this one was for real and the sight was  It's just safe to be extra-careful when these machines are by your sides 'because: 1. They never accept that they are wrong when an accident occurs. 2. Most of 'em do not have knowledge of traffic rules. I've heard adverts about them but it's very true - driving under the influence of alcohol is a very STUPI and SILLy way of dying having an accident. Like they say - grab the keys or gerrout the vehicle and last week when I was in this kind of situation - I took the second option  . . .and that 's why amalive to post this
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|