Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,194,171 members, 7,953,638 topics. Date: Thursday, 19 September 2024 at 09:21 PM

Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About - Nairaland / General (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About (2438 Views)

These Hyper-realistic Photos Are Actually Oil Paintings / Can Anybody Tell Me The Cuntry That Using This Code +277 / Tell Me Ur Dream & Ill Tell U The Meaning. (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (Reply) (Go Down)

Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nobody: 5:44pm On Sep 01, 2008
@Nigeria1@

My man, no mind these guys wey dey blab for here.
All i need is a satellite images of the oil wells in Ondo where you guys drill the 800,000 barrels daily.
Thanks.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by tpia: 5:54pm On Sep 01, 2008
texazzpete:

@Naija1

800.000 barrels of oil per day from Ondo state alone?! Are you on crack?!

am not sure how much oil exactly is being drilled from Ondo state, but I do remember hearing Abiola owned an offshore oil block there. Likewise some other VIP Nigerians whose names skip me at the moment.

This was ages ago- in the nineties, I think. Though who knows if its true or not.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nigeria10: 6:41pm On Sep 01, 2008
Once AGAIN, what does all of this have to do with your obsession with satellite images?

but him using them where, and when it's not needed,


No I am not , some of the question you people ask, show the lack of knowledge, and the need to bring it to a point you people to the right direction. we need to use what is real and not the imagination of mr makama. And it better explain most problem in nigeria. It is like what open up what is wrong with nigeria.

You see nigeria would not be sick now. And I can tell you president yar adua would not be in saudia arabia hospital now, he would be in a nigeria hospital. I would not be living here too, if we had do things right. I would making contribution to the development of the place. but because things have fail. and would continue to fail expect we make the change now.




800.000 barrels of oil per day from Ondo state alone?! Are you on crack?!




All i need is a satellite images of the oil wells in Ondo where you guys drill the 800,000 barrels daily.


please my other writeup,  http://Nigeria.mooo.com/smf/index.php?topic=11977.0

this anwser your question of 800,000 barrel per day,  and location is there to see, 



karmamod.  A satellite picture as many thing to do with slavery that is going on in nigeria to my people. the north do not have the population they claim. Our people  are slave at the moment. some of them who may have had benefit from this continue slavery may not agree with me.  100% of the people of the south are slave to the north.

You would ask what is slavery?? I would quickly refer to the well know one in america. the black slave and the rich slave owners in the US. I would use it as an example. Slavery may be constitution too.  When the black man worked on the farm, his labour reward he hand it over to the rich white slave owner.  The idea of slavery is better define by this word, my own quote" One sow another man reaps".

In nigeria the south sows and the north reaps the benefit. the north sit down and make no contribution to the federal revenue, like the white slave master they sit down and  take the labour reward of the southerner slave.  that why every southerner is a slave to a northerner. It must stop. I say it again. Let my people go. It is a 50 year old slavery.

The north is the white slave master , the south is the black slave. I say it again, let my people go.




The issue of SLAVERY comes in when a certain region of the country gets more than what another more populated region gets
.

I own no one an  apology for calling southerner slave. they are slave to northerner.  and here is what i said above

And I alway say decision determine destiny, it only when southerner decided that this slavery should be over that it would. it would not come just by asking, it may come by peaceful means like in USSR or even by violent means, just like the black american.  But the change most come now.

There is a time for everything under the sun.

there is a time to be born and a time to die.

there is a time to be happy and a time to be sad

there is a time to keep quiet and a time to talk.

there is a time to make change. and that time is now, with the constitution review. And we as southerner must make up our mind, that by any mean available , either positive or negative,  that this slavery would be over now. we must prepare our heart that if through the constitution review justice is not done. we should seek the alternative, which is to leave the federation.

And it is time for  southerner to be free from slavery is now.


If we fail to make this change and become free now. even obasanjo , bode george, tinubu, awolowo, kalu, odili, ibori, enahoro, zik, akinjide, clark,  sonekan, saraki , akala, fashola, agagu, oyinloye, amaechi, duke, sylia, igbinedion, adenuga, or ovie their great great grand children would be slave to northerner for ever,  NO money that they have can pay for slavery, a slave is a slave.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by dayokanu(m): 6:50pm On Sep 01, 2008
@Nigeria1,

Carry on!!! I dey gbadun you. Please show us a satelitte picture of yar' Adua in a strip club instead of the Hospital he claimed he went to.

Between you and me, can you show me the Paraga joints in Isele-Ukwu and Arochukwu just to prove that Nigeria Distillery is losing income in an unregulated Market tongue tongue tongue

Bros why you dey Bleep me up now?

I dey wait since, cos rumour has it here that Yar'Adua is dead/sick but I want to prove its a Northern conspiracy that he is in a strip club in Saudi on the Kabba. tongue tongue tongue

Pls help me with that Then there is another argument that Yoruba's drionk More Shepe than any other tribe. I want to use Satelitte pictures to prove it so that we can get more revenue/allocation from Paraga VAT collected by govt
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by RibaduFan(m): 6:56pm On Sep 01, 2008
Dayo

Iwe lani ko lo ka. Chati loun chati
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by congoshine(m): 7:03pm On Sep 01, 2008
Now you got my attention Mr Adesegun Musiwa ,

UniIlorin 1994 B. Eng. (Electrical ) based in Canada
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nigeria10: 7:10pm On Sep 01, 2008
why did you post my name. but a different date. you missed it.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by RibaduFan(m): 7:18pm On Sep 01, 2008
@Congoshine

I think posting members' full names and contact is grossly inappropriate. Would suggest u edit your post.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by dayokanu(m): 7:57pm On Sep 01, 2008
Yemi,
Ise la ni ko se Nairaland lo wa Whom are you going to charge these time to?
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nigeria10: 8:24pm On Sep 01, 2008
yemmy i don't care. i did finish from ilorin. he just missed my year of graduation. I don't care if anyone knows my name. Even if I stand before the king and put me in a cave with loins ,  I would not change the statement I made. we would not develop expect we become bold to speak out the truth.

1416 904 5008

nigeriamail@hotmail.com
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by dayokanu(m): 8:42pm On Sep 01, 2008
Yemi does not understand simple language, Give him an illustration from the Maps.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nobody: 9:08pm On Sep 01, 2008
@Nigeria1

Your analogy na die, but the good thing is that it exposed Niger Delta and MEND. They should quickly wind up their activities in the creeks and acknowledge that the so called oil flows from Ondo.

By the way, i cannot imagine you want to sell .com for a chicken fee of $20 million.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by chessguru(m): 9:28pm On Sep 01, 2008
@Nigeria1
whats up with thee? though i havnt figured out your stand but, and i would be glad to know what exactly your stand is. [b]IGNORE THOSE WHO MAKE RECKLESS CRITICISM [/b]people are prone to attacking what they dont understand, lets encourage polite conversation no matter how different our point of view is!! ok? so bro whats the stand?
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nigeria10: 10:21pm On Sep 01, 2008
Nuzo I never said that niger delta does not have oil. I just said they are making claim to more than their own. I am just saying anything west of the 200 nautical miles of ondo state is for us. which consist of 800,000 barrel per day.

My stand is clear, that this is the time to make change from been slaves. If we fail to make the change , to correct the injustice done to us. our children and children great great grand children would remain in this slavery. It does not matter if he is senator or reps.

The truth is DECISION determines destiny. If you do not DECIDE to say NO to oppression , you would continue to be oppressed. And this is nearly 50 years of been slave. It is time to be free.

we can not continue to beg for what is rightful our own. just because we are slave. let get our freedom. A slave is a slave.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Ibime(m): 12:54am On Sep 02, 2008
Nigeria1@;:

yemmy i don't care. i did finish from ilorin.

All former students of Uni of Illorin should just hide their degree now. This guy don expose una nyash.  grin grin grin
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by tpia: 1:08am On Sep 02, 2008
Ibime:

All former students of Uni of Illorin should just hide their degree now. This guy don expose una nyash. grin grin grin

quite the contrary.

Nothing wrong with Unilorin, as things go.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nigeria10: 1:28am On Sep 02, 2008
ibime, can you make an logical contribution. i have waited for that,  i am all eyes. i think you have a brain. give me something to think about.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nigeria10: 1:43am On Sep 02, 2008
Ibime, what don't you ask me what was one of my final year project  was about. it as something to do with this pictures. If i had this pictures then. it would save me time and money. Since you are not smart and you do not have the background to understand what I am doing. Na my fault my brother.

Because you know how to type and i don't.




read this piece,  Go through all the posting on nairaland. nobody have made any  intellectual contribution like i have.

What Happened to the Nigerian Intellectual Class?     
Written by Sabella Ogbobode Abidde   
Monday, 01 September 2008
Intellectual work, as Thandika Mkandawire has reminded us, is “quintessentially the labor of the mind and soul.”  Mkandawire went on to say that “intellectuals have played a major role in shaping passions, ideologies and societal visions.” This is principally true in Nigeria , where for several decades -- in spite of military autocracy and repression -- intellectuals helped shaped public debates and public policies.

In a formal sense, a few years after the University College of Ibadan was established in 1948, intellectualism, at least public intellectualism, became a feature of the Nigerian public landscape. And for the next three decades or so, Nigerian intellectuals were the doyen of the society; or at least, some of the doyens of the Nigerian society were intellectuals: men and women who earned the public’s trust, admiration and respect as a result of their faithfulness to intellectual pursuit.

From my own recollection and vantage point, most of the early intellectuals remained faithful to their craft. They were the purists, earning their living from the creation of their minds and brains; and were not voracious in their financial accretion. In addition, most detested party politics and also loathed serving in government -- especially military government.

The Ivory Towers and associated places, were their home; the place where they were most comfortable and productive. They were mostly poets and playwrights, lawyers and medical doctors, college professors and activists, socialists and communists and left-wing liberals. In some cases, they called themselves Comrades. They came in all shades and colors. They were educated at home and abroad.

The vast majority called the University of Ibadan , the University of Lagos , UNN, and the University of Ife, Benin and the University of Lagos home. Others were at the ABU and UNIPORT. A few others were independent scholars or were associated with Media Houses. Whatever their worldview was, and to whatever school of thought they belonged, they were interesting, inspiring, provocative, hard-hitting and sophisticated.

But beginning in the early 1980s, intellectualism began to take on a different shade and texture. There were new minds in town.  The principal objectives began to change. This noble and august craft began to have different questions, different answers and different meanings.  In a span of ten years, Nigerian-style intellectualism became unrecognizable.

And by the early to late 1990s, the society of Nigerian intellectuals had become mushy, clay-like, adulterated, corruptible, and puerile. It became a laughing stock. Some retained their stellar qualities, but for the most part, the society of Nigerian intellectuals became a pool of nothingness: a shadow of its pious past and now munching off of its past glory.

The intellectual class became as decadent and as rotten as the forces they had opposed for three or more decades. The military co-opted some; the bloody-civilians seduced others with money. The survival strategy employed by the military and the civilians was so effective it weakened the immune and defensive system of the Nigerian intellectual class.

Why and how the intellectual class came to be what it is today? It is hard to tell; it is hard to come up with systemic answers without any kind of empirical studies. Here and how however, a few assumptions can be made. First, the military and their civilian counterpart were determined in their pursuit of the “enemies’” Achilles heels. They begged and cajoled; and wherever possible, offered inducements in the form of money, political appointments, overseas engagements, and phony think tanks.

In the end, this group of intellectuals simply rationalized their involvement by saying “it was better to fight from the inside than to be perpetual outsiders.” The belief here is that “change can only be effected from inside.” But we know of Nigeria that no body that ever went in came out unblemished. The Nigerian system has a way of messing with ones soul and humanity. Once you go in, you can never return a saint.

Second, the strong-willed were threatened, blackmailed and prosecuted on fake criminal charges, persecuted, forced into exile, and or got fired or demoted in their place of work. After several years of government brutality and criminality, some gave up the good fight and simply went into exile. This account for why, in virtually all universities and research organizations in the world, there are Nigerians (mostly with clipped wings and mellowed disposition).

Those who dreaded life in exile -- and refusing to compromise their integrity -- simply gave up the good fight; faded away and died a slow mental and spiritual death. In the third instance are the Black and despicable sheep: the wannabes, the fakes, and the bojuboju akowe. Unhappily, the membership of this group exploded when the Nigerian universities and the larger society was almost emptied of the first rates. It is why today, there are few bona fide intellectuals left in Nigeria .

Since the tail-end of the 1990s, the Nigerian intellectual class has consisted mostly of domestic and foreign government agents; political prostitutes; loud-mouths, contractors, academic-thugs, cross-dressers and Aba traders, and handout photo-copyists. The end goal of this class is money and political power. Their brand of intellectualism is mostly what Nigeria is all about today: all around poverty and idiocy.

To be relevant in today’s Nigeria , you may have to be a thief, an egregious liar, a thug, a cultist and a kidnapper. A child born within the last seventeen years may find it hard to believe that in the early and middle stages of our Republic, Nigeria boasted a sea of eminent jurists and medical doctors, diplomats and policy wonks, artists, teachers and university professors and those who took philosophy and the art of thinking seriously.

To say that intellectual pursuit is a dying art in Nigeria is not an exaggeration. There is a price to be paid for silence and cowardice in the face of oppression and injustice. In the same vein, there is a price to be paid by any nation or society that does not encourage intellectualism or intellectual pursuit. Such a society may regress, become stagnant, or spend all her years and resources imitating fluff from other parts of the world. Isn’t that what Nigeria is becoming?

That Nigeria can return to its vibrant past is not in question. What is in question are two significant questions: first, whether Nigeria has the political will to do so; and second, whether Nigeria hasn’t gone too far and too deep into the abyss for such a reversal, without incurring monumental and prohibitive cost.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nobody: 4:00am On Sep 02, 2008
When did you become "oga" Sabella?
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nobody: 4:02am On Sep 02, 2008
rotflmao!! funny thread!! cool
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by Nigeria10: 2:25am On Sep 03, 2008
congoshine
I know who you are why now Abd, wetin i do you.
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by sima(f): 2:59am On Sep 03, 2008
rof lmfao . . . . , lol cheesy
Re: Can Someone Tell Me What Nigeria1's Satellite Photos Are About by lami4life(f): 12:08pm On Sep 05, 2008
People, this is not a funny issue. Nigeria 1 needs urgent help just like his namesake! :oThe key is early detection! what you see here are the early symptoms. We need to act fast on his behalf! shocked

@ Nigeria 1

but why did u let it get to this stage now? don't despair, there is an 'aerial' solution to this.

(1) (2) (Reply)

Why Does America Name Its Natural Disaster/crisis? (katrina, Irene) / End Of World! / The Heartbreaking Poem A 14yr Old Girl Wrote Before She Killed Herself

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 58
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.