1Alex's Posts
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Do you people know what 6 trillion is? 6 trillion is 1 billion naira into 6,000 = 6trillion, vanished for no accountability. Yes some people want us to pay more money as tax for others to continue to loot. It's well. |
He said same thing 5 years ago, during Buhari's tenure.
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I ma coming with the summary |
dibunotion:where was strike mentioned? |
saintopus:they protest, you complain, they don't protest, you complain. |
odejimioflagos:is Atiku in PDP? |
Wow!!!!! This will be huge. Fingers crossed. Though there is no credible source to this story. |
Chai!!!! A whole Range Rover sport of that year is now 6.5m. |
Almost 6 million for a naija used 2001/02 highlander? OK ooo |
No tribe can honestly be ranked highest or lowest. The differences people notice are mostly about location, lifestyle, and social systems, not ethnicity. |
He is both right. We’re just looking at the same place from different angles. Many locals see limits. Weak systems. Corruption. Low pay. Unstable policies. So you look outward, hoping for order, structure, and predictable rewards. Many Chinese, Indians, and Lebanese see gaps. Untapped markets. Less competition. High demand for basic goods and services. Lower entry barriers. They’re not comparing the country to Europe. They’re comparing it to where they started. They don’t come expecting comfort. They come expecting struggle. And they plan for it. They focus on trade, logistics, manufacturing, retail, and services people use every day. They reinvest profits. They live simply at first. They work long hours. They rely on tight family networks. Trust stays inside the group. That reduces risk. You often aim for salaries. They aim for ownership. You look for stability first. They accept instability and price it into their plans. You wait for systems to work. They build around broken systems. What you see that they don’t: 1. Daily frustration 2. Political uncertainty 3. Poor infrastructure 4. A sense of being stuck What they see that you don’t: 1. A young, growing population 2. Huge demand with weak supply 3. Space to start small and scale 4. Opportunities locals overlook because they feel “normal” The country isn’t rich or poor by itself. It rewards different strategies. If you play the “salary + system” game, Europe and Canada win. If you play the “ownership + chaos” game, your country can win. Neither side is foolish. They’re just playing different games with different expectations. |
Including them. They will be the first to be jailed followed by the jailers themselves |
6 Patriotic9ja:that is not what I quoted you for |
Patriotic9ja:read and understand before commenting. He clearly said. "vote them out, they don't deserve a return." meaning they are not the only people that will run for those positions. Vote for new people |
ATEAMS:surveys are not done by only journalists |
No more remita? FG will issue directive, FG will also violate the directive. |
Exousiang01:don't be too quick to judge him, you don't know his story. |
You should only be concerned with the one that has the specifications you need. |
Nigeria has been an oil-producing country for decades, yet most citizens can’t point to anything meaningful that came from all that money. No good roads, working schools, working hospitals, steady light, or real opportunities. But you see politicians living large. You see waste everywhere. You see the same story year after year. Now the government wants to introduce a new tax regime. The same citizens who are already struggling with high prices, low income, and zero support will pay more money. And nobody can say how the government will use that money. There’s no trust. There’s no proof of accountability. There’s no history of responsible management. So what is the moral basis for demanding more taxes from people who have never enjoyed the benefits of the oil wealth that should have changed their lives? How do you ask citizens to pay more when the people in charge haven’t shown that they can handle what’s already available? Before any new tax structure makes sense, the government should show real transparency. Nigerians need to see where money goes. They need to see projects completed. They need to see consequences for corruption. You can’t ask people who are barely surviving to bring out more money just to feed the same system that has failed them. Until there’s trust, accountability, and visible results, pushing a new tax regime feels unfair. And it raises a simple question: Why should citizens keep paying into a system that doesn’t give anything back? |
Felimax:Southeast is not lobbying for Anioma but Anioma people themselves are. Southeast is only lobbying for one more state, irrespective of where it is carved from. Eat your Anioma. |
Pierocash:The only geopolitical zone that a state is considered is south east. If Anioma state cannot be in the south East, then Anioma State will never materialize. |
I watched TV last in 2019 |
The guy has proven not to be trusted in anything. He has absolutely no integrity. |
Ok. 20 more characters needed |
Anything that happens in the southeast is ipob |
Caaz:please don't try this again. Apart from the egg, every other thing there is junk. |
Nothing special, here is The summary: Several southern governors speak about improvements in security across their region. They thank the national leadership for efforts that- according to them-have helped make the region safer. The video highlights strategies or developments regarded as contributing factors to the improved security situation. |
Ok oooo |
So how will it be used? AFTER THE NAME? |
Where is the upgrade ṅaa? Abi you no know wetin you dey sell? |
AI generated |