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Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian - Politics - Nairaland

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Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by HungerBAD: 6:50am On Dec 16, 2016
By Abdulrazaq Magaji | 16 December 2016 | 4:01 am

APC. PHOTO: dailypost

You have heard it within the last 24 hours, haven’t you? Suddenly, and for reasons that are not entirely misplaced … ‘which kin change be dis?’…has become the new song in town. And, in the midst of the confusion, there are very few Nigerians who are not overwhelmed at the turn of events. Many agree but few are quick to accept that the immediate cause of the rot in the land could be traced to President Goodluck Jonathan who, even before he inherited the presidency, made vacant by the death of Mallam Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, was adjudged incapable of providing quality leadership.

And, the man did not disappoint for the five years of his reign. By 2015, Jonathan had become so clueless that he could barely see any link between treasury-looting and corruption! So many things went wrong on his watch because he mouthed a dubious commitment even to his own self-declared war on graft. He simply looked the other way as vultures, leaches and parasites feasted without let or hindrance. If truth be told, Mr. Jonathan all but dumped the sick economy at the Intensive Care Unit by the time he was sent packing. In another classic case of betrayal, Mr. Jonathan had to concede victory or accept defeat after he realised he had been abandoned by his barrel-chested but empty-headed supporters in the creeks! Pity!

Between 1999 and last year, especially during the Goodluck Jonathan years, the situation got so bad that very few honest Nigerians expected any immediate turn-around by the incoming Buhari/Osinbajo administration. At the time the new administration took charge, there was no debate about whether or not the ICU was the next best option but how long it will take to restore the economy to its immediate status. Most experts were of the opinion then, that the new government will need a minimum of 24 months, at the earliest, to get the badly-dented economy back on its feet.

The 24-month deadline expires by the middle of 2017. The way Nigerians have been tuned to see public funds as manna, the stench and mass indiscipline in the system against the backdrop of the administration’s determination to ensure that positive change to do things the right way should begin with the individual means there will always be a fight-back. Nigerians who accepted the position of government that corruption will fight back have not been unduly surprised at the hurdles placed in the path of the administration. If there are any surprises, it has been the stubborn determination displayed by corrupt Nigerians, especially those holding public offices, to resist the administration’s change agenda.
Part of the problem is that, the rhetorical question, ‘which kin’ change be dis sef?’ in local parlance, is popular among Shi’a members who have been trained to self-destruct to the point of developing an intense hatred for anything outside Iran; not even their ancestry or their home governments. The questions is on the lips of sore-headed Biafran separatists and their scavenging cousins in the Niger delta who are still to come to terms with the defeat of Goodluck Jonathan in the 2015 election. It is the question on the lips of MMM Ponzi scheme addicts for whom the storm is gathering! Of course, the question is being asked by perpetually drunken and lecherous Boko Haram bandits and their supporters with their wrongheaded idea of a caliphate.

For dissimilar reasons, the question is being asked even by some Nigerians who voted for the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket. They too will ask the question for the simple reason that they probably never contended with the damage done to the country by the Goodluck Jonathan administration or had the misplaced opinion that the coming of the Buhari/Osinbajo administration will transform the economy overnight. It is best to remind these compatriots that if, by 2019 all the Buhari/Osinbajo administration has done is to plug leakages and reduced stealing, successfully prosecuted treasury-hijackers and confiscated proceeds of corrupt enrichment, then the administration would have started a revolution without having to shed blood!

The campaign for Nigerians to change their ways is a step in the right direction. Before now, few Nigerians believed it was possible to investigate retired and serving army generals and their equivalents in other services, judges and justices, privileged members of the political and business classes, have their ill-gotten wealth confiscated before they are hauled before judges. Had the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket failed, nobody would have heard of the embezzled billions appropriated to fight insurgency in the north east, as untrained Boko Haram gunmen killed and maimed more Nigerians.

Just pause to imagine what Adekunle Amosun and Alex Badeh and other thieving armed scoundrels would have turned Nigeria into had Nigerians failed to disperse the inept and fumbling Goodluck Jonathan crowd. Imagine too, the vile designs Mrs. Patience Jonathan and close Jonathan family members and cronies had for Nigeria! We now know the Goodluck Jonathan crowd consistently borrowed to pay salaries; that the voodoo economists of the Goodluck Jonathan administration failed to save in the midst of surplus and, that many public office holders never reckoned with the day they will be called to account!
The challenge which, for fear of a possible backlash past administrations sidetracked, has been to genuinely diversify the economy. The diversification process has finally commenced. The years of lip-service and outright dishonesty on diversifying the economy has ended and the Buhari/Osinbajo administration has literally taken the bull by the horn. Attention is gradually shifting from oil which has proved to be the nation’s nemesis. It has finally taken the Buhari/Osinbajo administration for Nigerians to realise that oil can and, should no longer be used to hold compatriots to ransom.

The transition is going to be painful but necessary! No reasonable Nigerian thought the transition is going to be painless, anyway. Much of the credit should go to President Muhammadu Buhari who, without doubt, is the leading light of the administration. Say what you wish about him but even his worst enemies concede that President Buhari is not a thief, does not condone stealing and will not glorify and celebrate criminals. General Buhari could have been the richest retired Nigerian General today if he chose to be corrupt!

One of the enduring attributes of Nigerians is their short memory of hate. Honestly, Nigerians who voted for change and who thought Shangri-La would be here the day President Buhari and Vice President Osinbajo entered Aso Rock Villa, unrealistic as the thought was, are right to score the administration low. But, it really does not matter now that an expectation of instantaneous transformation, after years of unquestioned looting of the country’s resources, was unrealistic. What does matter is that Nigeria has averted an imminent crash that would have occurred months ago had there been no change of baton last year.

It is this legendary short memory of hate that will come to play when things begin to look up for the country. From the look of things, the day should not be too far off.

Magaji writes from Abuja

http://guardian.ng/opinion/tell-me-do-you-call-this-change/

1 Like

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by INTROVERT(f): 6:54am On Dec 16, 2016
Let's play the blame game.

2 Likes

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by ASL33: 6:55am On Dec 16, 2016
You win you complain you lose you complain. Ooh

3 Likes

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by Mujaheeeden: 6:55am On Dec 16, 2016
This stupid Magaji is still blaming the past administration after close to two years of a new administration.




To the Op and Magaji

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by Warhawk(m): 6:55am On Dec 16, 2016
**
following
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by herzern(m): 6:57am On Dec 16, 2016
Followinq.
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by feodan: 6:58am On Dec 16, 2016
GOD BLESS EVERYBODY THAT IS READING THIS
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by EricSmallz(m): 6:58am On Dec 16, 2016
too long ... Am going to work keh
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by NDprudent(m): 7:00am On Dec 16, 2016
Am I supposed to comment on this?
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by IsaacBuchi(m): 7:07am On Dec 16, 2016


Why can people be this stupid? I checked the name, Abdulrazaq Magaji, and I found out why...zombie personified



HungerBAD:
By Abdulrazaq Magaji | 16 December 2016 | 4:01 am

APC. PHOTO: dailypost

You have heard it within the last 24 hours, haven’t you? Suddenly, and for reasons that are not entirely misplaced … ‘which kin change be dis?’…has become the new song in town. And, in the midst of the confusion, there are very few Nigerians who are not overwhelmed at the turn of events. Many agree but few are quick to accept that the immediate cause of the rot in the land could be traced to President Goodluck Jonathan who, even before he inherited the presidency, made vacant by the death of Mallam Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, was adjudged incapable of providing quality leadership.

And, the man did not disappoint for the five years of his reign. By 2015, Jonathan had become so clueless that he could barely see any link between treasury-looting and corruption! So many things went wrong on his watch because he mouthed a dubious commitment even to his own self-declared war on graft. He simply looked the other way as vultures, leaches and parasites feasted without let or hindrance. If truth be told, Mr. Jonathan all but dumped the sick economy at the Intensive Care Unit by the time he was sent packing. In another classic case of betrayal, Mr. Jonathan had to concede victory or accept defeat after he realised he had been abandoned by his barrel-chested but empty-headed supporters in the creeks! Pity!

Between 1999 and last year, especially during the Goodluck Jonathan years, the situation got so bad that very few honest Nigerians expected any immediate turn-around by the incoming Buhari/Osinbajo administration. At the time the new administration took charge, there was no debate about whether or not the ICU was the next best option but how long it will take to restore the economy to its immediate status. Most experts were of the opinion then, that the new government will need a minimum of 24 months, at the earliest, to get the badly-dented economy back on its feet.

The 24-month deadline expires by the middle of 2017. The way Nigerians have been tuned to see public funds as manna, the stench and mass indiscipline in the system against the backdrop of the administration’s determination to ensure that positive change to do things the right way should begin with the individual means there will always be a fight-back. Nigerians who accepted the position of government that corruption will fight back have not been unduly surprised at the hurdles placed in the path of the administration. If there are any surprises, it has been the stubborn determination displayed by corrupt Nigerians, especially those holding public offices, to resist the administration’s change agenda.
Part of the problem is that, the rhetorical question, ‘which kin’ change be dis sef?’ in local parlance, is popular among Shi’a members who have been trained to self-destruct to the point of developing an intense hatred for anything outside Iran; not even their ancestry or their home governments. The questions is on the lips of sore-headed Biafran separatists and their scavenging cousins in the Niger delta who are still to come to terms with the defeat of Goodluck Jonathan in the 2015 election. It is the question on the lips of MMM Ponzi scheme addicts for whom the storm is gathering! Of course, the question is being asked by perpetually drunken and lecherous Boko Haram bandits and their supporters with their wrongheaded idea of a caliphate.

For dissimilar reasons, the question is being asked even by some Nigerians who voted for the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket. They too will ask the question for the simple reason that they probably never contended with the damage done to the country by the Goodluck Jonathan administration or had the misplaced opinion that the coming of the Buhari/Osinbajo administration will transform the economy overnight. It is best to remind these compatriots that if, by 2019 all the Buhari/Osinbajo administration has done is to plug leakages and reduced stealing, successfully prosecuted treasury-hijackers and confiscated proceeds of corrupt enrichment, then the administration would have started a revolution without having to shed blood!

The campaign for Nigerians to change their ways is a step in the right direction. Before now, few Nigerians believed it was possible to investigate retired and serving army generals and their equivalents in other services, judges and justices, privileged members of the political and business classes, have their ill-gotten wealth confiscated before they are hauled before judges. Had the Buhari/Osinbajo ticket failed, nobody would have heard of the embezzled billions appropriated to fight insurgency in the north east, as untrained Boko Haram gunmen killed and maimed more Nigerians.

Just pause to imagine what Adekunle Amosun and Alex Badeh and other thieving armed scoundrels would have turned Nigeria into had Nigerians failed to disperse the inept and fumbling Goodluck Jonathan crowd. Imagine too, the vile designs Mrs. Patience Jonathan and close Jonathan family members and cronies had for Nigeria! We now know the Goodluck Jonathan crowd consistently borrowed to pay salaries; that the voodoo economists of the Goodluck Jonathan administration failed to save in the midst of surplus and, that many public office holders never reckoned with the day they will be called to account!
The challenge which, for fear of a possible backlash past administrations sidetracked, has been to genuinely diversify the economy. The diversification process has finally commenced. The years of lip-service and outright dishonesty on diversifying the economy has ended and the Buhari/Osinbajo administration has literally taken the bull by the horn. Attention is gradually shifting from oil which has proved to be the nation’s nemesis. It has finally taken the Buhari/Osinbajo administration for Nigerians to realise that oil can and, should no longer be used to hold compatriots to ransom.

The transition is going to be painful but necessary! No reasonable Nigerian thought the transition is going to be painless, anyway. Much of the credit should go to President Muhammadu Buhari who, without doubt, is the leading light of the administration. Say what you wish about him but even his worst enemies concede that President Buhari is not a thief, does not condone stealing and will not glorify and celebrate criminals. General Buhari could have been the richest retired Nigerian General today if he chose to be corrupt!

One of the enduring attributes of Nigerians is their short memory of hate. Honestly, Nigerians who voted for change and who thought Shangri-La would be here the day President Buhari and Vice President Osinbajo entered Aso Rock Villa, unrealistic as the thought was, are right to score the administration low. But, it really does not matter now that an expectation of instantaneous transformation, after years of unquestioned looting of the country’s resources, was unrealistic. What does matter is that Nigeria has averted an imminent crash that would have occurred months ago had there been no change of baton last year.

It is this legendary short memory of hate that will come to play when things begin to look up for the country. From the look of things, the day should not be too far off.

Magaji writes from Abuja

http://guardian.ng/opinion/tell-me-do-you-call-this-change/

2 Likes

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by Firefire(m): 7:10am On Dec 16, 2016
Nonsensical nonsense...


Kontinue, your 4 years sliding off with agony to Nigerians.


Sinking brainwashed Zone-Bs.

3 Likes

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by Atiku2019: 7:10am On Dec 16, 2016
Blame Games Again? cool

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by Opinedecandid(m): 7:14am On Dec 16, 2016
It called changi
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by DaudaAbu(m): 7:17am On Dec 16, 2016
It is indeed
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by DaBullIT(m): 8:19am On Dec 16, 2016
You don't want magaji to talk about the past, but you always talk about Buhari's military tenure whenever it suits you ?


Hypocrites

Jonathan ruined this country , those who stole money are afraid to spend it now , so they are burying it up and down

And the Mafia bosses are giving Buhari a tough time

Lets take a look at this perspective

Some ediots threatened to expose Buhari since he was sworn in , Babangida and co , Till today , not one file has been released, Yet, Buhari has busted the Powerful of the most powerful crime bosses , You would think they would release Buhari's PTDF files , however so far we have zilch , zero , nothing

Wike threatened to expose Amaechi and APC's plan to rig elections , Till now, Zero information has been released , however the voice recording of Wike threatening INEC has been viewed, listened to and downloaded over 1M times


PDP is a cancer , it has to be destroyed , as well as anyone who associates with that demonic party


JONATHAN RUINED THIS COUNTRY , Several of his staffs have revealed that , even the previous Finance minister said Jonathan had been borrowing to sustain Nigeria 6 months into general elections

Call a spade a spade

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by HungerBAD: 8:22am On Dec 16, 2016
DaBullIT:
You don't want magaji to talk about the past, but you always talk about Buhari's military tenure whenever it suits you ?


Hypocrites

Jonathan ruined this country , those who stole money are afraid to spend it now , so they are burying it up and down

And the Mafia bosses are giving Buhari a tough time

Lets take a look at this perspective

Some ediots threatened to expose Buhari since he was sworn in , Babangida and co , Till today , not one file has been released, Yet, Buhari has busted the Powerful of the most powerful crime bosses , You would think they would release Buhari's PTDF files , however so far we have zilch , zero , nothing

Wike threatened to expose Amaechi and APC's plan to rig elections , Till now, Zero information has been released , however the voice recording of Wike threatening INEC has been viewed, listened to and downloaded over 1M times


PDP is a cancer , it has to be destroyed , as well as anyone who associates with that demonic party


JONATHAN RUINED THIS COUNTRY , Several of his staffs have revealed that , even the previous Finance minister said Jonathan had been borrowing to sustain Nigeria 6 months into general elections

Call a spade a spade

Your write up makes sense.

Kudos.

1 Like

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by ivandragon: 8:27am On Dec 16, 2016
as usual, the writer's history of Nigeria & her challenges starts in 1999, matures in 2010 & ends on May 28, 2015.

I have often wondered if Nigeria was an eldorado pre-2010 or 1999.

they say GEJ made things worse, are things better now?

initially, it was that PMB cannot correct the wrongs of the past government in 6 months, they then shifted it to 12, then 18, then 4 years... then he will need 8 years... but the new refrain is that it will take a century & half to correct the ills of GEJ...

in order words, we should expect nothing in our life time?

GEJ wasn't perfect (by a long shot), but PMB is the greatest mistake 15 million Nigerians made on behalf of 170m people.

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by tuniski: 9:33am On Dec 16, 2016
DaBullIT:
You don't want magaji to talk about the past, but you always talk about Buhari's military tenure whenever it suits you ?


Hypocrites

Jonathan ruined this country , those who stole money are afraid to spend it now , so they are burying it up and down

And the Mafia bosses are giving Buhari a tough time

Lets take a look at this perspective

Some ediots threatened to expose Buhari since he was sworn in , Babangida and co , Till today , not one file has been released, Yet, Buhari has busted the Powerful of the most powerful crime bosses , You would think they would release Buhari's PTDF files , however so far we have zilch , zero , nothing

Wike threatened to expose Amaechi and APC's plan to rig elections , Till now, Zero information has been released , however the voice recording of Wike threatening INEC has been viewed, listened to and downloaded over 1M times


PDP is a cancer , it has to be destroyed , as well as anyone who associates with that demonic party


JONATHAN RUINED THIS COUNTRY , Several of his staffs have revealed that , even the previous Finance minister said Jonathan had been borrowing to sustain Nigeria 6 months into general elections

Call a spade a spade

No shame at all for all the apc zombies. Suffering and smiling.

1 Like

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by DaBullIT(m): 9:51am On Dec 16, 2016
tuniski:


No shame at all for all the apc zombies. Suffering and smiling.

And you are enjoying and crying ?
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by sekamykome(m): 9:57am On Dec 16, 2016
Dear OP and Abdulrazaq Magaji,
Your piece I must say was well structured and and your message was clear and well understood, I personally will not want to defend GEJ and the the last administration for only one reason, and that reason was his silence and body language when Mr. Abba Moro the then Minister of Interior did what he did and nobody had the guts to ask him for explanations, that was the day I gave up on GEJ. Howbeit, it will be a very difficult and senseless argument if we still want to argue that the ship of the Nigerian state is being steered properly. In the words of a good friend of mine "Nigeria really needs a change, but we cannot afford the Buhari kind of change at this stage of our National life".

There is no way we can defend the plethora of mistakes that the Buhari administration is making because of an improperly laid foundation, I dare say, the current administration was only interested in gaining power without an articulated plan for what to do with the power. This administration was founded on propaganda and without propaganda it cannot survive. This is the very reason why we have one gaffe to another from week to week.

Sincerely, what I expected PoFRN to do on winning the elections are not much, Mr Buhari would have so succeeded if he had followed or capitalized on the image that the APC laundered as a No-Nonsense-Man that will not take any form of sabotage from any civil servant, if He had built on that image by now I see no reason why we would be importing PMS. Honestly I was not expecting Mr. Buhari to perform miracles, I mean... I was only expecting him to make sure that the forces stopping our refineries from working are ruthlessly dealt with (which is another reason I became discouraged with GEJ), that salaries pensions and entitlements of staffs of DELTA STEEL COMPANY OVWIAN-ALADJA are paid because I am sure that some very corrupt individuals are sitting on the funds... and to my greatest pleasure Mr. Buhari lit hope in me when this topic was included in his 2016 Budget of Change.. to to my utmost surprise, he is presenting 2017 budget and not a dime was paid to DSC (This was my litmus test for this administration). For me, Mr. BUHARI is NOT FIGHTING THE CORRUPTION he claims he is fighting, because I am very sure that these funds were approved by him, approved by the senate and I am equally sure that he Mr. Buhari had released these funds and some paper shifters have shifted it again just like under GEJ, what is the difference!!! You approved, maintain a stern face and yet they pilfer it under you, well no difference with GEJ.

Another thing I would want those defending this administration to note is that, when General Olusegun Obasanjo took over on may 29th 1999, Nigeria was worse than it was on May 29th 2015, it is understandable that any president that is not from the North of Nigeria is an under performer in the eyes of Northerners, but we should all realize that the day we start keeping quiet when fire burns our neighbors farm is the day that our farm starts burning, Mr. Buhari is dissociated from the talakawa that took to the street to celebrate his victory, Mr. magaji should please note this because one Egg is 40 naira now, it was 25 naira for the raw one and 30 naira for the boiled one. So I have no Idea what you people mean by saying that this government is better than the governments that were on sit from 1999 to 2015, please Mr. magaji and OP should instead write to remind Mr Buhari to please help us revere him like we were doing before 2015....

Note: The office of the President is a revered one, I think it is absolutely wrong for people to be insulting the president, rather bare your criticisms with the best of your anger.

2 Likes

Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by richidinho(m): 10:12am On Dec 16, 2016
Jonathan was also the cause of recession in 1983?

You guys shld stop telling us what we already aware of, we were born and brought up here, we are still very much arnd
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by basilo102: 10:19am On Dec 16, 2016
what happened to body language that fixed the refineries and provided constant electricity few months after Buhari was sworn in:?: we warned them that it was an unsustainable initial gra gra, they called us wailers, now they have realized that nigeria can not be fixed in 2 years
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by Ngokafor(f): 10:57am On Dec 16, 2016
....Zombie write ups brought here by one of the chieftains of zombies on nairaland for his fellow zombies to lap up while they continue to deceive themselves..

..The truth of the matter is that more and more Nigerians are seeing buhari/apc for the epic failures they are...no amount of on-line propaganda will erase that fact.

..We all know how the economy, our standard of living/the value of the naira was before buhari/apc came on board.
....How everything went down in quick succession AS SOON AS buhari landed is what we are all aware of as well..It's almost like recession and hardship was waiting at As-rock gate to walk in with buhari undecided embarassed

..Therefore it is not a coincidence cos same thing happened in 1983/84 when buhari was there...

...Lies,false-hood and propaganda are not working anymore cos the Minister of Mis-information(sic) Lie mohammed has decried the scathing criticisms trailing this admin from all quarters..blaming the 'opposition' for downplaying the 'achievements' of this Government undecided

....I rest my case.
Re: Tell Me! Do You Call This Change?- The Guardian by Nobody: 11:21am On Dec 16, 2016
sekamykome:
Dear OP and Abdulrazaq Magaji,
Your piece I must say was well structured and and your message was clear and well understood, I personally will not want to defend GEJ and the the last administration for only one reason, and that reason was his silence and body language when Mr. Abba Moro the then Minister of Interior did what he did and nobody had the guts to ask him for explanations, that was the day I gave up on GEJ. Howbeit, it will be a very difficult and senseless argument if we still want to argue that the ship of the Nigerian state is being steered properly. In the words of a good friend of mine "Nigeria really needs a change, but we cannot afford the Buhari kind of change at this stage of our National life".

There is no way we can defend the plethora of mistakes that the Buhari administration is making because of an improperly laid foundation, I dare say, the current administration was only interested in gaining power without an articulated plan for what to do with the power. This administration was founded on propaganda and without propaganda it cannot survive. This is the very reason why we have one gaffe to another from week to week.

Sincerely, what I expected PoFRN to do on winning the elections are not much, Mr Buhari would have so succeeded if he had followed or capitalized on the image that the APC laundered as a No-Nonsense-Man that will not take any form of sabotage from any civil servant, if He had built on that image by now I see no reason why we would be importing PMS. Honestly I was not expecting Mr. Buhari to perform miracles, I mean... I was only expecting him to make sure that the forces stopping our refineries from working are ruthlessly dealt with (which is another reason I became discouraged with GEJ), that salaries pensions and entitlements of staffs of DELTA STEEL COMPANY OVWIAN-ALADJA are paid because I am sure that some very corrupt individuals are sitting on the funds... and to my greatest pleasure Mr. Buhari lit hope in me when this topic was included in his 2016 Budget of Change.. to to my utmost surprise, he is presenting 2017 budget and not a dime was paid to DSC (This was my litmus test for this administration). For me, Mr. BUHARI is NOT FIGHTING THE CORRUPTION he claims he is fighting, because I am very sure that these funds were approved by him, approved by the senate and I am equally sure that he Mr. Buhari had released these funds and some paper shifters have shifted it again just like under GEJ, what is the difference!!! You approved, maintain a stern face and yet they pilfer it under you, well no difference with GEJ.

Another thing I would want those defending this administration to note is that, when General Olusegun Obasanjo took over on may 29th 1999, Nigeria was worse than it was on May 29th 2015, it is understandable that any president that is not from the North of Nigeria is an under performer in the eyes of Northerners, but we should all realize that the day we start keeping quiet when fire burns our neighbors farm is the day that our farm starts burning, Mr. Buhari is dissociated from the talakawa that took to the street to celebrate his victory, Mr. magaji should please note this because one Egg is 40 naira now, it was 25 naira for the raw one and 30 naira for the boiled one. So I have no Idea what you people mean by saying that this government is better than the governments that were on sit from 1999 to 2015, please Mr. magaji and OP should instead write to remind Mr Buhari to please help us revere him like we were doing before 2015....

Note: The office of the President is a revered one, I think it is absolutely wrong for people to be insulting the president, rather bare your criticisms with the best of your anger.
God bless you, especially for the comparison between the state of the economy may 1999 and may 2015.
At times I wonder what would have become of Nigeria had Buhari won the elections in 1999. All of us for don die finish with all this his blame games.
Op, Buhari no know road simple.
And I will keep praying this praying every morning when I wake up, till 2019.
"Buhari, receive sense in the mighty name of Jesus "
Amen somebody

1 Like

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