Christianity Etc › Re: Monotheism Is A Scam Played Upon The Masses. by amInigerian: 11:18pm On Feb 12, 2017 |
Whereas death may not be the discussion, the implied question (to everyone including the op) is...
...Whatever concepts you have embraced about God, are you willing to cling unto them on your dying bed?
Whereas everyone's answer may be more relevant directed at themselves, it is clear that folks may find it easy embracing any wanton idea about the supremely exquisite mind that created this universe so long as they are not faced with the reality of slowly slipping away unto the other side (to face Him). |
Christianity Etc › Re: Monotheism Is A Scam Played Upon The Masses. by amInigerian: 10:06pm On Feb 12, 2017 |
Whereas we must all individually try to solve the puzzle of who God is and and having found Him, being right with Him before we eventually meet Him, someone once said it is easy to say there is no God when you are not on your dying bed.
In the same vein, I say, it is easy to embrace mumbo-jumbo ideas about God, the super scientific and architectural mind behind the masterpiece that is our universe (and curiously volunteer a piece of that same mumbo-jumbo to others) when you are not about to slip away unto the other side - on a your death bed. |
Politics › Re: The Enduring Grip Of Historical Falsehoods On Igbo Minds by amInigerian: 8:31pm On Feb 12, 2017 |
TheSociopath: The enduring grip of historical falsehoods on Igbo minds continues to poison both Igbo culture and psyche.
BY TOCHUKWU EZUKANMA FEB 06, 2017
My recent article, the messages of Ahiara, an incisive piece buttressed with logic and reason, which refuted some popular but erroneous notions of tribalism and secession in Nigeria, drew a lot of hostile responses from some of my readers. They lobbed curses and hauled invectives at me. However, to me, it was all exhilarating. I relish rejoinders to my writings, be them abusive or appreciative.
One of my milder critics accused me of demonstrated dislike for Biafra and its leadership. Yes, I detest the Biafra leadership because, in its recklessness, arrogance and despotism, it brought about the death of hundreds of thousands at the glory of their youth and the starvation to death of more than one million hapless and blameless men, women and children. It dismantled the Igbo power structure, painstakingly put together over decades by the likes of Nnamdi Azikiwe, Louis Odumegwu Ojukwu, and Michael Okpara, and set the Igbo back by at least 100 years. Why would any Igbo not despise a leadership that brought so much, avoidable, suffering, pain and sorrow to the Igbo?
Some of my detractors argued that secession was a necessary response to the mass-murder of the Igbo in northern Nigeria. Undoubtedly, that orchestrated slaughter of the innocent for no offense of theirs but their ethnicity was unconscionable. However, it would be selective amnesia to forget that the July 29th 1966 coup and the attendant anti-Igbo riots in the North did not sprout out of a void. They were in reprisal for an earlier coup in January 1966 in which an Igbo dominated group of army officers murdered the most important Hausa/Fulani political and military leaders (Ahmadu Bello, Tafawa Belewa and Zakari Miamalari) without killing any Igbo leader. And following the coup, the Igbo in the North became too celebrative; dancing and singing to a Rex Lawson song and telling their Hausa neighbors that the bleating of a goat in the song was Ahmadu Bello (the most important Hausa/Fulani leader) howling like a goat as he was being killed by Major Nzeogwu. It was the discriminatory killings and gratuitous mockery of the memory of their most important leader, amongst other reasons, that set the stage for the July 1966 anti-Igbo coup and the attendant anti-Igbo riots.
After the killings in the January and July coups and that unsurpassed butchery of Igbo civilians in northern Nigeria, there was a desperate need for peace in the country. In search of peace, the regional governors, David Ejoor, Usman Katsina, Robert Adebayo and Chukwuemeka Ojukwu, and the Head of State, Yakubu Gowon, met at Aburi in Ghana, where they agreed on and signed the Aburi Accord. The most significant aspect of the accord was constitutional: the reduction of the powers of the federal government by devolution of additional powers to regional governments. Long ago, an Igbo professor of political science at Howard University in Washington, DC told me that Yakubu Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord. To me, his statement was not only unbelievable but sacrilegious. I lost my temper at what I thought was historical revisionism taken to a nauseating extreme. The elderly professor must have understood my problem. I was suffering from a hangover of the Biafran propaganda. I was under the stupefying hold of the lies we were fed in Biafra. For he stated, “don’t worry, with time, in the course of your reading and research, you will find out that Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord”.
Years later, I found out that Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord. In his book, Power Sharing in Nigerian Federation, Chukwuemeka Nwokedi wrote that, “Apart from minor adjustments to the Aburi Accord, in other to still retain the corporate nature of Nigeria”, Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord with Decree 8; “and the regions acquired more powers than they have ever had”. That was months before the continued wrangling between Ojukwu and Gowon led to the creation of states. But did Ojukwu not declare Biafra and we marched out to war on the mantra, “On Aburi We Stand”. According to other writers, the minor adjustments Gowon made to the accord was the cancelation of two articles of the accord, which stated that any region can secede from Nigeria at will, and that the federal government can, on no account, impose a state of emergency on any region. Ojukwu’s advisers urged him to accept Decree 8 because Gowon had “gone more than far enough”. He refused.
The removal of the two articles of the accord did not in any way imperil the lives and property of the Igbo and other peoples of Eastern Region. Ojukwu’s squabbling, against the advice of his advisers, over the two articles was solely motivated by personal ambition. Following Ojukwu’s declaration of Biafra, the war inevitably started. As it raged on, it was obvious that a negotiated settlement to the war would be most advantageous to the Igbo. Ojukwu’s obsession with maintaining himself in power stalled the peace talks that would have extracted for the Igbo a number of concessions from the federal government. Despite the enormous toll of the war, especially, on human lives, he kept protecting his position and power, until it became untenable. And, as Biafra collapsed, he ran away; Biafra surrendered unconditionally.
A litany of the falsehood we were fed in Biafra is beyond the scope of this article. David Klinghoffer was right when he wrote that, “Widespread misinformation poisons a culture”. The enduring grip of these falsehoods on Igbo minds continues to poison both Igbo culture and psyche. They make us paranoid – we feel surrounded by enemies committed to our destruction, and in our suspicion of these “enemies” we see ulterior motives in every act, no matter how well-intended and benign, by other Nigerians. In addition, they make us feel like innocent victims of the evil devices of an alliance of the other Nigerian ethnic groups. And like perennial victims we refuse to take responsibilities for our actions; we find psychological refuge in blaming others, the Yoruba, Hausa/Fulani, etc, for our problems.
Blaming others for your problems is gratifying but destructive; it reinforces the feeling of victimhood. The mindset that sustains a feeling of victimhood is antithetical to victory. Therefore, a victim remains a loser until he changes his mindset. For our own good, the Igbo need to change their attitude towards Nigeria and the other peoples of Nigeria. This demands rising above the misinformation of the Biafran propaganda by embracing some incontrovertible historical facts. This will enable us to realize that our problems stemmed not from the hatred and wicked machination of the Hausa, Yoruba and other ethnic groups of Nigeria, but from repeated political blunders of Igbo leaders, especially, Chukwuemeka Ojukwu.
Otherwise, our political fortune, clout and relevance will continue to decline. It has declined to a point, where a proud and resourceful people that, in their triumphalism, once boasted of dominating not only Nigeria but the whole of Africa now whimper and snivel over trivialities like a disconsolate old widow.
Source: http://saharareporters.com/2017/02/06/misinformation-continues-poison-our-minds-tochukwu-ezukanma . |
Politics › Re: The Enduring Grip Of Historical Falsehoods On Igbo Minds by amInigerian: 1:07am On Feb 12, 2017 |
TheSociopath: The enduring grip of historical falsehoods on Igbo minds continues to poison both Igbo culture and psyche.
BY TOCHUKWU EZUKANMA FEB 06, 2017
My recent article, the messages of Ahiara, an incisive piece buttressed with logic and reason, which refuted some popular but erroneous notions of tribalism and secession in Nigeria, drew a lot of hostile responses from some of my readers. They lobbed curses and hauled invectives at me. However, to me, it was all exhilarating. I relish rejoinders to my writings, be them abusive or appreciative.
One of my milder critics accused me of demonstrated dislike for Biafra and its leadership. Yes, I detest the Biafra leadership because, in its recklessness, arrogance and despotism, it brought about the death of hundreds of thousands at the glory of their youth and the starvation to death of more than one million hapless and blameless men, women and children. It dismantled the Igbo power structure, painstakingly put together over decades by the likes of Nnamdi Azikiwe, Louis Odumegwu Ojukwu, and Michael Okpara, and set the Igbo back by at least 100 years. Why would any Igbo not despise a leadership that brought so much, avoidable, suffering, pain and sorrow to the Igbo?
Some of my detractors argued that secession was a necessary response to the mass-murder of the Igbo in northern Nigeria. Undoubtedly, that orchestrated slaughter of the innocent for no offense of theirs but their ethnicity was unconscionable. However, it would be selective amnesia to forget that the July 29th 1966 coup and the attendant anti-Igbo riots in the North did not sprout out of a void. They were in reprisal for an earlier coup in January 1966 in which an Igbo dominated group of army officers murdered the most important Hausa/Fulani political and military leaders (Ahmadu Bello, Tafawa Belewa and Zakari Miamalari) without killing any Igbo leader. And following the coup, the Igbo in the North became too celebrative; dancing and singing to a Rex Lawson song and telling their Hausa neighbors that the bleating of a goat in the song was Ahmadu Bello (the most important Hausa/Fulani leader) howling like a goat as he was being killed by Major Nzeogwu. It was the discriminatory killings and gratuitous mockery of the memory of their most important leader, amongst other reasons, that set the stage for the July 1966 anti-Igbo coup and the attendant anti-Igbo riots.
After the killings in the January and July coups and that unsurpassed butchery of Igbo civilians in northern Nigeria, there was a desperate need for peace in the country. In search of peace, the regional governors, David Ejoor, Usman Katsina, Robert Adebayo and Chukwuemeka Ojukwu, and the Head of State, Yakubu Gowon, met at Aburi in Ghana, where they agreed on and signed the Aburi Accord. The most significant aspect of the accord was constitutional: the reduction of the powers of the federal government by devolution of additional powers to regional governments. Long ago, an Igbo professor of political science at Howard University in Washington, DC told me that Yakubu Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord. To me, his statement was not only unbelievable but sacrilegious. I lost my temper at what I thought was historical revisionism taken to a nauseating extreme. The elderly professor must have understood my problem. I was suffering from a hangover of the Biafran propaganda. I was under the stupefying hold of the lies we were fed in Biafra. For he stated, “don’t worry, with time, in the course of your reading and research, you will find out that Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord”.
Years later, I found out that Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord. In his book, Power Sharing in Nigerian Federation, Chukwuemeka Nwokedi wrote that, “Apart from minor adjustments to the Aburi Accord, in other to still retain the corporate nature of Nigeria”, Gowon implemented the Aburi Accord with Decree 8; “and the regions acquired more powers than they have ever had”. That was months before the continued wrangling between Ojukwu and Gowon led to the creation of states. But did Ojukwu not declare Biafra and we marched out to war on the mantra, “On Aburi We Stand”. According to other writers, the minor adjustments Gowon made to the accord was the cancelation of two articles of the accord, which stated that any region can secede from Nigeria at will, and that the federal government can, on no account, impose a state of emergency on any region. Ojukwu’s advisers urged him to accept Decree 8 because Gowon had “gone more than far enough”. He refused.
The removal of the two articles of the accord did not in any way imperil the lives and property of the Igbo and other peoples of Eastern Region. Ojukwu’s squabbling, against the advice of his advisers, over the two articles was solely motivated by personal ambition. Following Ojukwu’s declaration of Biafra, the war inevitably started. As it raged on, it was obvious that a negotiated settlement to the war would be most advantageous to the Igbo. Ojukwu’s obsession with maintaining himself in power stalled the peace talks that would have extracted for the Igbo a number of concessions from the federal government. Despite the enormous toll of the war, especially, on human lives, he kept protecting his position and power, until it became untenable. And, as Biafra collapsed, he ran away; Biafra surrendered unconditionally.
A litany of the falsehood we were fed in Biafra is beyond the scope of this article. David Klinghoffer was right when he wrote that, “Widespread misinformation poisons a culture”. The enduring grip of these falsehoods on Igbo minds continues to poison both Igbo culture and psyche. They make us paranoid – we feel surrounded by enemies committed to our destruction, and in our suspicion of these “enemies” we see ulterior motives in every act, no matter how well-intended and benign, by other Nigerians. In addition, they make us feel like innocent victims of the evil devices of an alliance of the other Nigerian ethnic groups. And like perennial victims we refuse to take responsibilities for our actions; we find psychological refuge in blaming others, the Yoruba, Hausa/Fulani, etc, for our problems.
Blaming others for your problems is gratifying but destructive; it reinforces the feeling of victimhood. The mindset that sustains a feeling of victimhood is antithetical to victory. Therefore, a victim remains a loser until he changes his mindset. For our own good, the Igbo need to change their attitude towards Nigeria and the other peoples of Nigeria. This demands rising above the misinformation of the Biafran propaganda by embracing some incontrovertible historical facts. This will enable us to realize that our problems stemmed not from the hatred and wicked machination of the Hausa, Yoruba and other ethnic groups of Nigeria, but from repeated political blunders of Igbo leaders, especially, Chukwuemeka Ojukwu.
Otherwise, our political fortune, clout and relevance will continue to decline. It has declined to a point, where a proud and resourceful people that, in their triumphalism, once boasted of dominating not only Nigeria but the whole of Africa now whimper and snivel over trivialities like a disconsolate old widow.
Source: http://saharareporters.com/2017/02/06/misinformation-continues-poison-our-minds-tochukwu-ezukanma |
|
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 12:54pm On Feb 09, 2017 |
ANBAKO: Please quote me if you have USD or CAD (Canadian dollar) for sale. 370 naira per Canadian USD |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 2:54pm On Feb 07, 2017 |
I need $90 payoneer. Anyone have, please let us deal using an escrow |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 9:24am On Feb 07, 2017 |
$330 worth of bitcoins needed at 470/$. Escrow accepted. |
Business › Re: I Have A Problem With My Payoneer Account by amInigerian(op): 4:33am On Jan 18, 2017 |
wealthyhrt: its not credited immediately. its waits for approval and finally confirmtion before its sent. I sell payoneer dollar. so thats the process. to be sure ask the person that sent you dollar to send you the approval and confirmation mail from payoneer to show that he did it.if not, then he could have also scammed you. The person has done that. All is very well. Please if someone abroad is funding their payoneer card from their bank account, how much will payoneer charge them. This person is in Canada. Thanks |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 2:37am On Jan 13, 2017 |
willian10: Tell the supplier to send u proof of payment When did you request for ur card? I requested for the card last year but was not around to pick it up in December so I picked it op in January, and successfully activated it online by providing the digits on the card I was asked to provide. |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 12:39am On Jan 13, 2017 |
I activated my new payoneer card some days ago and proceeded to purchase some dollars worth of payoneer from my supplier. The supplier said the money has been sent but I see nothing reflected in my account. Somebody help. What could be the problem please? |
Business › I Have A Problem With My Payoneer Account by amInigerian(op): 12:34am On Jan 13, 2017 |
I activated my new payoneer card some days ago and proceeded to purchase some dollars worth of payoneer from my supplier. The supplier said the money has been sent but I see nothing reflected in my account. What could be the problem please? |
Politics › Re: "INEC Officials Caught In Opobo Writing Results For APC"- UnitedRiversReporters by amInigerian: 12:13am On Dec 12, 2016 |
charityexplicit: the younger one is a lecturer at MOUAU, comp Engr. The older one is a librarian or so. Okay. When I was there, the younger one was not yet a lecturer. He was still a student. The other one became a Librarian when I was there. |
Politics › Re: "INEC Officials Caught In Opobo Writing Results For APC"- UnitedRiversReporters by amInigerian: 9:41am On Dec 11, 2016 |
I know the two people in the picture. They younger man was a student at Michael Okpara University of Agriculture in Umuahia. The older was once a librarian at the same university. I do not know if he is no more a librarian there. |
Politics › Re: Rivers Re-run Elections: Live Monitoring And Updates by amInigerian: 11:28pm On Dec 10, 2016 |
TonyeBarcanista: IPod and chest beating sha LOL... Rivers residents ko, Aba residents ni! iPod yoot I have stopped paying attention to them sef. If you listen to them, you will think they are about taking over Washington sef |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 8:43pm On Dec 07, 2016 |
mercylicious234: $1358$ bitcoin bought from ALE-AIRhub. Swift transaction. What's his rate please? |
Business › Re: How Much Did You Exchange The Dollar For Today? by amInigerian: 12:18am On Nov 26, 2016 |
I need to by CFA with Naira. How is it done? What is the best rate I can get when I get to Cotonou? Do I purchase before entry, at the entrance or after entrance into cotonou?
Thanks. |
Business › Re: How To Receive Western Union At N370/$ In Nigeria by amInigerian: 12:14am On Nov 26, 2016 |
Interested. |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 1:39am On Nov 25, 2016 |
I'll hope to be selling $200 worth of bitcoins everyday from Monday, at N510/$ first come first serve |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 2:22pm On Nov 20, 2016*. Modified: 10:04pm On Nov 20, 2016 |
This thread is about to get filled up. I heard a thread cannot be more than five hundred and something pages long and now we are at 464  We'll have to create another one. Just wondering if we will have to 1) wait for a moderator to
OR...
2) wait for the person who created this one to create the next one or
OR...
3) wait for anybody to create the next one (which must bear the same title with something like "PART 2" as suffix)
What's it gonna be?
|
Business › Re: I Need An Alipay Account. I Need To Fund It. Who Can Help? by amInigerian(op): 11:49pm On Nov 17, 2016 |
So, do you have a verified alipay account? chiefkpokp: Its easy to have an unverified alipay, But with type of account, you would not be able to received funds, but you can send a request for someone to pay on your behalf.
the procedure to have alipay is simply to register for it, simple as abc...... but to get verified and be authenticated so that you can start to receive funds on your alipay, you will need to have a china bank account, identity Number, which authomatically means, you must be a citizen of their country in order to be verified. and your alipay account name must match, same name on your identity card and your bank account. with this, you are good to go.
Yes, i can fund you, for me to fund you, i will to test your account if its can receive fund by sending you 2rmb.... if its sails, then congrat! if not, u are on your own |
Business › Re: I Need An Alipay Account. I Need To Fund It. Who Can Help? by amInigerian(op): 11:46am On Nov 14, 2016*. Modified: 2:50pm On Nov 14, 2016 |
C'Mon...  . Somebody respond |
Business › I Need An Alipay Account. I Need To Fund It. Who Can Help? by amInigerian(op): 10:11am On Nov 14, 2016 |
1). Is it easy to have an alipay account?
2). What is the procedure?
3). Can you (or who can) fund it for me?
These are the things I need sorted out. Thanks |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 1:08pm On Nov 06, 2016 |
[size=14pt]Me, I want over $1,000 worth of bitcoins everyday. Please someone provide me their best offer. Whatsapp number in my signature.[/size] |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 11:58am On Nov 06, 2016*. Modified: 12:21pm On Nov 06, 2016 |
Me, I want over a thousand $$$ worth of bitcoins everyday. Please someone provide me their best offer. Whatsapp number in my signature. |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 11:56am On Nov 06, 2016 |
Tabbaz: You can trade that one with trusted fellow or use other trusted members as escrow now. these mentioned fellow (and some others that we know which time did not permit me to mention) should be used for $$$ escrow. make we no abuse them, otherwise they go vex and start turning down escrow job. FYI, they don't collect money - they offer free service o. It is interesting that members should provide escrow services for the good of the group/members |
Politics › Re: Who Do You Wish To Be The Next President Of Nigeria? by amInigerian: 11:47am On Nov 06, 2016 |
luvinhubby: Very articulate & intelligent man, took him 2 weeks to resolve an ASUU strike that Nyesom Wike could not resolve in 6 months. Some of the people being mentioned here perhaps explains why/how we foist bad leaders on ourselves and the rest of the population. People seem to be allergic to greater minds like Ibrahim Shekarau and others in his class or better because... these people make them feel inferior. |
Politics › Re: Who Do You Wish To Be The Next President Of Nigeria? by amInigerian: 3:12am On Oct 29, 2016 |
[size=13pt]Ibrahim Shekarau, governor of Kano state before Kwankwaso. During his time, the notorious city of Kano was not heard for even one riot[/size] |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 10:28pm On Oct 15, 2016 |
Jainine: Country? Any country. it depends. Add me on whatsapp to know more
08127853407 |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 5:50pm On Oct 15, 2016 |
dagr8: If you have available at N400, please contact me I will buy I can sometimes supply at 440 |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 5:48pm On Oct 15, 2016 |
amInigerian: [size=15pt]$3,000 BItcoin for sale at 520 per $ Whatsapp: 08127853407 [/size] $1,500 now available [08127853407] |
Business › Re: ➜ ➜ ➜Currency/E-currency Market Deals➜ ➜ ➜ by amInigerian: 2:31pm On Oct 13, 2016 |
[size=15pt]$3,000 BItcoin for sale at 520 per $ Whatsapp: 08127853407 [/size] |