Arsenefc's Posts
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BootyOnMe:Blazay, I love your profile pix But which v/a/g/i/n/a do you want us to smell gaaaaaaaaaaaaaan? The one closer or the one farther away. I like to smell "ochara" v/a/g/i/n/a, straight from the factory. Which of the two is still "ochara?" |
latogng:Planet SW. We dont do stuff like this there, FYI. You are always welcome in the SW, as long as you leave your spouse-killing-baby-eating mentality behind in whatever part of Alaigbo you are coming from. We are a peaceful, loving bunch. Its just our culture to love, not kill, each other. |
latogng:ISnt something like this the norm in that part of the country? Well thats what i was told, Not true? |
what happens in Alaigbo, Please guys, for the sake of the great Yoruba race, LET IT STAY IN ALAIGBO. Exporting Kidnapping and money ritual is bad enough, please stuff like this shouldnt be posted on NL so they dont get exported to other places. |
^^^ Hows an ordinary tree tax payer's property? What else is tax payer's property? oxygen? Shouldnt people go to jail for taking in oxygen and exhaling carbondioxide, increasing global warming in the process? You are stupidddd, just like your father it seems. I think your stupidity is genetic, but most likely multifactorial in origin. Keep carrying that anger of yours, it will eat you up inside soon, trust me. Ode oshi! Agbaya |
^^^ The poor folks in Ikorodu would have to go to Alausa for permission to cut some trees Fashola doesnt even know exist? Your are dumber than i initially thought? Did you inherit your stupidity from your father or just like acting dumb? |
emmatok:You are comparing two things/people and you think its right to use "worst?" You are the worst of all. |
Okay sorry then. |
ekt_bear:Survival over [b]a[/b]esthetics, anyday anytime Give the poor folks some slack, they deserve it. I have done it in the past when the going was rough. Thank God I wont have to do it ever again. You may not understand . . . |
Less prone = less likely to happen Mitigate = Flood is still gonna happen, but the risk of losing lives, and other dangers are reduced. |
Chinedu Nlem:Let me tell you a lil about myself. My best friend's name is Chinedu. And you know what, I have always dreamt of killing Chinedu since I was in primary 0. If Hotel Rwanda type scenario were to occur in Nigeria, the first person I'd kill is Chinedu. I will show no mercy. Why? Because Chinedu is Ibo and I hate Ibos. |
prince4lif:You are a phocking liar Liarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr. Someone did all these to your sister and you are here on NL asking for help? How old are you? I would expect you to be in jail by now for homicide or attempted homicide of the so called BF. At least, if not cooling off in jail, you should, by now, have become an international fugitive. Phocking liar. Oloshi. looking for attention on NL. Anuofia |
If you dont know the intent, maybe you shouldnt comment. Anyway, we all know, I mean REAL lagosians, that Fashola's intent, first and foremost, is to turn lagos into "small London" aka mega-city. This policy is part of the broader aim to beautify the environment. meaning, it is all for aesthetics, nothing more nothing less. . . .He also urged Lagosians not to cut down trees as they help beautify the environmentTherefore, contrary to what some misinformed folks in America would have us believe, this is all for the beautification of the environment. It has nothing to do with the welfare of the people. With regards to flooding: Didnt realize that trees make your land less prone to flooding. I always thought they just help mitigate the risk, not prevent it or make it less prone. But then, What do I know? I am no American, just an ordinary, humble, well brought up Nigerian. . |
ekt_bear:Sorry, I should have said London wasnt built in a day. Since the whole point is to turn lagos into small London. . . geddit? |
Demdem:Do you have a job? have you ever held any kind of job in your life? What would happen to you if you do not show up for work? The famous actor Woody Allen once said that "80% of success is showing up. Aregbe isnt showing up at all. In saner countries, leaders lead by example. He is not leading at all. |
ndu_chucks:Lets go there |
Very inhumane, if this is true. Is it now a crime to be poor in Lagos? IT’S too bad, already, so many Lagosian are falling into poverty at a time when it’s almost illegal to be poor. You won’t be arrested for stealing N 7 billion or for forging your certificate and lying about your age on INEC form or for exploiting the masses to the tune of N 2 Billion every month or for imposing your cronies and buying election tribunal judgement with dirty money, but if you are truly, deeply, in-the-streets poor, struggling to survive, you’re well advised not to engage in any of the biological necessities of life — like cutting trees to cook your food. In the same state where the government has failed to provide basic amenities to her populace, it is now criminal for the same populace to try to survive. It is unfortunate that the poor are no longer being extorted by the biggest mafia in town, ACN government, they are now being prosecuted by the government for even trying to survive. Rome wasnt built in a day. |
For me, it is the V/a/g/i/n/a Once i see it, I automatically gravitate towards my partner. I no try? |
@Op How old are you again? |
[size=18pt]And by "we", I don't even mean Osun people alone. That is another arbitrary boundary. I am more closely related blood-wise and language-wise to Aregbesola than even many Osun State indigenes, heh. Despite being from the neighboring state.[/size]Seriousness aside. I think the is the funniest ish I have ever come across on NL. People just like to drop names shaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa. Anyway, success they say has many fathers, sons, relatives. Funny how the same person is connected to Fayemi, Aregbesola, Tinubu, OBJ, met Soyinka, had dinner with Amosun, phocks Awolowo's wife, wrote Bola Ige's biography, had intellectual discussions with many VIPs. . . hmmmmmmmmm Funny as hell. Me too, I am more closely related to Obama, blood-wise, skin color-wise, language wise, height wise, shoe size wise and missionary position wise ( we phock the same way), than even many Kenyans. ![]() That said, anyone interested in taking ugly-looking Aregbesola to their state in I rest my case!!! |
Gbawe:Very petty. Ignoring the message, attacking the messenger. This does nothing to change the issues. This only shows people who you really are. Arent you the same person always quick to bring up argumentum ad hominem whenever people attack your person? Isnt it hypocritical of you to be doing it now against Beaf, whose only crime is that he brought up a very valid point to be discussed, and here you are going to town on his "cooked up" negative characteristics. You cry blue murder when people talk about your corrupt uncle and how he has robbed the masses blind with his incompetence and association with Tinubu. Dont throw stones, if you live in a glass house they say. The Osun government under Aregbesola, the avatar of liberal hope for at least when Oyin and his PDP goons were in government, has become hopelessly undemocratic, expensive, unfocused, poisoned by corruption and structurally snarled by in-party divisions and nepotism. The government, as Beaf convincingly describes it over the past few weeks, is not only expensive, "bloated" and all the rest. It has become a handmaid to the newest corporate power in town, Athiefnubu Company of Nigeria. The State house in Osogbo has become a hiring hall from which close allies from Lagos are selected and imposed on Osun residents for vastly lucrative government jobs, as well as an emergency cash reserve for Emperor Thifnubu's many known and unknown fronts Beaf has raised a very valid point. Just address it. Aregbesola is one of the many things wrong with ACN. The elevation of money over substance. Aregbesola won the election in Osun in part because he was on ACN, but mostly due to the fact that the judgement that brought him to power was BROUGHT by Tinubu with dirty money. The source of which we all know too well. No one knew who Aregbe was in Osun before he contested for governorship. And he won after JUST ONE TRY. AFTER JUST WON TRY. He defeated Omisore, the shon of the shoil and Ooni's favorite, and Akande, a one time Military Governor of Lagos. How is that possible? Anyway, Beaf has raised a good point, he needs to focus on Osun issues 24/7. Actually, Osun should be on his mind 25/7/366. He is now at the helm in Osun, let him leave Alimosho alone for the natives of Alimosho. Osun people want his undiverted attention. Let him face is phocking business and stay in Osogbo instead of junketing around the world for no obvious reason or gain. It is becoming clearer by the day that the people's faith in ACN's ability to better their lives is misplaced. The role of the so called "NL progressives and intellectuals" should not be to uphold or defend the incompetence and flagrancy and impunity and sense of entitlement of Aregbesola/ACN, but to speak to it, drastically, rationally, and decisively. But then again, that would be too much to ask from someone with his hand inside the cookie jar, but boldly looks up at you, firmly stating that his hand is in his pocket, not the jar. Fashola has got Lagos, let Aregbe take care of business in Osun. |
@Ajanlekoko, Good job with the way you put Kobojunkie in hisher place. People should leave the afairs of Lagos to real Lagosians BTW, I think the 4th mainland bridge is long over due. Ikorodu to ketu alone is a 5 hr drive anytime after 3 pm on weekdays. I am not even kidding you. |
Shell linked to Nigerian military payments John Vidal and David Smith October 4, 2011 Children play on an abandoned Shell oil flow station near Port Harcourt in Nigeria. Photo: AP DOCUMENTS that have emerged from court cases against oil giant Shell reveal that in the 1990s it routinely worked with Nigeria's military to suppress resistance to its activities, often from activists in Ogoniland, in the delta region. https://images.theage.com.au/2011/10/03/2665978/art-shell-nigeria-420x0.jpg Confidential memos, faxes, witness statements and other documents, first released in 2009, show the company regularly paid the military to stop the peaceful movement against pollution, even helping to plan raids on villages suspected of opposing the company. Several thousand people were killed in the 1990s and many more fled. [size=18pt]The revelations come as an investigation by the oil industry watchdog Platform, and a coalition of non-government organisations accuses Shell of fuelling more recent armed conflict in Nigeria by paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to feuding militant groups. [/size] [size=15pt]Shell had been accused in a New York federal court of collaborating with the state in the execution in 1995 of writer Ken Saro-Wiwa and other leaders of the Ogoni tribe. Instead, Shell paid $15.5 million to the eight families in settlement, and key documents never saw light during the trial.[/size] [size=18pt]Among them is a 1994 letter from Shell agreeing to pay a unit of the Nigerian army to retrieve a truck, an action that left one Ogoni man dead and two wounded. Shell said it was making the payment ''as a show of gratitude and motivation for a sustained favourable disposition in future assignments''.[/size] Brian Anderson, the director of Shell Nigeria during those years, said in 2009, after the New York settlement, the company ''played no part in any military operations against the Ogoni people, or any other communities in the Niger Delta, and we have never been approached for financial or logistical support for any action''. But he conceded that Shell had paid the military on two occasions. Platform's investigation alleges that government forces hired by Shell perpetrated atrocities against local civilians. Shell disputes the report, but has pledged to study the recommendations. In Counting the Cost: Corporations and Human Rights in the Niger Delta, Platform says it has seen testimony and contracts that implicate Shell in the regular awarding of lucrative contracts to militants. Last year, Shell is said to have transferred more than $159,000 to a group credibly linked to militia violence. One gang member, Chukwu Azikwe, told Platform: ''We were given money and that is the money we were using to buy ammunition, to buy this bullet, and every other thing to eat and to sustain the war.'' He said his gang and its leader, S. K. Agala, had vandalised Shell pipelines. ''They will pay ransom. Some of them in the management will bring out money, dole out money into this place, in cash.'' The gang fought a rival group over access to oil money. ''The [rival gang] will come and fight, some will die, just to enable them to also get [a] share … Who takes over the community has the attention of the company.'' Platform alleges that in Rumuekpe, ''the main artery of Shell's eastern operations in Rivers state'', Shell distributed ''community development'' funds and contracts via Friday Edu, a youth leader and Shell community liaison officer. By 2005, Mr Edu's monopoly over the resources of the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) had sparked a leadership tussle with Agala's group. The latter was reportedly forced out of the community and a number of people killed. Dozens reportedly died in counter raids. The violence killed an estimated 60 people from 2005-08. Thousands more were displaced. The allegations were largely substantiated by a Shell official, Platform claims. A manager confirmed that in 2006, one of the most violent years, Shell awarded six types of contract in Rumuekpe. Platform said: ''Through Shell's routine practices and responses to threats, [it] became complicit in the cycle of violence.'' Rumuekpe is just one of several case studies examined by the report which alleges that in 2009 and 2010, security personnel guarding Shell facilities were responsible for extra-judicial killings and torture in Ogoniland. Shell insisted that it respected human rights. ''The [Nigerian] federal government … deploys government security forces to protect people and assets. Suggestions in the report that SPDC directs or controls military activities are therefore untrue.'' GUARDIAN Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/world/shell-linked-to-nigerian-military-payments-20111003-1l5a7.html#ixzz1ZlJdlHG1 |
Desola:How many soja bullet can you take in your puccccy. I am not afraid of any revolution, as long as you lead the revolution. Are you down? Before we talk of revolution, can i see the padding of your "idi?" How many "oko" can your "idi" withstand? |
South-East:90% of the students denied by UI are of Ibo extraction, the rest Hausas. I work for the UI and there was no Yoruba involved in the fake result debacle. As Omoluabis, it is against our cultural upbringing to engage in something capable of bringing shame to our family. On the other hand, for our brothers ( & sisters) east of the Niger, toting fake results is how they prove their street cred to their fellow dust-brained, spare-part dealing, human eating Ibos. Its in their blood to take short cuts. Hard-work, perseverance, careful planning arent words you will find in their dictionary. They feel more at home claiming un-earned Ph.Ds, importing and exporting fake medications, stuffing hard drugs in their tiny dirty arses, opening their honey-pot for all sorts of strange men in Europe and the Americas & generally doing anything and everything that would bring shame to a right thinking individual. All in their lust for easy money and fame. |
^^^^ Egbon Becomrichn Oyebambam, How do i get to the internet? |
Yeah, I hope it happens, Again. Remember Biafra. I am hoping and praying for another Biafra. I am sick of the lazy, dirty, stupiddddd Ibos. They need to be wiped off Naija's map. |
South-East:Professor, did you ever attend any of the soon-to-be-demolished illegal schools in Ebonyi or Alaigbo? No wonder, everything about you is substandard? hun? How your friend Ekt-Bear? |
texazzpete:Oloshi ma ni baby yen ke LOL In fact, I need to get into this pastoring business. It is indeed a huge racket, this church thingy. yeye yeyeye baba yeyeye yeyeye baba Ogun orun oooooooooooooooooooooo E so kale wa, e wa gba Tithe ooooooo ROFLMAO |
fummylolah:You asked for forgiveness from god before you could help a fellow man? What a heartless mo'afucker you serve! I dont want to worship your god. He is too authoritarian and greedy. Why does he want all the money to himself? Why? What a freaking greedy, gluttonous god you serve |
Nothing wrong It takes a thief to understand the mindset of another. I say go ahead GEJ! |
e no go better for you for loving a 14 yr old girl wow, wonders shall never cease Signs of end times |
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