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PoliticsRe: Anioma And Igbo Trends On Twitter by bennyxt: 6:50pm On Apr 26, 2020
Afonjas, oyah Igbo thread ooh, come in. Umu anumanu!
PoliticsRe: Senator Uche Ekwunife Distributes Food Items To Anambra Central (Photos) by bennyxt:
Anambralstson:
Tummy Tummy noodles is seriously making money this period, Thanks God he has the capacity
Below is Okorocha palliatives to his constituency
This is what we call strategic business. State government must make sure they are protected; I don't mean support financially(they can fend for themselves) but make sure the business environment is conducive for them to be around for strategic reasons, especially times like this. Same with Seahorse, Coscharis Farms and other food and Drug businesses. I'm proud of my people during this period and also thank you for the media work you are doing.

PoliticsRe: X-raying The Ministry Of Humanitarian Affairs Under Covid-19 –onyema Dike by bennyxt: 6:58am On Apr 26, 2020
Afonjas, oyah come and tell how beautiful she is.
PoliticsRe: Igbos,yoruba, Idoma, Igala, Edo & Nupe - Have A Common Ancestor by bennyxt: 6:51am On Apr 26, 2020
EzeUche:
[img]http://whoruleswhere.files./2010/11/657px-[s]nigeria_benin_cameroon_languages.png[/img]

The similarities in our languages is just too common to say that we did not descend from a common ancestor. So in essence, we are all brothers and sisters who came from the same family tree.

Our languages diverged and now we have different groups.

This is a secret that no one wants to discuss but it is staring at us.

We do not descend from any group in the Middle East. Our ancestors came from Central Africa near the source of the White Nile. [/s]
God forbid Igbos are related to wicked afonjas. Afonjas stop opening these usless threads and claiming it's Igbos. Igbos don't even look like you people.
PoliticsRe: Abaribe Cautions Against Lockdown Extension by bennyxt: 6:16am On Apr 26, 2020
back2sender:
Chilling in Abuja
He has been in Abia since the lockdown.
PoliticsLagos "We Are Poor And Hungry, Yet We’ve Received No Cash From FG" Say Residents by bennyxt(op): 1:26am On Apr 26, 2020
The grey-haired woman has heard of government palliatives, food and a sum of N20,000 the Federal Government is giving out to vulnerable people like her to cushion the effect of lockdown but none has yet to come her way. “I have not received any palliatives from government,” she disclosed.

“I have become sick because of hunger. If not for God and help from some generous people, maybe I would have died by now,” the grandmother bemoaned as she began to share her ongoing excruciating moments.

She said, “I used to sell drinks but I stopped three months ago when thieves broke into my shop. I have three children. Only one of them is working. He is into furniture making, but since the lockdown started, he is unable to get money to take care of us.

“The first two weeks of the lockdown, I went out to pick used plastic bottles and sell them so I could get some money to feed my younger children and grandchildren living with me. I sold a dozen for N50. One day while I was going to Oyingbo to sell five dozen I picked, I fell on the road around Railway. Since then, I stopped picking plastic bottles. It was one of my husband’s friends who came to give us some food last Sunday.”

The Federal Government has been giving N20,000 relief fund to vulnerable persons to cushion the effects of the lockdown after the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd), imposed lockdown on Lagos, Ogun states, and the Federal Capital Territory. Other state governors have also initiated similar measures to contain the spread of the virus.

According to a report by The ICIR, as of April 9, the North-West region is the highest beneficiary of the Conditional Cash Transfer in the country, with 561,758 households benefitting from an allocation of N500bn.

Others are North-Central, 321,434; North-East, 109,442; South-South, 67,696; South-West, 37,904; and South-East, 27,977.



READ ALSO: My brother’s abductors who killed his son during operation gave me N200,000 share — Suspect who planned brother’s kidnap

The report further showed that the highest number of beneficiaries is in Katsina State, Buhari’s hometown, at 133,227.

Other states with the highest number of beneficiaries are Zamfara, 130,764; Jigawa, 99,044; Kano, 84,148; and Plateau, 78,430.


A section of Otto-Ilogbo community
As of 12pm on Tuesday when Njoku spoke with Saturday PUNCH, the family was hoping on providence for breakfast. These days, eating twice a day is a luxury for the family sheltered in a makeshift wooden structure.

“Even when my husband’s friend brought food for us, we ate two meals per day. We ate one late morning and took another meal in the evening. I heard that government promised to give vulnerable people like us N20, 000 each but I have not received anything.

“Apart from our CDA (Community Development Association) chairman who gave us some foodstuffs, we did not get any palliatives from government. As long as the government insists people should not go anywhere and we did not get anything from them, it is like they want to kill us,” she added.

Her husband, John, relived the same sad tale. Pale and worried, the hunger his stout posture concealed was exposed by his forlorn looks.

He said, “I have a small shop at Iddo (a neighbouring community) but I can’t go to shop since the lockdown started. Feeding is a problem. It’s my friend who gave us some staples. We are just managing whatever we get. We have not received any cash from government; not even food.

“If government wants us to stay home for now, they should provide what to eat for us. Government promised to give poor people N20,000 but I did not receive anything.”

The couple’s plight reflects the grim reality thousands of poor people in Lagos with a population of about 22 million have been battling since rising cases of COVID-19 forced the nation’s commercial hub into lockdown.

Their neighbour, Ayoka Ajide, said to be in her 70s, has grown frail as a result of sickness worsened by hunger and inability to get prescribed drugs. She leaned on the shoulder of a youth to come out of her hut that Tuesday noon. Her gloomy voice was evident of someone in dire need of rescue from the grip of poverty.

“I am from Oke-Onigbin in Kwara State. I started living in this place some months ago when I fell sick,” she croaked, taking a long pause to muster some strength.

“My children live in Lagos and they are petty traders. They give me some money which I use to survive. They have been trying their best but since the lockdown started, they could not do their business again. I have been eating whatever comes my way for three weeks now.

“I rely on little food I get from my neighbours; I have not received any food item from the Lagos State Government let alone N20,000 cash from the Federal Government. I am appealing to them to assist me. I am sick and need to get drugs,” she appealed.


Ajimuda
Locked in hunger’s grip

Donning thin-framed dark glasses and decked in a blue polo with white stripes, 78-year-old Abiodun Ajimuda emerged from a small wooden kiosk where he sold provisions. His wife sat behind him, folding her arms and covering her chest with a long blue wrapper.

For about 26 years, the couple, who hailed from Igbokoda in Ondo State, had been living in a slum Ifesowapo, Otto/Ilogbo Extension in the Oyingbo area–an old residential neighbourhood in Lagos beautified by colonial architecture.

Since the lockdown started, Ajimuda also said he and his wife had been expecting the N20,000 relief package promised the vulnerable people by the Federal Government but had not received a dime.

He said, “We are aware of the coronavirus lockdown and since it started, we have been observing all the directives from the government, including hand-washing and social distancing.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE: Southern Kaduna kicks as bandits kill seven

“We heard about the N20,000 promised the vulnerable aged people like us but we have not collected any money from the Federal Government. My wife and I have just been coping with the meagre foodstuffs that we have. Since the government said we should not go out to work, we’ve been staying indoors but they should also fulfil their own promise. We don’t have any money.”

Ajimuda said he and his wife would have not relied on the Federal Government’s relief money if their six children had been able to work and send them stipends as they usually did.

“Our children send us stipends but they too are complaining that they can’t go out to work due to the lockdown. We have spent all the little money they sent before the lockdown started,” he said.

“We need government’s help and that is why we are obeying all the rules they laid down. I have not eaten any meal today (1pm on Tuesday). We are suffering too much.

“As we are cooperating with the government, they should also help us. If they can give us the N20, 000 they promised us, we will use it to feed during this lockdown,” he added.

It had also not been easy for Lambe Amosa, a widow from Ora, Kwara State, who lives at Oyingbo.

Although she trades in palm kernel nuts, Amosa said she had been unable to sell since the coronavirus lockdown began. Because she is poor and unable to eat even two meals in a day, the widow, who is perhaps in her 70s, pleaded with the Federal Government not to forget aged people like her who had not received the relief fund.

“I have not collected the N20,000 the Federal Government promised us. They should help me with whatever they have. I am hungry and my children too are unable to send me anything,” she said.


Bello
Living every day on the off chance

Similarly, Moruf Bello, a widower from Oyo town who is in his 60s, said he had been unable to feed himself and two grandchildren living with him because of the lockdown.

“I have two children who usually send me stipends but since the lockdown started, they couldn’t give me any money because there is no money. My wife who used to take care of me died about two years ago.

“I have been managing the foodstuffs I have at home. I have not collected any N20,000 from the Federal Government but I hope they remember me and other aged people. I don’t eat three meals a day. Sometimes once, sometimes twice,” he said.

For another widow, Abebi Akinpelu, who lives at Ebute Metta, if not for some foodstuffs that her church donated to her when the lockdown started, she said she might have died of hunger.

She also complained that even though she was a poor elderly person, she had not received the N20, 000 money that the Federal Government promised to give people like her.

She said, “I don’t have anybody. My church helps to provide certain foodstuffs for me once in a while. I have not collected the N20,000 from the Federal Government.

“I have not been given a dime. I was only given three small paints of rice and beans each some days ago by some people.”

As of 1 pm on Tuesday when Saturday PUNCH spoke with Akinpelu in her slum dwelling, she said she had just gone to buy noodles on credit to have her first meal for the day.

“I am suffering. My only child is in Côte d’Ivoire and she sends money once in a while but this coronavirus has disrupted everything. I want the government to support me with the N20,000 they said they are giving the poor and the vulnerable. The money will help in some ways,” she said.

Experts fault FG’s palliative sharing method

A lawyer and social commentator, Mr Liborous Oshoma, stated that the Federal Government Conditional Cash Transfer was fraught with controversy and shrouded in secrecy.

He said it was laughable that a government lacking a comprehensive list of underprivileged people could claim to have disbursed millions of naira in one week.

The lawyer said, “First and foremost, it is shameful and disgraceful that we don’t even have data for sharing anything to the vulnerable. We don’t have the number of the vulnerable among us. We can’t even say for sure the number of retirees despite the fact that the government does the audit of these retirees year-in-year-out.


Amosa
“The first time they said they wanted to share money to 2.5m Nigerians; in less than one week, the Federal Government said it had shared money to more than a million people. Some people even raised a poser that the Federal Government that finds it difficult to share voter cards has suddenly become effective in sharing cash.

“It was shrouded in mystery and controversy so much that the National Assembly wants to get involved. ‘’

Oshoma said the government ought to address the controversy surrounding the disbursement by setting up mechanisms conforming with the realities across the country.

He added, “The government said they would give cash to the poor of the poor. That means you can be poor and not be poor. Some people have said the North is the poverty capital of the country. If you have six geopolitical zones, does that mean there are no poor of the poor in other geopolitical zones apart from the North? Can’t you take like 200,000 people from each geo-political zone rather than concentrating it in one place?

“Even in the North, I have many friends who complained that they didn’t receive a dime. That now takes us further to the fact that where was the money shared? It seems they just go to IDP (Internally Displaced Persons) camps, give money to few people there and then tell the rest of Nigerians that they have shared the money in the North. Why is it difficult for the money to get to Lagos, Ondo, Oyo and the entire South?

“With the data they brought out, what was shared in Katsina State alone was almost at par with what they shared in the entire South. And if you go to Katsina now, you will find it difficult to get 100 persons in Katsina who received that money.”

The lawyer also urged the government to make provisions for those engaged in small and medium scale enterprises, noting that more people would be pushed further down the poverty ladder if it failed to address the effect of the lockdown.

READ ALSO: Nigerian-British accuses Benue of wrongful COVID-19 diagnosis

An activist and political commentator, Mr Tunde Esan, said it was leadership failure for government to ask the vulnerable, as well as every other citizen to stay at home without providing any palliatives for them.

He also said the Federal Government was not displaying accountability in the manner it was distributing the relief fund.

Esan said, “We have failed leadership in Nigeria because figures are being thrown out without any facts to back them up. Personally, I have yet to see a beneficiary of the N20,000 palliative. Recently, there was a member of the House of Representatives who complained that there was nobody in his constituency who had received the money. He asked if the money was being given to ghosts. Also, the National Assembly recently faulted the Social Investment Programme for excluding poor Nigerians. This is billions of naira we are talking about.

“I think it’s a high level of irresponsibility to lock people down without feeding them. You are asking them to stay indoors without making provisions for them? Even in the North, who are those being given the money? Let them publish their names. Why is there so much secrecy about this whole thing? Let each state publish the names of those being given the money and the amount spent so far. At least, provide some accountability. I think the government has failed the people.”

In this period, Esan said governance meant leading and providing solutions, amid economic uncertainties such as the future of the price of oil, which the country heavily depends on to make income.

“If coronavirus doesn’t end today with oil price drop and no vaccine discovery, how will the government feed the people? In other places, be it in the Middle East, North America, or Europe, their governments are telling their people not to bother about feeding.

“They are feeding them. But we are not ready in Nigeria. We have failed leadership. You’re asking the people to stay at home without feeding them. In other countries, people want to get out of home because of boredom, not because of what they want to eat,” the activist said.

A professor of sociology at the Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Edo State, Stephen Omorogbe, said it was a fallacy that some people in a region were poorer than some others in another region.

“We don’t have any statistics to determine that. As a matter of fact, some people who think they are rich are poor if we go by the indices of poverty. There are poor people everywhere,” he said.

Omorogbe said a good way to alleviate the suffering of poor people was to distribute the palliatives across the country to those who really deserved them.

He said, “Also, the government should reexamine the method of the palliatives distribution, and this is where they should bring experts in. The government may have good intentions, but do the people implementing the intentions have the expertise?

“It is not about how much is available for distribution but how well planned the process of distribution is. If you want to give money to the people, why don’t you transfer it to their accounts, rather than making them queue?”

The don pointed out that lack of data could hamper the effective distribution of the palliatives.


John
“In the United States and other countries, they have data of everybody, including the aged. Hence, it is not difficult to reach everyone. Here in Nigeria, we need to do more so that when interventions of this kind come again, we can have a blueprint that we can use so that the people who really need the interventions can be reached,” he added.

Another sociology lecturer at the University of Ibadan, Oyo State, Dr Omobowale Ayokunle, said the government’s definition of poor Nigerians appeared to be premised on the World Bank definition of people living under $1 per day.

The scholar urged the Federal Government to reconstruct the social intervention list of the poor to include those living on the fringes of poverty.

He said, “The first thing we have to address is the social intervention list of the poor which is based on the World Bank definition of poverty of people living under $1 per day. You find people living at that level more in the North but it does not mean the South does not have people who are poor.

“They (Southerners) may not be living under $1 per day but they are on the fringes. They may be working as porters and conductors earning N400-N1,000 per day. But with the lockdown, they cannot work again and they are poorer now. So, what is supposed to be done is to have another list that will accommodate those people.

“I think Southern governors should engage the Federal Government on the need to reconstruct the welfare list of the poor in Nigeria. We need an urgent poverty reduction agenda that will capture those who are on the fringes. By the definition of World Bank, they may not be poor but in actual fact, they are poor.”

We’re working on expanding social register – FG

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Rhoda Iliya, said the N20,000 relief fund was being paid to people who were already on the Conditional Cash Transfer Programme, an initiative of the Federal Government which started since 2016.

She explained that there were 2.6 million beneficiaries in the social register and they were usually paid N5,000 each per month.

“But because of the lockdown due to COVID-19 pandemic, the President directed that instead of giving them N5,000 each per month, they should be paid N20,000 at once for four months. So it is for people who are already in the social register,” she said.

However, Iliya said the President had directed the ministry to expand the social register to accommodate one million more vulnerable persons, thereby increasing the number of beneficiaries to 3.6 million.

“It’s a new directive and it’s being worked on right now. The persons will be selected from the 36 states based on the modalities that are on the ground.

“There is an agency called the National Social Investment Programme, which is under our ministry handling this new directive. It is working right now to add one million more vulnerable persons to the social register,” she said.
https://punchng.com/were-old-poor-and-hungry-yet-weve-received-no-cash-from-fg-lagos-vulnerable-persons/

PoliticsRe: Where Is Nnamdi Kanu? by bennyxt: 9:33pm On Apr 25, 2020
potent5:
[s]Nnamd Kanu, the charismatic leader of the IPOB has recently become scarce, very much unlike him in view of recent events.

The leader of IPOB never let's any opportunity to promote IPOB ideals and criticize the Nigerian government pass him by.

However, Nnamdi Kanu has not been as vocal as used to be, even when rumors swelled that he is dead. His silence has emboldened persons who hitherto would not discuss him openly, to not only do so but also make deriding comments about him.

Therefore, it has become necessary to ask the question, where is Nnamdi Kanu?[/s]
PoliticsRe: Video:Resident Robbed A Truck Of Foodstuff As Lockdown Enters A 2nd Week In Kano by bennyxt: 9:26pm On Apr 25, 2020
Afonjas and Nortth and hunger

PoliticsRe: Omoyele Sowore From Revolution To Cooking And Frying Pan March by bennyxt(op): 9:17pm On Apr 25, 2020
Frankdoz8:
if I wake up from sleep and hear Yoruba's beating the drum of war, I will go back to sleep, Cowards! ~ IBB
IBB was even nice. If my door is locked and I hear or see afonjas shouting war war, I'll open all my doors and windows.

PoliticsRe: Omoyele Sowore From Revolution To Cooking And Frying Pan March by bennyxt(op): 9:13pm On Apr 25, 2020
Corrinthians:
[s]Stand in one place like Kanu. One place like King Japa, from Nigeria to Israel to UK and finally to his grave, at the sight of a small pistol.

Stay one place indeed. grin grin

Pray Kemi doesn't see this trash[/s]. cheesy
PoliticsOmoyele Sowore From Revolution To Cooking And Frying Pan March by bennyxt(op): 9:06pm On Apr 25, 2020
Afonjas will never change. Zero shame as men. They are naturally, innately and congenitally inconsistent. Stand in one place like Nnamdi Kanu...stand there and don't change. Jesus Christ!

https://www.reactiongifs.us/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/lol_idi_amin.gif
Foreign AffairsRe: Kim Jong-un Reportedly Dead After Botched Heart Surgery - TMZ by bennyxt: 8:06pm On Apr 25, 2020
x
CrimeRe: RE: Married Woman In Jos Porn Video Commits Suicide by bennyxt(op): 8:00pm On Apr 25, 2020
ajailer:
[s]go to all the brothels in Lagos and you will see that majority of the girls thr are ibos yet they will always go about inviting other tribes. civil war na part one, part two for una is loading and this time that Lagos y'all bastards claim to have a share in will be inhabitable for u. na house boys and house girls una go all be Las Las for agbero[/s]s
PoliticsRe: Nnamdi Kanu Should Apologise To Apostle Suleman Immediately by bennyxt: 7:56pm On Apr 25, 2020
Supremeboss:
[s]True leadership entails a lot and requires total control over your utterancds, especially when you command a pool of followers as large as IPOB members.

The self acclaimed leader of IPOB clearly does not understand these principles and it is clearly evidenced in his recent statements.

A leader unites while a ruler scatters, from the look of things and the lingering ugly scenarios it is audible even to the deaf that Biafra may come but certainly not in the days of Nnamdi Kanu. Read on https://naijaresources.com/nnamdi-kanu-should-apologise-to-apostle-suleman-immediately[/s]/
CrimeRE: Married Woman In Jos Porn Video Commits Suicide by bennyxt(op): 9:18am On Apr 24, 2020
Some of you Igbo people have zero clue the evil afonjas are perpetrating on you daily. You read things but can't see the subtle evil in it. In this thread below that made it to front page, afonjas claimed the name of perpetrator of the crime in Jos is "Emeka." Emeka has no last name name abi? What these demonic and evil afonjas are doing that you foolishly (I'll insult some of you) fail to see is to incite local Jos people or Plateau to see you as the those bringing vile and crime to their state and they will start killing you. They do this subtly but you cannot see it. Everybody know that 99.999% of the porn business in Nigeria are run by afonjas. Igbos don't do such lazy business, that's what afonjas do. Afonjas desist from your evil!

https://www.nairaland.com/5660319/married-woman-jos-porn-video
PoliticsRe: A Biafran: My Verdict On Nnamdi Kanu And The Biafran Struggle by bennyxt: 9:07am On Apr 24, 2020
nijabazaar:
[s]Check my profile and previous posts wella.

Dont be a useless fart[/s]

PoliticsRe: A Biafran: My Verdict On Nnamdi Kanu And The Biafran Struggle by bennyxt: 9:05am On Apr 24, 2020
nijabazaar:
[s]I strongly believe in Biafra and would gladly stake my existence for it.

Nnamdi Kanu is a Narcissistic Megalomaniac. He lacks all the attributes of a modern democratic leader. Give this guy enough presidential power and watch Hitler reincarnated but I trust We, igbos, he cant have enough powers. Someone will do the greater good to assassinate him.

I believe this Biafran struggle has come to a different stage, Nnamdi had created the needed wholeness amongst the new generation of young igbos but He is Moses, he isn't destined to lead us to the promised land. The job belongs to a more forthright Man....A Joshua[/s].
Same person as the OP. Afonja stop this your vicious evil ways, stop it!
PoliticsRe: A Biafran: My Verdict On Nnamdi Kanu And The Biafran Struggle by bennyxt: 9:03am On Apr 24, 2020
Orubebe01:
[s]my brother I must tell you the truth. I love Nnamdi Kanu more than you love him but my problem with him is that he shop stop talking against other tribes cos it can't get us Biafra[/s].
PoliticsRE: An Explanation On Whether South South Has Inferiority Complex by bennyxt(op):
Afonjas creating useless divisive threads to further divide the East. Most of you easterners don't see the evil these people are perpetrating. Just absolutely wicked. Naturally evil! Believe me God don't know these people!
PoliticsRe: A Biafran: My Verdict On Nnamdi Kanu And The Biafran Struggle by bennyxt: 8:58am On Apr 24, 2020
Orubebe01:
[s]I am a confirm Biafra and I dream and hope that one day that Biafra will come but exactly what you noticed is what I complained to him on his Facebook page about 5yrs back.

I told him that I don't like the way he talk against other tribes and call them names. There was a time when kumuyi planned to come for a crusade in imo or Abia some years back and he kicked against his coming. i asked him what is going to be the relationship between Biafra and other countries that will share border with us cos definitely we are going to share border with maybe some Hausa or Yoruba. Are not going to see them as our friends and neighbours?

So, if he really want to get us the Biafra, he should stop talking against other ethnic groups and focus on his mission that is restoring Biafra.[/s]
Same person as the OP; deceiving himself.

PoliticsRe: A Biafran: My Verdict On Nnamdi Kanu And The Biafran Struggle by bennyxt: 8:56am On Apr 24, 2020
supercase1:
[s]Athough I am sympathetic to the biafra struggle and have a lot of respect for Nnamdi kanu and the ipob struggle, I am beginning to see concealed flaws in Nnamdi kanu leading the struggle for biafra.
Nmadi kanu is a stunch tribalist:I am a Nigerian and proudly Igbo man but I think there are some hidden signs unnoticed behind Nnamdi kanu and his struggle.he is a chronic tribalist.i have listen to so many derogatory remarks he made regarding the yorubas and the fulanis.even if some or maybe the fulanis are guilty of some of the allegations levelled against them.attacking the yorubas which are non fulanis with derogatory and tribalist comments shouldn't be condoned and he should see the igbos as superior to other tribes.he attacked apostle Johnson Suleiman in a live broadcast and lambast ibos attending a church led by apostle Johnson Suleiman (note I am not a Suleiman Omega ministries church member just a realistic person),this is the height of tribalism in his hidding agena. and I belief if biafra comes Nnamdi kanu might not garantee the absolute freedom of other tribes in biafra.
*Nnamdi kanu might become a dictator:once again from his radical behavior for the liberation of biafra from nigeria,am beginning to see signs of dictatorship in him.i don't think he would give biafrans the free and fair government we all crave for,he might hold until power like the likes of musleveni of Uganda and Paul kagame of Rewanda despite been librators of their country and people,they held unto thetpart of dictatorship and allowed their ego to override their sense of justice and helping the oppressed.
*Freedom of religion won't be garanteed:if biafra becomes a country with Nnamdi kanu as supreme leader,I don't think the freedom of worship would be garanteed as he would rule biafrans according to his wish and ideologies.he might make Judaism the ultimate religion and persecute others for their fate.
CONCLUSION
although biafra would come maybe someday but with Nnamdi kanu championing the course, I am a bit skeptical and suspicious of how it would be governed by him and his style of politics.
I always stand for justice, and fairness and not a paid propanga champion.points I laid out aren't based on propanganda but on reality.[/s]

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