Brizzy404's Posts
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Na to change name abi na to attach money to the name be thing |
Ok... Battle of the crowds Anyhow buhari wants it. Buhari’s Campaign Residential Zombs: hahaha... So much love for buhari, see crowd....atiku should just go and rest. Buhari has won Atiku's Campaign Residential Zombs: It is not by hired crowd. Elections are not won by the number of people in a rally neither is election won online... Sai baba |
Feel free to join https://naihub.com Currently building momentum. Nigeria business only forum. Easy, fast and simple layout |
Seems this guy wants me to redirect amadioha his way |
Shame on APC |
News has been going round today about the presidential candidate of the APC skipping the debate slated for today by 7pm. If Buhari skips the debate, is there any reason for others to attend? |
Village people naim dey follow u up and down |
God should help us scatter them up to presidential level |
https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2019/01/19/poll-stop-harassing-opposition-leaders-us-congress-warns-buhari/?amp The United States Congress has warned President Muhammadu Buhari to stop the harassment of the opposition political leaders, following recent perceived crackdown on some political figures in the country. The warning by the US Congress is coming on the heels of a N156 million fraud allegation against former Vice-President and Presidential candidate of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP) by the federal government. The UN Congress warning is contained in a bipartisan resolution urging the government of Nigeria, along with Nigeria’s political parties, to ensure electoral accountability and transparency in the upcoming February election. A statement made available to THISDAY by Zachary Seidl of the US Congressional office, said the resolution, which has been adopted by the US Congress, was introduced on Wednesday, by Rep. Karen Bass, a top Democrat serving on the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, along with the Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Elliot L. Engel, the top Republican serving the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa Congressman Chris Smith, Nigeria Caucus Co-Chairs Representatives Steve Chabot and Shelia Jackson Lee, and Representative Gregory Meeks. “The upcoming elections in Nigeria, Africa’s largest democracy and economy, are critical to the future of the nation. Reports of President Muhammadu Buhari’s apparent crackdown on non-violent protests and harassment of opposition leaders are extremely concerning, as well as the ongoing violence that has been perpetrated by extremists, particularly in the Middle Belt region. The violence must be stopped, along with any subversion of the electoral process. The Nigerian government must see to free and fair elections, which this resolution calls for,” said Ranking Member Smith. They urged President Buhari to copy the smooth transition in 2015 from the ruling party to the opposition, as their commitment to the strengthening of democracy in Nigeria. “I am proud to be an original cosponsor of this legislation, which reaffirms the United States’ long-standing commitment to strengthening democracy in Nigeria. In 2015, Nigeria became another democratic role model for countries on the continent, showing that a credible electoral process could result in the peaceful transition of power from an incumbent to the opposition. Regardless of the outcome, my hope for the upcoming presidential, gubernatorial, and National Assembly elections is that Nigerian politicians, citizens, and the electoral commission will build on the successes of 2015 to further consolidate democracy in Nigeria,” said Chairman Engel. The Congressmen harped on the imperative of conducting free and credible elections. “It is critical that Nigeria remain a role model in its region for democratic institutions and work to ensure free and fair elections. There can be no democracy without full confidence in the results of an election, and it is vital that there is full transparency so that February leaves no doubt as to the outcome,” said Representative Meeks. According to Representative Bass, “It is in the best interest of the United States to maintain a strong bilateral relationship with a politically stable, democratic, and economically sound Nigeria that can play a leadership role in the region and the continent more broadly. “A credible, transparent and peaceful election this coming February would further consolidate democratic gains achieved over the last two decades. Nigerians are deeply committed to democracy and ensuring transparency in electoral preparations, which would build public confidence in the electoral process. This resolution sends the message that the people of the United States will continue to stand with the people of Nigeria in support of peace and democracy.” Still on US-Nigeria collaboration, Representative Chabot said, “As Co-Chair of the Congressional Nigeria Caucus, I appreciate the importance of a strong bilateral relationship with Nigeria and applaud its citizens for their commitment to democracy. “There is still work to be done, however, to ensure that Nigeria’s upcoming elections are transparent, peaceful, and credible. Our resolution lays out the necessary steps to achieve these goals, and urges Nigeria to conduct elections free of violence. Conducting high-quality elections will strengthen our bilateral relationship, help consolidate Nigerian democracy, and be an example to other countries.” |
G |
Where is buhari... He better not escape because the shame of not coming will be more than the inevitable embarrassment he is going to bring on himself |
bidv:There arr alot ranging from frozen food suppy(very profitable but with risk), wears, e-commerce or any other related online business etc |
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It has always been the position that the presidential candidate of PDP cannot visit America. He is currently trending on Twitter with his visit to Washington DC.
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Hahahahahaha |
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Twitter reaction to "The Candidate" featuring the President Muhammadu Buhari and his Vice Professor Osinbajo
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#buharimustdebate The guy might collapse that day |
Is there anything he is aware of... Somebody that don't read |
Because it's a shameful something |
Omen apc no dey shame... . No dey stress urself |
How much this guy pay nairaland sef wey we no go rest for him matter |
Should i be bothered with that? |
https://naihub.com/d/13-how-to-make-monetary-wealth-in-5-years-or-less Create yourself a mathematical equation that scales, then work that equation to death while acting, assessing, and adjusting along the way. Few people understand that all of our actions and career decisions implicitly tie us into an equation. This equation can be relatively simple or extremely complex. At the end of the day, it will be your self-directed EQUATION that determines how much wealth you can (or cannot) accumulate. Equations that scale make their owners rich. Equations that do not, make their owners slaves to the system of “trading time for money.” The beauty of this equation is that you can control its basic variable parameters. But most people DO NOT because most people don’t even know this equation exists! If you decide to get a job and paid N100,000 — congratulations, you just created yourself an equation to which you are now bound to: Monetary Wealth = (rate of pay) x (months worked) If you work 12 months, your equation is N100,000 X 12, which equals N1,200,000 This mainstream advice is the standard prescription for mediocrity. And it’s clearly not a method to create monetary success in less than 10 years, much less 5. As you can see, the problem with “trading your time for money” as a conduit to wealth is that the variables are extremely limited and uncontrollable. You cannot work 3,000 hours a day at your job in one week. You cannot force your company to pay you N1,000, 000 per month. There are only so many hours in a day, and years in a life. The problem remains. TIME CANNOT BE SCALED. You cannot work 1000 hours in day. You cannot live to be 500 years old. You cannot ask your employer to give you a raise from N1,200,00/year, to N10,000,000. Your hands are tied because the equation you’ve given yourself SUCKS. Instead of trying to scale time, start scaling units— units separate from your time. This means you become a creator of relative value. Creators produce products, services, books, information, inventions, it doesn’t matter so as long as: A) Your creation can eventually become separate from your time. B) You can scale your creation to a level that can change your life. The other metric is relative value. Whatever you create, it must be relatively valuable in the global pool of options. This doesn’t mean you have to be the next Steve Jobs — it just means to skew value on one or two attributes; faster shipping, improved operation, better logistics, better service, better UI, better this, better that. Entrepreneurship is about improving, more so than inventing the next hot thing. So let’s assume you invent a cool new product that appeals to women who are mothers. Your equation now becomes: Wealth = Product Profit X Product Sold. This is where things change. Now you can SCALE a part of your equation. There are millions of mothers in one country. Additionally, you control your product operations and can fiddle with pricing, sourcing, and other operations integral to your product. So if you sell 100,000 products at N20 profit each, you just earned N2,000,000. If a IG influencer raves about your product in IG and you get a rush of traffic for 1 week, selling 4,000 units, you make N80K or more in a week. Your ceiling for wealth can be influenced by your execution, marketing, and decision-making. You cannot do this under a “time trade” regime. This is how you create wealth beyond the BS preached in the mainstream (get a job, save your money blah blah) Of course I’m not suggesting this is easy. The key is to change the equation, change the probability, and change your potential outcomes. Nothing is easy, but neither is getting up at 6AM, fighting traffic for 50 years, and retiring with a gold watch on 50% of your income. cc:lalastilala, mynd44 |
How much is the land sef |
netx:https://naihub.com/d/12-problems-entrepreneurs-face |
Na una way... Nobody was expecting otherwise |
Because family is everything and they get a chance to make one |
Once this one don smoke small igbo him go start to talk anyhow.... African queen wey dem don chop d money finish |