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Descartes's Posts

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 (of 199 pages)

PoliticsRe: Photo: Fashola Unveiled His Successor by Descartes: 9:34am On Dec 04, 2014
Hmmm...
Good to know smiley
PoliticsRe: Photo: Fashola Unveiled His Successor by Descartes: 9:24am On Dec 04, 2014
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel_Suswam

Compare and Contrast

Suswan vs Hamzat shocked

Do you see the similarity in pictures
PoliticsRe: What Is This Nairaland 1and 2? by Descartes: 6:44am On Dec 04, 2014
Seun:
Don't you love surprises? Isn't it fun to try to figure things out on your own sometimes?
Oga Seun the Naira sign in the "Nairaland" is also a surprise? wink

Just noticed that your site was offline for about 120seconds yesterday when you were experimenting on the new development.

Kudos for your ingenuity. smiley

PoliticsRe: Tam David Says President Thinks Like A Schoolboy by Descartes: 6:36am On Dec 04, 2014
Freedom of speech and Democracy in action smiley
PoliticsRe: Tam David Says President Thinks Like A Schoolboy by Descartes: 6:06am On Dec 04, 2014
shocked
PoliticsRe: Tam David Says President Thinks Like A Schoolboy by Descartes:
Hmmm...so GEJ has graduated from the Kindergarten(apologies to Akande) to School boy. cheesy
PoliticsRe: Photospeaks: Who Is Your Choice? by Descartes: 8:23pm On Dec 03, 2014
It seem that these APC apologists have not seen beyond the picture displayed above undecided

Have you asked yourself; why is Atiku and Okorocha at the centre stage while the political tataboys like Buhari and Nda Isaiah flanked by them both from the both sides? undecided

Go through the picture above, look at it diligently and come back and tell me what you observed wink
PoliticsRe: 8,000 Delegates To Storm Lagos For APC National Convention by Descartes: 7:46pm On Dec 03, 2014
OrlandoOwoh:
I wish Buhari all the best.
I see Kwankwoso and Isaiah-Nda stepping down.
Stepping down for Buhari, hmmm...

Let's hope these political " maradonas" in APC will not give him Jonah Jang treatment cheesy
PoliticsRe: 8,000 Delegates To Storm Lagos For APC National Convention by Descartes: 7:43pm On Dec 03, 2014
You know that Atiku political sagacity can not be overemphasized wink

Anyway,

Sai Okoroji for Lagos 2015 cheesy
WebmastersRe: Leadership Newspaper Website Hacked by Descartes: 7:10pm On Dec 03, 2014
Hack kor jack ni undecided
PoliticsRe: America Is Now Waiting For Nigeria To Collapse! by Descartes: 5:56pm On Dec 03, 2014
Phame:
bastard, i've always known u to b stuupid. If u are tired of Nigeria, kill urself. Idi0t!
Is that a Western chameleon or the Northern parasite ranting? undecided

I don't give a damn angry
PoliticsRe: 2015: APC Contract Prevents Unsuccessful Aspirants from Defecting After Dec 10 by Descartes: 5:50pm On Dec 03, 2014
Phame:
We've just shown Nigerians that we mean well for them.
Allah ya bada sa'a!
Descartes, just shut ur mouth there.
Wetin I do ? undecided
PhonesRe: Microsoft Lumia X Comes 2015 See Leaked Specs by Descartes: 5:25pm On Dec 03, 2014
My question is; who is responsible for all these leaks in Tech world? undecided
PoliticsRe: Exclusive report on Nigerian Army’s Renewed Offensive Against Boko Haram by Descartes: 5:09pm On Dec 03, 2014
Good development
PoliticsRe: Why Buhari Will Get Less Than 1% Igbo Vote by Descartes: 5:01pm On Dec 03, 2014
Eziachi:
I know that I am, but thanks for reminding me.
Please sir, forgive him for such brazen display embarassed
PoliticsRe: Why Buhari Will Get Less Than 1% Igbo Vote by Descartes: 5:00pm On Dec 03, 2014
zlatansomto:
You're a bloody fool •
Habatically habatical!!! You went too far dear embarassed

That Man is a grandpa you know. sad

You better apologise to him now cos your tone of language was bit too harsh and our people are not well-known for insulting ELDERS embarassed embarassed


Wisdom is a function of Humility and indeed the Principal thing cool
TravelRe: Air Fares Fall As New Local Operators Board by Descartes: 4:46pm On Dec 03, 2014
komek:
The airport has been operational since 2yrs ago.
OK.
Thanks for your concern smiley
PoliticsRe: Terrorism: Military Gets New Order From Jonathan, Gowon by Descartes: 2:57pm On Dec 03, 2014
Anything that can crush the Islamic ragtags and their sponsors/sympathers both online and offline is welcomed by me angry

The time is now to deal with these ragtags once and for all
PoliticsRe: Gunmen Snatches Lamido’s Vehicle Injigawa by Descartes: 2:37pm On Dec 03, 2014
bruno419:
u sound like 1
undecided undecided undecided
TravelRe: Air Fares Fall As New Local Operators Board by Descartes: 2:35pm On Dec 03, 2014
komek:
Are u in Nigeria at all?
Meaning undecided
PoliticsRe: Gunmen Snatches Lamido’s Vehicle Injigawa by Descartes:
And so? undecided

Robbers have been snatching up people's vehicles and this one on Sule Lamido is not an exception.

Anyway, that Auwal of a driver should be seriously interrogated and possible charged for conspiracy angry
PoliticsRe: Where Is The Hope For The Youths And Vulnerables?(a Case Study Of APC) by Descartes: 2:21pm On Dec 03, 2014
Paddy paddy government
PoliticsRe: 2015: Yerima Joins Presidential Race by Descartes: 2:13pm On Dec 03, 2014
Is it the same Yerima we know or another yerima ?
PoliticsRe: 2015: APC Contract Prevents Unsuccessful Aspirants from Defecting After Dec 10 by Descartes:
“We believe whoever will fly our flag will have
an understanding of the problems of Nigeria.
The score was very narrow and very high. The
least scored 62 per cent and the highest scored
78 per cent.”-APC


They should publish the Cumulative result of the aspirants against their names so that we the electorates and party faithfuls will know who got that lowest mark angry

I definitely know who got the highest and lowest marks and your guess is as good as mine wink
PoliticsRe: 2015: APC Contract Prevents Unsuccessful Aspirants from Defecting After Dec 10 by Descartes:
“I, on behalf of myself and my primary
campaign organisation, undertake to accept the
outcome of the primaries and actively support
whoever emerges as the winner and shall not
decamp to any political party or in any way
obstruct the smooth prosecution of the
presidential campaigns.”
This is just like telling chronic prostitutes not to engage in their businesses embarassed

Can prostitutes be committed to their marriages having sampled different men/women? undecided I doubt.

Surely this oath of secrecy is not meant for political harlots like Atiku and Okorocha who are veterans as well as Professors in the field of Political Harlotry lipsrsealed

Surely, such "arrrangement/agreement" to whom it may concern is dead on arrival grin
PoliticsRe: How Nigeria May Collapse In 2015 - Must Read By Rudolf O. by Descartes:
cramjones:
Excellent piece. Must read!

-CramJones

Forget the urban legend that there is a United States CIA’s plot to fulfil their purported prediction that Nigeria would cease to exist in 2015. If Nigeria collapses in 2015, the country to be held responsible, besides Nigeria itself, is Saudi Arabia.

Before you raise your hands in protest, it won’t be for the reason you think.

Nigeria has a very high ranking on all the lists of the most-unstable countries in the world. Last month, a UK-based risk analysis firm, Maplecroft, grouped Nigeria with the worst ten in Africa. Heading the team of most-unstable nations are Somalia and Sudan. Others are South Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, Libya and Egypt. The ranking looked at conflict, terrorism and political pressure.

In another list compiled by Foreign Policy Group and Fund for Peace in 2013, Nigeria was ranked 16th in the world with a 100.7 points on the failed state index. The index indicators are factors like demographic pressure, human rights, uneven development, economic decline, de-legitimization of the state, public service, security apparatus, factionalized elite and others.

The good news is that Nigeria is also on the list of the highest growing economies in the world. Some of the richest people in the world are Nigerians, too. So, all things being equal, the economic factor will balance out the instability factor and allow Nigeria to soldier on beyond 2015. In fact, that is how Nigeria has been soldiering on, defying all predictions of doom. When Nigeria last visited the precipice, which was during the civil war, it was able to pull back and survive, thanks to the oil boom that followed.

In his speech during the declaration of his interest for a second term, President Goodluck Jonathan touted Nigeria’s economic growth as one of his accomplishments. At 7% growth per year, Nigeria is one of the top performing economies in the world. The president gloated, “Nigerian economy is on the right path.”

Nigerian economy is not on the right path. In fact, it is in distress. Even the eternal optimist, the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, is beginning to sound the alarm bell.

Here is how we got to where we are:

You must have heard of the declining crude oil price. Unlike past fluctuations in price of crude oil, this one is so bad that everyone is going to feel the effect. If the austerity measures announced by Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala have not affected you directly, the recent devaluation of the Naira would.

All these are happening because Saudi Arabia is locked in a mortal fight to destroy the US crude oil production. Experts believe that the United States, with its 11 million barrels production a day this summer, became the world’s largest oil producer, beating the former number one, Saudi Arabia. Most of America’s new oil is produced through fracking, an exploration system that extracts oil from shale rock using the process known as hydraulic fracturing or fracking. This process of splitting rocks using high-pressure liquid is expensive and is believed to be profitable as long as crude oil price is high. The thinking in Saudi Arabia is that allowing crude oil price to fall below $60 a barrel will knock off the US shale production.

At the last meeting of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC, in Vienna, the cartel failed to do what is needed to increase price – that is, cut the production quota of each of the 12-member countries. While Venezuela, Nigeria, Iran, Iraq, and Ecuador pushed for cut in production, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and the UAE opted for retention of the current production quota. That failure led to a further drop in price of crude oil to a five-year low. At $72 per barrel of Brent crude, Nigeria’s oil is now selling below Nigeria’s 2014 budget benchmark of $77.5 per barrel.

What this means is that Nigeria will find a way to make up the short fall in revenue. Technically, nothing will be going into the Excess Crude Account until oil price recovers. And whatever was there has been all but depleted. Initially, Nigeria raided its External Reserve to support its expenditures but that move was not sustainable. That led to the decision to devalue the Naira and reduce pressure on the Central Bank to keep burning dollars in foreign reserve in support of the Naira.

On the American side, the fall in oil price has been a foreign policy political weapon. America’s lack of dependence on foreign oil means that it doesn’t have to worry about every little crisis that flares up in the Middle East. In other ways, the fall in oil price means that countries like Russia, Venezuela, Iran and Syria are under economic pressure. That helps America’s foreign policy entanglements with these countries. Iran is being forced to stay on the table to discuss its unclear ambition by a combination of sanctions and falling oil price. Russia has lost over $100 billion from falling crude oil price and is under severe economic pressure that it is moderating its ambitions in Ukraine and other parts of Eastern Europe. In Syria, ISIS that has been financing its campaign of terror from illicit oil sell is now having difficulty selling oil in a world market that is glutted. For Venezuela, America doesn’t have to worry about the radical leftist government in the country when declining revenue is forcing the government to deal with a growing number of disaffected citizens.

Given these economic and political conditions, there is little interest in America or Saudi Arabia to see an increase in oil price soon. What this means is that Nigeria must brace itself for a crude oil price that could fall below $60 a barrel. In trying to calm the fear of Nigerians, Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala assured Nigerians that the country would withstand crude oil price of $60 a barrel.

But what about a $20 dollar a barrel price of crude? Will Nigeria still stand or will it collapse? If by next year the price of crude oil falls to $25.42 a barrel that it was in May 1999 when President Olusegun Obasanjo’s started his first term as president, Nigeria may collapse. Here is why.

Lets begin with Nigeria’s budget. Nigeria’s budget can be divided into four parts: statutory transfers, debts services, recurrent expenditure and capital expenditure. In 2014, Nigeria budgeted N4.64 trillion. This is divided as follows: N399.7 bn or 8.61% for statutory transfer, N712 bn or 15.34& for debt service, N2.43 trillion or 52.35% for recurrent expenditure and N1.1 trillion or 23.7% for capital expenditure. The United Nations Development Programme recommends 70% of the budget to Capital Expenditure and 30% to Recurrent Expenditure.

In the last ten years, Nigeria’s budget allocation has not come any close to the UNDP’s recommendation. The best we have performed in the last ten years was in 2010 when Recurrent Expenditure got 56.77% while Capital Expenditure got 40.23%. Actionaid Country director, Hussaine Abdu, lamented about Nigeria’s inability to produce a progressive budget in line with UNDP recommendation. “No country develops under such provisions,” he said, “because what grows a country or builds the economy is the amount of investments you are making on infrastructure and other structural issues that you require to strengthen your economy.”

Looking at what the government could do with the current economic austerity, the budget would be a good place to start. With debt service taking up 15.34% of the budget, recurrent expenditure at 52.35% and statutory transfer at 8.61%, the only place that the government has room to manoeuvre without having to fire workers or upset bureaucrats, is in capital expenditure. So instead of increasing it, the government may be forced to decrease it further, never mind the recent non-budgeted ordering of N9.6 bn cooking stoves.

In the last four years, crude oil price has hovered around $100 a barrel. The Nigerian government has been swimming in petrol dollars. Looking at government figures, economists determined that Nigeria’s total crude oil sell came to about $470B in all 5 years of President Jonathan’s administration and $489B for Yaradua, Obasanjo, Abdusalami, Abacha administrations combined. Adjusted for inflation, the numbers are $488.8B for Jonathan and $594B Yaradua, Obasanjo, Abdusalami, Abacha combined. The boom is reflected in the budgets, too. In 2004, Nigeria’s budget was N1.79 trillion. In the last year of Obasanjo’s administration(2007), Nigeria budgeted N2.26 trillion. But the lowest budget in the last 5 years of Jonathan’s administration was N4.2 trillion.

The additional money did not just come from the revenue from crude oil. Nigeria’s gas production within this same period has tripled. In his declaration speech, President Jonathan reported that, “in terms of gas supply, we have grown from less than 500 million cubic feet per day, 4 years ago, to about 1.5 billion cubic feet per day currently. Our goal is to attain 4 billion cubic feet per day, over the next 4 years.”

These increases in revenue had not translated into a stable economy that could withstand a shock as normal as a change in oil price. In fact, as more money came, Nigeria became more unstable.

If there is a worst time for Nigeria’s economy to be in distress, it is now. With the insurgency in the Northern Nigeria, each day causing more havoc, creating more victims, more destructions and more distrust in the economy, Nigeria is potentially coming face to face with that perfect storm it has avoided for decades.

If Nigeria collapses in 2015, don’t look anywhere else for the blame; put the blame where it belongs- squarely at the feet of Nigeria. In the last 15 years of democracy and relative peace, Nigeria had a chance to build a strong economic and political base. But like all the other opportunities the nation has had, we squandered it. For so long, Nigeria has been in denial about the unsustainability of the corruption within its system. In time of boom, the nation can endure the waste, but in time of austerity, corruption will eat up what remains of the nation.

In January of 2012, a presidential committee on public service reform discovered that top government officials in Nigeria take home N1.126 trillion a year in salaries and allowances – out of a national budget of N4.6 trillion. These public officers constitute just 0.013 per cent of Nigeria’s population. They include 108 senators who each make over $1.7m a year. That alone is $183.4 million (N28 billion). Then the 360 members of the House of Representatives each takes home over $1.2 million, which amounts to $432 million (N65bn). Again, each state governor collects an average of N200 million naira a month just as security vote. In a year, they each get N2.4 billion naira. So, our 36 governors take home N87 billion naira on security votes alone every year. Add our 38 ministers and ministers of state, 100 plus heads of federal and state agencies, over 432 state commissioners, 774 local government area chairmen or caretakers, almost 10,000 councillors and you will understand where the N1.126 trillion goes.

Nigeria had a chance to trim down this N1.126 trillion waste but the leadership of the country, who are the beneficiaries, did not have the will-power to do so. Like the N260 billion naira spent from 2009 to 2013 on ex-Niger Delta militants, these wastes are nothing but hush money paid to postpone doing the right and difficult things needed to birth a modern socio-political structure that is fair and balanced, a structure that is sustainable in the long run.

Sadly, the day of reckoning is here. The consequence of Nigeria’s self-denial is staring us all in the face.

A ministry of finance committee led by Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede looked at the subsidy claims of 2011 and discovered that the Federal Government had overpaid importers and marketers of petrol by a whopping N430 billion naira. In 2012, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala proudly announced that Jonathan’s government had recovered N29 billion naira from oil marketers out of N234 billion certified as stolen. Whatever happened to the rest of the stolen money? Have we stopped paying subsidies two years after? Of course, not. Whatever happened to the promise to retool and repair our refineries? How much did we waste trying to repair our refineries? How much are we paying in subsidies today? Shouldn’t the subsidies we are still paying be coming down now that oil price is falling?

You will think that those handling our economy will be answering these questions publicly. But no, they are not. We are beneath them.

The subsidy scam is part of the elaborate corruption industry that feeds the mammoth Nigerian unsustainable structure. It has become so entangled in the fabric of the nation that a half-hearted attempt at disentanglement will result in chaos. What could not be done in a time of economic boom cannot be done in a time of economic crisis. A lot of people in Nigeria have been fed fat by corruption. In crunch time, as the nation tightens its belt, the corruption industry will morph and move and when pushed hard will marinate the nation and serve the country for the forces of destruction to eat up.

Since 2009 crude oil thieves have been increasing the amount of Nigeria’s oil that they steal. According to the 2012 Ribadu Report, crude oil thieves in 2011 stole over 100,000 barrels a day. That is over $3.6 billion dollars a year. Some foreign sources put the figure of oil theft at 250,000 barrels a day. Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala in 2012 told the Vanguard newspaper that the loss to oil theft could be up to $12 billion that year. If Nigeria had closed avenues for oil theft, that oil could be shipped abroad and refined for Nigerian use, allowing the citizens to enjoy low fuel cost like other oil producing countries when they pay for just the cost of shipping and refining.

Meanwhile, as oil price falls, the oil thieves are not going to go out of business. Instead, they need to steal more to make up for the losses due to falling price. With their children in the most expensive schools abroad, dozens of girlfriends to show the good things in life and with private jets to maintain, the oil thieves and all the other looters of the Nigerian economy, are going to do whatever is necessary to maintain their lifestyles.

In the political arena, the 2015 election is shaping up to pitch two candidates, like none that we have ever seen, against each other. Oh, yeah, they probably have met each other in a presidential election before, but they have been transformed in some unique ways. In past elections, we used to have two distinct options that fitted into our overall narrative, which was that “the best is impossible and the worst never happens.” A foreign newspaper once described the two candidates offered to Nigerian electorates thus: “one is a fool surrounded by idiots while the other is an idiot surrounded by fools.” What is shaping up for 2015 is an unpalatable option for a weary nation. The option for 2015 is simple: If Nigeria votes for candidate A, Nigeria is finished. If we vote for candidate B, Nigeria is finished. That’s a no-win situation for a country of 170 million people.

The scenarios are clear enough to those of us who care to disturb our so-called beautiful dream.

The one thing that Jonathan administration can do to reverse the impending collapse is to acknowledge in words and in deeds that what is not sustainable is really not sustainable. And that includes this government itself.

- Rudolf O.
What a masterpiece from an erudite Rudolf Ogom Okonkwo smiley

Please fellow esteemed readers I sincerely apologise for what this act of quoting this lenghthy article might have caused you.

I only did it for reference purposes
Please bear with me

Facts are Sacred!!!
PoliticsRe: Scaling Of National Assembly Gate Our Lawmakers’ ‘finest Hour’ – Soyinka by Descartes:
Princewill1:
SLAVE! Is this all you have to say?? I thought you are creative enough to run this game??
Anyway you are a MISTAKE OF CREATION !!!
And who cares what a gambari SLAVE have to say??
My dear don't mind the perpetual slave who masturbàtes on every affairs of Ndigbo angry

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