₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,330,971 members, 8,448,038 topics. Date: Sunday, 19 July 2026 at 03:26 PM

Toggle theme

DickDastardly2's Posts

Nairaland ForumDickDastardly2's ProfileDickDastardly2's Posts

1 2 3 4 5 (of 5 pages)

PoliticsRe: Before Supreme Court Ruling: A Nairalander Has This Message For PDP. by DickDastardly2(m): 3:37am On Jul 12, 2017
Good talk, but I don't see the thieves taking this advice. It's always about how much they can't lay their filthy fingers on.
PoliticsRe: Zahra Buhari Indimi Stuns In New Photos by DickDastardly2(m): 6:03pm On Jul 11, 2017
Person wife o!
Na so Islam teach? Woman, you are off the shelf. Biko, na your father we wan see angry
PoliticsRe: "Ortomatic 2019", Is Governor Ortom Planning To Go For A Second Term?(pics) by DickDastardly2(m): 6:01pm On Jul 11, 2017
grin cheesy
PoliticsRe: Governor Okorocha Bans Igbo Traditional Leaders From Speaking English Language by DickDastardly2(m): 4:27pm On Jul 11, 2017
Right message from a wrong messanger.
PoliticsRe: Quit Notice: Igbo Not Leaving Nigeria –ohanaeze Lagos by DickDastardly2(m): 4:13am On Jul 11, 2017
Ok
PoliticsRe: Ndume: Buhari's Medical Vacation Has No Time Limit by DickDastardly2(m): 11:06pm On Jul 10, 2017
angry sad
IslamRe: Greeting In Islam And Evils Of Prostration In Greeting by DickDastardly2(m): 10:12pm On Jul 10, 2017
So Saraki did no wrong while greeting the Ooni? New lesson learnt
Nairaland GeneralRe: Biafra Has Not Been Defeated – Wole Soyinka by DickDastardly2(op): 4:03pm On Jul 10, 2017
Truth layed bare up there. Only matured minds make more use of their brain.

Lala nwa mama ..... front page biko grin
Nairaland GeneralRe: Biafra Has Not Been Defeated – Wole Soyinka by DickDastardly2(op): 3:58pm On Jul 10, 2017
Such individual and collective preferences for nation validation offer sincere basis for negotiation and resolution. Once conceded, we proceed to invoke the positives of cohabitation that render fragmentation mostly adventurist and potentially destructive. Habit is a great motivator, but it should not be permitted to transform itself into categorical controls that make any existing condition “non-negotiable.” Independence surely means more the severance of ties with an imperial order. It need not go so far as to dictate the dismantling of its bequests but certainly leaves open the option of placing it in question. Propagators of the inflexible “nationalist” line unabashedly attempt to shut down this questioning. They distort even the stance of those whose preference is that the nation remain one, but base their pleading strictly on a pragmatic platform, not as the manifestation of a divine will. The unity of any nation is not only historically subject to negotiation; nation is itself an offspring of negotiation. So what is so exceptional about those who inhabit the Nigerian nation space? Nothing. Except we wish to situate them outside history. Should Biafra stay in, or opt out of Nigeria? That is the latent question. Even after years of turbulent co-tenancy, it seems unreal to conceive of a Nigeria without Biafra. My preference for “in” goes beyond objective assessment of economic, cultural and social advantages for Biafra and the rest of us. Today’s global realities make multi-textured nations far more compelling, not only for outside investors—tourists included—but equally inspiring to the occupants of any nation space. The West African region is marked by an intersection of horizontally and vertically-formed groupings and identities, the result of colonial intervention in the race for territory. The result has proved often dispiriting but just as often stimulating. It has gone on for long, with developmental structures whose dismantling strikes one as being potentially perilous even for the most resilient and endowed of the resultant pieces. Among many analogies, I have heard and read Nigeria described as a ticking time-bomb. Ironically, I see in this very fear a strong argument for remaining intact. An explosion in closed space is deadlier than in a wider arena which stands a chance of diffusing the impact and enabling survival. My preference for remaining one is thus reinforced by that very doomsday prediction, not by any presumptive law of human association. Among the lessons learnt today is that changing the content of geography texts does not obliterate the fundamental attachment to an idea. The Bight of Biafra was renamed during the civil war—to expunge the secessionist consciousness—but that ruse has clearly failed. Orders from a section of Igbo leadership for restoration of the original name is a warning that the Biafran narrative has not ended. When added to the widely spread observance earlier this year of sit-at-home protests to mark Biafra Day on May 30, it would be wise to respond with a fresh understanding to the pulsation of the new Biafran generation.

Wole Soyinka is a Nigerian playwright and poet who was awarded the 1986 Nobel Prize in Literature.

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/07/biafra-has-not-been-defeated-wole-soyinka/
Nairaland GeneralRe: Biafra Has Not Been Defeated – Wole Soyinka by DickDastardly2(op): 3:57pm On Jul 10, 2017
Many have died at the hands of the police and the military as succeeding guardians of that legacy troop out to reclaim it in defiant manifestations. Amnesty International estimated that at least 150 pro-Biafra activists have been killed since August 2015. Some of their leaders, including the director of their official mouthpiece, Radio Biafra, remain on trial for alleged subversion and treason. Others have gone underground. The war is not over, only the tactics have changed. One could claim that a project of internal secession is unfolding, one that skirts the peripheries of Nigerian laws, testing what they permit, and daring what they do not. As for the victorious side, analysts continue to cite the lingering consequences of the war of secession among the main causes of the nation’s instability, alongside contemporary factors such as mismanagement of petroleum resources, corruption, visionless leadership, etc. Today, secession simmers openly, and is moving steadily beyond rhetoric. It has already taken on a dangerous complement—ejection. A number of combative youth organizations in the northern part of Nigeria recently called for the expulsion of the Igbo from their lands for daring once again to talk about secession. Mainstream leaders have disowned them, but some support has been voiced by individuals within the same adult cadre, including its intelligentsia. Debate is intense, often acrimonious. Sadly however, one is left with a feeling that most participants in this discourse shy away from a fundamental component of nation being, one that transcends the Biafran will to corporate existence. That principle virtually gasps for air under the wishfully terminal mantra that goes: “The unity of Nigeria is non-negotiable.” I have never understood how this is supposed to differ from the dogma of certain religious strains that declare conversion from faith to be an act of apostasy, punishable by death. Nationality, like religion, is only another construct into which one is either born, or acquires by accident or indoctrination. Those who insist on the divine right of nation over a people’s choice seem unaware that they box themselves into the same doctrinaire mould of mere habit, just like religion. In the Nigerian instance, however, the matter is even more troubling. Since the absolutists of nation indivisibility are not ignorant of the histories of other nations and are immersed daily under evidence of the assertive factor of negotiation—be it in the language of arms and violence or the conference table—since they know full well that this process straddles pre-colonial, colonial and postcolonial histories, such speakers unconsciously imply that Africans are sub-citizens of the real world and are not entitled to make their own choices, even in this modern age. This smacks of an inferiority complex, if not of a slavish indoctrination, when we additionally consider how today’s Africa came to be, a land mass of constitutive units that were largely determined by alien interests, and thus, hold possibilities of fatal flaws. Also requiring contestation is the implicit equation of supreme sacrifice with supreme entitlement: Those who say, “We have shed our blood for Nigerian unity, and will not stand by and watch it dismantled.” My observation is that in civil warfare—indeed in most kinds of warfare—civilians pay the higher price in lives, possessions and dignity. We need therefore to eliminate the distracting lament of professionals of violence and confront, in its own right, the issue of the collective volition of any human grouping. This leaves us with the other line of approach, the line of frankly subjective or reasoned, pragmatic preferences. It is a positioning that admits, quite simply, I am a creature of habit and prefer things as they are. Or: I like to be a big frog in a small pond, and allied determinants.

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/07/biafra-has-not-been-defeated-wole-soyinka/
Nairaland GeneralBiafra Has Not Been Defeated – Wole Soyinka by DickDastardly2(op): 3:57pm On Jul 10, 2017
On July 6, 1967, civil war broke out in Nigeria between the country’s military and the forces of Biafra, an independent republic proclaimed by ex-Nigerian military officer Odumegwu Ojukwu on May 30 of that year. The war killed more than 1 million people, many of whom died from starvation. It ended in January 1970 with the reintegration of Biafra into Nigeria. Malnutrition, Red Cross, kwashiorkor, relief flights, genocide, the Uli airstrip used by Biafran planes to elude the Nigerian blockade, mercenaries, the Aburi accord that broke down and led to war—these are some of the memory triggers of the Nigerian civil war of secession that we would like to re-assign. Over a million lives perished—a shameful proportion of them children—mostly through starvation and aerial bombardment. The Nigerian federal government, committed to the doctrine of oneness, had boasted that the conflict would last no longer than three weeks of “police action.” We had learnt much from the politics of other nations, but apparently not from history; the war lasted more than two years. Noble Laureate, Prof Wole Soyika Tormented by the image of a herd of human lemmings rushing to their doom, as a young writer, I made the “treasonable” statement warning that the secessionist state, Biafra, could never be defeated. The simplistic rendition of that conviction in most minds—certainly in the minds of the then-ruling military and its elite support—was that this applied merely to the physical field of combat. Thus it was regarded as a psychological offensive against the federal side, an attempt to demoralize its soldiers while boosting the war spirit of the enemy. That “enemy” had also boasted that no force in black Africa could defeat them. My visit to the Biafran enclave in October 1966 resulted in arrest and detention. During interrogation, I insisted that my statement was meant as a counter to the surge of emotive nationalism and a slavish sanctification of colonial boundaries. Biafra was therefore an expression of that rejection and its replacement with a people’s self-constitutive rights. This specific challenge owed its genesis to memory at its rawest, the memory of ethnic cleansing, whose remedy could not be sought rationally in a campaign of subjugation against an already traumatized community. One question, rhetorical in tone, stuck in my mind for long afterwards. It went thus: “Why should you take it on yourself to make such a statement? Is it because you’re a writer? Who are you to take a contrary stance to the government?” I replied to myself that I had learned to listen. The young man countered that he was on the side of history, and Biafra would be crushed. Not quite, as it turned out. The Biafrans were indeed defeated on the battlefield, but crushed? Today, most Nigerians know better. Biafra has not been defeated. If anyone was left in any doubt about this, the last work of my late colleague, Chinua Achebe’s There Was A Country, has left us re-thinking. New generation writers, born long after that brutal war, have inherited and continue to propagate the Biafran doctrine, an article of faith among the Igbo populace, even among those who pay lip-service to a united nation. Millions remain sworn to uphold it.

Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/07/biafra-has-not-been-defeated-wole-soyinka/
SportsRe: Chelsea Ready To Offer Real Madrid €80million For Morata by DickDastardly2(m): 2:16pm On Jul 10, 2017
angry
PoliticsRe: Nigeria's Presidential Jet Spotted At Stansted Airport in London (Photos, Video) by DickDastardly2(m): 2:06pm On Jul 10, 2017
angry
CelebritiesRe: Chiwetel Ejiofor Celebrates His 40th Birthday Today by DickDastardly2(m): 7:49am On Jul 10, 2017
IGBOs doing GREAT THINGS all over the world cool
PoliticsRe: Final Results Of The Osun West By-election. PDP 9 APC 1 by DickDastardly2(m): 7:17am On Jul 09, 2017
Revenge Voting
PoliticsRe: OsunWest Election:Adeleke Floors Aregbesola’s Candidate,Wins Election Officailly by DickDastardly2(m): 7:15am On Jul 09, 2017
Revenge Vote.
Will be worse for the crooks come 2019.
PoliticsRe: Restructuring: Igbo Blackmailing The Rest Of Nigeria To Give Them Presidency by DickDastardly2(m): 4:18am On Jul 09, 2017
Thunder faĺl on Nigeria
CelebritiesRe: Dunca Mighty Builds A New Mansion, Shares Photo Of His Old Beautiful House by DickDastardly2(m): 7:01pm On Jul 08, 2017
Anchor on the Gate cool cool
CrimeRe: Cultist Girl Post On Facebook About 77 Nite And Threaghten Those Who Comment by DickDastardly2(m): 2:59pm On Jul 08, 2017
Dirty girl ... tomorrow when karma calls she go follow dey shoult "domestic violence"
CrimeRe: Ex-president Goodluck Jonathan’s Son-in-law Shot In Calabar by DickDastardly2(m): 2:23pm On Jul 08, 2017
Violence everywhere like never before. APC came to drag us all into war. And they must all hang along if all finally boils down to that. Useless lying criminals
PoliticsRe: Nigeria Belongs To All Of Us - Acting President Osinbajo Warns by DickDastardly2(m): 12:47pm On Jul 08, 2017
Nigeria belongs to HAUSA FULANI. We want out
PoliticsRe: Nnamdi Kanu Reveals 9 States To Follow Biafra After Referendum by DickDastardly2(m): 7:45am On Jul 08, 2017
buharichild:
Am laughing in swahili, dis fraudster should better change his career to become a comedian, because he's joking, we must put hands together and move this nation forward
You and who will push a country dominated by the NORTH forward? Every sector of the country is dominated by the NORTH and you wish it to continue? CHANGE begins with balancing the one sided equation where the NORTH is a constant.
PoliticsRe: Nnamdi Kanu Reveals 9 States To Follow Biafra After Referendum by DickDastardly2(m): 7:42am On Jul 08, 2017
eshietIntrepid:
Honestly millions are secretly wish and praying Biafra is actualized even when they don't want to be amongst Biafra, they believe once Biafra is realized they also can break away. Everyone is tired of Nigeria "and one tribe is responsible for all the agitations they believe ruling Nigeria is their birth right".
Exactly what we talking about. Let everybody join hands and balance the NIGERIAN EQUATION where everything is in the hands of the NORTH.
PoliticsRe: Nnamdi Kanu Reveals 9 States To Follow Biafra After Referendum by DickDastardly2(m): 7:40am On Jul 08, 2017
Nnamdi Kanu is the real BRINGER of ROBUST CHANGE. NIGERIA has been dominated by HAUSA-FULANI. We should all join hands and break the CHAIN of NORTHERN DOMINANCE.
The Only reason people agitate is because of this imbalance in the system. Once every Nigerian feels equally treated, I will support ONE NIGERIA. Even NNAMDI MANY will have no option. But as long as NORTH continue to LORD it over OTHER NIGERIANS, agitations will continue.
PoliticsRe: Those Asking For Biafra Are Senseless - Obasanjo by DickDastardly2(m): 3:51am On Jul 08, 2017
Obasanjo is evil and evil is Obasanjo. Na Nnamdi Kanu for una. Destroying your evil hearts with truth. NO PEACE FOR THE WICKED.
PoliticsRe: Governor Aregbesola Asked People To Fast In Osun & Was Mocked by DickDastardly2(m): 8:31pm On Jul 07, 2017
grin
CelebritiesRe: ”Olisa Adibua And Others Sabotage Me On Radio” – Blackface by DickDastardly2(m): 8:25pm On Jul 07, 2017
Frustration personified.
SportsRe: Lionel Messi, His Wife And Two Sons (Photo) by DickDastardly2(m): 2:43pm On Jul 07, 2017
Cool

1 2 3 4 5 (of 5 pages)