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PoliticsRe: 2019: Buhari To Decide Participation In Presidential Debates - Presidency by DMathematical: 9:48am On Apr 11, 2018
You come across as eloquent.

But let's face it, is the electoral process even meaningful if candidates are too busy to defend their ideas in a competent debate?

Is it a crime to support descent standards in our electoral process and practice of democracy as a whole?

Is there no limit to what is defensible in the name of loyaltyhuh




igbodefendercom:
President Buhari has a right to participate in debates or refuse to do so. There is no where in the constitution or in the electoral act where it is stipulated that a candidate must attend debates.

Giving the extraordinary circumstances our nation is facing, it is not inconceivable that Mr President may not be available for some or all debates.

This is whithout prejudice to our belief in debates as a constituent part of the electoral process.
PoliticsRe: Brilliant Questions: Are Nigerian Youths Ready For Leadership? By James Ibori by DMathematical(op): 10:33am On Feb 27, 2018
Nigeria has always been ruled by young people. Leadership is not about age, it is about what you have to offer!

We should have:

Too young to rule - 35 down

Too old to rule - 70 upwards




obailala:
Are Nigerian youths ready for leadership?

The simple and short answer to this question is 'No! Nigerian youths arent ready for leadership.'

In the 60's when youths were ready and hungry for leadership, they never waited for leadership to be given to them, they simply took it. And to date, those youths of the 60's still rule because the successive next generation of youth still arent ready or hungry enough for leadership.

How I wish Lalasticlala or Seun or the other MODs can push this thread to the front page and the point Ibori is trying to make will be clearly seen from the responses. Majority of the responses will be in the line of "the older generation doesnt want to give power to the youths." And then of course, the next line of action will be a rain of curses thrown at the older folks, the messanger (Ibori) and at each other.

Power is not given, it is taken; and the daY Nigerian youths realise this, that is the day the Nigerian youth would be ready for leadership.
PoliticsBrilliant Questions: Are Nigerian Youths Ready For Leadership? By James Ibori by DMathematical(op): 8:46am On Feb 27, 2018
Former Delta state governor, James Ibori, has asked if the youths are truly ready to assume political positions. In an article he wrote recently, the former governor who went to jail in London for stealing from the coffers of the Delta state government when he served as governor, argued that it is not enough to demand for a generational shift in the political class. According to him, what is more important is to ascertain if the Nigerian youths have something to offer when they come into office. Ibori said

According to the former governor, unlike the Nigerian youth, some of the world’s leaders including France President Emmanuel Macron who was 39 years old when he was elected President and former US president Barack Obama, had something to offer before coming on board.

“The election of a Macron in France may have galvanised a section of Nigerians to think that the time is now. Macron did not contest for office solely on the basis of being a ‘youth’; he ran in a national election based on concrete ideas.”

He argued that the call for President Buhari not to run for a second term because of his age is baseless.

''This age-related argument should not be aimed at Buhari. The constitution gives him the right to seek the presidency for two terms. The argument for and against him should be based on his record of achievement. The young ones need to make the necessary sacrifice, study the problems facing the society, master how to solve the problems of the various parts of the Nigerian federation. Has the youth trumped the old in behaviour, morality, leadership, integrity and frugality? How have our youth fared in the professions, the military and the civil service? Do they even hold out any hope for the nation?” he said

According to the former governor, ironically, the problem of Nigeria has been caused, in large part, by exuberant young men who were at the helm of affairs in the first decade of the nation’s independence.

Read his article below

The call for power shift from the older to the younger generation is fast gaining currency. This political discourse has occupied the public space in recent times and understandably so. The question is what level of leadership are we talking about and what age suitability should be considered; below age 40 or 50 or 60? Or even below age 30? We are yet to interrogate the idea that the failure of leadership may not necessarily be age related.

Closely related to this idea is the proposition that this failure is actually across all sections of society. That is to say, it may not be restricted to political leadership alone because other sections of the society that are by nature exclusive to the youth are also afflicted. For example, university students’ unions and the financial sector where we have a large proportion of young people in senior management positions. Have these young men and women exhibited the leadership qualities lacking in the older generation? We must, of necessity, answer this question. We also have young men and women as ministers of God. Many of them are at the helm of affairs in majority of the churches in Nigeria. Has the youth trumped the old in behaviour, morality, leadership, integrity and frugality? How have our youths fared in the professions, the military and the civil service? Do they even hold out any hope for the nation?

One problem that appears to have bedevilled Nigeria is the “one solution fits all” and “easy way out” syndrome. We are quick to proffer ill-thought out solutions to all our problems; transfer political power to the youths and all our problems are solved.

When nine years ago Americans voted in a 47-year old Barack Obama as their President, many Nigerians enthused that American politics had embraced youth power. That Obama had attended the best schools in his country, volunteered again and again in providing free services to his communities, and had been involved in politics as early as he could, and the fact that he had been elected into the country’s Senate did not matter in their reasoning. The only thing that registered was that a black person below age 50 was President. Many never bothered to study his trajectory to power. Had they done that, they would have realised that Obama did not become President simply because the United States of America decided that the old must give way to the young or whites to blacks. No, Obama became President because, at that moment, he was adjudged the best among those who offered themselves for election. He had built up some national gravitas. He had been noted as having something to offer his nation, something great enough to even transcend whatever obstacles that had blocked the way of every black politician before him. In as much as his election was a black revolution, it was actually personal to Barack Obama.

There was no national consensus before the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi began to defend people for free. And when he began that public service in 1969, he was a young lawyer. Let it not be forgotten that when the late Chief Anthony Eromesele Enahoro was jailed because of his struggle for Nigeria’s independence, he was just 21 years old. The Wole Soyinkas, the John Pepper Clarks, and the Chinua Achebes that we celebrate today achieved greatness while they were in their youth. Achebe wrote Things Fall Apart at the age of 28. Ben Enwonwu became a master sculptor in his youth. There was no national consensus that literary greatness should be taken from the old to the young then. And when the Ben Okris and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichies took over the mantle of becoming great writers, they begged for no let or leave from the old. They just did what they had to do. They tasked themselves until they achieved greatness.



The election of a 39-year-old Emmanuel Macron in France may have galvanised a section of Nigerians to think that the time is NOW. Monsieur Macron did not contest for office solely on the basis of being a “youth”; he ran in a national election based on concrete ideas. He ran against popular Eurosceptic and anti-immigration candidates. He believed in something. It was not because someone mobilised the French voters to support a young man. In electing Macron, France voted a left of centre politics.

Macron has been in public service for decades. He studied Philosophy at Paris Nanterre University before obtaining a Masters degree in Public Affairs at Sciences Po. He graduated from the École nationale d’administration (ÉNA) in 2004. He worked at the Inspectorate General of Finances, and later became an investment banker at Rothschild & Cie Banque. Before entering politics, he was a senior civil servant and investment banker. He joined the Socialist Party in 2006 and was appointed Deputy Secretary General in François Hollande’s first government in May 2012. He was appointed Minister of Economy, Industry and Digital Affairs in 2014 under the Second Valls government, where he pushed through business-friendly reforms. He resigned in August 2016 to launch a bid for the 2017 presidential election under the banner of En Marche!, a centrist political movement he founded in April 2016, and won the election on 7 May 2017. Macron made history as the youngest President in the history of France, but he actually paid his dues. He learnt the ropes and acquired experience. He was tested to the hilt. He did not scream that he represented the youths whose turn it was to take over power.

A good look at Nigeria’s political history will throw up the fact that, ironically, the problem of Nigeria has been caused, in large part, by exuberant young men who were at the helm of affairs in the first decade of the nation’s independence; civilian and military alike. Major Patrick Chukwuma Nzeogwu was just 28 years old when he pulled off his January 15, 1966 coup. Gen. Yakubu Gowon, under whom Nigeria fought a civil war, was 32 when he became Head of State and could not prevent the war that started when he turned 33. Even the first military Head of State, Gen Thomas Umunakwe Aguiyi-Ironsi was 41 when he mounted the saddle. Late Chief Obafemi Awolowo was in his 30s when he started the Egbe Omo Oduduwa as a university student in London. This association later metamorphosed into a political party, the Action Group. The late Sir Ahmadu Bello was in the same age bracket when he rallied the North together through the Northern Peoples Congress and the late Mallam Aminu Kano was also about the same age when he decided to speak up for the rights of the “talakawas”. Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe was just 30 years old when he returned from the US and began his Pan-Africanist struggle in Ghana. Their failures and successes cannot and should not be laid at the doorstep of age. It was not because they were old or young men. The reason for their failures must be found elsewhere.

Nigeria’s third military ruler, the late Gen. Murtala Muhammed entered office at 38. Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo succeeded him at 39. Alhaji Shehu Shagari became President while in his mid-50s, so he was not a Methuselah. Actually, Nigeria has favoured the youth in elections. That Obasanjo and President Muhammadu Buhari returned to power was because they ran on their records as leaders in their youth. Obasanjo returned exactly 20 years after his military presidency and Buhari, 30 years after his overthrow. That the same charges for which Buhari was overthrown are still being levelled against him in his democratic government may show that if there is any fault in him, it could be ascribed to his personality, not age.

We can still remember the likes of the then youthful Chief Jim Nwobodo and Abubakar Rimi as state Governors. In the early 1990s the two contending parties were led by two relatively young men; Chief Tom Ikimi of the National Republican Convention (NRC) and Ambassador Babagana Kingibe of the Social Democratic Party (SDP). And they were new breed politicians in that they were untainted by the politics of either the First or the Second Republics. The military regime that initiated the Third Republic was headed by a relatively young Commander-in-Chief, Gen Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida. Yet, that Republic did not take off. The “gerontocrats” that have ruled Nigeria are just Obasanjo and Buhari. President Goodluck Jonathan was in his 50s when he took office on the demise of President Umaru Yar’Adua. His failures would have to be located anywhere but age. Umaru Musa Yar’Adua himself became President at 56 but was hobbled by health challenges. An “old” President Obasanjo showed he had capacity, tenacity, strength of character, but for many other characteristics which are not the subject of this article, his administration would have truly transformed Nigeria and his personal reputation would have soared like South Africa’s Nelson Mandela’s.

The choice we face is not that of “Paedarchy” or “Paedocracy” versus gerontocracy. It is one of strength, character, vision, courage, capacity, intellect and a deep understanding of Nigeria. This age-related argument should not be aimed at Buhari. The constitution gives him the right to seek the Presidency for two terms. The argument for and against him should be based on his record of achievement. Fifteen years ago, when President Buhari first contested against President Obasanjo, he was already 60. The issue of age did not rear its head then because President Obasanjo himself was in that age bracket and he exercised his right to a second term. Age is definitely a major determinant of good leadership especially in a democracy such as ours. Among my colleagues in the set of 1999 to 2007 Governors, were young, charismatic and intellectually sound Nigerians. Some of them danced to the drumbeat of anti-democratic and dictatorial tendencies not out conviction but out of convenience and conformity. What we need is courage, character and vision as age has nothing to do with good leadership.

I plead with Nigerians who extend the France/Macron example here to please learn from history. John F. Kennedy’s presidency at age 41 was just another election and no generational power shift. Some 20 years later, the US elected a 69-year-old Ronald Reagan who teamed up with 55 years old Mrs. Margret Thatcher of Britain in a conservative alliance to give the West a new direction. Of course, after that Britain elected a young Tony Blair at 44 into office and its present Prime Minister came into office at the age of 60. So, in both Britain and the US, policies, ideological considerations and the likes have been affecting elections, not age. Remarkably, as this generational discourse is going on in Nigeria, the US has put a 75 year-old Donald Trump in office. The Israeli leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, is 69, Japan’s Shinzo Abe is 63; his grandfather Kishi Nobusuke served as Japan’s prime minister from 1957 to 1960, and his great-uncle Sato Eisaku held the same post from 1964 to 1972. His father, Abe Shintaro, was Japan’s foreign minister. In Nigeria, someone would have called that a dynasty. China is right now on the ascendancy and its President is the 64 years old Xi Jinping. Norway’s female Prime Minister, Erna Solberg, is 56. Sweden’s Prime Minister Stefan Löfven is 60; this welder has no university degree, but launched into politics from his post as a trade unionist. Canada’s Justin Trudeau was elected Prime Minister at the age of 43 but he has been a parliamentarian since 2008.

Politics is a game of ideas, policies and numbers. The Nigerian youth needs to pay the required price, make the necessary sacrifice, study the problems facing the society, master how to solve the problems of the various parts of the Nigerian federation by first appreciating that Nigeria is a federation and that these federating units have dissimilar problems and that one size fits all approach to solving Nigeria’s problems will not work. The youths have to be disciplined enough to attend political meetings, play party roles, canvass for votes, identify the needs of their various peoples and seek to effectively represent them. They have to acquire organisational abilities, learn from the mistakes of the past and put themselves up for public service. There are young men and women doing just that across the country without making a song and dance of it. Plum offices will surely come to them as early as they did to Barack Obama, Canada’s Justin Trudeau or, France’s Emmanuel Macron or a few Nigerians including myself.

Every nation is a work in progress. Governance is constant since it is what sustains the different nations of the world. Nigerian youths should be proactive and not tarry hoping that leadership will be thrust on them. It has never been so and it will never be so.

Source: https://www.lindaikejisblog.com/2018/2/unlike-obama-and-macron-are-nigerian-youths-ready-for-leadership-james-ibori-asks-says-most-of-the-problems-in-nigeria-are-caused-by-exuberant-young-men.html
Jobs/VacanciesRe: New - International Grants, Scholarships and Business Funding Opportunities!!! by DMathematical: 7:09pm On Feb 26, 2018
QuestionMac:
Hello bro.
Have you given up on the thread?
Lollz... E done tire me
PoliticsRe: How Yar’adua Picked Jonathan As Running Mate, By Ali by DMathematical: 1:41pm On Feb 25, 2018
True & Lovely . . .


MyPWisINCORRECT:
If Odili had been VP

PDP would have been in power till date

South-South would have been the political power house

APC wouldn't have existed

Tinubu would have been on exile

Lagos by now would have been a PDP state

The entire South-West would have been PDP

Some statesmen would have disappeared for good

Maybe, Buhari would have been in Daura since 2007

In turn, herdsmen would have advised themselves to build ranches

Shekau's surbodinates would have been the ones hunting him down after receiving Ghana-must-go, not the Army

In Odili's political dictionary, the word "opposition" DOES NOT EXIST
PoliticsRe: How Yar’adua Picked Jonathan As Running Mate, By Ali by DMathematical: 1:39pm On Feb 25, 2018
There is a pattern in Nigerian Leadership . . .

and it is not good.

.

PoliticsRe: 2019: Buhari Meets APC Governors In Daura Today by DMathematical: 8:20am On Feb 16, 2018
PMB the great! Kukuma just tell dem say you no do again.
BusinessRe: External Reserve: Across The US$40bn Threshold, And Counting by DMathematical: 3:45pm On Feb 08, 2018
FIRS + Custom duties = Money at Hand


GavelSlam:
Does budget = Money spent ?


Does budget even = Money at hand?
BusinessRe: External Reserve: Across The US$40bn Threshold, And Counting by DMathematical: 11:51am On Feb 08, 2018
According to the PMB led FG, In 2017 alone:

- FIRS made 4 trillion naira

- Customs 1.5 trillion

- With Extra Billions USD in foreign reserves

His budget for 2016, 2017 & 2018 (4, 5, 8 trillion) is bigger than all of Jonathan's Six years combined!!!

Oh . . . and yet you ask on his behalf, for what money to use?



GavelSlam:
If Jonathan neither completed the roads nor left sufficient funds in the reserves what money are you expecting him to use ?

At least you are not even disputing the roads.

I can't ask you to receive sense when the basic compartment to receive it is not even available.
BusinessRe: External Reserve: Across The US$40bn Threshold, And Counting by DMathematical: 11:41am On Feb 08, 2018
"the FG resolved to engaging the billionaire Dangote" . . . Definitely not the Buhari led FG. The Dangote refinery has been 7 years in the making!


rxmusa:
President Muhammadu Buhari is indeed working. Oh God please give him more wisdom and guidance to lead this nation to greatness.

Fuel Scarcity! Before you crucify Mr President....

Most people propose two solutions and blame the president for inability to select one of the two. The popular suggestions are:-
A--Fixing our refineries
B—Return of fuel subsidy regime
I am not in the oil industries but I read what happens.
Before we discuss further let’s state some facts:
1- It’s obvious landing cost of petrol and its distribution to fuel station, is quite above 145 naira per litre.
2- Daily Fuel consumption in Nigeria is about 35 million liters
3- Our four refineries installation capacity is 445,000bpd.
4- When refined, a barrel of crude produces average of 13% pms (petrol)
5- Therefore our refineries (The four we have) can produce about 8 million liters of petrol per day when they operate at full capacity
6- Fixing the obsolete refineries (of 1983) can cost govt about $2bn (close to a N1tr)
7- Returning the subsidy regime for petrol to be sold at N145/liter will cost govt about 1.5bn naira daily, equivalent to 550bn naira annually. Of which a lot will be looted by marketers crudely.
8- Average share of FG from monthly FAAC is N235bn naira monthly, N2.8tr annually. Of which 65% goes to salaries and other recurrent expenditure. The balance is less than a trillion.

Knowing it cannot build a mega refinery for lack of resources, the FG resolved to engaging the billionaire Dangote, and giving him all kind of support to build a mega refinery for the benefit of all.
If we insist on subsidizing oil now, remember the FG may not be able to provide the required Forex to Dangote for timely completion of his project.
If we insist on fixing our refineries, we may end up with “biyu babu”, spending the money without getting the result.
Now, considering above, it will be futile to spend the limited resources we have on fuel subsidy or trying to fix refineries.
We have only one option, which is allowing the marketers to sell at competing prices. While we await Dangote with his refinery. Hopping his MOU with the government is masses oriented.

Until then lets be patient
CrimeRe: Fulani Herdsmen Kill SARS Boss In Oyo by DMathematical: 5:29pm On Feb 07, 2018
Its Official!

The fulani donation of Blood continues nationwide!
BusinessRe: OLX Shuts Down Office In Nigeria by DMathematical: 9:31am On Feb 07, 2018
222Martins:
This is beyond Buhari. The business model was faulty from day one. Hype and Vanity metrics cannot sustain a business.
. . . You made a fantastic assertion in your earlier post. But not this: OLX is far from hype and vanity metrics. OLX is a very successful business model. The truth is, the Nigerian business environment is hostile (people underestimate this). Take it or leave it, the President & his team have contributed nothing in changing this narrative.
PoliticsRe: Ortom Faults Buhari’s Letter To Senate, Tells IG To Resign If Overwhelmed by DMathematical: 10:47am On Feb 04, 2018
Buhari will not rest until he achieves what his mind tells him . . .
RomanceRe: The Wife Of The Kitchen Stool Headmaster Speaks About The Sextape Saga (video) by DMathematical: 10:45am On Feb 04, 2018
Its not a women issue. Everyone suffers in a bad marriage!


sinaj:
Women are suffering o!

If it was the other way round, the woman would av being thrown out of her home.
PoliticsRe: 2019: Buhari’s Men Court Igbo With 2023 Presidency by DMathematical: 10:42am On Feb 04, 2018
Buhari is too old and desperate . . .

PoliticsRe: Buhari Signs Bill Conferring Immunity On Lawmakers by DMathematical: 1:34pm On Jan 27, 2018
Yes it is a good development. However this is far from our priority now as a Nation.

How has the lack of immunity stopped them from performing all this years? This is just a pat on the back. Just maybe someday it may be useful



deji17:
This is beyond 2019. This is a law that will outlive Buhari, Saraki, Dogara and the present crop of lawmakers.
This is a law that will deepen democracy in Nigeria.
Just like the judiciary, the lawmakers now have some form of immunity in the course of discharging their duties.
PoliticsRe: Buhari Passed 8 Bills Into Law. by DMathematical: 11:44pm On Jan 26, 2018
usayab:
PMB stopped over N2trillion subsidy payments to
the almighty cabals.
He stopped the payment of over N30billion
monthly salaries to 50,000 national ghost
workers.
He withdrew the license of rice, salt, sugar etc
from one individual and spread the license to
various interested group of people so as to stop
the issue of monopoly.
He ordered the enforcement of BVN in the
banking industry which stopped the illicit fraud
perpetrated by private and public officials.
He ordered the enforcement of TSA where a
single government parastatal operated over 43
accounts siphoning funds without remittance to
the Federation Account.
He ordered the enforcement of payment and
salaries of National Assembly members to be
done through TSA.
He stopped the importation of rice from Thailand
which our leaders used to siphon billions of naira
yearly.
He blocked all the loop holes in the public
sectors even though some avaricious Nigerians
still cut their ways through sometimes.
He exposed the corrupt practices in the judiciary.
He did same in the national assembly.
He exposed them all in the Nigeria Police, Nigeria
Army, Navy, Air force and prosecuted the corrupt
officials involved.
He exposed Patience Jonathan N13b looted fund,
N15b, N11b worth of hotel in Bayelsa, N2.5b
laundered funds to her housemaids.
He exposed Ikoyi's gate N13b NIA funds.
He exposed N4.7b Ekiti election fraud given to
Fayose by Obanikoro.
He exposed the $2.1b insurgency funds shared
among Femi Fani Kayode, Olisah metuh,
Bafarawa, Nduka Obaigbena, Raymond Dokpesi
and others.
He exposed the illicit dealings in the legislative
house.
He stopped the padding of our national budget
by the National Assembly members.
He enforced the law to retrieve the N11b loan
granted to Ben Murray Bruce which he refused
to pay for 10years.
He exposed our Christian community where N7b
was shared to them for election campaign by
Jonathan.
He Enforced the EFCC to go after Ifeanyi Ubah
who sold N11b worth of crude oil and pocketed
same without the knowledge of NNPC.
He Exposed Saraki undeclared assets/looted
funds.
He stopped Intel(Atiku's Company) where trillions
of Nigeria money was not remitted to the
federation account over the years.
He exposed our unscrupulous leaders both in
APC and PDP even if the law could not
prosecute them because of the lacuna in our
laws.
Through Nigeria Customs, FIRS, JAMB, NIMASSA,
Nigeria was able to realize over trillions of Naira
remitted to the federation account, the first in
Nigeria history.
PMB refused to die.
He refused to be paralysed.
He refused to give up on Nigeria and Nigerians.
They spread false reports against him, God
exposed their lies.
They did everything, they found nothing to pin
him down with especially on corruption.
Why would they not hate him?
Why would they not wish him dead?
Why would they not spread false reports against
him?
Those who never benefitted anything from the
national looters are always right behind
defending those who put them in their sorry
states.
Curse him, wail, cry, shout, grumble, fumble, hate
and even jump into the biggest ocean...he who
God has blessed, no man can curse.
You prefer the devil and I prefer PMB, the God
sent, the choice is mine.
Car TalkRe: Tesla Model S In Nigeria (photo) by DMathematical: 8:20am On Jan 26, 2018
Lollz only a simple google search will clear your doubt: "largest tesla charging station in the world" . . . They are actually in Shangai, China.



Follygunners:
The ONLY operating ones are in the U.S. The ones they're building in Australia isn't a charging station but, a battery/cell production factory. Go figure..
Car TalkRe: Tesla Model S In Nigeria (photo) by DMathematical: 7:42am On Jan 26, 2018
That's NOT True: The largest Tesla charging stations are not even in the US. Do your research.

Follygunners:
You can't charge them using the regular home-made electrical output else, you damage the programming. You need special charging stations for these vehicles, bro. which are ONLY available here in the U.S and NOT in any other place in the world which is why they've not gone abroad yet. undecided
EducationRe: 90-Year-Old Grandma Begins Primary School In Kenya (Photos) by DMathematical: 11:49pm On Jan 25, 2018
Wow! You seriously need a heart transplant.


Jamariwolf4:
This is so wrong!

This old woman is doing this to draw all attention to herself.

Those students will stare at her or try to help her more often, and in turn, they'll lose focus in class.



Leave that school old bitch so that the little students can focus on themselves and not on you.
BusinessRe: Elumelu Seeks More Int’l Support To Boost Entrepreneurship In Africa by DMathematical: 8:30am On Jan 25, 2018
See people with international leadership credentials full Nigeria! . . . and some forces of darkness insist only a sickly cattle rearer from Daura, who cannot hold a brilliant conversation in English or any language must continue to rule!
PoliticsRe: Ahmad Lawan Differs With Abaribe On Impeachment Of President by DMathematical: 8:17am On Jan 25, 2018
So where were the millions of supporters when Buhari was loosing elections year after year! He only managed to win 2015 by just 2million votes

All of a sudden you guys forget he is an erection loosing specialist!


Newbiee:
How you go impeach wetin you no install, 2019 would decide who to impeach, whether it is the President or the Sinators. This guys never see anything, by the time we go to poll in 2019, they go no say no be likes and shares on nairaland they win election. Millions of Buhari supporters don't have access to social media.
Foreign AffairsRe: The United States Government Has Officially Shutdown by DMathematical: 7:14am On Jan 20, 2018
A sound follower of American politics spotted

dfrost:
Republicans are actually confused. They don't know whether to follow the party decisions or their conscience. Afterall they are humans too start with before becoming politicians.
CrimeRe: Fulani Herdsmen Kill 8-Month Pregnant Woman In Ekiti by DMathematical: 4:37pm On Jan 18, 2018
Fayose, its not by making noise . . . over to you grin
CelebritiesRe: Pretty Nairalander Breaks The Internet As She Bcomes Chatered Accountant @22 by DMathematical: 4:34pm On Jan 18, 2018
See children wey get roadmap grin
PoliticsRe: Fulani Herdsman Killed In Ekiti, Fayose Said Ekiti Should Not Be Turned To War by DMathematical: 7:21pm On Jan 17, 2018
Gehn Gehn. . . I smell trouble coming
PoliticsRe: Why We Rejected Grazing Colonies - Ohanaeze by DMathematical: 3:09pm On Jan 17, 2018
What stops a group of herdsmen from buying land for their business in any state of the federation?

edoman2016:
Cattle colony is a good idea by federal government that will boost the dairy industry in Nigeria. It is adopted in African countries such as Kenya and Uganda. And those two countries are leading in dairy farming and milk production in Africa.

The peculiarities of Nigeria politics is the reason why application of cattle colony will be difficult in Nigeria. Ethnicity in Nigeria do not simply trust the Fulanis on their ancestral lands.
PoliticsRe: Nigerians Accept I’m Doing My Best – Buhari by DMathematical: 1:00am On Jan 17, 2018
Stop celebrating mediocrty! APC, PDP are all failures damñ. . .

GavelSlam:
Insult him all you want he is your president and has done better than who he took over from.

Even the visually impaired are aware electricity supply has improved. The rail lines in the south west are coming on nicely.

Npower has given succour to the youth who would have been asked to queue up in a jam packed stadium for a non-existent job, that would make billionaires of the government officials behind it.

Insecurity is still a problem but it has been so for the greater part of a decade now.

The president can do better but indeed he has done well.
PoliticsRe: Sultan And I Are Miyetti Allah’s Patrons, Says Sanusi by DMathematical: 2:27pm On Jan 14, 2018
Sanusi has a good point! The government has failed to protect the lives of the herdsmen and farmers alike!

PMB is tooooo docile! Too ineffective and ideologically bankrupt!
PoliticsRe: Ibrahim Elzakzaky Is Alive, Speaks With Press (Photos, Video) by DMathematical: 7:45pm On Jan 13, 2018
What does pigs and idiots have to do with Buhari keeping a man prisoner against court orders?

That just gives his enemies opportunity to score cheap points . . .


madridguy:
Another heart attack for the pigs and idiots praying for the man to die so they could be wailing up and down as usual.
PoliticsRe: Goodluck Jonathan Reacts To Fulani Herdsmen Killings, replies El-rufai by DMathematical: 6:36pm On Jan 13, 2018
Masters of Failure:

GEJ the ineffectual boffun.

PMB the weaked dullardin.

Both men are never tired or ashamed of competing for failure!

HOW CAN RIGHT THINKING ADULTS BE ARGUING OVER DEATH TOLLS?
PoliticsRe: Goodluck Jonathan Reacts To Fulani Herdsmen Killings, replies El-rufai by DMathematical: 6:35pm On Jan 13, 2018
GEJ the ineffectual boffun.

PMB the weaked dullardin.

Both men are never tired or ashamed of competing for failure!

HOW CAN RIGHT THINKING ADULTS BE ARGUING OVER DEATH TOLLS?

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