Donmixc's Posts
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madridguy:bomb go still land when the time is right ![]() |
HELINUS NEED TO MIGRATE TO SA THEN ![]() |
omenka:omenka you never still change? ![]() |
Bat and his criminal people😏 |
we are choosing Atiku, north is taking back power 2027 ![]() |
lies, he was sacked by tinubo ![]() |
soothers always embarrass us ![]() |
saphiere:You wia never chop bellefull😏 |
Useless party Wike no get sense 😒 |
saphiere:Can you buy it??🙄 |
Ekukesian ![]() if this one bite person na rabis straight ![]() |
we will reciprocate that in the north, no more Eze ndi Igbo nor oba here in the north trouble makers ![]() |
tinubu is a fraud star, a criminal ![]() |
STAGED, HOW THE CAMERA KNOW SAY THE WILL BE PROBLEM ![]() |
Stop saying what you don’t know, north still de learn work for where south de when it comes to begging 😒 |
And so?? Atiku will defeat Tinubo 2027😏 |
eejo:This is not a prophecy, but a systemic risk assessment grounded in demography, climate science, economics, housing, insecurity, and governance trends. 1. Nigeria’s Population Growth Is Outrunning Its Economic Capacity Nigeria’s population is growing faster than almost any country on Earth. Current population: ~220 million Projected population by 2050: 375–400 million Annual growth rate: ~2.5–3% This means Nigeria will add 150+ million people in one generation, without a similar expansion in: Jobs Infrastructure Housing Energy Food production As a result, competition for scarce resources intensifies, leading to: Falling wages Youth unemployment Social unrest Mass poverty PwC and the World Bank project that over 60% of Nigerians could be living in poverty by 2026, a level that makes long‑term stability extremely difficult. [punchng.com], [documents....ldbank.org] Money loses value not just through inflation, but through overcrowding and economic dilution. 2. Climate Change Will Destroy Homes, Farmland, and Livelihoods Nigeria is one of the world’s most climate‑vulnerable countries. Flooding (South & Middle Belt) Increasing rainfall intensity Niger and Benue river overflow Coastal erosion and sea‑level rise Floods already: Displace millions annually Destroy crops and homes Collapse local economies The 2012 floods alone affected 7 million people and cost Nigeria ~$17 billion. Flood risk is increasing each year and is projected to displace hundreds of thousands annually by 2030–2050. [dicf.unepgrid.ch], [link.springer.com] Desertification & Drought (North) Expanding Sahara Loss of arable land Collapse of pastoral livelihoods This drives migration southward, intensifying land conflict and urban overcrowding. When climate destroys land, people do not disappear—they move, creating humanitarian pressure elsewhere. 3. Insecurity Is Destroying Agriculture and Rural Wealth Nigeria’s food system is collapsing in many regions due to: Banditry Farmer–herder conflict Insurgency Kidnapping Over 3.4 million Nigerians are already internally displaced due to violence and disasters. [dtm.iom.int] Consequences: Farms abandoned Food shortages High food inflation Collapse of rural economies Food inflation hits the poor hardest because low‑income households spend up to 70% of income on food. [punchng.com] This means: Even people with jobs lose purchasing power → money becomes meaningless. 4. Housing Collapse Is Coming, Not Because Prices Fall—But Because People Lose Homes Nigeria has a housing deficit of over 20 million units, and it is growing rapidly. [guardian.ng] Drivers: Population growth Urban migration Climate displacement High construction costs Weak land administration Outcomes: Expansion of slums Informal settlements in flood zones Unsafe housing Forced evictions Mass homelessness after disasters People will lose houses not because prices crash, but because: Floods wipe them out Insecurity makes areas uninhabitable Poverty prevents rebuilding 5. Businesses Are Dying Because the Economy Is Structurally Fragile Many Nigerian businesses will fail because: a. Inflation and Currency Weakness Rising input costs Falling consumer demand Unstable planning environment b. Energy and Transport Costs High diesel and petrol costs Poor electricity reliability c. Shrinking Consumer Purchasing Power People spend on survival, not services SMEs collapse first Reports show real household spending is falling even when nominal spending rises—a classic sign of economic stress. [thenigerianvoice.com] 6. Oil Dependence Meets Global Energy Transition Nigeria still relies on oil for: ~90% of foreign exchange ~50–60% of government revenue The world is: Electrifying transport Taxing carbon Reducing fossil‑fuel dependence As oil demand weakens in the long term: Government revenue shrinks Social services collapse Currency weakens Subsidies vanish Without successful diversification, this creates fiscal failure, not just recession. [globaljournals.org], [kas.de] 7. Why This Could Become a Historic Humanitarian Crisis When these forces interlock, they create systemic collapse: Climate displacement + housing deficit Poverty + youth unemployment Insecurity + food scarcity Population growth + weak institutions This leads to: Mass internal displacement Disease outbreaks Hunger and malnutrition Urban chaos Violent conflict Humanitarian agencies already struggle to support current crises, and funding is declining. [dtm.iom.int] The Core Truth Nigeria’s problem is not one issue—it is compounding risk. If population growth, climate change, insecurity, housing failure, and economic fragility continue on their current path, millions will lose: Money (through inflation and unemployment) Businesses (through demand collapse) Houses (through floods and displacement) Lives (through hunger, violence, disease) Final Perspective (Important) This outcome is not inevitable. Countries that: Invest early in climate adaptation Create mass employment Control population growth through education Fix land and housing systems Diversify their economies avoid collapse even under pressure. The danger is delay, denial, and fragmentation. If you want, I can: Break this down into warning signs to watch Explain what individuals can do to stay ahead Analyze regional risks within Nigeria Or convert this into a policy or documentary‑style narrative Just tell me the angle you want. |
their business, tinubo is also executing us here too ![]() |
tinubo went to recharge. while his bandit boys are killing us in the north ![]() |
let trump strike bourdillon road @ tinubo house and leave the north alone ![]() |
tinubo is a thief, we will kick him out of our region next year ![]() |
Dead party, tinubo must go back to lagos ![]() |
nawa oooo. trump is a mad man ![]() |
MrCork:Mrpenis you are gay nah and have no business with ladies ![]() |
tinubo and Trump shoud focus on the southern Nigeria where we have plenty unknown gunmen and never try throw any missiles in the north again to avoid the real war ![]() |
helinues:everyone that did not agree with you is ibo, nawa for you ooo ![]() |
tinubu is trying to reduce our population just to win 2027 election but it will backfire tinubu is the sponsor of this current insecurity in my region ![]() |


