Earnest301's Posts
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Remember when some Nigerians romanticized the Taliban—until they saw girls banned from school? Same story. Iran’s ayatollahs preach virtue yet jail poets, hang protesters, and bomb neighbors by proxy. OP is right: don’t confuse religion with regime. Blind loyalty to any ideology without questioning its human cost is dangerous. True faith uplifts, but tyranny—no matter how it’s dressed—only destroys. |
Please, publish corridor maps and monthly enforcement dashboards—showing the number of incidents, arrests, compensations, and cases concluded. Sunlight reduces rumors. When people see lawful cases going to court, vigilante justice will fade. Transparency restores confidence in institutions and reminds citizens that justice still works when systems do their job. Accountability should not be seasonal—it should be standard. |
This surplus must not end as headline history. The government should now push aggressive export incentives, port reforms, and value-added manufacturing. ₦5.17 trillion is the seed — policy is the soil. Water it with transparency, and harvest it with jobs. The green shoots are here; let’s turn them into a forest of growth. |
Obi has shown he can trend, not lead. His record is a cautionary tale: a man can be popular and still lack capacity. Nigeria’s next chapter must be written by builders, not quitters. No crown for a Quisling coward—only lessons for a wiser generation. |
🤣 TDS is the new national sport. No matter what Tinubu does—good, bad, or neutral—the Derangement Drummers will always spin it. If he builds roads, they call it a photo-op. If he removes subsidy, they say it’s wickedness. If he reduces inflation, they dismiss it as luck. You simply can’t reason with people who prefer outrage over outcome. Whether we like it or not, PAT is the solution. |
The danger in Obi’s moves is that Nigerians may start to see him, not as a leader, but as a liability. Politics rewards patience, negotiation, and strong rooted structures. Yet Obi keeps chasing shortcuts. His flirtation with the ADC is the clearest sign that he is trapped in desperation. Nigerians deserve leaders who can plant roots, not political drifters. |
If Nigeria could truly be fixed in just four years, then why didn’t Peter Obi perform such magic in Anambra? He had eight full years as governor, yet even now, Soludo is still cleaning up the mess he left behind. And suddenly, Obi wants us to believe he can fix Nigeria in half that time? That’s not just unrealistic—it’s a comedy of the highest order. |
“Bi omode ba subu, a wo iwaju; bi agbalagba ba subu, a wo ehin.” When a child falls, he looks ahead; when an elder falls, she looks behind. Natasha is supposed to be an elder in the chamber, but she’s behaving like a child on the streets. Senators should be shaping the nation’s future, not chasing clout with soundbites. |
The truth be say, zoning na one of the few things wey don keep Nigeria together politically. Without am, one region for don dey dominate forever. Momodu know this thing, but e dey pretend say e no know. Him wahala no be zoning—na because APC fit benefit for 2027. That one no be principle, na selfish politics. |
We must stop recycling impatient politicians. Nigeria’s problem is not lack of prophecy or ambition—it is lack of discipline. Atiku is a warning sign: six presidential runs, billions wasted, and no lesson learned. Like the monkey who refused to wait, he never became man. Nigerians must choose leaders who can wait, who can serve, and who can build steadily. No more gamblers. No more desperados. |
Marabout this, marabout that. But even the marabout can’t manufacture patience. Atiku behaves like the monkey in Barrister’s story—always rushing to dance before the appointed time. Obasanjo himself said it: the man is restless, scheming, always calculating shortcuts. Prophecy no be destiny when character is missing. That’s why Atiku has turned presidential elections into a hobby. Every four years—same candidate, same impatience, same failure. |
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