Eden007's Posts
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Read carefully! What pdpd means is that Buhari has no case to answer in this democratic Era! That doesn't include military rule like during Abacha's tenure. Besides, why would he have a case to answer when he had no link to power for the past 16yrs of being an opposition. |
This is how ladies take other men children to their hubbies. Most first children are not their dad's. Insist on DNA for your supposed children. |
Change |
Lie |
If I hear |
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Watch out..more shocking revelations will come out. Take it from me, Gej saw this coming he hired experts to clean up his mess. He is very confident that no case would be found to indict him. More shocking revelations of the real corrupt pay masters coming out soon! |
Guy calm down.. take this from me, jonathan has leverage against all top people dining with buhari even buhari himself. A private investigator was hired to dig up the events of the past leaders and those Apc big wigs last year. There are shocking and concrete revelations that would shake this country. PDP would either use that to make Buhari back down or to let Nigerians know the calibre of leaders we now have. Don't underrate this evidences most are Video recordings, bank transactions even evidence of the corruption case of obj,tinubu,Ibb,atiku,ameachi,danjuma etc. The reason gej didn't want to publicly hunt these individuals was because doing such would amount to anarchy by their followers. Personally I want gej probed, but I want everyother person probed as well. Wait and see within the next few weeks shocking revelations would start coming out..very shocking! |
E go be |
Sad |
Me |
IME1:if you calculate, 19800*13months= 257,400. Cost of nysc kits per Corp member could amount to 50k. Cost of feeding and other miscellaneous expenses per Corp member could amount to 200k. We end up coming back to square 1, stay in the same hood we grew up and it makes it seem education has no reward. I know we have people close to our president that have access to nairaland, I hope this gets to him. He could fine tune this idea and work with the national assembly to make the necessary changes. Lalasticlala, ishilove help us take this to front page. |
Before you descend on me, this is just my opinion. Nysc has lost its essence. It's more or less university education continued. Parents still send money and take care of most of their so called graduates in the name of nysc. It's painful to note that, government spends a lot of money on this program. Ranging from, salaries of Nysc staff, allowances of corp members, cost of funding various nysc camps etc. The painful part of it is that, after nysc 90percent of graduates end up going home to their parents like nothing has happened over the years. I think if government could channel about 250,000 naira per graduate to start a small and medium enterprise, it'd be more useful and reduce drastically rates of graduates roaming the street in search of jobs. Furthermore, if you calculate how much is spent on one graduate in a year during the nysc scheme, you'd realise that it's close to 500,000 naira including feeding in camp. This idea could be fine tuned and the nysc madness stopped! I know this would step on a lot of toes because a lot of corrupt practices arise from this nysc scheme. |
Does this make pre-marital sex important? Sex in marriage is very important in this generation. Should we gamble with that serious aspect and just get married to somebody we don't know their capabilities only to regret later? So many unanswered questions. |
Abi |
Change |
None |
Ok |
RIP to the victims. Let God be the judge. |
Amen |
Lol |
Tere |
Change |
Good for you. |
Change |
It's really sad to read about this from jamb. I tell anybody that cares to listen that corruption is a way of life in Nigeria. This is a clear case of an individual trying to benefit financially from a useless policy at the detriment of people's future. This is a serious threat to our nation's peaceful co-existence. My humble suggestion is, JAMB should be scrapped! Universities should conduct their aptitude tests directly. Candidates should be selected based on their grade points in their ssce examinations. In addition to that, there should be a set out method used for calculating grade points from ssce results. Furthermore, to digress a little from the topic, I would love to appeal to the government to scrap NYSC! Its essence has been defeated. Money used for nysc should be used to empower graduates for small and medium enterprises. Graduates should be qualified for a grant of 250,000 each immediately after graduation. If you calculate 19,800 for 13 months, it amounts to almost the same amount. VIKTA |
Back from the wasteful trip. What happened to video conferencing?? You just decided to go waste over 2billion naira on some rubbish trip! Fine, gej did same but I thought you promised us change? Why are you still doing the same mistakes gej did?? Why didn't you channel that 2billion naira to try and keep to some of your campaign promise like paying 5k monthly to all unemployed graduates or feeding school pupils. Trust me, it'd be more beneficial than that your tourism escapade. I weep for our gullible citizens that promoted change. Same old story recycled. Same ways of doing things, I feel no change here. All I feel is change of personnel in government. Click like if you feel the same way I feel. VIKTA |
https://www.nairaland.com/2471558/letter-africa-buhari-forgiveness-nigeria Read that eye-opening article written by a BBC journalist. |
Lalasticlala ishilove |
In Nigeria, it is quite common that if you fire someone for gross misconduct, that person will turn up days later in the company of his or her grey-haired, widowed mother and maybe an aged uncle and a pregnant wife. Together, they kneel at your doorstep and beg you to forgive, promising that the recalcitrant person will act differently if re-employed. Sometimes, the sacked person will phone you two months later to say that he or she has been offered employment elsewhere, then beg for a positive reference, while reminding you that the same people you meet on your way up, you shall surely meet on your way down. More likely than not, the repentant former employees are given a second chance. Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani: "My Nigerian-American friend is horrified by this Nigerian culture of wiping clean people's track records" Nigerians are usually willing to give others the opportunity to prove that they have transformed, no matter how grave their previous errors. One of the most recent, high-profile beneficiaries of this second-chance culture is Muhammadu Buhari, Nigeria's new president. Back in 1983, he brought the country's then fledgling democracy to an abrupt end via a military coup, and his 18-month rule was infamous for draconian policies and human rights violations. While campaigning for the 2015 elections, Gen Buhari assured Nigerians that he was a changed man, that he was well aware of the difference between dictatorship and democracy. Many prominent citizens who had suffered in one way or the other under his rule responded by openly declaring their forgiveness for the retired general. Politician Audu Ogbeh and journalist Tunde Thompson, who were incarcerated under President Buhari's military regime, became active members of his 2015 campaign committees. My Nigerian-American friend is horrified by this Nigerian culture of wiping clean people's track records. She describes her experience as a first-year student at Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, where the careers counsellors often spoke about the close-knit circle in corporate America, and how easy it is to get blacklisted by all firms based on bad behaviour or poor performance at one firm. The students studied the stories of two alumni who had brought shame and financial ruin to their companies because of their unethical behaviour. "I remember the moods in the lecture rooms after each of these sessions," she said, "when we often swore to ourselves that we would never become subject material for case studies on ethical failures." No such case studies are taught in Nigerian schools. A disgraced CEO here could easily get hired in another high-profile role. Yesterday's vilified plunderer of public funds could metamorphose into tomorrow's icon of philanthropy and champion of the masses. Radical policies wanted But, one month after President Buhari's inauguration, a paradox appears to exist in the forgiveness extended towards him. Nigerians claimed to have forgiven him for the man he used to be, yet are expressing disappointment that he is not that same man they thought he was. They seem to have expected President Buhari, on assuming power, to immediately act tough: To send corrupt government officials straight to the guillotine; to initiate probes and commissions of inquiry; to announce radical policies; to order arrests; to drop bombs on Boko Haram. President Buhari has promised to deal with the Islamist insurgency in the north So far, President Buhari has done none of these things. He says he is consulting and assessing. He has not appointed the squad with whom he is expected to zap the nation clean. He has not shown any open interest in political machinations, appearing indifferent even to the vitriolic squabbling engulfing the country's National Assembly. President Buhari is clearly a changed man. And Nigerians have started grumbling, in daily conversation and in the media. They want their new president to get a move on. They want to see some action. They want a bit more evidence of those revolutionist traits for which he became infamous, and then famous. They want some of the old Buhari. They want the man they forgave. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-33440417?africa_africaindex_ppc_outbrain_33440417 |
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Maybe |