Emmy512's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Emmy512's Profile › Emmy512's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 (of 78 pages)
The will of God is unknown by man. Whatever you here is as a result of mans thinking always trying to get answers to the unknown and things that are better left alone. To those that believe the story of the garden of eden to have happened real, I'll say this to you. God gave man choice. And man chose knowledge which most of us feel was the wrong choice adam made. If he didn't make that choice would y'all be here arguing this? Would you know what is right from wrong? Our God created adam perfect but still left a temptation of an apple tree. And even told them not to take that one , which means from the onset man had a choice... Read and pass, don't quote me scriptures. |
People still don't understand that internet has evolved. it's not about having phones without knowing what to do with them, how to prevent yourself from issues like this and others. Majority of us see software updates on our devices and ignore it, when the people that gave the update have many reasons for it. Anyways back to the topic....you just got phished which is as a result of clicking links, i guess someone begged you to vote for them and other stories wich is part of their social engineering tricks. they pry on someone's weakness sometimes. You can't get it back soon because the number is not available and even if the number was still active any wise scammer would remove the number immidiately and probably change the username wich i thought wasn't possible untill last year. By username i don't mean your profile name but the name Facebook gives you that you can see via URL. Best I'd advise now is to abandon the account, tell your friends to report it so Facebook can block it. Else they scammer if he's computer literate enough would download the whole if your fb account then after hitting his maga and cash out will delete all those photos and info he put and replace it back with your own pictures to cover his tracks temporarily and with Facebook having the option to change dates on post it would make it more realistic. I'll also advise you to do the 2 step authentication that has been advised by others above me in all your accounts, wether it's bank or social media it would prevent a lot of issues as sometimes we all make mistake of using the same login credentials on almost everything. Lastly whoever is reading this, all I've said is just a summary of things i know. So I'll advise you all to take a crash course in cyber security, download a PDF and read through, also go online and read recent stories of scammers and how to perpetrate their acts. Sometimes to catch a killer you need to think like one. I also think this forum as it is i big enough to have a cyber security or fraud awareness page where we share new formats used by criminals and scammers to enable others who are not fortunate enough to understand this things get to know from a laymans talk. |
Thelucifer666:Thanks for the advice I'll certainly start |
Jeremy1234:Baba this thing twist my head even when i i know what you wanted to say |
Apart from the bible, i can say through knowledge I've gathered from reading of ancient books , theological papers etc that he is right. Every material has what is called a vibration, and crystals are we'll known in the occult world to have such vibrations, Some are positive others are negative, some repel. Did you know salts contain crystals? Google what salts where used for in occult practice in ancient days |
I've always been of the notion that, people like him and his guy mompha are just audio. They try so hard to impress with everything. Any shoe or car they'll post. But questions we should ask should be the aftermath of such purchase. He buys a car, do u see him post about that car ever again? Goes to showroom and takes pictures. Mtcheew. Everything is just a farce. |
I figured already that all this rice they're sharing is customs rice |
More than 20,000 people have now died with coronavirus in UK hospitals, the Department of Health has announced. The latest figures showed a total of 20,319 deaths in the UK, up by 813 on the previous day. At the government's daily briefing, the home secretary described the figure as a "tragic and terrible milestone". Last month, the government's chief scientific adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, said keeping deaths below 20,000 would be a "good outcome". At the Downing Street briefing, Home Secretary Priti Patel said: "As the deaths caused by this terrible virus pass another tragic and terrible milestone, the entire nation is grieving." It is 51 days since the first virus-related death was announced in the UK. The government's figures do not account for deaths that have happened in care homes, at home, in hospices or elsewhere in the community. These are measured separately by the Office for National Statistics, based on death certificates, and a weekly figure is announced each Tuesday. Last week that figure indicated that there were at least 1,662 deaths, up to 10 April, that were above the hospital-based number. The fact we have now passed the grim milestone outlined by Sir Patrick Vallance in less than two months is both a tragedy for the families affected and a worry to the rest of the country. There are strong signs - at least in hospitals - that we have passed the peak of deaths. The fact that may have happened without the health service being overwhelmed in the way Italy's was is at least some good news. However, the deaths in care homes, which the daily figures from government do not include, are rising rapidly and could prove very difficult to get under control. In fact, if we included them we would have passed the 20,000 mark some time ago. On 17 March, Sir Patrick told MPs "the hope" was to keep the UK death toll below 20,000. At the time the number of deaths in UK hospitals stood at 71. That ambition was later echoed by NHS England medical director Prof Stephen Powis, who said the UK would have "done very well in this epidemic" if deaths remained below that figure. Speaking at Saturday's briefing, Prof Powis said it was a "very sad day for the nation", adding that his "heart goes out to families and friends of those loved ones". Asked about his and Sir Patrick's previous comments, Prof Powis said: "What we were emphasising is that this is a new virus, a global pandemic, a once-in-a-century global health crisis. "And this was going to be a huge challenge not just for the UK, but for every country." Four other countries to date have announced an official number of coronavirus-related deaths exceeding 20,000 - the US, Spain, Italy and France. Globally, confirmed coronavirus cases stand at more than 2.8m, with the figure of 200,000 deaths expected to be reached imminently. "Even in countries that have got on top of this early on we are unfortunately beginning to see new infections," Prof Powis said. "So I think the first thing to emphasise is that this unfortunately is not going to be something we will begin to get over in the next few weeks. "This is something we are going to have to continue working our way through over the months ahead - as I have said before this is not a sprint, this will be a marathon." Bbc.co.uk
|
Ishilove:I'm having same issue with my bull, he should be 8 or 9 months old now. Ever since he was 3 months bathing him has always been stress, he chews his wooden cage that we had to make a very strong iron cage for him. He's been too aggressive and I don't know what to do again, i just let him be in the cage, and feed him there. As he doesn't get out of the cage due to stubbornness he's nails are now sharp that before he baths he must have given marks all over my hand n legs. Sometimes he succeeds to slip out of my hand and first thing he does is to go fight with the quiet Rottweiler that's on chain or Scooby the bull mastiff. I just fear that one day even at his tender age he'll beat the hell out of his seniors. The other dogs are over 3 years.
|
obembet:Una no d sleep? Just ro login comment 5 comments enter already |
Leezah:Philips electric iron. I'm 24 now, started using it at primary 4, still functioning wella. |
6 years ago, during my waec exams, last paper for that matter and simple agric science . I was accused of impersonation even with the waec ID card the idiot invigilator from hope wadell came to my school and my school principal never liked anything that involved paying invigilator for his students to write freely i think this man got frustrated that nothing came out of us. He asked me to leave the hall and threatened to call police that where outside, innocent me heard police and got weak. I told my principal and he came with the photobook and showed this invigilator yet he still insisted i wasn't the one. After begging from my teachers he let me finish the exams like nothing happened or he let go of the issue only for results to come out and mine was showing withheld. I reported to cross River branch and they said there's nothing they can do, Imagine without evidence they did that to me, i got admission into radiography i applied for hoping there would be a change nothing, and the neco i had a D in chemistry i felt let down, had to forfeit the admission and spend another year at home. That accusation changed the path of my life. What i aught to do was changed to something else, i rained curse on that man a year after. Even with biometrics that they took they couldn't even verify. Writing this now i realize how i was cheated and if the judicial system wasn't as frustrating, i would've sued the idiots. |
The current debate over the Buhari government’s request to borrow additional $30bn (a substantial portion of which is likely to come from China), has revived debates not just about debt overhang in the country but also about whether China is using debt as a deliberate strategy to take over several countries in Africa. In 2018 John Bolton former US national security adviser pointedly accused China of making “strategic use of debt to hold states in Africa captive to Beijing’s wishes and demands.” In fact critics of China’s role in Africa argue that China is basically trying to do what the European powers did at the Berlin Conference of 1884-1885 but using a different strategy. It should be recalled that at the Berlin Conference the continent was divided among the major European powers, with the principle of effective occupation, which was used as a major criterion in deciding which country got what, legitimising colonialism and forceful pacification of the native – and achieved mostly through guns and mortars. Critics argue that rather than tanks and mortars, the Chinese found that banks are more effective than tanks as instruments of domination in line with the arguments of the revered ancient Chinese military philosopher Sun Tzu who posited that to defeat your enemy without a fight is the highest demonstration of skill. Of course any analysis of China’s role in Africa risks being caught in the web of the rivalry (or jealousy) between China and the continent’s former colonial masters and traditional allies: if it is too critical of China’s role in the continent, it is suspected of oozing of Western bias or playing out a Western script. If it is too welcoming of Chinese presence, it is suspected of trying to ingratiate oneself to China or even externalising one’s sub-conscious disappointments with the continent’s traditional allies and former colonial masters. What is obvious is that the influence of China, (which overtook USA as Africa’s biggest trading partner in 2009), is growing by leaps and bounds in the continent. While trade between China and Africa reached $300 billion in 2015, China has also embarked on many infrastructural and road development projects in the continent through its colossal Belt and Road Initiative – its gargantuan global infrastructure development projects. For instance, under this initiative it constructed Kenya’s 290-mile railway from the capital, Nairobi, to the port city of Mombasa. Under the initiative for instance, landlocked Ethiopia got a 470-mile electric railway from its capital Addis Ababa, to the port in the neighbouring Djibouti. While East Africa has been the main focus of China’s Belt and Road Initiative on the continent, Chinese infrastructure projects stretch all the way to Angola and Nigeria, with ports planned along the coast from Dakar to Libreville and Lagos. Beijing has also signalled its support for the African Union’s proposed pan-African high-speed rail network. A major concern of many is on the cost to Africans of China’s increasing involvement in the continent – from accusations of the Chinese taking over local jobs (including in retailing roadside roasted corns) to squeezing the continent’s SMEs, land grab and predatory lending. For instance a recent study by the China-Africa Research Initiative at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, found that China had lent a total of $143 billion to 56 African countries. The loans were facilitated principally by the Export-Import Bank of China and the China Development Bank. Seven countries – Angola, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Kenya, Republic of the Congo, Sudan and Zambia – accounted for two thirds of total cumulative borrowing in 2017 from China, with oil-rich Angola alone representing a 30% share, or $43 billion (35% of Angolan 2017 GDP). According to an April 2018 IMF study, as of the end of 2017, about 40% of low-income Sub-Saharan African countries are now in debt distress or assessed as being at high risk of debt distress including Ethiopia, the Republic of the Congo and Zambia. This should be a real red flag. On September 3 and 4, 2018, Chinese President Xi Jinping hosted the seventh Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in Beijing where President Xi pledged additional US$60 billion in aid and financing for Africa. A major concern with these loans is what happens if the borrowing country is unable to pay back. In the 1980s and 1990s when many countries in the continent struggled to repay their loans to the London and Paris Clubs of creditors, one of the consequences was the foisting of crippling IMF/World bank-supported structural adjustment programmes as a condition for the affected countries rescheduling their debts or even opening new letters of credit. China’s responses to some of its debtors that struggled to repay have raised fears of Africa’s debt overhang of the 1980s and 1990s. For instance, when Angola, which is heavily indebted to China struggled to repay, it was forced to reach loans-for-oil settlement, with Beijing tying the country’s future oil production to shipments to China in order to service the country’s burgeoning infrastructure debt. In Kenya, China is set to take over the country’s lucrative Mombassa port if Kenya Railways Corporation defaults on its loan from the Exim Bank of China. Though Kenya’s standard gauge railway (also known as the Madaraka Express), which was built and funded by China, was plagued by cost overruns, (with some questioning its viability), critics say China is not worried since if the 80%-China funded project fails, Beijing will take full control of it in what would be a ‘debt-for-sovereignty’ swap. Again when Sri Lanka had difficulties servicing its $8 billion of infrastructure-related borrowing from China, it led to the country handing over a controlling equity stake and a 99-year operating lease of her second-largest port at Hambantota to a subsidiary of a Chinese state-owned enterprise in December 2017. For Pakistan, another debtor to China which struggled to re-pay, it is estimated that more than 90% of revenues generated at her newly developed Gwadar Port at the mouth of the strategically significant Gulf of Oman are collected by the Chinese operator. ÀIn Djibouti, where public debt has risen to roughly 80 percent of the country’s GDP (with the lion share being owed to China), it may not be mere coincidence that China’s only overseas military base is in the country. A number of African countries – Burundi, Chad, Mozambique, Zambia and Nigeria are either in debt distress or at high risk of it. Some have accused China’s lending practise of causing this or exacerbating the situation. However not everyone has a dim view of China’s role in Africa. Some have in fact argued that total spending in the China’s colossal Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), could reach $1.3 trillion in the decade to 2023 – more than seven times the investment made under the US Marshall Plan to rebuild European economies after World War II. A 2018 Pew Research poll on global perceptions of China also found that more than two-thirds of Tanzanians have a positive view of China. Essentially therefore, deconstruction of China’s role in Africa must transcend the capture of single-story narratives. African countries that take loans from China and other sources must also take responsibility because even at the personal level, if you take loans from a bank and default, you lose your collateral. It may be true that China is swapping its value-added manufactures for low value-added and raw commodities from Africa. No one can blame it for using what it has to get what it does not have. Unfortunately it is this pattern (which also characterises the continent’s relations with its former colonial masters and traditional allies) that has stoked fears of colonization or China’s relations with the continent being anti-development. The solution for this may not be in China bashing but in African leaders finding smart ways of benefitting from the relationship with China and also developing ingenious ways to profit from the rivalry between China and her traditional allies. In doing this, African leaders should bear in mind that China, like the continent’s former colonial masters and others, is in Africa not as Father Christmas but to advance its interest. There is nothing wrong in that so it is up to the continent’s leaders to develop hard-nosed economic thinking in its relations with China, rather than being swayed by the politeness of Chinese leaders and the easy availability of loans. African governments could match China’s ‘Africa policy’ with their own ‘China policy’ with long term strategies. Email: pcjadibe@yahoo.com Twitter: @JideoforAdibe |
LordviccoDaGuru:
|
ExAngel007:I agree to disagree or disagree to agree |
slimgonzalez:Tell me something, I've had 3 different girls sit on my leg with my dick certainly making contact and there was no fuss,,. Maybe i was emotionally blind |
lalasticlala:YOUR INFORMATION IS OUTDATED AS REGARDS TINAPA. ITS AN ABANDONED PLACE. NO ONE DOES ANYTHING CONCERNING CHRISTMAS THERE. THERE ARE NO MALLS AS YOU SAID EXISTING. THE PLACE NOW LOOKS LIKE THE SET OF THE WALKING DEAD OR OTHER SCARY ABANDONED PLACES. SINCE DONALD DUKE LEFT OFFICE WE'VE NOT HAD A TINAPA . EVEN ARCADE CENTRE NO LONGER EXISTING. YOU CAN ONLY GO THERE TO SIT QUIETLY AND MAKE OUT WITH YOUR BABE WITHOUT TOO MUCH EYES ON YOU. |
EMILO2STAY:I can't believe this. First of all gravity exists. Any object above the Earth's gravitational pull floats in space. The moment it comes in range of gravity, the laws of physics execute their rights on such object. Havevu ever watched a live lunch of a satellite? Most recently India's The moment I just saw all this copy and past work here I just knew you couldn't be serious. If you did the research on your own I'd be impressed. I might as well tell you Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene with all conviction and let you argue it out with all the copy and paste evidence I'll drop for you. |
Rest in peace juice. I'll still see your shadows |
You see that screen shot? How are you sure it's from his father. Do you have his father's number? He could just use another phone and chat with himself as his father so that you will loose guard. Take this seriously, still try to ascertain that it's truly his father. It takes more than that screenshot to prove anything. Be wise. |
Ignorance |
The pure white of same car is missing, |
Thanks for this nice explanation. You explained it we'll for layman to understand |
Fizzymike1:Finally someone read between the lies |
How old are you and you bf also. I'd like to ascertain what you're both capable of. Well I'd just say best thing for you to do is report it as rape, police ask for evidence your boyfriend presents it, In other to defend himself he will have to produce the guys that gave him the video. Do this now before we come and hear your rape allegations in 10 years time or a latest sextape in few weeks. |
frosbel2:Well said.. |
1.i believe if the church is meant to teach and correct and the Bible treated as a curriculum I should've been done with the Bible in atleast 10 years. 2.they preach the same thing over and over again. I believe every human knows right from wrong so they don't need anybody reminding them. 3. I follow the ten commandments and most of all love ur neighbor as yourself, if you do follow the ten commandments u will henof no sin, but to sin is part of human nature so no matter the preach we will still sin. 4. The Bible is just a collection of books collected by men, Yes we may say books written by apostles or disciples with inspiration from God but in a language different from what we know today.dont you think some meaning could've been lost because of translation from men. Today we have many versions of Bible where same passage may mean different things contextually. 5.the church is now materialized. You can't go to church without thinking how you look, if you're presentable or not and if you're not you decide not to go to church, pure hipocrisy because u placed your looks above the God you wish to worship. 6.the church is now a business oriented institution, If I don't have money for offering and tight I feel guilty, why? Because we have been conditioned by our society Wich was conditioned by religion to give offering. Churches building schools that their members can't attend with the offering from members. Where do their profits go. Men of God outshining the reachest men flaunting their wealth gotten from church coffers. 7.worst is the different churches breaking out from another church for a selfish purpose. 8.its filled with gossipers and unwanted competition from fellow members, show off from members etc. 9.theres is no love in the church. 10.they preach prosperity and leave the issues surrounding us outside making us feel we haven't achieved anything while listening to their sermons. 11. The pastor's don't even know the history of their religion. 12. Worst is when I'm told not to question the things God has done and how he did it. The choose to blind me by saying have faith and believe. I don't even want to go to stickers, holy water, |
1.i believe if the church is meant to teach and correct and the Bible treated as a curriculum I should've been done with the Bible in atleast 10 years. 2.they preach the same thing over and over again. I believe every human knows right from wrong so they don't need anybody reminding them. 3. I follow the ten commandments and most of all love ur neighbor as yourself, if you do follow the ten commandments u will henof no sin, but to sin is part of human nature so no matter the preach we will still sin. 4. The Bible is just a collection of books collected by men, Yes we may say books written by apostles or disciples with inspiration from God but in a language different from what we know today.dont you think some meaning could've been lost because of translation from men. Today we have many versions of Bible where same passage may mean different things contextually. 5.the church is now materialized. You can't go to church without thinking how you look, if you're presentable or not and if you're not you decide not to go to church, pure hipocrisy because u placed your looks above the God you wish to worship. 6.the church is now a business oriented institution, If I don't have money for offering and tight I feel guilty, why? Because we have been conditioned by our society Wich was conditioned by religion to give offering. Churches building schools that their members can't attend with the offering from members. Where do their profits go. Men of God outshining the reachest men flaunting their wealth gotten from church coffers. 7.worst is the different churches breaking out from another church for a selfish purpose. 8.its filled with gossipers and unwanted competition from fellow members, show off from members etc. 9.theres is no love in the church. 10.they preach prosperity and leave the issues surrounding us outside making us feel we haven't achieved anything while listening to their sermons. 11. The pastor's don't even know the history of their religion. 12. Worst is when I'm told not to question the things God has done and how he did it. The choose to blind me by saying have faith and believe. I don't even want to go to stickers, holy water, |
. |
??