EzeUche2's Posts
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Look at these people rushing to defame Ojukwu, a living legend for the Igbo. Well who can blame them though? He still remains a boogey man for most Nigerians. The easiest way to hit at the Yorubas is to aim at Awolowo. That is where it hurts. You see an Edo man defending Ojukwu, but members of the same tribe (Yoruba) continue to try and bring the man down. Even the Hausa do not even do this. And do not include alj harem, because everyone knows he is a Yoruba. He can't even write in Hausa correctly, that Igbos who were raised in the North were able to unmask him. Shame! Shame! Shame! |
Mercenaries have no qualms in killing people they have no allegiance to. That is why Gaddafi hired them. |
eku_bear:He did not flee. By most accounts, he was look for more help from France, since we all know the British was giving tons of support to the Nigerian Federal Government to keep their Nigerian experiment alive. Point BLANK! Trying to peddle more lies, I see. My people are not known to flee. We die where we stand. Better to die on my feet than live on my knees. |
Where is the birthday girl (Ileke-Idi)? Where is Aigbofa? Where is Jason? Where is fstranger? Where is seFAGo? Where is sbeezy? Where is Katsumoto? Where is the number ONE fool on Nairaland, bk.babe97y? |
PhysicsMHD:Thank you! Now tell that to the people who keep on peddling that lie. |
jason123:Stay out of our issues. This is internal affairs. You see other non-Easterners have steered clear of this thread. I advise you to do the same. This thread has been progressing even before you signed onto Nairaland. Now back off this thread. Obiagu (Igbo) and Chinenyen (Igbo) will sort themselves out without the help of an outsider. That is why this thread was put into this section. |
The West will look for their own interest. I hope Nigerians realize that by now or are some of you foolish? |
The East is 75% Igbo. And we are found throughout the East in large numbers. There are indigenous Igbo communities in every South-South state East of the River Niger. |
^^^ Another wannabe Igbo. . . We have our clans and our own militias. |
It is easy for me to get a mob to target a specific ethnic group, but it is not easy to get people to go against the state. |
komando7:Maybe in some parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. Lets the protest occur in Gabon and Cameroon. |
Justcash:Adding Fashola to the ticket would even have caught my interest! ![]() |
jason123:Well it is the truth. And it not just a small number of non-Yorubas that are present in the South-West. We are talking millions of people. ![]() |
Justcash:They had to "Yorubanized" the ticket. ACN was getting worried of not getting Yoruba votes if they put an Easterner on the ticket. |
^^^ Beaf my brother, look at the article I just posted. I think you would be more in agreement with that article. https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria?topic=609341.msg7774022#msg7774022 |
Justcash:Ha! He forgets about Niger Deltans, Igbos, and Northerners are present in the South-West. Kwara may even vote for Buhari. ![]() |
seanet02:Ribadu cannot compete with Buhari in the North. Do you know how loved Buhari is amongst Northerners? Ribadu is even unknown by most in his region. GEJ doesn't even have to rig, because he will already get half of the Middle Belt and the entire East. |
dayokanu:SW vote will be split regardless. The only unified vote is SE/SS and the Core North. Middle Belt will be the battleground. |
I agree with what the author says in this article, and not with the author of the article I posted that is more optimistic. This gives two opposing points of view. |
Why “egypt” Will Never Happen In Nigeria Wonders shall never end. For day’s end, I cannot seem to hear the last of overtly optimistic Nigerians about how Nigeria will soon recreate the Egyptian People’s Revolution that took that Arab nation by storm in recent weeks. I laugh; I mean, I laugh like Obasanjo. Nigerians are awful daydreamers; and I’m very sorry to burst their bubble. Here is why Egypt will never happen in Nigeria. I mean, never ever happen: no buts, ifs and when. Here are why. First, Egyptians actually exist. Let me bring this home, the term “Nigerian” is a geographical derived expression. Nigerians don’t exist; the probability of finding a true Nigerian is directly proportional to their proximate distance from benefiting from the Nigerian state largesse. Basically put, the patriotic fervor of Nigerians is felt only when they are participating in the “lootocracy” that dominates in our various State Houses: Local, State or Federal. Nigerians are more likely to identify with their family, ethnic group or region than the country. Contrast this with Egypt with a proud long history that stretches millennia. Egyptians are not easily divided. The rule and divide tactics that any Nigerian dictator will deploy to break up street protests failed woefully in Egypt for this reason. I can imagine a protest against the People Destruction Party (PDP) in Lagos being easily mowed and broken up with soldiers of South-South origin that feel no compunction in dealing with these “troublesome Yoruba people”. Sorrows and tears will follow. It happened in Odi, it happened in Malu village and it will happen again. Soldiers and security personnel are decidedly sent to areas where they are not from to mete out punishment to locals. The powers that be easily polarize Nigerians exactly because we allow them; they beat the drumbeats of tribe like Atiku and IBB when it is most convenient for them, like they did during their zoning debacle at the PDP primaries and we sadly follow. Revolutions thrive under exact opposite conditions: of unity. Furthermore a military force with no professional standards and which sees itself first as an occupation force makes attempting what happened in Egypt suicidal in Nigeria. Ever driven into the convoy of the rulers of Nigeria? The brutality of their security personnel knows no bound. Using horse whips and abounding with such sadism that will make Hitler jealous, the Nigeria military force sees itself first as an institution in place to protect power. Insular from the realities of everyday living with constant electricity supplied at the barracks where their soldiers are quartered and with no requirement for compulsory military service (as it obtains in Egypt) – the military have no connection to the people that arm them. Turn them out and they will do as asked: kill and go. Perhaps this mentality makes it more likely an average Nigerian will rather go about their daily business under crushing oppression from the ruling class than protest. First, no mother will allow a son or daughter hit the streets with the possibility of “dying in vain”. People sacrifice when they know their sacrifice will amount to something. It is not as if Nigerians are exactly cowards; heroes want to feel like they are doing something that count for the larger good. Aside that an average Nigerian has no sense of larger good, of community and of country, they know intuitively that their sacrifices may not count. The young Tunisian chap that committed suicide to liberate two countries and counting will never be forgotten. Can the same be said of the Nigerians that died fighting for democracy and fair vote in 2003 and 2007? Who even remembers them? Name one hero of the gubernatorial victories of Ekiti, Osun, Ondo and Edo? Nigerian heroes are more likely to be shamed than praised. We praise villains, petty thieves like Annenih and Bode George, and glorify coup plotters and murderers like IBB, Abacha and Buhari. Go to any Nigerian message board and the supporters of these folks abound fighting each other; eating off their masters’ crumbs. Chief MKO Abiola sacrificed for democracy in Nigeria and if you go to Abuja today not a single monument to this hero of democracy. Rather, Abacha the villain is honored. He even has a stadium named after him! Such is the stuff of Nigerian legend. The story book of Nigeria is filled with heroes that have died in vain, while villains like Olusegun Obasanjo write the postscripts and mutter “I dey laugh”. Nigeria defies all explanation; she is truly a land of contradictions. Egyptians are not Nigerians. They are not cowards. Say whatever you may, cowardice and Arab can hardly appear in the same sentence. They will suicide bomb and immolate for a cause they believe in: ask Americans. [b]We Nigerians will sell our soul for a pot of porridge; sorry I mean a brown envelope. Oh lest I forget, the only Nigerian to date to attempt suicide bombing got scared and got his laps burned. [/b]Remember the Christmas day bomber? That was even after he went through the process of Arabization in Yemen. He still could not deliver; I laugh at those wishing Egypt in Nigeria. It will never happen. By the way, what is your price? I ask because I have learned from experience that there is a price for every Nigerian. All that needs to be done to discourage a Google Executive in Lagos from leading a revolution is a choice land in Abuja like our journalists seem to have indulged in. What is the price of a Nigerian? A foreign friend of mine once commented that there are two types of Nigerian: “those that are corrupt, and those waiting on an opportunity to partake in corruption”. I pray it is not true. I weep for my country. http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/michael-oluwagbemi/why-egypt-will-never-happen-in-nigeria.html |
Well this is the right course of action. |
These people are starting their own "revolution" against the Nigerian state. |
againstGEJ:And when that person leads, people will think he is crazy or question what tribe he represents. That is the simple truth. |
Of course Nigeria will not use the money wisely. Nigerian politicians are probably salivating of all the money they will making, due to the Mideast crisis now that the revolutions are moving towards oil producing Mid-east states. |
Bad move on the part of the ACN. They have a lot to learn. SE + SS and parts of the Middle Belt will go to GEJ Core North will go to Buhari. And the SW vote is now split. |
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