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Giigglee's Posts

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Car TalkRe: World's Most Beautiful Car Of All Time by Giigglee: 1:02pm On Apr 10
Alikoooooooooo:
I like classic cars like the ones produced in 2026. Those are Classique. Putting my two fingers in a circle and blowing a kiss to all car manufacturers
Sold my car recently....... I'm using Legedes Benz
Fashion/Clothing MarketLask Kick Of A Dying Horse ( Pictures ) by Giigglee(op): 12:56pm On Apr 10
The Last Kick: Why This Tee is Currently Ruling Nigerian Social Media

if you’ve scrolled through Instagram or Twitter (or X, whatever we’re calling it this week) in the last 48 hours, you’ve definitely seen it. The timeline is absolutely flooded. From the biggest comedians in Lagos to the fashion icons in Abuja, every single top influencer in Nigeria is rocking the same piece of fabric. They’re calling it the "Last Kick of a dying Horse," and let me tell you right now: this shirt isn't just clothing, it’s a whole vibe. It’s a masterpiece.

First off, let’s talk about the design because it is absolutely mental in the best way possible. You’ve got this crisp white canvas, and then—bam!—explosive art. On the left, you’ve got these swirling, cool blue waves that look like they’re straight out of a stormy ocean. But then, right in the center, you have this horse. And this isn’t just any horse; it’s a creature made of pure fire. The way the artist used those gradients of deep red, burning orange, and bright yellow? It looks like the horse is literally galloping through flames.

The title, "Last Kick of a dying Horse," sounds tragic on paper, but on this shirt, it translates to pure, unadulterated power. It’s giving "going out with a bang." It’s giving "final boss energy." The horse is rearing up, kicking against the odds, surrounded by fire and water, refusing to go down quietly. It’s the kind of energy we all need in 2026. It’s resilient. It’s fierce.

And can we talk about the sleeves? The attention to detail is insane. The left sleeve has that kente-cloth inspired geometric pattern mixed with the blue waves, while the right sleeve is engulfed in fire. It’s like wearing a battle armor of elements. Plus, that graffiti-style "OLOKO" text at the bottom? That adds just enough street edge to keep it from looking like a museum piece. It keeps it grounded, cool, and undeniably Naija.

The reason every influencer is obsessed with this is simple: it’s a statement. In a sea of boring logos and plain tees, this shirt screams creativity. It tells people you appreciate art, you understand culture, and you aren't afraid to stand out. When you wear this, you aren't just wearing a shirt; you’re wearing a conversation starter.

Honestly, if you don't cop this "Last Kick of a dying Horse" tee soon, you’re going to be left in the dust. It’s fire, it’s water, it’s art, and it’s currently the hottest thing in the country. Respect the drip, respect the art, and get on the wave before it sells out completely

TravelRe: US Embassy Cancels All Visa Appointments In Abuja, FG Reacts by Giigglee: 12:49pm On Apr 10
PlasmaTV:
Even tinubu, in a million years, will never open his mouth to spew the balablu that you just uttered.

Who cares if you set foot in the US?
You care, that is why you commented. The Dube knocked your idol down...... I hope it is not broken ?
Foreign AffairsRe: Iran Targets U.S. Universities In The Middle East by Giigglee: 8:52am On Apr 06
greenermodels:
Honestly, Iran have proved a very solid point regardless of how this war ends, USA wouldn't try the stunts they pulled in Venezuela and Iran elsewhere again, not even in Cuba.
Alot if goodies will be entering Cuba from " Russia with Love "
PoliticsRe: I’m Not Afraid, I’ll Never Be Intimidated – Seun Okinbaloye Fires Back At Wike by Giigglee: 8:49am On Apr 06
PrinceOfLagos:
Peter Obi will cure Wike madness if elected as president

Infact, Wike will run out of this country if Obi is voted In as president and we will make sure that Peter Obi recovers all Abuja stolen land and river state resources that Wike is using to help APC destroy our beloved country.
PO is the man
CultureRe: Things That Were In My Parlour In The 1970s And Early 1980s. by Giigglee: 8:46am On Apr 06
naptu2:
Antenna

Now here's the thing. I remember quite well that the black and white TV set had a very powerful indoor antenna. I remember tuning that antenna back in the 1970s. The antenna was not inbuilt. It had two very long telescopic antennas that were connected to a base and you could do something to that base (I no longer remember what) to increase the signal strength and it had a particular kind of cable (I'm not even going to try to describe the cable) that you could connect to the TV. There was a dial on the base, but I don't remember how it was used to increase the signal strength.

We switched to an outdoor antenna (on the roof of the house) during the 1979 redecoration.

Well, since we stopped using the black and white TV, I made the antenna mine and converted it to another use. I discovered that I could get greater reception on the home audio system if I connected that antenna to it. It made no difference on MW, but it made all the difference on SW.  Foreign radio stations like the BBC and VOA became much clearer.

It looked very similar to the first antenna and it had the same colour as the second antenna.
This is really back when
Foreign AffairsRe: Bodies Recovered After Iranian Missile Strike On Haifa (pic) by Giigglee: 8:44am On Apr 06
KingAzubuike:
Honestly you just gotta give it to iran. Infact if not for U.S support, Israel would have been dust. Not a fan of Iran but man, they were obviously underrated and I just lobe how they're not intimidated and standing for themselves.

Trump has given them an ultimatum till Tuesday to open the "damn" strait. grin

Let's see what the clown and noise maker has in stalk.
The reason why Iran are not scared of America is because from 1917 - 1979 America and Iran were best friends but Iran was betrayed several times. There this dude called KobolanderSegun on this forum who laid out there history together.

Iran opened it's doors to America and it was when the elected president at the time wanted to rightfully nationalize the British petrol company or take back Iranian oil that Britain and America removed him. This was were it all started . All the bad belle is because America had tried to undermine Iran for profit when the Ayatollah came in all American underhand stopped. Iran went from secular society to Religious society in a way they had to do it to end all American underhand.
FashionRe: The World's Ugliest Shoe Of All Time by Giigglee(op): 1:21pm On Apr 02
KobolanderSegun:
My Gee Giigglee how about this shoe ?. Is this shoe bad ?
They are beautiful...they make sense
EntertainmentRe: Hottest Women On Social Media by Giigglee: 1:07pm On Apr 02
Alikoooooooooo:
Chimo Lovv has so much love to give
Chioma Lovv how can you mess up one of Nigeria's biggest personalities name up ?
EntertainmentRe: Hottest Women On Social Media by Giigglee: 1:05pm On Apr 02
Negro1986:
Thanks for the feedback and the recommendations, will definitely work on them, may God or what ever you believe in keep blessing your hustle too , Amen 🙏🥳👍
Amen
FashionRe: T-shirt Culture In Lagos Nigeria. by Giigglee: 9:19am On Mar 28
Alikoooooooooo:
Round Neck Tee- Shirt Vs V-neck Tee-shirt

In this humid jungle, the tee-shirt is king. It is the uniform of the people. But within this kingdom, there is a quiet, ongoing debate that divides households, markets, and wallets: The Round Neck (Crew Neck) versus the V-Neck. And the question on everyone's lips isn't just which one looks better? It's how much will this thing cost me, and is it worth the stress?

Writing about the cost of t-shirts in Lagos is like trying to hit a moving target while riding a okada. The prices shift faster than the Naira does against the Dollar. But let's sit down, maybe open a cold malt, and break down the economics of the necklines in the Centre of Excellence.

The Round Neck: The People's Champion

The round neck is the default setting for the Lagos man and woman. It is the bread and butter. If you go to Tejuosho Market in Yaba or the chaotic labyrinth that is Balogun, eighty percent of what you see hanging on those racks is the classic crew neck.

Why? Because it's safe. It's versatile. You can wear it under a shirt, you can wear it alone with jeans, you can even sleep in it when NEPA decides to take the light for three days straight. Because of this high demand, the round neck is generally the more affordable option, relatively speaking.

As of right now, if you are shopping in the open markets—places where you have to dodge pushcarts and watch your pocket for pickpockets—a decent, plain round neck tee will set you back anywhere between ₦3,500 to ₦7,000. That's for something new, not okrika (second-hand). If you want the first copy designer ones with the little logos that might peel off after three washes, you're looking at ₦8,000 to ₦15,000.

The round neck benefits from economies of scale. Tailors and importers bring them in by the container load. Everyone needs one. Because the volume is high, the margin per unit can be lower. It's the fast food of the fashion world. It's accessible. You can haggle the seller from ₦5,000 down to ₦4,000, and they will still sell it to you with a smile, because they know they have ten more customers waiting.

The V-Neck: The Soft Life Illusion

Then we have the V-Neck. For the longest time, the V-neck carried a certain stigma in Lagos. It was seen as the shirt you wore when you were trying too hard to look casual but fancy. Or, worse, it was associated with a certain demographic of men who tucked it into tight jeans and wore excessive cologne.

However, trends change. The V-neck has found its footing. But does it cost more?

Here is the secret: In the physical markets of Lagos, the V-neck often costs the same as the round neck. If a seller in Yaba is selling a plain cotton tee for ₦4,500, the V-neck version is usually also ₦4,500. The fabric cost is identical. The stitching difference is negligible.

However, the perceived cost is higher. Why? Because V-necks are harder to find in high quality. In Balogun, you might dig through five bales of round necks to find one bale of V-necks. Scarcity drives perception. When you do find a good V-neck in a boutique in Ikeja or Lekki, the markup is immediate. That same shirt jumps from ₦4,500 in the market to ₦12,000 in a air-conditioned shop with a POS machine that never seems to work.

There is also a psychological V-neck tax. Sellers know that the guy looking for a V-neck is often looking for something slightly more refined. They sense you are willing to pay for the cut. So, while the round neck is haggled aggressively, the V-neck price is often presented as fixed price, boss. Quality.

The Location Variable

You cannot talk about cost in Lagos without talking about where you are buying. The price of a tee-shirt is directly correlated to the amount of traffic you endure to get to it.

If you trek to Computer Village or Idumota, you pay the stress price. It's cheaper, but you pay with your sanity. You are sweating before you even try the shirt on. You are dodging area boys who demand security fees just for standing near their shop. A round neck here is cheap, but the hidden cost is the transport fare and the risk of getting your phone snatched.

If you order online from Instagram vendors—who are everywhere these days—the price inflates. A shirt that is ₦4,000 in the market is ₦9,000 on Instagram. Why? Because you are paying for the convenience of delivery via bike rider, the aesthetic photoshoot, and the vendor's data subscription. With the V-neck, this gap is even wider. Instagram vendors love pushing V-necks as part of a corporate casual bundle. They sell a lifestyle, not just a shirt.

Then you have the boutiques in VI or Ikoyi. Here, the neck shape matters less than the brand. A round neck from a high-end brand can cost ₦40,000. A V-neck from the same brand, ₦45,000. At this level, the difference is trivial compared to the sheer audacity of the price tag. You aren't paying for cotton; you are paying for the air conditioning in the shop and the fact that the shop is located where fuel is expensive.

The Inflation Elephant in the Room

We have to address the elephant. The Naira.

Six months ago, the prices I mentioned were lower. Six months from now, they will likely be higher. The cost of tee-shirts in Lagos is tied to the importation of fabric and the cost of diesel to power the sewing machines. When the Dollar sneezes, the price of a V-neck in Surulere catches a cold.

Recently, I watched a seller in Oshodi argue with a customer over ₦500. The customer wanted a round neck. The seller said, Oga, the price of cloth has gone up. Even the thread I use to stitch the neck is imported. It sounds like an excuse, but it's the truth.

This inflation affects the V-neck slightly more simply because it is a lower-volume item. If the cost of production rises, importers stop bringing in the risky stock (V-necks) and focus on the safe stock (round necks). This makes good V-necks harder to find, and when found, more expensive.

The Durability Factor (The Real Cost)

When we talk about cost, we must talk about value. In Lagos, a t-shirt goes through war. It is washed in harsh detergents because we want the sweat out. It is dried under the scorching sun, which fades the black to grey. It is ironed with dry irons when the water runs out.

The round neck generally holds up better structurally. The collar is reinforced. It doesn't stretch out as easily. A ₦5,000 round neck might last you two years of heavy Lagos use.

The V-neck, however, has a weakness. The point of the V. In the wash, that point can curl. It can stretch. It can lose its sharpness. If you buy a cheap V-neck for ₦3,000, by the third wash, you look like you're wearing a rag. To get a V-neck that maintains its shape, you often have to spend more on better fabric blends. So, while the sticker price might be similar, the long-term cost of a V-neck might be higher because you have to replace it sooner if you don't buy quality.

The Art of Haggling

Finally, the final price you pay depends on your mouth. In Lagos, the price on the tag is a suggestion. It is a starting point for a negotiation.

With a round neck, the haggling is standard. Oga, reduce am. How much you get? Take this one. It's routine.

With a V-neck, the dynamic changes. Because it's seen as slightly more premium, sellers are sometimes stiffer on the price. But if you buy in bulk—say, you are buying for your office staff or a family reunion—you can swing the price. I want ten V-necks. Suddenly, the seller is your best friend. The price drops.

But be warned: There is a tourist tax. If you walk into a market looking too clean, smelling too good, and speaking too much English, the price of that V-neck just doubled. You have to look like you know the value of money. You have to speak the language. Even if you don't speak Yoruba or Pidgin fluently, a little How much be this? goes a long way in keeping the price honest.

what is the cost difference between a round neck and a V-neck in Lagos?

Objectively? Maybe ₦500 to ₦1,000 in a boutique. Zero in the open market.
Subjectively? It depends on your stress levels.

If you want the round neck, you are choosing the path of least resistance. It is cheaper, easier to find, more durable, and socially acceptable in almost every setting from the church to the bar. It is the economic choice.

If you choose the V-neck, you are paying for a specific aesthetic. You are betting that the slight elevation in style is worth the hunt. You might pay the same amount, but you will spend more time looking for it. And in Lagos, time is money. Time spent in traffic going to the right shop is a cost. Time spent haggling is a cost.

In the end, the real cost of a t-shirt in Lagos isn't just the Naira figure. It's the fuel you burned to get to the market. It's the data you used to scroll through Instagram vendors. It's the mental energy spent deciding if the collar is too low or too high.

My advice? If the heat is unbearable, just buy the round neck. Save the V-neck for when you are going somewhere with steady electricity and cold air. And whatever you do, always keep ₦2,000 extra for transport and a small snack. Because in Lagos, even buying a simple t-shirt is an expedition. And whether it's a V or a Round, if it absorbs sweat and doesn't fade after one wash, it's a bargain.

Stay cool, Lagos. The price will go up tomorrow, so buy today.
If one wants to buy a Tee-shirt what is the best way to go about it ?

Where can I buy a t-shirt with African Designs on the Tee-shirt and what is the Price of a T-shirt with African Designs on the T-shirt.
CultureRe: Top Facebook Influencers 2026 by Giigglee: 9:02am On Mar 28
Alikoooooooooo:
The Battle of the Screens: Facebook vs. TikTok (Or, How We All Became Digital Zombies)

Let's be honest for a second. If you pull your phone out of your pocket right now, there's a pretty good chance the first thing you tap is either a blue app with an F or a black app with a music note. It's muscle memory at this point. We wake up, we scroll. We wait in line, we scroll. We sit on the toilet (TMI? Sorry, but we all do it), we scroll.

But here's the question that divides dinner tables, group chats, and generations: Which one is actually better? Is it Facebook, the aging giant that basically invented the social media game as we know it? Or is it TikTok, the chaotic newcomer that hijacked our brains in the span of about three years?

Trying to pick a winner between Facebook and TikTok is kind of like trying to decide whether a minivan or a rollercoaster is the better vehicle. They're both designed to take you somewhere, but the experience, the passengers, and the likelihood of you throwing up are vastly different. So, let's break this down, no jargon, no corporate speak, just real talk about which platform deserves a spot on your home screen.

The Vibe Check: Town Square vs. The Stage

First off, you have to look at what these apps actually feel like.

Facebook is the digital equivalent of a high school reunion mixed with a community bulletin board. It's where your aunt posts pictures of her casserole, your old college roommate announces they're engaged for the fourth time, and your uncle posts a conspiracy theory about bird flu. Facebook is built on the Social Graph. That's a fancy way of saying it's about who you know. You connect with people you have a real-life tie to. It's useful, sure. It's great for Marketplace (honestly, Facebook Marketplace is the only reason I keep the app; where else can you buy a slightly used couch and get ghosted by a stranger within minutes?). It's good for event planning and local community groups. But the vibe? It's heavy. It's cluttered. It feels like walking into a room where everyone is talking at once, and half of them are arguing about politics.

TikTok, on the other hand, is a stage. And you're not necessarily the performer; you're mostly the audience. TikTok is built on the Interest Graph. It doesn't care who your friends are. It cares about what makes your brain light up. The vibe is fast, loud, and incredibly entertaining. It's a never-ending talent show where the acts range from brilliant comedy sketches to someone pressure-washing a driveway (why is that so satisfying?). There's less pressure to post about your life. On Facebook, if you don't post, you're invisible. On TikTok, you can lurk in the shadows for years, consuming content without ever showing your face, and the algorithm will still love you.

The Algorithm: Creepy vs. Scarily Accurate

We need to talk about the brain behind the operation.

Facebook's algorithm is smart, but it's kind of a rage-bait machine. It learned a long time ago that anger keeps people engaged longer than happiness. So, it shows you stuff that makes you want to comment, argue, or share out of outrage. It prioritizes content from friends and family, which sounds nice, but often means you're forced to see your cousin's 50-photo album from their trip to Disney World whether you want to or not.

TikTok's algorithm, the For You Page (FYP), is basically magic. It's borderline psychic. You watch one video about sourdough bread, and within ten minutes, your entire feed is flour, yeast, and crusty loaves. It learns your taste faster than a dating app learns your type. It's addictive because it's good. It cuts out the fluff. If you don't like a video, you swipe, and it's gone. Facebook makes you wade through ads and sponsored posts to get to the good stuff. TikTok hides the ads better (until they don't). In terms of pure content delivery, TikTok wins hands down. It respects your attention span more, even if it is stealing your entire life.

The Cringe Factor and Demographics

Here's the harsh truth: Facebook is getting old. I don't mean the company, I mean the users. Remember when Facebook was cool? That was like fifteen years ago. Now, if you're under 25, having a Facebook profile is almost ironic. It's where you go to verify your identity or check the date of an event. The cool factor has evaporated. It feels a bit like showing up to a party wearing a shirt from 2012. Everyone else is wearing it too, but we all know it's dated.

TikTok is the cool kid on the block, but it's aging up fast. Originally, it was Gen Z dancing in their bedrooms. Now, you've got millennials posting day in the life vlogs, and even Gen X is trying to figure out the trends. But TikTok still feels fresher. The culture moves at light speed. A trend on TikTok lasts a week; a trend on Facebook lasts a decade (looking at you, Ice Bucket Challenge shares that people still repost). However, TikTok has its own cringe. The influencer culture is rampant. The fake relationships, the get rich quick schemes, and the over-produced content can get exhausting. But at least it's new exhaustion.

Privacy: Pick Your Poison

Now, let's get into the stuff we try not to think about while we're watching cat videos. Privacy.

Facebook (Meta) has a reputation that is... let's call it tarnished. They've had more data scandals than I've had hot dinners. They track you across the web, they listen to your conversations (okay, maybe not literally, but it feels like it), and they sell your data to advertisers. It's a data vacuum cleaner.

TikTok? Well, they're owned by a Chinese company, ByteDance. This brings up a whole different set of geopolitical anxieties. There are concerns about data security, government access, and censorship. Governments around the world are constantly threatening to ban it.

So, who's better? Honestly? It's a toss-up. With Facebook, you're the product being sold to advertisers. With TikTok, you're the product being potentially sold to... well, advertisers and maybe a foreign government? It's like choosing between giving your data to a shady used car salesman or a mysterious spy movie villain. Neither is great. If privacy is your main metric, the answer is to delete both and go touch grass. But since we're comparing the two, let's call this round a draw. They both want everything you've got.

The Mental Health Toll

This is the big one. How do these apps make you feel after an hour of use?

Facebook often leaves me feeling anxious or annoyed. I'll get off the app feeling like I'm behind on life, or angry about the state of the world, or jealous of someone's vacation. It's a comparison trap. You see the highlight reels of people you actually know, which makes your real life feel dull by comparison.

TikTok leaves me feeling... hollow. It's the ultimate doomscroll. You open the app for five minutes, and suddenly it's 2:00 AM and you've watched 400 videos about how to organize your fridge. It zombifies you. It's passive consumption at its peak. However, TikTok has carved out niches for mental health awareness, neurodivergence, and community support that feel more genuine than Facebook's support groups. You can find your tribe on TikTok easier than on Facebook. But the time-sink factor is undeniable. TikTok is designed to break your concept of time. Facebook is designed to break your temper. Which is worse? I'd argue the time-sink is slightly less toxic than the rage-machine, but it's close.

It Depends on What You Need

So, which is better?

If you want to sell a couch, organize a family reunion, or keep tabs on your high school enemies, Facebook is the tool for the job. It's utility software disguised as a social network. It's the digital phonebook we never asked for but can't quite throw away. It's better for connection in the traditional sense, keeping ties with people you already have.

If you want to be entertained, learn a quick recipe, laugh until you cry, or feel like part of a global culture without having to perform your own life, TikTok is the winner. It's better for content. It respects the creator economy more; a random teenager in a bedroom has the same chance of going viral as a celebrity. On Facebook, unless you're paying for ads or already have 5,000 friends, you're shouting into the void.

But here's the real take, the one nobody wants to hear in a Facebook vs. TikTok essay: Neither of them is actually good for you in large doses. They are both attention economies designed to harvest your time.

If I had to pick one to survive on a desert island? I'd pick TikTok. Why? Because Facebook feels like work. You have to curate your profile, manage friend requests, and navigate family drama. TikTok is just a show. You sit down, you watch, you swipe. It's simpler. It's honest about what it is: a slot machine for videos. Facebook pretends to be about community while selling your data. TikTok pretends to be about creativity while selling your data. At least TikTok admits it's all about the entertainment.

Wrapping It Up

In the end, the better app is the one you use with intention. If you open Facebook to check a specific group or sell an item, it's a great tool. If you open it to mindlessly scroll, it's a trap. If you open TikTok to find a tutorial or have a laugh, it's amazing. If you open it to numb out for three hours, it's a problem.

We're living in an era where these companies are fighting a war for our eyeballs, and honestly, we're the battlefield. Facebook is the established fortress, sturdy but crumbling. TikTok is the flashy new castle, exciting but built on shaky ground.

Maybe the best move isn't choosing a side. Maybe the best move is realizing that we don't need to live in either castle. We can visit, enjoy the view, and then log off before the algorithm decides it knows us better than we know ourselves. But until we all collectively decide to throw our smartphones into the ocean, I guess I'll see you on the FYP. Just don't tag me in a Facebook meme, please. I'm trying to retire that part of my life.
What about Twitter and YouTube which one is better ?
CultureRe: Top Facebook Influencers 2026 by Giigglee: 8:10am On Mar 28
Alikoooooooooo:
You want to trend abi?

There's no magic button, but the fastest legitimate way: import your phone/email contacts to send bulk friend requests, join active Facebook Groups in your niche and genuinely engage with members, and cross-promote your profile on Instagram or other platforms. Be friendly, comment on posts, and accept requests from people you know.

Important note: Facebook caps personal profiles at 5,000 friends. If you hit that limit and want more reach, switch to a Facebook Page, which allows unlimited followers.

Avoid buying friends or using bots—it violates Facebook's rules, gets you flagged, and fills your list with fake accounts that won't actually engage. Real connections take time, but they're worth way more than a number.
In your opinion which is better TikTok or Facebook ?
Nairaland GeneralRe: Most Beautifullest Women In The World 2026 Edition ( Pictures ) by Giigglee: 3:25pm On Mar 27
KobolanderSegun:
Madrid All the Way Vinicius Junior
Madrid All the way
Nairaland GeneralRe: The War Is Over ! They Lost !!!! by Giigglee: 10:08am On Mar 27
Alikoooooooooo:
Trump says he is going to launch more missiles
Yes he said that but Iran will definitely retaliate. Let us watch this film show
RomanceRe: Biggest Breasts On Tiktok ( Pics ) Natural by Giigglee: 9:46am On Mar 27
Tenrack:
lol. You don dey whine me
Who dey whine you
Nairaland GeneralRe: Most Beautifullest Women In The World 2026 Edition ( Pictures ) by Giigglee: 8:39am On Mar 27
FashionStyleGla:
These are the real Champions
Hala Madrid
RomanceRe: Biggest Breasts On Tiktok ( Pics ) Natural by Giigglee: 8:24am On Mar 27
KobolanderSegun:
Wow..... Iv forgetten all about this babe. It truly is out off sight is out of mind. How could I have forgotten about her ??
I'll check online .....
PoliticsRe: APC Convention: FG Shuts Roads, Asks Civil Servants To Work From Home by Giigglee: 7:54am On Mar 27
Dannieln1:
APC
Some people will still vote this party in 2027
I weep for this country.
Just the other day, the stats for countries with good quality of life was released and my beloved country came last.
We never had it this bad
9ja dey carry last, out Olodo in charge and Olodo go dey everywhere
FashionRe: The World's Ugliest Shoe Of All Time by Giigglee(op): 4:35pm On Mar 26
Alikoooooooooo:
Her fashion boutique is doing extremely well, they have everything African Fashion especially African Designs on t-shirts, bangles, skirts, Kente bags. Do you know she also is on Nairaland? She has a page dedicated to fashion and afrocentric items
Very interesting.
FashionRe: List Of 10 African Women With Big Huge Massive Breasts by Giigglee: 1:26pm On Mar 26
Ori mi o !!!
Nairaland GeneralRe: The War Is Over ! They Lost !!!! by Giigglee: 1:22pm On Mar 26
Alikoooooooooo:
No wonder Billionaires were building bunkers. They had a heads up
And amazingly most of those guys backed him as president
Nairaland GeneralRe: Most Beautifullest Women In The World 2026 Edition ( Pictures ) by Giigglee: 5:51pm On Mar 23
KobolanderSegun:
Is she a car. What do you mean by engine ?
Engine now.... You know Engine.... Like a good motor ... If I talk to much na ban go happen
Nairaland GeneralRe: Most Beautifullest Women In The World 2026 Edition ( Pictures ) by Giigglee: 4:41pm On Mar 23
What's the name of Number One. looks like someone who has engine
PoliticsRe: Peter Obi/Kwankwaso Kano Rally: Tunde Ednut And Isaac Fayose Mock Tinubu by Giigglee: 4:39pm On Mar 23
jeff1993:
Hmnnnnnn if dem like let Dem Plan against Tinubu in there millions, BAba will still succeed. Tinubu is politics himself. He has read the game to the full stop.

OBI/Kwankwaso is just wasting their time.

Note: I'm not a fan of tiluuumbu
You are a fan and you cannot even hide it. Nobody ever praises an Enemy. You only praise what you love.
Nairaland GeneralRe: Most Beautifullest Women In The World 2026 Edition ( Pictures ) by Giigglee: 4:30pm On Mar 23
For me it's the first woman and the third womy
Nairaland GeneralRe: The War Is Over ! They Lost !!!! by Giigglee: 3:30pm On Mar 23
worldpeacetoday:
As for me there War is Over. The way people are looking for war and wanting escalation is simply proof to the destructive energy in man, that wants to see death and destruction.

For me there is No War.

Celebrate with me the war is Over
Bros e be like say you a a prophet o......
Foreign AffairsRe: Trump Says He Is Postponing Strikes On Iran Power Plants After ‘Productive’ Talk by Giigglee: 3:25pm On Mar 23
CaseSensitive:
But Tehran said they there's been no direct communication with the US nor through an intermediary. Who actually did Trump speak to? Eating up his own words as usual?

Looking at it from a different but connected lens, the market is currently in shambles and I believe Trump’s post about talking to Iran is about stabilising the market for this week at least and avoid a global meltdown. His statement is meant to manipulate the market. He’s going to resume attacks over the weekend when the markets are closed. But that’s not sustainable, how long is he going to keep up with the manipulation? He’s backed into a corner that he can’t get out of.

I'll take this as a win for Iran, it's Cuba and Nigeria that will bear the brunt of United States bruised ego. Buckle up guys, it's about to get interesting.
No Boss it Nigeria. They will leave Cuba and come to a soft spot
PoliticsRe: 2027: Portable Declares Spiritual War On Yoruba Anti-tinubu Voters by Giigglee: 3:00pm On Mar 23
Thiefobi1:
I am igbo and will never vote obi as presidential candidate or president.
Then who will you vote for ?

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