Hoodrat's Posts
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What was their justification for criminal kidnapping, bloodshed and destructions of those not having money to bail themselves out of their terror camp... What is the best name to call this criminals and monstrous fellows?? Janduku |
Northernblood8:In Southwest Nigeria, several states including Oyo, Ondo, Ekiti, Ogun, and Osun have passed Anti-Open Grazing Laws since 2019, with Oyo State’s law being one of the most actively enforced. These laws forbid open grazing of cattle and other livestock, requiring ranching instead, to reduce farmer-herder conflicts and protect farmlands. Enforcement & Penalties Arrest of cattle found roaming freely. Fines imposed on herdsmen. Court prosecution for violators. Security posts established in farming settlements (e.g., Ijaye Farm Settlement in Oyo). |
This guy needs to s.t.f.u right quick im sick and tired of his constant shallow analysis of the problem facing the country and his one sided bias He is a heavy propaganda pusher who enjoy putting his mouth in dirty politics game and labour under hand in spreading negativity and talking crazy about the country. |
samomoli:Your words reek of bitterness, not truth. To curse leaders endlessly without offering solutions is easy, but it adds nothing to progress. Selling everything to ‘japa’ is not a badge of wisdom, it’s a symptom of despair. Africa is not doomed it is sabotaged by those who choose hopelessness over responsibility. The so‑called ‘giant of Africa’ will rise, but only when citizens stop glorifying foreign lands and start demanding accountability at home. Instead of spreading doom, channel your anger into action. That is the only way to shame wicked leaders and prove them wrong. The allure of Hollywood films, Netflix, and other foreign media constantly paints life abroad as superior, fueling desires to forsake one’s homeland. This propaganda contributes to the mindset that leaving is the only path to success. Unfortunately, it led to the situation of this woman who made an ill‑informed decision to abandon Nigeria for France. |
Nigerian should continue to put continual curses on the bandits that they may fall into their own demise and be destroyed by their own foolishness. |
The poster of this misleading information should be found and arrested. |
[quote author=MrsAyomide post=138779379]Northern Nigerian Youths had a man wearing the face of Donald Trump on a leash and were torturing him. Notherners Boys are amazing... Beating the trump out of a man is hilarious 😂 |
Pacesetter123:The First Lady Oluremi Tinubu was born on 21 September 1960. She is the number 12 of 13 children in her family and she hails from the Ikusebiala family of Ogun State. |
Pacesetter123:The first Lady is of Yoruba ethnic group. |
Antoeni:This appears to be propaganda at work. Reno is Urhobo, the First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu, is Yoruba. So he is definitely not from the same ethnic group as the First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu. Suggesting otherwise is really misleading. |
richmond500:Understood bro. |
davillian:Yea the confussion is very obvious on his face. |
The stone scientifically proven and historically recorded to have fallen from the sky is the Hoba meteorite in Namibia. In contrast, the Black Stone in Mecca is set up to be believed by many to be sacred, but it has not been scientifically verified as a meteorite because researchers have not been allowed by the saudi authorities to examine or test it directly. As a result, some critics argue that without independent scientific and historiam analysis, its true origin cannot be confirmed. W.O.S 14:21 And this was an occasion to deceive the world: for men, serving either calamity or tyranny, did ascribe unto stones and stocks the incommunicable name. He went to sokoto to dey find wetin dey inside him sokoto. |
Fujiyama:You’re not just telling the truth you’re telling one slice of the truth and insisting it is the whole picture. You say you’re not making a case for life outside Nigeria, yet every paragraph you write is structured to prove that Nigeria is unlivable and that anyone who doesn’t fully agree with your framing is naïve, sheltered, or dishonest. That’s a position, not neutrality. You keep shifting the goalpost... When corrected that the NYSC case is outdated, instead of simply updating your information, you double down and say many others were not so fortunate which is true, but it doesn’t change the fact that you used an old example as if it were current. That’s exactly what outdated means. You say nobody is painting this country in colours she isn’t already wearing, yet you only ever describe bloodshed, death, siege,strife,calamity,scourges and collapse,but never the millions of people still living, working, travelling, and building in the same Nigeria you claim is practically uninhabitable. That’s not balance that’s selection. Your only the living can own houses line doesn’t contradict anything I said. It’s emotional, not logical. Nobody argued that insecurity isn’t deadly. The point is acknowledging danger is not the same as declaring the entire country a write‑off. You blur that line on purpose. You also keep using foreign governments as a moral measuring stick.. If this happened abroad, the government would fall.Yes because their citizens stayed, fought, organized, and demanded accountability over decades. The same thing you subtly discourage Nigerians from doing by constantly framing staying as foolish and dangerous. You say you’re not a theorist,then what ae you? if accusing others of Reducing a complex country to one lens.Treating your field experience as the only valid reality.. Dismissing any attempt at nuance as minimization. Here’s the contradiction at the core of your argument.. You insist we must call things what they are but when someone calls your framing one‑sided, you call it an attack on truth. You say people can make their own decisions yet you speak with the finality of someone declaring that any hope, any talk of building, any mention of context is an insult to the dead. |
Ironfaceman:Francis Obikwelu’s story is real but it is one man’s experience with a corrupt sports federation, not proof that Nigerians are second‑class humans in their own country. AFN failed him, not Nigeria as a whole. If one rotten institution defines an entire nation for you, then every racist police killing abroad and far right anti immigration atmosphere currently spreading in europe and america should define those countries too. But you conveniently don’t apply that same standard. And your argument contradict itself when you say Nigeria rewards mediocrity, yet the same Nigeria produced Obikwelu, Seun Ogunkoya, Falilat Ogunkoya, Chioma Ajunwa, and countless global achievers. You say the system is rigged, yet millions of Nigerians build businesses, careers, and generational wealth every day without switching nationality. You say tribalism blocks success, yet your own example is a single biased official not a national decree. You’re using extreme cases to generalize an entire country, while ignoring the millions of Nigerians who succeed because they stayed, not because they ran. And here’s the part you keep skipping...... Foreign success doesn’t erase the value of home. 1.Abroad, you survive. 2.At home, you build. 3.Abroad, you rent stability. 4.At home, you own legacy. 5.Abroad, even your house isn’t truly yours miss taxes and it’s gone. 6. At home, land is land. Legacy is legacy. Obikwelu found success in Portugal good for him.But that doesn’t mean every Nigerian must switch nationality to matter. It simply means his path opened elsewhere. Your personal story is valid.Your conclusion is not. Stop using isolated failures to paint Nigeria as a place where nobody can rise. |
Fujiyama:Let’s start with the NYSC claim: the young man you mentioned has already regained his freedom. Using outdated or exaggerated stories to paint Nigeria as a hopeless warzone is exactly how misinformation spreads. It’s not honest, and it’s not helpful. And this is the bigger issue many Nigerians abroad consume only the worst headlines about Nigeria and start believing that’s the whole country. Social media amplifies the loudest tragedies because outrage gets clicks. But step outside the internet and you’ll see a different reality millions of Nigerians waking up, working, raising families, building businesses, and living their lives every single day. Criticism is valid. Nigeria has issues. But turning those problems into a one‑sided narrative that ignores context, resilience, and progress isn’t insight it’s bias. The claim that Nigerians are second‑class citizens in their own country is simply not true. What exists is a rewarding system that requires resilience to climb, not a structural declaration that you are inferior. One tribalist, one biased official, or one corrupt gatekeeper does not define an entire nation. Abroad, the comfort people talk about is built on a saturated system designed for stability, not growth. You can survive there, but you rarely own anything in the true sense. Even the house you buy is never fully yours miss a few payments, taxes, or administrative fees and the government takes it back. That’s not ownership that’s long‑term renting with paperwork. Meanwhile, building wealth in your home country is different. Here, what you build can actually belong to you and your children. Land, business, legacy these things are real. They are not leased from the government. They are not dependent on a visa renewal. They are not wiped out because you missed a tax deadline You can’t cherry‑pick the darkest stories to justify a worldview. you can’t use outdated tragedies to push a narrative of total collapse. |
Ironfaceman:What you experienced was one individual’s tribal bias, not the entire Lagos system, not the entire Nigerian society, and certainly not a justification to paint a whole state as inherently against you. A single gatekeeper with a small mind does not represent millions of people. Reducing an entire city to the actions of a few is the same flawed thinking that fuels the insecurity you claim to have escaped. And let’s be honest.. Becoming a citizen in another country and rising in their system doesn’t erase your roots it simply shows what structure, fairness, and opportunity can do when combined with personal effort. That’s admirable. But it doesn’t mean Nigeria is incapable of producing the same outcomes. What’s unfair is pretending that your success abroad automatically proves that home is worthless.It doesn’t. It only proves that you found a place that worked for you not that everyone else must abandon theirs. The truth is this One bad experience does not invalidate the dignity of building at home. And one person’s foreign success does not make Nigeria a wasteland. People need to stop using isolated personal stories to shame others into believing their country has nothing to offer. That mindset is exactly what pushes desperate people into dangerous, reckless japa attempts the same pressure that killed your colleague. Success is not tied to geography, but disrespecting your own land because one person disrespected you is not wisdom it’s projection. |
GOVERNORR:I am sorry to hear of such sad event. Your colleague’s death is a painful reminder of how dangerous the pressure to japa at all costs has become. It’s no longer just about travel it’s about people feeling so trapped, so ashamed, and so deceived by the illusion of life abroad that they destroy themselves trying to chase it. What happened to him connects directly to everything the nairaland poster of this story discussed, i had earlier rebuked a long term naiaralnder who in his bid to glamourized life abroad instructed both old and young to risk it all, sell their inheritance in naija to japa. The hidden pressure behind the soft life performance Many Nigerians abroad unintentionally (and sometimes intentionally) create a false picture of success curated photos, selective updates, exaggerated comfort. Some do it out of insecurity, some out of pride, and some because they don’t want to admit how hard their reality truly is. But those images become a weapon against people back home, making them feel like failures for simply living their lives. Your colleague wasn’t just scammed by an agent he was scammed by a narrative. A narrative that says: If you’re still in Nigeria, you’re wasting your life. Once you land abroad, everything becomes easy. Borrow money, sell everything it will pay off.These lies push people into desperation, and desperation is where tragedy happens. The real cost of chasing a fantasy Your colleague took loans he couldn’t repay, carried shame he couldn’t bear, and faced a future he felt too embarrassed to explain. That emotional weight is heavier than any suitcase. And when the dream collapsed, he had nothing left to hold onto. |
Ironfaceman:Many Nigerians abroad are not just posting their lives they are curating them. The snow pictures, the apartment tours, the soft life captions often hide the loneliness, the racism, the visa anxiety, the years of doing survival jobs, and the quiet fear of being sent home. Some amplify the glamour because they need the validation others do it to feel superior to those back home. But their insecurity should never become your compass. The truth is simple not every shining abroad story is real, and not every quiet life in Nigeria is failure.There is dignity in living where you are not a second‑class human, where your progress isn’t controlled by immigration officers, and where your future isn’t held hostage by a resident permit renewal. In your own land, you don’t need to shrink your identity to fit in, or endure subtle humiliation just to survive. Nigeria is hard nobody denies that. But it is also a place where you can build wealth without fighting a system designed to keep you at the bottom. Land, business, networks, community, identity these are resources many Nigerians abroad would give anything to regain. You can grow here without hiding, without pretending, without begging a foreign country to let you stay. So take your eyes off the show-offs and the insecurity-driven I have arrived performances. Focus on building a real life where you stand on your own soil with your full dignity intact. Progress built at home may be slower, but it is solid and it is yours. |
The people of northern Nigeria are largely from different ethnic groups than those in the southern and eastern parts of the country and not blood related through the father. In the north, historically entrenched social hierarchies and slave like systems have persisted in various forms over time, and some scholars note that slavery continued well into the 20th century. Understanding this historical context can help explain certain social behaviour and political dynamics of the people in the region. It also helps explain how figures such as Usman dan Fodio were able to mobilize support through jihadist rhetoric during the early 19th century to wage war against those in the south and eastern part of the country for his jihad course. Many people were dissatisfied with existing rulers and social conditions, including systems that tolerated or perpetuated slavery. These grievances helped fuel the movement that enabled his military and religious campaign to succeed. Some observers also point to echoes of these structural problems in parts of the region today. For example, armed groups and bandit networks have been known to recruit or coerce children and teenagers sometimes as young as eight to sixteen into carrying weapons and participating in criminal activities. For many of these youths, recruitment is tied to poverty, lack of opportunity, coercion, or the search for belonging and protection within armed groups. |
Precious201010:Nothing good at all , according to the his and his ancestors stories on our records. |
Both fake Israel,Iran,Palestinian, Hezbollar, USA, EU, Boko haram, ISIS, Iswap,Bandits etc and all of their sympathizers and war enablers can all kill and bombed each other back to stone age, Alll i know is the Glorious future and kingdoms thats fast aproaching belongs to the Children of Oyasheriola AKA Odudu-iwa AKA Yacouba, AKA Yoruba ,AKA Ori-Oba, Aka Yahsarala AKA Israel AKA Jew Aka Ouidah AkA Judah AKA Ajuba, AKA Negro AKA anago, aka Omonoahbi . ![]() |
SixSeven:The experiment was made on dogs,that tells a lot about the truth. |
EmperorIsaac:This is true... Hypocrisy on every side. |
uche87:This is one of the saddest modern-day things... Satan became a tailor, and greedy women embraced it because it serves their depraved minds. So selfish that they don’t care about the damaging effect and how mentally exhausted the men around them feel when they walk around in those yoga pants. What once seemed like innerwear meant for home has now become a public monument, and when you speak against it, they call you a misogynist. |
Uploaded similar case, like Renee Bach this woman was later given her own platform on an HBO program. Yet her case exposed something deeply troubling how a foreign missionary without proper medical training was allowed to operate a clinic in Africa, with devastating consequences. And hers is not the only case. There have been numerous reports over the years of foreign NGOs or missionaries arriving in remote African villages, presenting themselves as medical helpers, setting up clinics tto kill us, and operating with little oversight. In communities where people are desperate for healthcare, trust comes easily especially when many still believe that anything coming from the West must be right. That blind trust has sometimes led to tragic outcomes and loss of life. This is why Africans must become more vigilant and demand accountability. Genuine help should always come with transparency, proper qualifications, and oversight. Our people deserve real healthcare, not experiments carried out in vulnerable communities.
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Dpharmacist:Your response sounds confident, but it also ignores several realities people are raising. First, saying there is no evidence while dismissing the growing number of lawsuits and compensation claims against companies like Pfizer, Moderna, and AstraZeneca is not honest debate. Millions of lawsuit cases have been filed in different countries by individuals who believe they suffered serious adverse effects. Whether every claim is proven or not, pretending there is no controversy while media coverage stays silent and selective only deepens public mistrust. Second, people are not foolish for remembering history. African populations have previously been used in questionable medical trials and experiments by foreign institutions. Because of that history, skepticism toward externally driven health campaigns is understandable. Prevention programmes do not automatically gain trust simply because they are labeled public health. Third, pointing fingers at Africans as reckless with sex oversimplifies the issue and shifts attention away from deeper social solutions. Public health is not only about medication. It also involves community responsibility, moral values, education, and cultural stability. Restoring stronger communal and family values can play a major role in preventing diseases like HIV. Finally, questioning pharmaceutical interventions does not mean rejecting science. It means asking whether the same institutions with massive financial interests should automatically be trusted without scrutiny. Healthy debate is not fear-mongering; it is part of accountability. If prevention is truly the goal, it should combine transparent science, cultural responsibility, and public trust not pressure campaigns, dismissive attitudes, or narratives that silence legitimate concerns.
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