Kobojunkie's Posts
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Localemperor:Given we are on the subject of Nigeria, expect and accept the cho cho cho. I have been on Nairaland since about 2007, long enough to know that people should question and discuss everything if they really want to see lasting change come to be. ![]() Are students already using the Owo facility as we speak? Has anyone confirmed that even that school has all that was promised by the state Governor in every school? ![]() A Glimpse into Our SMART & GREEN SchoolsThis na people money dem dey spend for all of these things and it is on the people to ensure that their money is in fact spent for what it was allotted for. ![]() |
Localemperor:The State site does not indicate a location for any of the projects. I am currently still searching to find pictures of actual structures where they are. ![]() |
Localemperor:I was going to ask the address of at least one of the schools but I found that none of the schools are slated to go into operation until 2025. Any idea of the location of any of these schools so I can maybe google see using Google Maps for myself? Same with any of the "advanced healthcare centers" please. ![]() |
Youareforgiven:But I don't need to comprehend all that exists. I simply need to know for a fact that your claims are based on falsehood...lies. That is all that is needed. ![]() |
Localemperor:Where are the smart schools and advanced healthcare centers built by the governor make we investigate and know of what is going on too? ![]() |
This monograph describes how a failed state in 2030 may impact the United States and the global economy. It also identifies critical capabilities and technologies the US Air Force should have to respond to a failed state, especially one of vital interest to the United States and one on the cusp of a civil war. Nation-states can fail for a myriad of reasons: cultural or religious conflict, a broken social contract between the government and the governed, a catastrophic natural disaster, financial collapse, war, and so forth. Nigeria with its vast oil wealth, large population, and strategic position in Africa and the global economy can, if it fails disproportionately affect the United States and the global economy. Nigeria, like many nations in Africa, gained independence from the United Kingdom in 1960. It is the most populous country in Africa and will have nearly 250 million people by 2030. In its relatively short modern history, Nigeria has survived five military coups as well as separatist and religious wars, is mired in an active armed insurgency, is suffering from disastrous ecological conditions in its Niger Delta region, and is fighting one of the modern world?s worst legacies of political and economic corruption. A nation with more than 350 ethnic groups, 250 languages, and three distinct religious affiliations? Christian, Islamic, and animist Nigeria?s 135 million people today are anything but homogenous. Of Nigeria's 36 states, 12 are Islamic and under the strong and growing influence of the Sokoto caliphate. While religious and ethnic violence is commonplace, the federal government has managed to strike a tenuous balance among the disparate religious and ethnic factions. With such demographics, Nigeria's failure would be akin to a piece of fine china dropped on a tile floor. it would simply shatter into potentially hundreds of pieces. Poor investment in the nation's critical infrastructure and underinvestment in health care, education, science, and technology are all leading to a brain drain. in which Nigeria's most talented and educated citizens are leaving the country. This will leave a future Nigeria even poorer. Nascent attempts to address electoral and governmental corruption are meeting with some success and hold promise for the future. Recent meetings between the president and insurgent groups may, over time, help resolve some of Nigeria's most intractable and dangerous internal conflicts. The population's disappointment in its government has not appreciably shaken its faith in democracy. Elections are and will likely remain an important part of Nigerian life as they, despite the odds, provide the people hope that they can make a difference in Nigeria struggles to succeed. Nigeria becoming a failed state is not a foregone conclusion. However, should the oil-rich state of Nigeria, a nation likely to provide up to 25 or 25 percent of US light, sweet crude oil imports by 2030, fail, then the effect on the United States and the world economy would be too great to ignore. The threat that failure poses to a quarter billion Nigerians in terms of livelihood, security, and general way of life could quickly spread and cause a humanitarian disaster of previously unimagined proportions. Regardless of the extent of the humanitarian crisis unfolding in the wake of failure, the hard work to repair the damage could take two generations to make Nigeria viable again. This failed-state scenario is one of four that comprised the Blue Horizons study in 2008. It explores the implications of what it would mean for the US Air Force to respond to a failed state in 2030, one with a large population that has resources vital to the Western world. The capabilities necessary to detect threats, characterize the environment, rapidly deploy and protect responders, and sustain operations long enough to create conditions for the indigenous people to resurrect their fallen nation are all issues that need to be explored. From these, this monograph helps the study team understand what types of technologies the US Air Force should pursue to enable it to lead and prevail against the challenges and surprises posed by future failed states. https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/citations/ADA543719 |
jesmond3945:Yes, why not? Let every house in Nigeria set up its own food garden and its own illegal refinery. Why not? ![]()
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vikstandon:WOW... I guess the state is really a construction site. ![]() |
Exousiang01:🤣🤣🤣🤣Na you talk am ooo! |
Localemperor:Can you please include information about these "smart schools", "advance health centers", and "international conference centers"? It would be right to investigate it all to understand what is real from what is the usual propaganda and lies that are typical of Nigeria. ![]() |
MorataFC:1. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 We can't ask non-existent questions but somehow you can answer non-existent questions? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 2. If Jesus Christ never attended any burials nor charged anyone for burials and Jesus Christ also never charged anyone for food.... how then do you even begin connecting your churches which charge people for burials or food to Jesus Christ? What the heck have your churches which are glorified business centers — they pretty much charge for everything from their members — to do with Jesus Christ who never charged His followers for anything? ![]() 3. Jesus Christ is famous for saying, "Let the dead bury their dead." Your burial ground rituals which apply only to the dead — those who do not belong to Jesus Christ since His followers are instead referred to as the living — have nothing to do with Jesus Christ but your church business enterprises and their bottom line. ![]() 4. Your reasoning is severely destroyed from the roots which is why you can't even see the obvious disconnect between your belief and the reality of this man who you pretend your belief associates with. This inability to critically process logic is typical of people under religious delusion, mind you. ![]() |
danladi02:Is this not evidence of African numu-ism? ![]() |
Okoroawusa:Before you go out to protest, please go on the INEC website and fill out the form to have your underperforming Senator and Representative recalled both at the state and National Level. Tell your friends and family in Nigeria to do the same in preparation for the revolution to come. ![]()
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89green:Stand up and take back your mandate! if more Nigerians would do this, these arseholes would not be up there sucking the life and destinies of over 200 million Nigerians. ![]()
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voiceoftheupcom:Inflation is bound to experience a fall when the demand for goods falls. With many Nigerians no longer able to afford many of the essentials, there is bound to be a fall in the price of goods. Given the state of the economy, I don't believe it is something that we ought to celebrate. ![]() |
Melagros:Peaceful protest ke? Any protest that does not include a divisive move by the electorates to fire — recall members of National Senators and Reps and have them prosecuted immediately afterward — is likely not going to achieve much more than the other protest was able to. Nigerians are already more than aware that these thieves in power are not going to listen to them. So, going out to do more of the same is likely not going to lead anywhere. ![]()
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SmartPolician:You wey you pretend to live there, how is he benefiting the people in terms of development that benefits the majority and not a minority? Construction of roads and overhead bridges? ![]() |
phr0nesis:How? ![]() |
FourQu:Are you ok in the head at all? Or comprehension problems dey plague you. ![]() Kobojunkie: ![]() |
coolitempa:This coming from a sponsored online tout is hilarious! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 |
FourQu:Yes, pretty much almost all of those on that list are either proven elements of corruption or have track records that scream ineptitude. Prove otherwise if you can or waka pass me with whatever is your brand of lunacy! ![]() |
FourQu:Given that his name stands out on a list comprised mostly of proven criminals and inept politicians, I should have to answer to you or something? Am I somehow to blame for why there were no better Nigerians on the list of candidates back in 2023 or something? ![]()
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coolitempa:
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Marel3d:Home and business owners should also endeavor to protect their properties from damage as well. Clearly, the government ain't ready to in fact tackle the problem. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p51btvregMw?si=A8q8DWeMbjP_CwFn |
VaselineCrew:Lagos Drainages can and should be reengineered. Of course, if drainage leads nowhere it defeats the purpose. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p51btvregMw?si=A8q8DWeMbjP_CwFn |
89green:A people dedicated to suffering and smiling for life! 😂😂😂😂😂😂 You go farm your food, drill for your crude, refine your petrol, gas, and diesel, source and purify your own water, provide your own electricity, build your own school...all while paying taxes to a government that does not mean or care anything for your lot. Una no dey tire? ![]() |
Faber:LOL... I instead heard he made the state a "construction site". ![]() |
johnca:Here's a technology I came upon that could greatly reduce the time of building the needed drainage in Lagos, at the same time helping in directing waste from the drainages to a receiving point where much of it can be processed or at least captured before the water is then directed back into the capture zones. ![]() https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p51btvregMw?si=8teEBW7xE_YEAweG |
Urgent1Million:Lagos flood no be problem of broken down dam though. Also, I read there was a flood in the same Maiduguri as a result of the same dam breaking, just two years ago. ![]() https://humanglemedia.com/maiduguri-floods-the-unfortunate-series-of-events-that-led-to-the-breakdown-of-alau-dam. |
BreconHills:That is exactly the major reason you lot flood to religious halls and into the hands of these scammers-in-the-lords. Unresolved childhood trauma and issues from those formatives years, coupled with indoctrination is a major reason why so many run into the hands of these fraudsters who hide their brand of lies behind the mentions of a divine all so as to milk their gullible followers without consequence. ![]() |
bdon123:Decided when? For all you and I know, Dangote's agreement with the Federal government may have always been to have NNPC as the primary buyer for the product. I mean how else would you explain Dangote not already having a list of local buyers for the product all before all of this? An interview on the news a couple of days ago had one particular marketer insisting that many marketers would have loved to have had the chance to negotiate their own price deal directly with Dangote, something they had no chance to do given that NNPCL was named the primary buyer of Dangote PMS. ![]() |
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