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Here’s the brutal truth: The worst punishment for attention-junkies is silence, not outrage. A certain self-proclaimed crusader is running a desperate PR circus, baiting the federal government for a reaction. But here’s the alpha strategy: Ignore her. Fully. Ruthlessly. Publicly. The moment you respond, you validate her delusions. The goal isn’t to counter her , it’s to erase her from the national radar. Imagine a Nigerian official live on CNN or BBC being asked about her… and they respond: “Kemi who?” [smirks] “I don’t know who that is.” Boom. That’s how you shatter a fragile ego in one breath. |
“Some people don’t speak to be understood. They speak to feed their need to be seen.” Kemi Badenoch, the British MP of Nigerian descent, has revealed a consistent pattern: she only seems truly animated when she’s attacking Nigeria ,often in high-profile, global platforms. From calling Vice President Shettima’s boko haram, to stating on Fareed Zakaria’s CNN segment that Nigeria does not issue citizenship by ancestry, Badenoch seems to be feeding off provocation. But this is more than political posturing. It’s starting to look like narcissistic behavior cloaked in policy discourse. 1. Emotional Vampirism Through Provocation Like textbook narcissists, Badenoch has discovered a formula: every time she denigrates Nigeria, she gets attention , media coverage, panel invites, applause from British right-wing circles. It doesn’t matter whether people cheer or condemn her. What matters is that they react. Narcissists don’t need praise , they need focus. Rage, backlash, applause , it’s all fuel. 2. Deafening Silence on British Issues Kemi has almost nothing to say about the UK’s actual crises: • Exploding homelessness across London • Genocide complicity via arms sales • Rising knife and phone theft rings across the capital • NHS on life support Instead, she projects dysfunction onto Nigeria ,a psychological tactic to divert attention from the crumbling house she lives in. It’s easier to castigate a country thousands of miles away than fix the one paying your salary. 3. Targeting Nigeria, But Never Others Her selectivity is telling. Her Jewish husband and broader Jewish immigration to the UK have never once come under her scrutiny , and for good reason. If she made disparaging comments about Jewish immigration, she’d be labeled anti-Semitic and canceled by the next election cycle. But Nigerians? Nigerians are expendable. They don’t wield enough institutional power to push back in ways that matter to her politically. So they become her go-to target , the soft punching bag that earns her airtime and clout. 4. Projection and Internalized Resentment This isn’t just politics , this is psychological projection. Every time she attacks Nigeria, what she’s really doing is trying to distance herself from her own reflection. She is assaulting the part of herself she’s ashamed of, trying to surgically cut it out in public view. But self-hatred disguised as policy is still self-hatred. And eventually, it leaks through. 5. The Solution to Narcissists? Deny Them Oxygen Here’s the truth: You don’t win by debating people like Kemi Badenoch. You win by refusing to play the game. She thrives on outrage, retweets, reactions, and rebuttals. If she’s the center of a firestorm, she feels important. If she’s ignored, she’s irrelevant , and narcissists find irrelevance unbearable. Do not fan her flames. Do not trend her name. Do not quote her. Do not reply. Let her speak to an empty room. 6. Final Thought Kemi Badenoch isn’t trying to fix Nigeria or the UK. She’s trying to sell herself to a class of elite gatekeepers who reward Black faces willing to discredit Black spaces. She is not a public servant. She is a performance artist. And the only way to bring down a narcissistic performance artist is to leave the theatre. |
If you like raise IBB up from his wheelchair Sópě Otiloooooooo |
dalongjnr:You seem to know Jos very well. Maybe i should follow you there to buy a property. I like chilled life, good food secure neighborhood. Money is not a problem |
Factcheck0001:I joined nairaland before your father was born |
Factcheck0001:Good Question. Because justice in Nigeria is for the highest bidder Not necessarily the guilty Please no more stupid questions. |
Factcheck0001:
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Factcheck0001:PWAN was sued by multiple customers in court !!! And in many cases they were found to be in the wrong. |
correctguy101:I have lived abroad, they value their own (macguire) pass us. You have to have extra special talent as a foreigner to impress them and moreover they will still field their own home based talent. Osimehen should cut down on useless expenses, make bulletproof passive investments. Then he can just play football for enjoyment. |
tutudesz: As long as there is one established and verified claim that they sold receipts with no intent to fulfill or delayed fulfillment. Its not harassment /cyber bulllying. People call USA president a convicted felon. Can he sue them ? NO Because a court has convicted him. If PWAN has been taken to court by any of there client and found guilty. Scott cannot be charged. |
Eriokanmi:Anybody that JAPA abroad. Not only footballers. Build your passive income. If you work hard for 10-15 years. Most people can hit 2-3k (pounds or dollars) monthly as passive income. Then you come back to naija and enjoy your life. Nothing they abroad. |
Gboss247:Anybody that JAPA abroad. Build your passive income. If you work hard for 10-15 years. Most people can hit 2-3k (pounds or dollars) monthly as passive income. Then you come back to naija and enjoy your life. Nothing they abroad. |
Factcheck0001: If you are fraudulent , you are fraudulent Trying to redefine fraud by the accuser is tantamount to self deception. |
Factcheck0001:Tell me who is in charge of the mass fraud perpetrated in the real estate sector in Lagos ? How mnay people were persecuted before Scott Iguma ? Buying houses with fake papers,flooded zones,selling to multiple buyers etc |
Amudeneogu:The change is both sides.....Buhari was pacifying some northerners not to go after Tinubu. Now they will unleash terror against his administration. |
Ighalo coming back from china to play in Manchester united was very high odds.......it was a big gamble If Osimehen goes to Saudi......he should forget Europe. Whether you play in Europe or Saudi..Your ultimate aim should be ....make sure you build your passive income, with bulletproof reliable investments. Once you hit 1 million dollars a year without having to play ball....you are set for life. |
sholatech:Posts like this will remain forever on the internet, this will kill their business faster than Scott Iguma. They have forgotten, the internet never forgets. Unless they change their name, that brand PWAN is DEAD. |
SadiqBabaSani:You must also be someone who sees with their third eye. His death has changed the whole political scene. A lot of politicians are now Internally displaced. They have to go and pledge loyalty to a new Godfather. |
manck:Where did you see Buhari's name in the write up ? Where ? |
tutudesz:Scott Iguma didn’t wake up one morning and randomly decide to take on Nigeria’s most notorious land scammers. His was a calculated move rooted in the failure of law enforcement to act despite dozens of buyer petitions. While others like Sujimoto and Keji Giwa may have quietly corrected their missteps when challenged, PWAN chose the dark route. Now, they’ve weaponized Nigeria’s broken justice system, flexing illegal muscle to detain a whistleblower in a case that’s clearly bailable. This is no longer about land. It’s about silencing truth. About sending a message to others who dare disrupt corruption.
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There are whispers traveling faster than the desert wind across the plains of northern Nigeria. They aren’t the hollow murmurings of conspiracy theorists ,no, these are the voices of insiders, disillusioned patriots, and seasoned observers who have learned that in Nigerian politics, coincidence is almost always a disguise. A stoic, stern former head of state , a man whose persona became the rallying point for northern conservatism ,recently passed away under “natural” circumstances. But those who know power know it rarely relinquishes the throne without a negotiated price, or…...a carefully engineered exit. Within 7 days of his death, a quiet appointment shook Abuja’s corridors: the son of his long-time nemesis was given a strategic role within nation. This was not a bureaucratic slip. This was a move from a chessboard old-timers know too well. The rival, once a military tactician with a Machiavellian touch, is said to have whispered into coups like a snake charming a flute. He once ruled not from the throne, but from behind curtains of fear, wealth, and unseen brutality. The Puzzle Pieces That Don’t Fit • A president falls ill abruptly. • The ailment progresses strangely fast despite modern treatment. • Radio silence from his former allies. • No autopsy. • Rapid burial. • Political appointments within 7 days to his historic rival’s lineage. Are you thinking what many in Katsina, Abuja, and Kaduna are thinking? That perhaps this wasn’t a death… but a quiet assassination camouflaged as “natural causes.” That the rallying figure of the North had to go so another could return to their messianic fantasies. Welcome to the Nigeria of Ritual Politics Where ambitions are transgenerational. Where enemies wait decades to plant the dagger. Where sons are pawns to restore legacies. Where death isn’t the end , it’s a transaction. We will not call it an inside job, but ask yourself: • Why was the North’s beloved leader removed from the scene just when he had started to become a unifying post-office elder stateman? • Why is the resurgence of a Cold War-era strongman gaining traction again? • And who benefits from this sudden death? Nigeria must not sleep through this moment. What we are seeing may not just be death .It is the silent return of an old guard. The architects of Nigeria’s endless recycling of misery are back in business. But we are not the same people. We have history at our fingertips, and eyes behind our heads. The people must demand answers, track appointments, investigate health records, and never forget: “Those who want power that badly never give up unless someone else ends their chapter first.” Ask yourself, would Tinubu have made this appointment if Buhari was alive ? Is the loyalty gone ? Not even 7 days yet.He could atleast have waited 1-2 months
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In the burning heat of injustice, something glorious has happened. The Nigerian people have decided that the long wait for a functioning government ends with them. While President Tinubu’s administration slumbers, and anti-graft agencies perform a high-stakes ballet of silence, Nigerians have risen, not with guns, but with petitions, exposure, and a raw, untamed hunger for truth. Scott Iguma. A man who saw the rot, named it, and pulled it into the daylight. His public outcry against PWAN real estate group, who allegedly trade receipts for non-existent properties like a casino selling chips that can not be redeemed. Dozens of verified complaints and customer petitions document phony plots, missing deeds, and corporate gaslighting that would shame even the boldest 419 schemes. But instead of launching a probe, Nigeria did what Nigeria always does when a citizen threatens the cabal. Scott was arrested. No bail. Silenced. This isn’t law. This isn’t order. This is organized suppression, backed by the police and, by omission or collusion, the legal apparatus meant to protect the common man. The system doesn’t just fail. It retaliates. Yet this time, the story changes. This time, WE FIGHT BACK. What Happens Now? 1. All PWAN buyer petitions will be published online. Free. Unfiltered. Searchable. 2. We will organize protests at strategic locations, digital and physical. 3. Lawyers for the people will challenge the incarceration of Scott Iguma at every court level. 4. Every official who ignored this rot will be named. 5. A whistleblower fund will be set up for more insiders to speak, anonymously if needed. Nigeria’s Justice System Has an Achilles Heel, Silence is its weapon. But exposure is ours. If the President won’t lead, we will. If EFCC won’t investigate, we will record, publish, and push international sanctions. If PWAN thinks its ties to police and thuggery will protect it, they haven’t seen Nigerians in motion. This isn’t just about land. It’s about dignity, ownership, and the future we refuse to surrender. “If you cage the voice of the people, you only delay your own collapse.” The world is watching.
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I’m genuinely relieved Tinubu didn’t show up. That image? A masterclass in narcissism wrapped in national disgrace. It wasn’t diplomacy ,it was performative humiliation, on full display for the world to see. |
How about make the Visa fees can that be reduced as well. USA is punishing us for leaning towards BRICS. For advocating for a free Palestine movement, which is based on just being a decent human being. |
there has been a court order respect it. we are going down a bad path |
How is Akpabio or Wike any different from Boko Haram? One kidnaps people with guns… The other kidnaps democratic mandates with presidential backing. Akpabio has hijacked Kogi Central’s seat. Wike, with Tinubu’s blessing, is holding Rivers State hostage. Yet we pretend insurgents are only in the bush — when the real terrorists now wear agbada and sit in the Senate. |
In a functioning democracy, power is balanced, not bartered. Representation is sacred, not conditional. And the Constitution is supreme, not optional. Yet in Nigeria, two recent events-the Senate's refusal to immediately reinstate Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, and the three absurd preconditions forced upon Rivers Governor Siminalayi Fubara-have unmasked a chilling trend: A coordinated dismantling of democratic norms under the disguise of parliamentary and executive procedure. And worse-the presidency appears complicit. THE NATASHA AKPOTI-UDUAGHAN SAGA: WHEN EGO TRUMPS LAW After daring to accuse Senate President Akpabio of sexual misconduct, Senator Natasha was slapped with a 180-day suspension-nearly the entirety of a legislative calendar. When Justice Binta Nyako rightly nullified the suspension as excessive and disenfranchising, the Senate refused to comply immediately. Instead, they chose semantic gymnastics: "The ruling was not a directive but an opinion," they claimed. "We'll consider her reinstatement after she apologizes correctly." This is not governance. This is legislative bullying wrapped in parliamentary cloth. If the judiciary says, "You've overstepped," and the Senate replies, "We'll be the judge of that," then what exactly is left of the checks and balances envisioned by our founders? THE FUBARA CONDITIONS: A COUP DISGUISED AS A PEACE DEAL Siminalayi Fubara, a democratically elected governor, was handed three conditions for remaining in office after his political rift with his predecessor, Nyesom Wike: 1. Recall of all commissioners who resigned in protest. 2. Reinstatement of the State House leadership loyal to Wike. 3. Non-interference in the affairs of the state legislature. 4. Sim Fubara should not seek reelection. (This violates his constitutional right as a Nigerian citizen) These conditions, brokered by the President himself, amount to the governor relinquishing the constitutional powers of his office. It is a de facto power transfer to unelected forces, formalized under executive supervision. Let's be clear: A governor cannot be held hostage to political godfathers and executive puppeteers. He cannot be forced into loyalty oaths in exchange for remaining in office. To normalize this is to institutionalize political hostage-taking-a precedent that will haunt Nigeria's federating units for decades. SEMANTIC SABOTAGE: THE NEW DISEASE IN NIGERIA'S POLITY Both the Senate and the Presidency have discovered a new weapon of institutional subversion: Redefine legality as suggestion. • When courts issue rulings, they now call them "opinions." • When governors are elected, they are told their mandates are "conditional." • When justice is served, they insist on "restitution" before compliance. This tactic erodes public trust, weaponizes delay, and cloaks civilian dictatorship in democratic packaging. POLITICS OF PETTINESS: WHEN LEGISLATORS BEHAVE LIKE STREET LORDS Let's not be fooled-this is not about rules. This is about hurt egos, unresolved power lust, and anti-woman backlash. A Senate more concerned with seating arrangements and Facebook posts than national budgets is not a legislative body-it is a petty men's club drunk on its own power. Their behavior lends credence to the rising belief that military rule, despite its iron grip, had more honor than this cabal of ego-driven schemers. THIS IS TREASON IN INSTITUTIONAL CLOTHING To deliberately sideline judicial verdicts, undermine elected offices, and enforce loyalty contracts is not politics. It is treasonous conduct against the republic. And worse still, it bears the silent approval of the Presidency, which should've protected the Constitution, not the cabal. THE REPUBLIC IS BEING RANSOMED IN FRONT OF OUR EYES Nigeria must now decide: Will it remain a constitutional democracy or become a theater of conditional democracy dictated by strongmen in agbadas? If the courts can be bypassed… If governors can be reprogrammed like software… If senators can be silenced for not flattering the powerful… Then the republic is no longer a democracy. It is a hostage situation.......The president is complaining about bandits, but he is also involved in kidnapping mandates of other duly elected politicians !!! Nlfpmod Self Opinion Malali |
Let’s stop lying to ourselves, this democracy isn’t working for Nigerians. We’ve glamorized failure for too long, allowing mediocrity to parade as leadership while the country slips into systemic collapse. Wike, a public officeholder with a known salary, shamelessly brags about buying a Rolls Royce. And we’re supposed to clap? His excuse? “My father was a general manager.” That isn’t a source of wealth, it’s an insult to Nigerians who break their backs to survive daily. We are governed by political relics from the analogue era, now parading themselves as “fresh hope.” Obi, El-Rufai, Amaechi, Atiku, David Mark—they all had their time when the world was still running on faxes and floppy disks. What exactly didn’t they fix back then that they now claim they’ll fix in the AI and blockchain era? Let’s be honest,Tinubu is trying but he isn’t the savior either. His economic playbook is straight out of the IMF manual: remove all subsidies, deregulate forex and fuel, then beg the same IMF for loans. Now, with oil prices softening, and crude already traded for short-term liquidity, we’re stuck with debt while revenue evaporates. The 2025 budget is underwater before it even launched, and guess who’s pointing fingers now? The IMF. “We warned you,” they’ll say, as if we weren’t coerced into this. Instead of revenue-generating reforms, this government is prioritizing vanity infrastructure and borrowing against a sinking currency. Wike is comfortably allocating Abuja real estate to his children, playing landlord while the average Nigerian can’t afford rent in their own ancestral land. Under President Obasanjo, he wouldn’t have had the nerve. This isn’t just corruption, it’s state capture. The Titanic is heading for the iceberg, and the captains are drunk on power and oil fumes. It’s time for Nigeria’s non-partisan elders and true patriots to step forward. This country doesn’t need another political messiah, it needs a moral revolution. We must stop tolerating this madness. Speak out. Organize. Pressure the system to correct itself,or watch it implode. |
Elusive001:Which contributions ? Even their war equipment are made and imported from USA. Iran makes and even sells to Russia........keep drinking the Israel Koolaid..... ![]() |
sekeyso:Who gets to decide who is good and who is bad ? Is it the same America, thats supporting the genocide in Palestine....where at least a 100 children are killed daily ? Do you think for yourself ? Or you just dey do follow follow ? |
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