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MayorofLagos's Posts

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PoliticsRe: Obasanjo Is Working With APC - Daughter by MayorofLagos(m): 6:34am On Dec 18, 2013
jerseyboy: Iyabo daughter of self styled father of modern Nigeria Mr. Olusegun Obasanjo has revealed that her father tried to bargain her loyalty by dangling before her a chance to return to the Nigerian senate on the platform of .....ready for this....APC. This claim Iyabo made as part of her open letter to her father whom she has now severed all relationship with for life.

'You called me after your vengeful letter as usual, looking out for yourself and thinking you will bribe me by saying the APC will use me for the Senate. Do you really know me and what I want out of life?'
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/12/iyabo-obasanjo-writes-father-calls-liar-manipulator-hypocrite/#sthash.cJhbJN45.dpuf
Whats the big dealhuh

Gej just worked for APGA in Anambra to elect Obiano against his own candidate, Nwoye.

PDP is finished!
PoliticsRe: Iyabo Obasanjo's Letter To Her Father by MayorofLagos(m): 6:31am On Dec 18, 2013
Whether Iyabo write this letter or not is irrelevant to the issue of APC becoming majority in 2015, or perharps before!

This is the end of Obj and Gej and also the END of PDP.
PoliticsPDP West In Search Of Candidate For 2015 Presidency by MayorofLagos(op): 5:58am On Dec 15, 2013
You will be updated as events unfold, stay tuned to this channel.
PoliticsRe: Prof Ben Nwabueze And Igbo Hate For North by MayorofLagos(m): 11:22pm On Dec 14, 2013
There are three regions naturally carved. I dont understand all these north/south thing.

Let West go its way, North go its way, East go its way.
PoliticsRe: Fashola - Badagry Seaport Project On Front Burner. by MayorofLagos(m): 2:34am On Dec 14, 2013
He appealed to Badagry residents to shun all forms of vice, and urged them to pay their taxes promptly.
This is it for me, this made my day! grin cheesy cheesy
CrimeRe: Edo Ex-Lawmaker Allegedly Beat Teenager On His Genital by MayorofLagos(m): 2:28am On Dec 14, 2013
We are sick in this country.
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 2:03am On Dec 14, 2013
ChinoElects: An average yorobarman. This happens to be superstar.. grin
Do you know why you find it hard to contribute logically to this discussion? Your depiction and exhibition attests to your state of maturity. You are incapable of seeing the success of IGR growth as a communal success that benefits all. Your level of development is trapped at the hunter/gatherer stage. There is no need for you here, urban dwellers are discussing social programmes that grow and benefit population at community level, you are showing and discussing individual gains and losses.

This discussion is focussing on the society and how it can sustain growth, its not about Uche's bush rat and Tunde's python.

The Yoruba who says his house is not for sale is more than likely putting that sign there to ward off people like you, delinquent elements in urban population that should be on the bus trip for the next batch of family reunion in Onitsha.
PoliticsRe: Mommy, I Don't Want A Shot' - Belgium To Pass Child Euthanasia Law by MayorofLagos(m): 1:43am On Dec 14, 2013
Will this be a government program?

Quick reminder, this is how Germany started and their state sponsored euthanasia program descended into holocaust.

The German state declared God made man in perfection, to attain spirituality and physicality in Godliness and be flawless, so to speak. Therefore any genetic deformity was viewed as an ungodly form and a corruption of mind, soul and body for the bearer and constitute an unecessary burden on society. To deal with it they set up mock programs designed to provide health remedies but clandenstinely operated as life terminators. Other races, not the aryan, are created to be mule societies..this can only be accomplished by creating a differentiator in society. That differentiator will be to create genetis disorders in other people and to kill off disordered aryans so in their state of imperfection non aryans will come to adore and desire the flawlessness in aryan as the benchmark for human state and circumstance. In other words, philosophical thoughts will shift to see anything aryan as the ideal human condition. Sort of aryan worshipping!

They convinced mothers of sick babies that their children will get free health care if they enroll them in the care program to treat genetic disorder. Those children, once they entered the hospital never made it out alive.

This abuse of children and their humanity is supressed while the issue of holocaust, which was to come later as by product of euthansia, is decried and even its criminal in some countries to deny holocaust..in itself a global worship of the Jewish race.

I encourage Nigerians living in that country to be on lookout for their loved ones and not carelessly trust their care to a programme that sound outlandish and miraculous.
PoliticsRe: “Niger Bridge May Collapse Sooner Than Envisaged” by MayorofLagos(m): 1:18am On Dec 14, 2013
dayokanu: Both of you are olodos. You want to say you didn't know its Tinubu carrying out the order of Awolowo.

Check our the similarity in altitude like musiwa says

They want to spoil the bridge do food won't get to biafra and they would commit another genocide because of envy and to claim our 99% of Lagos and abuja
Meehhn!! You guys are callous! If Awo had not confiscated their savings they would have built a second bridge. grin
PoliticsRe: “Niger Bridge May Collapse Sooner Than Envisaged” by MayorofLagos(m): 1:09am On Dec 14, 2013
agbameta: You are wrong my friend. It's Aregbeshola's fault, he sent 150 thugs from Osun via Imo state to destroy the bridge so he's responsible.

lmao
Oh yeah, oh my God, I forgot..Aregberascal is jealous of Igbo achievements. Osun people are planning to bring Niger bridge down. grin grin grin
PoliticsRe: The Politics Of Cannibalism In Africa by MayorofLagos(op): 12:43am On Dec 14, 2013
PoliticsThe Politics Of Cannibalism In Africa by MayorofLagos(op): 12:42am On Dec 14, 2013
You must read this book.

If you want to understand why Fulani hunt after humans, what makes Hausa thirst for blood, why is Ibo always smarting and eager for blood, read this book. It covers every nook and cranny of black Africa and its cannibalistic tribes.

Use the word finder in your browser to narrow down to specific tribes or region. Type in Nothern Nigeria and it brings up plenty information about the tribes in that region. Type in Bantu and it gives you info about a people.

Here is a caption from the book. Feel free to capture and paste your own choice caption.


A SINISTER FATE: Cannibalism in Africa

DAVID SOULSBY

This is an in-depth study of the practice of human cannibalism in Africa, from the prehistoric to the present day. Africa, the ‘dark continent’, has often been described as a land of savages. This work describes the evidence for cannibalism stretching back to the early stages of human evolution. Hunter-gatherer lifestyles have a far greater antiquity in Africa than anywhere else in the world, and here humans developed the use of tools, meat-eating, hunting, and primitive forms of warfare. There is physical evidence in deep prehistory for intentional damage or modification to hominid bones by other hominids during the defleshing of corpses as a part of some form of mortuary ritual, or simply for food. In the later pre-historic and historical era, however, archaeological evidence becomes exceedingly scarce, so by necessity one must rely upon the ethnographic record.

Unfortunately few native Africans produced written records, so accounts and journals by white explorers, missionaries, traders, and scientists referring to cannibalism are compared to assess the veracity of reports of the practice among African peoples. For historical chapters of the work, the major geographical continental divisions are employed since there are anthropological and social differences between the various regions. The story encompasses mythologies, secret societies, recent civil wars, and the behaviour of some of the world’s most unpleasant dictators. 


Chapters

CHAPTER 3. WEST AFRICA

CHAPTER 3.  WEST AFRICA West Africa is the trans-Equatorial belt stretching from Senegal eastwards to Nigeria, then around the Gulf of Guinea south to Angola, including the western fringes of the Congo basin.  By 2900 years BC Berber and Negro farmers had arrived as far south as the Niger-Benue region in West Africa, establishing cultures such as that of the Nok, the first known Iron Age culture in West Africa.  The Nok, a proto-Bantu group, probably occupied a large part of what is now Nigeria until some 200 years into the Christian era.  They were cultivators who also kept cattle, and are best known for technically accomplished terracotta figurines.  Artistic styles developed by the Nok have influenced much of the art of West Africa, such as that of the Yoruba, in which sculpted heads were popular.  For the Yoruba, the head is the bearer of a person’s destiny, and bronze heads were also made in the kingdom of Benin, where they served as shrines for deceased Bini kings.  Most kings were regarded as gods or the descendents of gods and were spiritually related to fertility and the welfare of the people. 

Nigeria is the most densely populated country on the African continent.  It is comprised of 12 states in four main geographical regions: the coastal mangroves and swamp belt, the forest belt, the northern savannas, and the Jos Plateau.  As a physiographically diverse land, it is inhabited by several hundred varied ethnic groups with their own languages and cultures.  Before the emergence of these ethnic groups, there were indigenous inhabitants in scattered communities.  Ethnic differentiation came along with the process of state formation. 

The first major ethnic group to emerge from the aboriginal continuum appear to have been the Yoruba of western Nigeria, a prominent group in terms of population and culture.  The consensus is that the Yoruba migrated from the north-east of Africa, perhaps Upper Egypt (some say the kingdom of Meroe) or even Arabia, between 600 and 1000 AD.  Yoruba civilization appears to be the result of a small immigrant ruling class merging with an artistic indigenous population, such as the Nok culture.  Linguistically, Nigeria is divided into two main affiliations; in the northern half of the country, the Afro-Asiatic group, and in the southern half, the Niger-Congo cluster, with Benue-Congo and Kwa as language sub-families.  Benue-Congo languages are used by such groups as the Jukun, the Annang, the Efik, and the Ibibio of the Cross River basin; Kwa languages are spoken by such tribes as the Ijo, the Yoruba, the Itsekiri, the Urhobo, the Igbo, the Egun, and the Edo of southern Nigeria.  The Cross River basin people of south-eastern Nigeria are linguistically closer to the Bantu of central, eastern, and southern Africa than to those of western Nigeria.  In northern Nigeria, to the fringes of the Sahara, pre-colonial peoples were influenced by Islam, for example, the Hausa, the Ngizim, the Manga, the Buduma, the Margi, the Katoko, and the Bolewa.  A pocket of Nilo-Saharan language affiliation is found among the Kanuri people of the extreme north-east corner of Nigeria, bordering Lake Chad. 

Control of Nigeria by the British began in 1861 with the annexation of Lagos.  It became a separate colony and protectorate in 1886, and came into being in its modern form under British colonial rule in 1914 when the two protectorates of Northern and Southern Nigeria were combined.  The country gained independence in 1960 (Sagay & Wilson 1978; Olaniyan 1983).    The earliest Europeans to reach the Nigerian coast were the Portuguese in the 15th century.  They began trading slaves with the Benue peoples and by the 17th century British slave ships were plying the coast.  In the 19th century, British merchant ships were trading in palm oil and other products from the southern coastal belt.  On the Niger River, British commercial interests were protected from French competition by an amalgamation of trading companies in 1879, which became the Royal Niger Company.  The company administered territories north of the delta, around the Niger-Benue confluence.  An Oil Rivers Protectorate around the delta was established in 1887, which in 1893 became the Niger Coast Protectorate.  There was sporadic resistance to encroaching British power by native chiefs, whose own ability to trade had been hampered, and the policy of the British was removal of these obstacles to trade in the Niger Delta rather than seeking their co-operation. 

A large proportion of slaves exported from Nigeria were procured in the Niger Delta, and there were a number of tribes or states in the delta, such as the Brass (or Nembe), who engaged in slavery and other trades.  They were unhappy at the monopolies enjoyed by the Royal Niger Company.  In 1895, according to Talbot (1926), Crowder (1973), and others, the Brass raided Akassa, a port run by the Royal Niger Company.  They destroyed stores and captured 60 men, taking their prisoners to Nembe (the Brass port), before killing and eating 43 of them. 

In response to this raid, the Brass were ordered by the consul general of the Protectorate to surrender their headmen and weapons, which they refused.  Protectorate troops then entered Brass territory, against strong resistance, and burned down their town.  Representatives of the Brass people stated that the Niger Company was attacked because they initiated hostilities and seized their canoes for smuggling. Among the Brass, cannibalistic sacrifices to native gods had long been a religious rite.  For example, captives were cannibalized, they said, because fetish priests had warned that a smallpox epidemic then raging would not cease until human sacrifices were made.  A decade earlier, a smallpox outbreak had purportedly been halted by a cannibal sacrifice (Geary 1927). 

The Niger Coast Protectorate established its authority over most overseas trade in Nigeria, but was unable to do the same in the old kingdom of Benin, which had withdrawn from trading with Europeans, under decree from the king.    No part of West Africa suffered more from the ravages of the slave trade than the region of south-eastern Nigeria around the mouths of the Niger Delta and the Cross River which enters the Atlantic Ocean at Calabar. Slavery had become the normal condition of the peoples of this coast and, later, the interior.  The strong preyed on the weak and tribe raided tribe, plundering and burning villages, to supply the slave ships with their human traffic for sale to the white men.  The sickly and the old, useless as slaves, were killed and, according to accounts (eg. Donald M. McFarlan, who wrote of the Church of Scotland Mission in Calabar, 1846 to 1946) often eaten in the cannibalistic orgies which rounded off a successful foray (McFarlan 1946).  Furthermore it seems, even those fit for shipment as slaves were concerned that their future lay at the mercy of cannibals. 

Talbot was asked to carry out a census of Nigeria in 1921, and to compile a report on the statistics and ethnography of the tribes of southern Nigeria.  He obtained information personally during travels in the southern provinces, which was corroborated by other informants.  Talbot states that the practice of cannibalism, almost always accompanied by head-hunting, seems to have been fairly universal in the Nigerian tribes with whom he had contact.  

Distribution of cannibalism in southern Nigeria was mainly in those areas east of Warri.  He lists the following tribes (and sub-tribes) as examples practicing cannibalism in a war context: Ibo (sub-tribes Abadja, Alensaw, Aro, Ututu, Ibe, Ekkpahia, southern Ikwerri, Nkanu, Okoba, Onitsha); Ijaw (or Ijo, sub-tribe Kalabari); Ibibio; Bafumbum-Bansaw (sub-tribes Melamba, Bansaw, Bametta); Boki (sub-tribes Boki, Bete, Uge); Ekoi (sub-tribes Akaju, Anyang, Nde); Iyala, and Ukelle.  


Exceptions were the Edo, among whom the eating of human flesh was taboo, and the Yoruba, among whom the practice was mainly a custom restricted to the rulers. 

The Ogboni secret society, comprised of elders and the heads of important families, exerted significant political influence among the Yoruba in pre-colonial times and administered worship of a pantheon of gods.  The god Oro, for example, was originally a spirit that presided over male-oriented mysteries; his voice could be heard in the whirling of bull-roarers, a widespread ancient ritual v instrument.  Male initiates were required to drink the blood of a human or animal sacrificial victim.  Blood might be licked off the head-man’s sword.  Priests of Ogun, the god of iron and of war, would remove the hearts of human victims which were then reduced to dry powder and added to rum.  This mixture would be bought by those who believed that it would give them courage.  Chiefs of the Yoruba would eat part of the head or the heart of their predecessors in office, a necessary ritual and a kind of succession based on gastronomy.
PoliticsRe: “Niger Bridge May Collapse Sooner Than Envisaged” by MayorofLagos(m): 11:03pm On Dec 13, 2013
agbameta: 1. This is about your crumbling and falling apart village bridge and not Lagos state or Fashola

2. Lagosians are not facing any imminent danger or about to fall off 3MB like your own people back in your village.

3. 3MB just got shot down and maintained unlike your crumbling village bridge.

4. We'll build our own bridge before begging anybody for 30 years like you beggars.

5. Are we begging anybody for 4thMB which groundwork is progressing as we speak? No

6. We did we beg the FG for 30 years for Ikoyi link bridge and the other ones Fashola built, no we did not

7. You are not saying anything because we know how to snatch FG infrastructures away from them and do our own upgrade and maintenance unlike you 30 years begging people.

8. We snatched Ikorodu road and it's undergoing reconstruction and upgrade as we speak.

9. We snatched Badagry EXPRESS and it's set to be the best road in Nigeria @ 10 lanes with metro rail and BRT access, something your generation including the next 10 generations can not duplicate.

You can huff and puff as much as you want, but the joke is still on you because you still don't have a little bridge even after 30 years of begging, Your people are the ones in danger and not Lagosians.
Bobo yi, abeg let my people go. Na Obasanjo fault. He was in Army Corp of Engineers during war and their demolition attack weakened the bridge. He was responsible for fixing it. It has been over 30yrs and the bridge is still dilapidated Yoruba people are lazy and not industrious at all. I tire for Yoruba people, 30yrs just to put up an ordinary bridge. Chineke me!! tongue
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 10:03am On Dec 13, 2013
ifechez: Ewu yorobar!!!! am from IMO state and I don't want you to tel us how we will lead the South East. Come 2015 we will vote out the clown rochas from Douglas house.
How does your voting out Rochas affect the price of amala and ewedu in Yorubaland? Voting Rochas in or out is your decision only..we only provide the platform for high achievement, whether you join the bandwagon or not is your headache.
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 9:56am On Dec 13, 2013
FreeGlobe: Apart from indian hemp manufacturing factory in Ekiti, I dare you or any Yoruba to mention 10 manufacturing companies/industries/corporations in Ekiti, Oyo and Oshun states. Miss me with your complex, why only shoprite, what of Walmart, bestbuy, McDonalds etc. Why haven't they flocked to SW then?
There are certain things that the world say is good but which to us is not.

What is the benefit of mcdonalds or walmart to us? These corporations will kill business for the petty trader that sell akara and moinmoin on the corner.

Development and growth is good but when we grow we should do so by growing our people and grassroot. If akara and moinmoin sellers are put out of business the community is impacted.

We have been buildin cities and civilizations before you learnt to cover your na-ke-dn-ess. You are no match for us industrially.
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 9:46am On Dec 13, 2013
superstar1: if they are not paying tax, what right or justification do they have to accuse their thiefing governors. No wonders their states are the way thgey are. Onitsha and Aba are the replicas of hell on earth. Anybody that goes to hell after his death after staying in those cesspits called towns, we prefer the hell in heaven to those eyesores.
Parties dont bring development, people do. When you have a party of high achievers and men of principled ideologies, then measurable developments and success on ground is certain. If Imo State can stabilize itself politically, I see it leading the Eastern states into a new era of sociopolitical awakening.

In addition to tax not being a custom, there is also not enough tax base in East to generate the income. For instance the entire Anambra state only had 1.76million registered voters in 2013. The voting age bracket is also the manpower age bracket..in other words those capable of productive labour. So if we say for some weird reason unemployment in Anambra is zero. This would mean all 1,76million people are gainfully employed and making income and paying tax. How much tax will the government get in a year from PAYE - pay as you earn?

Probably not enough to run one LG.

So then you will end with a deficit in budget and how do you plug that? Currently they wait for hands down from FG.

If these people have cars then there shoud be fees associated with registration. Govt should erect toll gates. Radio and Tv should be licensed. Govt should build a internet node stations and power it 24/7 and charge fee for usage. Instead of endangering lives on road, inter state traders should have clearing house for commodities. Govt should subsidize haulage of containers but charge heavy tax on shops. Offer relocation incentives to grow the tax base. If you relocate your business from Lagos to Onitsha and stay put for 10yrs you only pay 25% tax first 2yrs, you pay 50 % the next 2, 75% next 2 and 100% thereafter.

These are some of the things that can be done to prop up the economy and self reliance.
PoliticsRe: Man Posts Instagram Selfies With Stolen Goods, Subsequently Arrested by MayorofLagos(m): 9:13am On Dec 13, 2013
He set the police up to come and arrest him and lock him up. He will go to prison and while in there he has to do something whacky to move up the gang rank so that after his release back on street he will be couple of notches up in status from his current gang rank.

His aspiration centers on two things.
1. Appear on tv and be the talk of town. This is credibility for him.
2. Hook up with similar elements and release a durty south album.

Lord have mercy!! When you think you are in a bad situation guys like this make you remember to praise and thank Jesus.
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 8:59am On Dec 13, 2013
superstar1: they should show us the developed nations of the world without strong culture of tax payment. When our forefathers were building towns, the best their own can come up with are hamlets. how do you expect them to understand taxation, royalties and tributaries payments,
The more they look, the less they see! Yoruba is a mystery to them.

God Bless Oduduwa and the ancestors for me!
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 8:51am On Dec 13, 2013
ngozievergreen: SE govts have low taxation culture.
Of course! In fact SE is yet to understand and relate taxation with cultural power. This is because you never had city states with tributaries and never had to exact taxation on any throne, domestic or foreign.

The culture of taxation in West dates back to the age of Yoruba Empires.
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 8:46am On Dec 13, 2013
ngozievergreen: Back to base, how many Yoruba actors are on the world's stage?
None.
So, what are u saying?
Why do i even have to go into that with you? Actor is a relative term and world stage is a relative term.

On the world stage successful actors are acclaimed based on eurocentric and western values. I want my culture to promote and support Yoruba actors that project Yoruba culture to the world. Fela did not have the typical omoluabi lifestyle but he was an ambassador for Yoruba ethos and social accountability. He found place in Hollywood.
If Hubert Ogunde, Duro Ladipo and host of other Yoruba actors had directed their creativity to eurocentric drama and theater theyd be in Hollywood.

Ogunde was making movies in the 60s and 70s about occult topics that in 2000 were popularized in the Harry Porter series.
PoliticsRe: Audu Ogbeh's Letter To Obasanjo; Lest We Forget. by MayorofLagos(m): 8:32am On Dec 13, 2013
Clandestine sniper training

Overseas airman training for ex militants

Maritime security taken from Navy and given to ex militants

Oil pipeline security contract

Bayelsa guest house lodged terrorists

Ihejirika painted a model of terrorism using empty petrol tanker to smuggle high grade detonators into Yorubaland

Al Mustapha release

Al Mustapha meeting with Uwazuruike, Asari and Fasheun

Asari setting up schools and business in Yoruba backyard

If bokoharam is breaching security in important army installations and carting away ammo and armored vehicles, and lately burning and disabling fighter jets, then how does the Army not stop that knowing with the tension in the country these are the firepower they will need to silence any rebellion?


We in the West see the handwriting on the wall and we can connect the dots.
PoliticsRe: Insurgency Tracker by MayorofLagos(op): 8:00am On Dec 13, 2013
Ngwakwe: ANC (African National Congress) was also an insurgent group, a declared terrorist organisation headed by Nelson Madiba Mandela.

They believe in their power to ascribe nomenclature to demean or honour whoever they wish
Crazy racists! Upon everything they did to the Indian tribes, umentionable atrocities, including the infestation of smallpox (biological warfare/weapon of mass destruction) to decimate their population they still see fit to label their victims insurgents. E no go better for oyinbo!
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 7:37am On Dec 13, 2013
ChinoElects:

This is how the Igbos look like..

Igbos are model of what Nigeria should look like if not the outside world cannot take Nigeria serious..
Thats an exception. One in a million! Bring us Stealer Oduah, Ngozi, Madueke. Stealer look like a world wrestling federation prize fighter. Madueke dare not go without her razor, she might end up with a goatee. Ngozi i no go even talk about, she be my aunty Ngozi.
PoliticsRe: Obasanjo’s Letter: Atiku, Urges IBB, Abdulasalami, Danjuma, To Intervene by MayorofLagos(m): 7:30am On Dec 13, 2013
Reduce the tension ke? Why is Atiku fidgety?

Jonathan has had this letter since the 2nd. How has he responded inbetween? Has he himself seen fit to deescalate the issue?
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 7:20am On Dec 13, 2013
[quote author=IGBO-SON]^^^Far be it from me to rain on your parade, but that bridge was not 'built by Fashola' as you put it! It was built by Lagos tax payers of which includes Igbo, Yoruba, Hausa/Fulani, Ijaw, Efik, Ibibio, Annang, Itsakiri, Urhobo, etc-etc-etc.........just saying![/quote]If thats the case why do you all cry Fashola over toll gate on the bridge? Just pay the toll gate and be happy since its communal benefit.
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 7:16am On Dec 13, 2013
ChinoElects: Yorobass metamorposed from Cats and Tigers..

They hardly look like humans..

How did Lugard place us in the same country with this wild wild west animals..?
Id take that beautiful girl anyday over Ibo woman with facial hair. Who wants to lay on a woman and rub neck with bia bia?
PoliticsRe: The IGR Debate - Reloaded! by MayorofLagos(m): 7:12am On Dec 13, 2013
ifechez: So the lecturers in Ibadan wen Achebe was there are yorubas? you shld go and sit down biko. it was in the same Ibadan and lagos two Igbo men (Prof. Kenneth dike and Prof. Eni Njoku respectively) become the first Nigerian VCs and had more Igbo lecturers. why was akintola complaining abt Igbo domination in south west?
Where were you when this subject was discussed at length?

Zik was instrumental in Njoku and Dike's position.. As was with everything else in that era that the Ibo man was believed by Zik to be better than any other Nigerian, qualified and tenured professors of Yoruba stock were stepped over to install an Ibo man from underneath them. Achebe himself was tutored by Yorubas and in fact introduced to creative writing through a group called Mbari Mbayo. Achebe, Okigbo, Clark and Soyinka were some of the members. Mbari Mbayo was sponsored by a German researcher in UI, Uli Beier, who also happened to be Suzanne Wenger's husband. Yorubaland was surrogate for all Ibo scholars that achieve fame in one form or other.
PoliticsInsurgency Tracker by MayorofLagos(op): 6:54am On Dec 13, 2013
A historical list of known insurgencies around the globe from 1775 to 2012.

You can click on a country or simply slide through the countries list to get additional info.

American Revolution was in 1775 and I wonder why the American founding fathers that fought Britain were not listed as insurgents but Biafra was listed as insurgents, alongside maitatsine and bokoharam.

A gross injustice! How accurate is the data that most of us depend on to inform decisions?

http://www.cfr.org/wars-and-warfare/invisible-armies-insurgency-tracker/p29917
PoliticsRe: “obasanjo’s Letter Has Finished President Jonathan”- Femi Fani Kayode (read) by MayorofLagos(m): 6:04am On Dec 13, 2013
DerideGull: Nigeria is also the home of loudmouthed cowards who suddenly arrogated the power to elect president of Nigeria to them selves. What a country.
.
Have you not come to your senses and realized Yoruba is the political kingpin in this country?

Since the military boots and guns were retired from rulership do you not see how Hausa/Fulani has been fumbling? They took for granted they have the skills to manage a democracy..without guns they are useless. Look what we have done to IBB's attempt to return; see how we defanged Buhari and then after fruitless attempts made him succumb and return to listen to us; we gave Ribadu the walk and yanked carpet from underneath Atiku..we then crowned a man out of creek fishing communities. Its a mystery, the more you look the less you see! grin

May God Bless Oodua forever!
PoliticsRe: Tukur Responds To Obj’s Letter, Advises OBJ To Thread With Caution by MayorofLagos(m): 5:44am On Dec 13, 2013
kettykin: OBJ is the worst tribalist , a false patriot and the worst bigot that has ever ruled Nigeria.

A check on the privatisation of the Oil Industry down stream companies when he greedily doubled as the Minister of petroleum and the president of the country (the vociferous Activist like the hypocrite femi falana, wole soyinka all kept quiet)

National oil now conoil was sold to Adenuga at less than the price of the company and yet obasanjo looked the other way
Agip petroleum now Oando was sold to Wale Tinubu at highly discounted price and the whole watch dogs kept mute
Texaco now MRS was sold to Dangote another of OBJ men
African Petroleum now Fort Oil or FO was sold to another of his kins men in the person of Mike Otedola

4 National oil companies 3 were sold to yorubas and 1 to hausa/fulani in a country that is as divers as nigeria and no body said anything or criticised the president even when the sales were fraudulently done

NICON insurance was sold to Jimoh Ibrahim even when he didn't have the cash and the still allowed him to buy Nigeria Airways from Virgin Nigeria

At the End of the day the crude oil owned by Niger Deltans were sold to Yorubas and dangote by the worst tribalist and bigot ever in the history of Mankind

if this is not worse than Apartheid then what can be worse than apartheid and the same devil that wanted a thrid term has the effontery to accuse Jonathan of dividing the country and going for a second term
Please stop your nonsense. Did Nigeria own Texaco or Agip or any of these oil companies? Does Nigeria own Shell? So if Fashola becomes major share holder in Shell tomorrow you will say Tinubu sold it to him, right? Watch how you lie.
PoliticsRe: Sanusi Letter To Jonathan - Rejoinder From Central Bank by MayorofLagos(m): 3:40am On Dec 13, 2013
theoctopus: If you see 49billion, even on paper, can you recognize it! Olodo! All you know how to do is spread falsehood! You no dey shame! No truth in your mouth! Lying seems to run in the blood of APC members and their supporters grin

You no dey shame? With all the 300k when una dey pay for that pig house called LASU, una still dey go on strike. grin

Tell Tinubu to stop eating your money so you can attend school properly
All these na talk, moronic babbling! Tinubu is not the topic and LASU is not the topic..bottom line, tell your man-looking sisters to return our stolen money so school can reopen for my education.

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