Minjim's Posts
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israelmao:How many Turkish team have won the UCL? $75 is the highest transfer fee and they paid it twice. If not for Gala and Fenabache who would know the league |
Osihmen is simply playing safe. Its better to be a king in a pond than to be a slave in an ocean |
Those people must be zombies Dont they have opinion of their own? I can't follow any politician anywhere belle face |
The ASp was armed was not an excuse. Some one them were armed too. It is better to shot the ASP than allow him kill an innocent man even if he was not their brother. The fact is that they were all complicit. He is just taking one for the team. |
skydeexie:It like a bye - law. Sharia is not above the constitution |
I would have understood this if they were complaining that the money should be spent on the economy rather than religion because a relationship with God is personal. |
Nigeria politics is padi padi politics. His father was a nightmare to Nigerian yet they seek to reward him |
On road construction , kudos to him. He is taking on huge road projects like no other president . All these noise about Obi , with the calibre of politicians with him in that ADC he can't achieve anything . People like Gerry Gana , David Mark , and co. He has to satisfy their interests and their interest does not tally with national interest |
These English clubs are too arrogant They had the chance to buy him all the while but preferred white dudes. Now they noticed Real and Barca are sneefing him they running to Turkey |
Do they think their nationals aren't in other African countries? They wont have sense until all African countries start giving it back to them |
And Peter Obi will never condemn their actions. |
When you people kill and eat every animal you see. The elephants must have been fed up and decidedge to take matters into its own had. It must have tot , " what sort of animal are these people , you can't go around eating everything" |
Nigerian police. The public prosecutor that took this to court ought to be sacked. You have not evidence and you reported a crime. Is the judge doing judicial giveaway? Moreover NP dont honour any monetary verdict. |
Tinubu just used Kenya in that sentence carelessly. Somebody in his position should know better. |
You are not married, so right now your priorities are your parents and siblings. If you don't set up your immediate family , they will keep coming back. Stop giving money , set them up with business |
TruthU87:Do you have to pay for premium to do all these? |
Buffet and Gate are the true philanthropist. Elon Musk is obsessed with being the world richest man he doesn't do charity like those two I mentioned |
Believeintruth:Font be naive ,the such a big project not have Environmental Impact Accessment. If you have passed the road before. I visited Ogaga Mall in January , and i took that road. There is a ditch the jug at the other side of the road. I presume it going to be a flood passage to evacuate any flood on the highway. Just cross the road to the other side. Not the sea side. You will notice the line of ditch . We as citizens should applaud projects like this because it affects us personally not join politicians like Dino Malaye to condemn it in order to score cheap political points |
A failure as a minister wants to be a governor. Lets wait and see |
Believeintruth:The road is still under construction. Check the middle nothing has been done there. But since its a coastal road I don't see the neccesity of constructing a drainage , it just be an avenue for the sea water to escape to the road once there is high current. |
Ezeama400:Whats the benefits of the state creation to the common man? Only politicians will benefit from it. Out of all the 36 states how many can independently sustain themselves? Let the states IGR increase first to the point none is waiting of the FG for allocation , then we will another state can be caved out of it. For a state that can bearly stand to be clamouring for more state is like tell telling a 40 year old man that still lives with life parents to go and marry and live alone. That is a recipe for disaster |
Kukutente23:That video was during the rain that flood you see does not last till the next day. There are proper drainage channels there |
SmartPolician:Are you immune to reasonable facts ? |
Onewazobia:Dont mind him . To him every huge snake is anaconda. Some African pythons are even bigger than anaconda |
What are pythons still doing in Nigeria? They want to go extinct? |
Well, your best was not good enough. |
How can you claim the US is running out of missile when there are thousands of local munufacturers there. They have not even fought with Iran |
It may feel like it but that's not the end of a man. I know it may be too late to switch party but hold your ground and be consistent. Your time must come |
He turned leftover inventory into a thriving business. So when you see peiple selling bread at major busstops in buses, cars or tables. This was how the story began. And without formal education, he demonstrated a level of practical business insight that many structured operations would later adopt. “A Proven Model That Has Sustained Livelihoods for Over 20 Years” |
I am about to share with you a compelling history of how my elder brother contributed to opening up a new business model in Lagos in early 2000. Long before selling bread in traffic became a common sight across Lagos, there was a quiet innovation happening on the roadside—one that would later reshape how bread was distributed across the city. It began around 2002. My elder brother had no higher degree, no university education, and no formal training in business strategy. But what he had was something far more practical—sharp observation, courage, and the instinct to act on opportunity. He worked as a sales representative for a bakery, handling daily deliveries across Lagos. His routine was simple: load the bus with bread, supply customers, collect payments, and return. He earns commission. But there was always a gap in the system. At the end of many days, there were leftover loaves—customers who didn’t collect their full orders, cancelled requests, unsold stock sitting idle in the bus on the journey back. Most people saw waste. He saw opportunity. On his return trips, he began stopping at Orile Alaba Rago—a crowded, high-energy hub filled with commuters, buses, and constant movement. Instead of going back with unsold bread, he would park and sell directly to people on the spot. What started as a simple way to clear leftovers quickly revealed something powerful. The bread sold fast. People bought fresh loaves out of convenience. Drivers and passengers didn’t need to leave their vehicles. Very quickly, the results became undeniable: He was making more profit from roadside sales than from his actual delivery work. That discovery changed everything. Gradually, deliveries became secondary. The bus stops became the real market. He had uncovered a simple but powerful truth—traffic wasn’t a delay, it was demand. As the method proved effective, his reach expanded. He began working with multiple bakeries, including AdeOwo Bakery, Odalo Bakery, and later Queensmeal, Leventis Food, and Felis Bakery at Festac Town. Each partnership reinforced the same model—sell where people already are. The bakery owners saw the results—faster turnover, higher sales volume, consistent demand. Instead of resisting the change, they supported it. He was given a bigger bus, not for deliveries, but to scale roadside selling at busy bus stops. By then, what started as leftover sales had become a system. And this is where your own journey connects. I started this journey with him in the early days, learning the rhythm of the road and the art of selling. But after gaining admission into a higher institution, my involvement became seasonal—returning during holidays to join him and experience the business firsthand. One of those moments stands out. At Orile Alaba Rago, on this particulaly busy Saturday day, everything aligned—the crowd, the timing, the demand. That day, we sold about 2,000 loaves of special bread. We initially brought 1500 in a big Renault bus, but by 3 pm the we were counting less than 50 loaves and the day was still young. We had to call the bakery. A smaller bus brought exactly 500 loaves for us at that sme spot. And By 8 pm that same day we had sold 2000 loaves - the highest sold on a particular route. That wasn’t just a good day—it was proof of scale. But his impact didn’t stop with him alone. As the business grew, he brought in members of your family, teaching them the model and giving them a source of livelihood. What he started began to spread within your own household—turning into something bigger than a personal hustle. And even today, one of those family members is still in the business, continuing the same model he pioneered years ago. That is legacy. Over time, others outside the family began to notice. The idea spread across Lagos. More sellers entered the roads. Bread became a common sight in traffic. Eventually, companies formalized the system, sending out branded sales representatives to replicate what had once been an informal innovation. But by then, the foundation had already been laid. My brother didn’t just sell bread. He built a system. He created opportunities for others. |
This man is still pained but he's stating the obvious. |
Is the NP not supposed to be parrading this flashpoint with drones and helicopters? |
