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MisDzoi's Posts

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PoliticsRe: Governor Obaseki Wins Certificate Forgery Case by MisDzoi: 3:20pm On Jun 29, 2020
Strike is different from dismissal. Do the math
Foreign AffairsRe: Supreme Court Blocks Trump From Cancelling Daca Immigration Program by MisDzoi: 8:26am On Jun 23, 2020
Which one? The one they wrote to suit their white supremacy agenda which you are brainwahsed with?
sexylassie2:
Native Americans sold lands to the Europeans while some were conquered by wars.

Presently, those lands that were not sold or bought are now what is called Indian reserve, they are scattered all over the US, the US does not interfere with them.

In Australia, there is the indigenous protected areas about 170, million arcres all for the aborigines.

Go read history before writing
Foreign AffairsRe: Supreme Court Blocks Trump From Cancelling Daca Immigration Program by MisDzoi: 8:59pm On Jun 19, 2020
sexylassie2:
Pls explain to me, how trump is an immigrant in america?

Just because the native Indians were the real owner of some part of the land doesnt mean nobody is an america.

Most Americans black and white can trace their generation to back to the 8th generation.

Can an immigrate do that?
Oga what is the point you are driving at? You haven't asked a question? Because it's a known fact that the Trump and entirely white people are immigrants to the Land owned by Native Indians? You are so lost in history that the immigrants wipe out the society they met? Same thing they did in Australia. I bet you don't know where you are from or you are just one kid learning history now
PoliticsRe: Nnamdi Kanu To FG: Invite Us To Negotiate Peaceful Exit Of Biafra by MisDzoi: 4:21pm On Jun 19, 2020
They better start moving to their own Biafra land bcs they see themselves as Jews in Naija
Foreign AffairsRe: Supreme Court Blocks Trump From Cancelling Daca Immigration Program by MisDzoi: 12:30pm On Jun 19, 2020
salford1:
Trump thought Finland is a state in Russia. You think he cares about Nigeria let alone Biafra. He can't point out where Nigeria is on the map of the world grin
Biiafra my foot. They don't know the constitution says Naija is one indivisible country. These IPOB apologist Really think they will get Biafra? Even your Useless war lord never got any support talkless of Nnamdi Kanu
Foreign AffairsRe: Supreme Court Blocks Trump From Cancelling Daca Immigration Program by MisDzoi: 12:27pm On Jun 19, 2020
Who is the true owners of that land called America? Trump is a benefactor of the immigration system That has seen millions throng into the USA.

sexylassie2:
it is nothing....anyway. DACA BENEFICIARIES ARE MOSTLY MEXICANS


STOP THE ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS. THEY BRING CRIMES AS THEY COME, THEY MANIPULATE THE SYSTEM AND LIE TO GET CITIZENSHIP, SOME OF THEM EVEN LEAVE THEIR LITTLE KIDS IN THE US JUST TO MAKE THEM GET CITIZENSHIP BY ALL MEANS.
Also i noticed some Americans here trying to paint Trump as good, but wait for what will befall the USA before Trump's next 4 years.
Foreign AffairsRe: Supreme Court Blocks Trump From Cancelling Daca Immigration Program by MisDzoi: 12:20pm On Jun 19, 2020
BigBabyJesus:
DACA was Obama's exploitation of Presidential Executive Order to get illegal aliens to vote him back into office knowing fully well that the over 12 million illegal aliens will definitely vote for him over the temporary reprive to stay in America without getting deported.

Executive Orders are NOT laws but policies that can and used to be able to be reviewed or cancelled by the executive.

The Supreme Court decision has created room for American Presidents to act outside the US constitution and laws as it set the precedents that any EO can not be overturned without redress to Congress and or the courts which basically gives the President the powers to issue decrees and thus dictatorial power.

With this highly partisan ruling, SCOTUS has unknowingly given extraordinary powers to POTUS to enact decrees.
What this means in future (as Trump tweeted) was that POTUS can roll out laws and decrees without recourse to Congress and scrutiny by the courts.

What you should expect is Trump passing decrees that ban mail-in voting and ID mandated voting - two of the major contentions between the Republicans and Democrats in the upcoming elections.

Voting fraud has been perpetuated by the Democrats using both mail-in votes and multiple voting and vote by illegal aliens.

This is a win for Trump as he rightly tweeted but a big loss for American democracy as POTUS now has the dictatorial powers to roll out decrees.

The Democrats are now coming to realization that such a partisan decision by SCOTUS is not in anyway favorable to their intended rigging plans as Trump can issue same executive orders (which Obama used in 2012) to his advantage and ban mail-in votes and voting without identification or illegal immigrant voting - which are what the Democrats have been using to rig elections since Obma.
Fool
PoliticsRe: Edo 2020: Obaseki Resigns From APC by MisDzoi: 1:57pm On Jun 16, 2020
OZAOEKPE:
Adams go shock soon...

Adams should be ready for war with shaibu, he know say na only him village he get crowd. Shaibu go take the battle to am. He go see am
Are u in Edo State?
CultureRe: Masquerade, Ajeron, Cleanses Ajegunle Of Coronavirus (Photos) by MisDzoi: 7:36pm On Apr 24, 2020
Better than some known fake capitalist pastors
HealthRe: Woman Jumps Into Osun River Over Hunger Caused By Lockdown by MisDzoi: 4:22am On Apr 02, 2020
Now this is what we get when you collect 5 k during election in place of your conscience
PoliticsRe: COVID-19 Lockdown: Food Markets To Open Between 10:00am And 2:00pm Daily – FG by MisDzoi: 4:19am On Apr 02, 2020
Looming disaster that the Federal Govt Can't handle.....build hospital una no wan build. Take practical step to curb the meanance uns no wan gree
PoliticsRe: Workers’ Salaries In Jeopardy As Oil Price Tumbles Again by MisDzoi: 8:10am On Mar 22, 2020
You people fought GEJ because our excess crude account now u will at for it...more woes and hunger looming
Jobs/VacanciesRe: My 1 Year Experience With Fortunate Step Resources Makurdi by MisDzoi: 5:18pm On Mar 04, 2020
Write me, we can make a case against them in court.pm me
Science/TechnologyRe: Sloth Caught In My School Today by MisDzoi: 8:02am On Jan 14, 2020
Run for your lives...bush baby.
PoliticsRe: How US Embassy Portrays Nigeria On Its Website by MisDzoi: 7:13am On Jan 08, 2020
Are they lying?
PoliticsRe: 'Oshiomhole's Antics Will Fail' - Governor Obaseki by MisDzoi: 4:34am On Dec 27, 2019
Obaseki i hope the road you are constructing have stopped peeling off...because all the roads you constructed in Edo State without walkway and gutters have started peeling before the end of your first tenure...stop this your unnecessary antics and face your work as a Governor....so wasting our monies sending gifts to people who are already well fed
TravelRe: Canada Is ‘Stealing’ Our Young People! by MisDzoi: 4:00pm On Aug 21, 2019
My mother says when a man does not place value on his clothes another turns it to a rain. I myself have witnessed the brain drain when i wrote my IELTS and come to think that only the best in the society are seated next to you in the exam hall is crazy...you see people from all works of life...i even heard Desmond Elliot wrote the exams. This mass migration started under Buhari regime. Imagine able bodied men and women leaving this country by land and air. This is not because of what they are promised but because the have a better chance there, good health care and education too. Mind you this system has a lof of Indians, Chinese and Americans migrating to Canada...bros see don't envy them...join the train if you can. Canada fits the Nigerian Youth who don't want his talent to waste....


Just go through the people the want...from medical doctor, nurses, lawyers, sociologist, people with social works degree, meat cutters(butchers), engineers, technicians to even bakers...as long as you have a certificate to show for it...as for me and my family our relocation to Canada is as sure as eating our morning meals...
Thank you
Omooba77:
Yes, Canada is not just taking our young people, they are taking the fattest of our crops, the best, the brightest, and the brainiest!

One of them is my friend, Olufemi, (not real name). He graduated top of his class and best in the entire university! Nine years after graduation, he got married to his equally cerebral lawyer wife, and they both had fairly paying jobs that admitted them into the struggling middle class in Nigeria. A year after marriage, Olufemi, disillusioned by the state of his family’s finances, the situation in the country and the underutilisation of his skills, and intellect at his place of work, sold all his assets and relocated his young family to Canada!


Femi’s story is not unique, almost every young Nigerian professional who is not in the process of immigrating to Canada, knows a friend, family or colleague who has relocated or is in the process of relocating. The situation is alarming, almost like the biblical “rapture”: you come to work one day, you see your colleagues, you resume the next day, and they are gone!

I recently had a conversation with a millennial working in one of the big four audit firms; the conversation bordered on the number of young professionals leaving the country for Canada. He informed me that their firm had started a WhatsApp group for ex-staff members that had immigrated to Canada; as of the time of having that discussion about 70 Nigerian immigrants had joined the group. A similar conversation with another tax consultant also working in one of the “big four” revealed the same trend. According to him, almost all his colleagues in their audit department had immigrated to Canada or some part of Europe!


Why Canada, you may ask? Well, Canada has an immigration process carefully designed to attract highly skilled young professionals. It requires you to be of a certain age bracket (the younger you are, the more points you gain) to take a “Test of English”, send your academic transcripts, have certain amount in your bank account and Voila! you get a Canadian Permanent Residence.

The process, while seamless, is expensive for the average Nigerian, and is also a clear indication of the class of people they want: comfortable, highly educated, extremely skilled, young professionals, hence the people who go through this process are not poor by Nigerian standard.


As a young professional in this country, you begin to wonder if there is something wrong with you if you have not commenced your own immigration process. When you see your friends and colleagues resign from their jobs, sell their property, and leave the country; when you watch them upload pictures of their new countries of residence on social media and ‘brag’ about how the system works; when they inform you gleefully of how they have “secured” the future of their children, and invite you to join them, you wonder if, perhaps, you are not missing out on life opportunities for your own children!


Sir, the young people leaving the country are not unpatriotic, the reality is that Nigeria has not been kind to her youths! Furthermore, this brain drain did not start with young people nor did it start in this generation. When political and religious leaders send their children outside the country to be educated or when they seek heath care outside the shores of their country, they send a clear and uncontroverted message to our young people that they do not believe in the future of their country! Young people are therefore simply taking a cue from her leaders, yet, this mass immigration in recent times is nothing like what happened in the past: it is massive, and it is alarming! Young bright people immigrating to a foreign land is the most telling evidence of a failed leadership!


What state of affairs of a country would make its young people leave e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.ng: family, friends, some measure of certainty and in some cases extremely good jobs for a foreign country, full of uncertainties and oftentimes for less than inspiring jobs?

The current state! The reality is that the state of affairs of this country is extremely discouraging for young people! Our country is ridden with nepotism, insecurity, poor infrastructure, unemployment and a lot more, underemployment! What is more discouraging, and frightening is that nothing in the present seems to indicate that things will get better in the future!


Our health care system needs a complete overhaul, medical “facilities” are in dire state of disrepair. The doctor to patient ratio in public hospitals is shockingly poor, yet our doctors and health personnel continue to emigrate the country, because they are overworked, overwhelmed and underpaid!

A close friend and her younger sister were recently threatened with deportation, as she had remained in the United Kingdom, after her student visa expired. Her British friends started a petition online in a bid to keep her and her sister in the UK. There is a back story to all of this drama: my friend had lost two of her siblings who had medical conditions, mainly as a result of the poor health care system in the country and has a younger sister with the same medical condition who may have faced a similar fate, were it not for the excellent and timely treatment she had received in the UK. Unfortunately, her younger sister requires continuous health care which is simply not available in our country.


My friend, a brilliant lawyer and patriotic Nigeria, is compelled to appeal to the British Government to offer a right to remain, because her younger sister’s life quite literally depends on it!

Why do we subject our young people to this kind of humiliation? Why do we have to beg to remain in a foreign land? How does a developing nation recover from such massive evacuation of its human capital? And more importantly, how do we address this issue to reignite a sense of patriotism amongst our young people?


Quite frankly, I do not have the answers to all these questions.

I hear that there is a common joke in Toronto, that the best place to have a heart attack is in a taxi, because the driver is probably an immigrant doctor. The young people leaving are some of the smartest and the brightest, they know that adapting to a new society is hard, yet they still go! Many of them are skilled professionals, lawyers, doctors, architects, pharmacists, they know that they must write and pass expensive professional exams, yet, they still go! They hear about racism, about the cold, the lonely nights and outright discrimination, yet, they still go! The frustration and disappointment amongst young people are real and palpable, but, they believe the country has little to offer so they leave.


We must address this issue with the urgency it deserves, because at the end of the day, Nigeria is the only country we can truly call home! It is for this reason that many Nigerians in the Diaspora still choose to come back home! They still build property, start businesses and make investments in the country. They still give their children African names and follow the local news closely; many are even more abreast and passionate about the happenings in the country than those of us in the country. They are never truly gone; one “leg” in, the other out! and how can they, their parents, friends, colleagues and relatives are still here!

Yes, Canada is not just taking our young people, they are taking the fattest of our crops, the best, the brightest, and the brainiest!

One of them is my friend, Olufemi, (not real name). He graduated top of his class and best in the entire university! Nine years after graduation, he got married to his equally cerebral lawyer wife, and they both had fairly paying jobs that admitted them into the struggling middle class in Nigeria. A year after marriage, Olufemi,  disillusioned by the state of his family’s finances, the  situation in the country and the underutilisation of his skills, and intellect at his place of work, sold all his assets and relocated his young family to Canada!

Femi’s story is not unique, almost every young  Nigerian professional  who is not in the process of immigrating to Canada, knows a friend, family or colleague who  has relocated or is  in the process of relocating. The situation is alarming, almost like the biblical “rapture”: you come to work one day, you see your colleagues, you resume the next day, and they are gone!

I recently had a conversation with a millennial working in one of the big four audit firms; the conversation bordered on the number of young professionals leaving the country for Canada. He informed me that their firm had started a WhatsApp group for ex-staff members that had immigrated to Canada; as of the time of having that discussion about 70  Nigerian immigrants had joined the group. A similar conversation with another tax consultant also working in one of the “big four” revealed the same trend. According to him, almost all his colleagues in their audit department had immigrated to Canada or some part of Europe!

Why Canada, you may ask? Well, Canada has an immigration process carefully designed to attract highly skilled young professionals. It requires you to be of a certain age bracket (the younger you are, the more points you gain) to take a “Test of English”, send your academic transcripts, have certain amount in your bank account and Voila! you get a Canadian Permanent Residence.

The process, while seamless, is expensive for the average Nigerian, and is also a clear indication of the class of people they want: comfortable, highly educated, extremely skilled, young professionals, hence the people who go through this process are not poor by Nigerian standard.

As a young professional in this country, you begin to wonder if there is something wrong with you if you have not  commenced your  own immigration process. When you see your friends and colleagues resign from their jobs, sell their property, and leave the country; when you watch them upload pictures of their new countries of residence on social media and ‘brag’ about how the system works; when they inform you gleefully of how they have “secured” the future of their children, and invite you to join them, you wonder if, perhaps, you are not missing out on life opportunities for your own children!

Sir, the young people leaving the country are not unpatriotic, the reality is that  Nigeria has not been kind to her youths! Furthermore, this brain drain did not start with young people nor did it start in this generation. When political  and  religious leaders send  their children  outside the country to be educated or when they  seek heath care outside the shores of their country, they send a clear and uncontroverted message to our young people  that they do not  believe  in the future of their country! Young people are therefore simply taking a cue from her leaders,  yet, this  mass immigration  in recent times  is nothing like  what happened in the past: it is massive, and it is alarming! Young bright people immigrating to a foreign land is the most telling evidence of a failed leadership!

What state of affairs of a country would make its young people leave e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.ng: family, friends,  some measure of certainty and in some cases extremely good jobs for  a foreign country,  full of uncertainties and oftentimes for less than inspiring jobs?

The current state! The reality is that the state of affairs of this country is extremely discouraging for young people! Our country is ridden with nepotism, insecurity, poor infrastructure, unemployment and a lot more, underemployment! What is more discouraging, and frightening is that nothing in the present seems to indicate that things will get better in the future!

Our health care system needs a complete overhaul, medical “facilities” are in dire state of disrepair. The doctor to patient ratio in public hospitals is shockingly poor, yet our doctors and health personnel continue to emigrate the country, because they are overworked, overwhelmed and underpaid!

A close friend and her younger sister were recently threatened with deportation, as she had remained in the United Kingdom, after her student visa expired. Her British friends started a petition online in a bid to keep her and her sister in the UK. There is a back story to all of this drama: my friend had lost two of her siblings who had medical conditions, mainly as a result of the poor health care system in the country and has a younger sister with the same medical condition who may have faced a similar fate, were it not for the excellent and timely treatment she had received in the UK. Unfortunately, her younger sister requires continuous health care which is simply not available in our country.

My friend, a brilliant lawyer and patriotic Nigeria, is compelled to appeal to the British Government to offer a right to remain, because her younger sister’s life quite literally depends on it!

Why do we subject our young people to this kind of humiliation? Why do we have to beg to remain in a foreign land? How does a developing nation recover from such massive evacuation of its human capital? And  more importantly, how do we address this issue to  reignite a sense of patriotism amongst our young people?

Quite frankly, I do not have the answers to all these questions.

I hear that there is a common joke in Toronto, that the best place to have a heart attack is in a taxi, because the driver is probably an immigrant doctor. The young people leaving are  some of the smartest and the brightest, they know that adapting to a new society is hard, yet they still go!  Many of them are skilled professionals, lawyers, doctors, architects, pharmacists, they know that they must write and pass  expensive professional exams, yet, they still go! They hear about racism, about the cold, the lonely nights and outright discrimination, yet, they still go! The frustration and disappointment amongst young people are real and palpable, but, they believe the country has little to offer so they leave.

We must address this issue with  the urgency it deserves, because at the end of the day, Nigeria is the only country we can truly call home! It is for this reason that many Nigerians in the Diaspora still choose to come back home! They still build  property, start businesses and make investments in the country. They still give their children African names and follow the local news closely; many are even more abreast and passionate about the happenings in the country than those of us in the country. They are never truly gone; one “leg” in, the other out! and how can they, their parents, friends, colleagues and relatives are still here!

Canada’s gain is Nigeria’s loss. It is impossible to stop this trend completely, sadly, but we can discourage it by creating a more enabling environment for everyone. We would need to do this gradually,  perhaps, we can start with our health care, with improved power and security of lives and property!

More importantly, young people need to sense a clear redirection in the affairs of the country; when this is done, maybe, they will remain in the country. But first, we must start! The sooner we begin, the better.

https://punchng.com/canada-is-stealing-our-young-people/amp
Business To BusinessRe: Do You Want Better Returns On Than Banks Give To Your Saved Money? by MisDzoi: 11:30am On Sep 27, 2016
I want to join d next batch. 07035910524 is my number. Pls send ur number to me. Thank u
Jobs/VacanciesRe: Post Kano State Jobs Here by MisDzoi: 7:31pm On May 07, 2016
Amzee tanx! I am also seeking for a job in kano. I really need this. Tanx
Jobs/VacanciesRe: UBA Aptitude Test: What To Expect? by MisDzoi: 9:25pm On Apr 25, 2016
razzberry2:
please those that did an interview with the HR on 12th april in lag,please can I get Chima's number? It's urgent...tanx
Pls Razzberry2, hav u done d ED interview? When?
Jobs/VacanciesRe: UBA Aptitude Test: What To Expect? by MisDzoi: 8:06am On Apr 21, 2016
Toluak:
Toluak and Jumsim, how ws it? Was it ED interview? When did u take the last interviw b4 today's own?


Was withd Hcm,not ED
Stil awaiting response
Feb 16th
Thank u. M expecting an invitation for d next stage interview. I had my first interview on 1st April. I av nt gotten regret mail.
Jobs/VacanciesRe: UBA Aptitude Test: What To Expect? by MisDzoi: 8:12pm On Apr 20, 2016
Toluak:
Morni,did ur msg read ED interview n wen was ur last interview
Toluak and Jumsim, how ws it? Was it ED interview? When did u take the last interviw b4 today's own?
Jobs/VacanciesRe: UBA Aptitude Test: What To Expect? by MisDzoi: 8:34pm On Apr 19, 2016
jumsim:
What are the questions to expect when having an interview with the ED. Thanks
Are u also aving an interview with d ED? Which day pls?
Jobs/VacanciesRe: UBA Aptitude Test: What To Expect? by MisDzoi: 5:55pm On Apr 19, 2016
Toluak:
Anyone having interview at marina tomoro in d house,pls respond because i got a msg to dat effect bt nt sure wot stage it is
Toluak, is it interview with the ED? What is the content of the text sent to u?
Jobs/VacanciesRe: UBA Recruiting by MisDzoi: 8:38pm On Apr 06, 2016
Mr Kunzo, how r u? Pls I sent a cv to ur mail yesterday. The name is Mercy. Pls help me submit it. Thank u so much. God bless u.

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