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Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:33am On Feb 25, 2020
12) Education is revered in Nigeria
Education being revered is a pretty universal concept, but it’s especially valued in Nigeria. One piece of evidence for this is the 2006 US census finding Nigerians living in the US to be “the highest educated ethnic or racial group in the country,” with 17% having a master’s degree or higher.
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:32am On Feb 25, 2020
11) Nigeria has a prolific film industry called Nollywood.
Nollywood puts out two hundred movies a week, topping the output of Hollywood and coming in second only to Bollywood.
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:31am On Feb 25, 2020
10) A lot of people think that most of Nigeria’s super-wealthy are selfish, greedy, and far more interested in protecting the status quo and their elite position than in improving the country’s future, and this is disastrous because they have great sway over the corrupt government’s policies.
Yeah yeah I know, this is exactly the problem with your country too—but something tells me your country’s corruption/inequality issues are less extreme than Nigeria’s
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:29am On Feb 25, 2020
9) A lot of people think President Goodluck Jonathan is stupid and blame him for allowing terrorist group Boko Haram to wreak such havoc.
Boko Haram is a militant Islamist terrorist group that has been killing and kidnapping throughout Northern Nigeria for the last five years, killing over 2,000 civilians already in 2014. Their name is oddly specific, meaning “Western education is forbidden,” their goal is to turn Nigeria into a hard-line Islamic state, and their leader wants to kill a lot of people. You probably remember hearing a lot about them when they kidnapped over 200 school girls in April, before the news got bored and moved on to other things.

As for the president, A) I learned that Goodluck and Jonathan are both a common first and last name in Nigeria, respectively, and B) He’s a Lyndon Johnson—i.e. he was the vice president but after the president died he took over, and has since won election, and the people I talked to think the original president would have done a lot better at dealing with Boko Haram.

And while we’re making overarching statements about Nigeria based on a tiny sample size of personal opinions I encountered…
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:28am On Feb 25, 2020
cool A baby’s arm can also serve as a handle.
I kept seeing people pick up a baby or toddler by the arm and displace it to a new location in that manner. This didn’t appear to hurt or bother the child at all and is both hilarious and practical. I’ll be adopting this practice for all future dealings with children.
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:27am On Feb 25, 2020
Nigeria is not a good place to be gay.
In January 2014, President Jonathan signed into law the Same Sex Marriage Prohibition Act, which jails people for 14 years for gay marriage and 10 years for “other violations of the law.” And if you keep quiet about your friend being gay, that can get you 5 years of jail time. As soon as the law was passed, the police started arresting people.
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:26am On Feb 25, 2020
(6) A guy I met told me that he had no full siblings but over 20 half siblings because his father has seven wives.
I just needed to tell you
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 1:23am On Feb 25, 2020
1Sharon:
Lol at the oyinbo part
Yh he was very Gentle on Nigeria IMO
Health / Re: One Of My Knees Are Aching Me Badly by oboy81: 3:34am On Feb 24, 2020
mice:


If you can take garlic everyone morning and let it be the first thing you take trust me you would see result

Suffer the same thing some months back and I am not diabetic and also prayer
eating Garlic cured your diabetes?
Romance / Good Ig/twitter Pages by oboy81: 3:29am On Feb 24, 2020
It seems as though most Pages on IG and Twitter all about rubbish. pls recommend some positive, clean, cool or funny pages.
ir doesn't have to be popular
Jobs/Vacancies / Security Outfits Job by oboy81: 6:32pm On Feb 18, 2020
I got info from certain sources that you can walk into any security company, submit your CV and be employed. pls i want to know how true this is, and other things i should bear in mind.
the good thing about these jobs (at least to me) is that they are Shifts Jobs, little qualification required and depending on your posting, you will get Tips from People or Customers.
Pls help me with good information about this.
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 8:36pm On Feb 14, 2020
good4all40:
Instead of you to put everything here so that this beautiful epistle will be moved to the promise land (front page), you are here directing us to another link.
my brother that work long oh, and i dont have a smart phone. You may finish it yourself too, with the pics and everything you know, Nothing bad in that. smiley Let's give the brother some traffic too wink
Politics / Re: Name A Nigerian Hero by oboy81: 6:15am On Feb 13, 2020
Tai Solarin - Did a Lot for Us. Education, politics etc.
Fela Kuti - Fearless, true Activist. Progressive, open-minded, enlightened
Wole Soyinka - Great Sage and True Intellectual. has been fighting against the kick of the Oppressive boot even b4 Independence.
Omoyele Sowore, Agba Jalingo, Desmond Majekodunmi etc. also doing their Honest bit are gradually entering that Hero's terrain

2 Likes 1 Share

Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 6:02am On Feb 13, 2020
It turns out that being white is a conspicuous quality in Nigeria.
At one point on a car ride, I saw this written on the truck in front of us:

Oyinbo

There was that word again. Oyinbo. I had assumed it was a slang way of saying a friendly “hello,” since that was what people on the street kept saying to me as I walked by. To confirm, I asked people in the car with me what it meant. They smiled. “It means white man.”

Well would ya look at that.

I thought about it and realized that since leaving the airport days earlier, I had not seen even one other white person.

And I sensed that the more rural a place we were in, the more surprised people were to see me. In small towns or villages, when someone would see me walk by, they’d look at me, then look away, then do a sudden double-take and with wide eyes and big smile, they’d get the attention of the other people with them and then they’d all look at me with wide eyes and big smiles—delighted and amused at the rare sighting.

I’m sure with a history of European occupation, race is as complicated an issue in Nigeria as it is anywhere else, but as far as my own experience there, I sensed no negativity at all—only exceptional friendliness—including the roughly 2,500 times someone called me oyinbo during the trip, which never came across as carrying any hostility.

(Quick pause for experienced Sub-Saharan Africa travelers to patronizingly pat me on the head.)

One other funny thing that kept happening is kids would regularly study my hand or arm or touch (or pull) my hair, which Femi’s brother explained was because they probably hadn’t ever seen a white person up close before. Here’s an example—and I’m not sure why my arm looks like a corpse’s arm either so don’t ask:


Read the rest on his Site here -
https://waitbutwhy.com/2014/08/19-things-learned-nigeria.html

Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 5:59am On Feb 13, 2020
being sibling #10 of the Adebayo Family

Before we get into what I learned in Nigeria, here’s who I learned most of it from—

The best way to learn about a foreign place is to get to know locals, and I got lucky in Nigeria. Through a friend, I was put in touch with a 31-year-old Nigerian guy named Femi, who offered to pick me up at the airport when I arrived. This turned into Femi taking me under his wing for almost the entire trip, showing me around Lagos, having me over to his apartment, sending me with his brothers to stay for half a week with their mom at their childhood home, introducing me to a bunch of other locals, and answering my roughly 12,000 questions about life in Nigeria. Convenient.

I stayed with different members of the family during the trip and got to know a few of them pretty well—it’s a mom and her nine kids, who range from the ages of nine[1] to 32. After growing up in a tiny village, four of the siblings now live together in a small one-bedroom apartment in Lagos, and three others live in the smaller town of Ife with their mom in a one-room apartment. Both apartments are paid for by Femi, the second oldest sibling and the oldest guy. He was getting ready to start college when their dad got sick and died at a young age. Femi dropped his plans and started working as a professional driver to support the family, something he’s still doing a decade later, and his siblings say he’s like a dad to all of them.

And because it happens to be a ridiculously hospitable family, I just stepped my ass right in as their 10th and least useful sibling, which gave me a much better insight into life there than I normally would have gotten. Here’s what I learned along the way:

19 Things I Learned While I Was There

1) Nigerian children like to express the shit out of themselves on the airplane.

2) Just because two people are fluent in the same language doesn’t mean they can easily communicate. As a former British colony, Nigeria’s official national language is English. In reality, most people’s first language is their local Nigerian language and English is a second language they’re often fluent in but sometimes not as comfortable speaking. And many less educated Nigerians don’t speak English at all.

Femi and his siblings speak fluent English but with such a different accent to mine that sometimes when they’d speak, I wouldn’t be sure if they were speaking their Nigerian language (Yoruba) to each other, or English to me, and I’d have a little panic while trying to figure it out.

4) The country’s power goes out 10 times a day on average. Which means it happened over 100 times just in my visit. The first few times it happened it jarred the shit out of me, and I’d be like “Oh would ya look at that!” before realizing that it’s really lame to make a big deal about it and what everyone else does is just continue the conversation without any acknowledgment of the situation. If you were lucky enough to be in a hotel or restaurant, a generator would bring the power back within a few minutes. But when I was in Femi’s or his mom’s apartment, the power would often stay out for hours. No one knows how long power outages will last—they can be as short as 30 seconds and as long as three days.

So there were a number of times I’d spend a full night in a room with six people, eating dinner and talking for hours, and the entire time we’d be in the dark without being able to see each other’s faces (this was fine until I tried to play with a two-year-old sitting near me before I realized that her hand was intensely liquidy with I’m not sure what and I had no way to wipe my hand off and then had to continue eating my meal with my hands, which is the traditional way to eat there).

The power issue makes most Nigerians seethe, given that they believe the government has more than enough wealth to fix the problem.

While we’re here, another infrastructure debacle that got some angry eye rolls from the people I met is the condition of the highways. On a drive from Lagos to nearby city Ibadan, a 10-mile stretch of road took us about four hours to get past because the amount of cracks and potholes in the road created utter gridlock.[2] Amusingly, a stretch of gridlock is called a “go-slow” in Nigeria, and part of a Nigerian go-slow is utter lawlessness, as cars do insane things like drive over the median and weave around cars going in the opposite direction to speed up their drive. To spice things up, apparently police officers sometimes come walking through the gridlock and mug people—I was told to keep my phone out of sight for this reason. I offered a glimpse of a few go-slows at 2:42 in the
Travel / Re: 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 5:53am On Feb 13, 2020
There’s not really a more jarring travel experience than spending two weeks getting used to being in Japan and then going immediately to Nigeria. They’re opposite places in almost every way places can be opposite. Even as I was checking my bag at the Tokyo airport, the woman saw where I was going and looked at me like, “Seriously though what’s your problem?”

I don’t know what my problem is. But I had apparently decided to leave the world’s most pristine, orderly, safe place to go to a place that was not those three adjectives, and there I suddenly was, standing in the middle of Africa’s biggest city, trying to not die.

But we’ll come back to my situation in a minute—let’s first get oriented on Nigeria.
Travel / 19 Things I Learned In Nigeria by oboy81: 5:52am On Feb 13, 2020
This was really interesting read and kinda Funny lol.

Source is from waitbitwhy.com
Celebrities / Re: See Trending Photo Of Rich Hausa Girls Flaunting Their Iphone 11 Pro Max by oboy81: 1:55am On Feb 13, 2020
Nova1988:
Look at the stunning picture
What is stunning here?

1 Like

European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) / Re: Tottenham Hotspur Vs Manchester City (2 - 0) On 2nd February 2020 by oboy81: 4:56pm On Feb 02, 2020
1X is my prediction
Romance / Re: Not One Human Soul Gave Me Food Yesterday by oboy81: 4:59am On Jan 28, 2020
[quote author=oboy81 post=85833487]
Ok
Music/Radio / Sinzu Claimed To Have Sex With An A-list Artiste's Babymama by oboy81: 11:46pm On Jan 19, 2020
In a song i heard on the radio yesterday, Sinzu aka Saucekid claimed to bang a Very popular Nigerian musician's baby mama. It's a rap song and cant remeber the title, he was featured on it tho
Who could the musician and baby mama be?
The more important question is Do things like this still happen in music, nigerian music? Smh
Edit: the song is full effect by papyper corleone
Crime / Re: Colorado: The New Drug Making Our Youths Go Mad by oboy81: 11:27pm On Jan 19, 2020
Colorado1:
Welldone
Lol
Politics / Re: Shame On You! FFK To Gen Yakubu Gowon by oboy81: 9:03am On Jan 18, 2020
I think that under this Gowon's Regime Wole Soyinka was imprisoned right? Pls Correct me if I'm wrong
Celebrities / Re: Celin Dion’s Mother Is Dead by oboy81: 8:50am On Jan 18, 2020
Celine dion and her mother are lucky smiley
That beautiful Song would now take on teal meaning now

1 Like

Romance / Re: 'thanks To The Captain' How A Chinese Girl Destroyed A Pilot's Career. (photos) by oboy81: 8:43am On Jan 18, 2020
crackkhaus:

What part of the Satire don't you understand?
Oh, Ok then.
Foreign Affairs / Re: Meet ISIS Leader That Was So Fat, Could Not Enter Police Vehicle by oboy81: 8:34am On Jan 18, 2020
ItooWorWor:
What a big thing grin grin
They say it's 'one of the biggest captures' in recent Month lol
Romance / Re: Some Bitter Truths Every Man Must Make Peace With by oboy81: 8:31am On Jan 18, 2020
MrBrownJay1:
so much rubbish in ONE post... OP must be high on that "colorado".

[img]https://media./images/261ee25ebf4c2bd418714e6bc440edb9/tenor.gif[/img]

Lol how do you know? You know what the "Colorado-high" feeeling is like
Funny DP btw grin
Celebrities / Re: My Crown Is For No One,Bobrisky Shows Off Some Money She Exchange From Aboki by oboy81: 8:24am On Jan 18, 2020
If i was Gay, i wouldn't stoop so low to date this thing.
Our Senators are indeed Nonsensical, No Class, No Manners, No Quality in everything about them.
#igatnoprobswithLGBT
Romance / Re: 'thanks To The Captain' How A Chinese Girl Destroyed A Pilot's Career. (photos) by oboy81: 8:23am On Jan 18, 2020
Yolmelifya:
[s][/s]
I see You cancelled that comment abi, if i may ask, Why Sir?
Romance / Re: 'thanks To The Captain' How A Chinese Girl Destroyed A Pilot's Career. (photos) by oboy81: 8:21am On Jan 18, 2020
crackkhaus:
At least they didn't string him up in front of a firing squad, which is the usual hobby of the Chinese communist party. cheesy
Dude what the hell are you saying
Romance / Re: Memes Single Peeps Can Relate To by oboy81: 1:30am On Jan 16, 2020
Erediauwa:
I love myself so much, I am even jealous of myself for loving myself the way me myself never expect.


So, I want to use this platform to tell myself by myself that I love myself so much.

I love you "Myself.
Lol kikikiki
Oba Gha To kpere
Romance / Re: Not One Human Soul Gave Me Food Yesterday by oboy81: 12:54am On Jan 16, 2020
EDataguy:

Sorry I didn't receive it, is it via whatsapp or SMS?

I won't be able to receive SMS or call cuz the number is customized for whatsapp only.

You can whatsapp me or give me your contact.

Thanks
Ok, pls send the data to this Airtel phone Number
07013994174

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