Politics › Re: How Reliable Is The Australian Negotiator's Boko Haram Report by PointB: 8:46am On Sep 01, 2014*. Modified: 12:34pm On Sep 01, 2014 |
People point fingers of blame at those who give them so much distress.
I think the Boko Haram commanders are good student of subterfuge and misdirection.
They are simply trying to create confusion in their 'enemies' camps. Who better to use than someone who 'trust' them.
Anyone with who has seen movies like 24hrs, or even Spartacus will clearly understand the tool being deployed by Boko Haram in this phase of their struggles. This plot is simple sow discord, confusion in your enemy camp, use this period of their confusion to regroup and launch devastating attack.
Nigeria military cannot have a better them to mount a serious offensive against the terrorists than now. This particular play is borne out of weakness, and stress of battle by the terrorist. It's time for Nigeria to launch a massive offensive! |
Politics › Re: How Reliable Is The Australian Negotiator's Boko Haram Report by PointB: 8:37am On Sep 01, 2014 |
So Boko Haram commander told Mr. Davis their sponsors, but could not volunteer the name of their bag-man in Egypt? While at it, what are the identities (real not made up ones) of the Boko Haram commanders that Mr. Davis had encounter with? Surely, they would have told him their names as part of the ice breakers during his interaction with them. He could have even overheard them calling themselves.
Personally, I think Mr. Davis is just being mischievous. |
Politics › Re: Okorocha Eyes Presidency by PointB: 8:35am On Sep 01, 2014 |
berem: He should finish his second term before eyeing the presidential seat.  So if he has the opportunity now, you wont support him? Why? |
Politics › Re: Is There Any Difference Between Impeachment And Removal? by PointB: 8:26am On Sep 01, 2014 |
Impeachment and removal are the two steps in taking a high government official, such as a president or a judge, from his position. It is typically used in cases of malfeasance (see also recall election).
The first step, impeachment , is a formal accusation by a simple majority of the House. This vote leaves the accused in office, while he is "tried" by the Senate. A two-thirds majority there results in removal from office. |
Politics › Re: Okorocha Eyes Presidency by PointB: 8:20am On Sep 01, 2014 |
Meringe: I'm igbo from Imo State, ideato precisely, I will vote for him for any office he wishes to vie for. Rochas till infinitio. haters go and ask oshio wat to do. Rochas has my support too. Anything that get him out of Imo State Government House. I will even toe print for him! |
Foreign Affairs › Re: Presidential Villas Across The World.(pictures) by PointB: 6:50pm On Aug 29, 2014 |
terrimatix: I know this because i am a covert operator and i don't have to discuss their security apparatus with you........Ya dig?? Covert operator, huh? So what does that make me - who sees all the loopholes, Black Ops? |
Science/Technology › Re: Remains of an ancient dreadlocked woman Found On The Moon. by PointB: 4:44pm On Aug 29, 2014 |
onirugbon1: The nephilim are fallen angels as well. The jury is still out on that. |
Science/Technology › Re: Remains of an ancient dreadlocked woman Found On The Moon. by PointB: 7:45am On Aug 29, 2014 |
Interesting.
I believe this story, and perhaps there are clues in the bible support Extraterrestrial Beings. The book of Genesis chapter 6 clearly made it clear that there before and after the flood, there were other beings, different from the 'fallen Angels' and Noah's family, they were called - Nephilim! |
Foreign Affairs › Re: Presidential Villas Across The World.(pictures) by PointB: 7:24am On Aug 29, 2014 |
terrimatix: That's when you will know that as simple as those houses look, the security network there is twice put what you have in almighty Aso villa. And you know this by what means?  |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 7:24pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
Phoenix00: Are you sure you would see it all? As everyday new, interesting things and event evolve. I doubt 'forever' can exhaust the many mysteries and event of life
Love, wars, disease and death, is all there is to life. Every other thing is geared towards preparing for these! |
Foreign Affairs › Re: Presidential Villas Across The World.(pictures) by PointB: 7:07pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
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Foreign Affairs › Re: Presidential Villas Across The World.(pictures) by PointB: 7:05pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
IGBOSON1: ^^^Unlike our own Heads of State (that built a fortress and called it a Presidential Villa), their own Presidents are not afraid of their own shadow! Lol, I can imagine that. But how about in case of infiltration by foreign/special interest, for insidious purpose? |
Politics › Re: Photo News: President Jonathan Launching The New National E-identity Card by PointB: 5:56pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
I thought his original middle name was Ebelemi. |
Foreign Affairs › Re: Presidential Villas Across The World.(pictures) by PointB: 5:50pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
But the villa don't look secure. Unless they have underground tunnels, and multiple exits. |
Foreign Affairs › Re: Presidential Villas Across The World.(pictures) by PointB: 5:41pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
Following . . .
Looking at Brazil Presidential Villa, and a little confused. Is that reflection? Why? |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 5:31pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
acenazt: with time even the immortals see their immortality as a curse. I agree. I sure wouldn't want to live forever. 'Life' could certainly get boring, if you've see it all - love, wars, disease and death! |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 5:05pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
acenazt: great but being immortal has its disadvantages. Have you considered falling in love for a thousand time just to watch your lover age and die? Or your whole family,generations after generations come,grow and go?? Will get use to it with time.  I can always change identity and move around. I really don't want to be immortal, it'll be good to travel to other realms like heaven. If you are not Elijah or Enoch, surely you must die to get there. |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 4:32pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
acenazt: I've seen many Individuals come back even after being destroyed. Like vilgax in ben10. Regeneration is it for me then. lol |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 2:33pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
acenazt: funny guy I'll only wait naturally if the regeneration comes with Immortality. Most Super heroes I know with regenerating abilities tend to be kinda immortal. Regeneration more or less equally immortality, at least until you are dissolved in acid or nuclear explosion. |
Politics › Re: Ribadu Shouldn’t Be Granted Waiver – Edwin Clark by PointB: 2:31pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
Ribadu should have stayed in APC, or gone to another party like Labour or APGA. I frankly don't understand why he's gallivanting around. I have no sympathy for him. |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 2:04pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
acenazt: I don't plan on doing that. I plan on visiting the CBN once a week,go on a no expense holiday across the globe every week end,go to free shopping in Paris or dubai. That kind ish!! Lol, I see. One can achieve all that, with regeneration. The best part is that the money come to you, naturally, with time. Nothing illegal! |
Politics › Re: '50 000 Members In Boko Haram Camp' by PointB: 2:01pm On Aug 28, 2014 |
"Kill them all!" |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 9:42am On Aug 28, 2014 |
acenazt: I will love to always regenerate or teleport. Just don't teleport to the front of a moving GEJ train, if you don't have self regeneration!  |
Nairaland General › Re: Super Strength Or Psychic Ability by PointB: 9:37am On Aug 28, 2014 |
I'll take Self Regeneration.
With regeneration come longevity. If you live long enough, with time, you will learn how to achieve other abilities. |
Politics › Re: The BAD IMAGE Of Nigeria Is Caused By The Way Nigerians Present Nigeria by PointB: 9:29am On Aug 28, 2014 |
davidif: Excellent post. Thanks man. Just sharing. |
Politics › Re: I Want To Turn Imo Around –Sen Chris Anyanwu by PointB: 8:35am On Aug 28, 2014 |
Imo needs a technocrat as governor, not all these politicians! |
Politics › Re: The BAD IMAGE Of Nigeria Is Caused By The Way Nigerians Present Nigeria by PointB: 8:20am On Aug 28, 2014*. Modified: 9:33am On Aug 28, 2014 |
Speaking of Nigeria image 'problem', here is another perspective: Does Nigeria have an image problem? By Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani Abuja
Some years ago, a British filmmaker discovered an exotic site in Nigeria: An entire community of human beings subsisting on mountains of refuse.
And not in some remote state, but in Lagos, the country's commercial nerve centre - a city of fast cars, luxury shops and sleek folk, with women in Brazilian hair weaves and men in Ferragamo shoes.
Shortly after the Welcome to Lagos series aired on the BBC in April 2010, Nigerians around the world went berserk.
"There was this colonialist idea of the noble savage which motivated the programme," Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka said of the documentary.
"It was patronising and condescending," he added.
Nigeria's High Commissioner to the UK Dalhatu Tafida described it as "a calculated attempt to bring Nigeria and its hard-working people to international odium and scorn".
Online forums also went ablaze. "They are giving us a bad image," many Nigerians fumed.
Then the Lagos State government submitted a formal complaint to the BBC, calling on the organisation to commission an alternative series to "repair the damage we believe this series has caused to our image".
These patriots were not distressed that their compatriots in the oil giant of Africa were living in such squalor - that development had somehow eluded those Nigerians.
They did not rally with cries of: "There are people in our country living like this? What shall we do? How fast can we act?"
No, no, no.
The majority of voices were harmonised in one tune: Anxiety over their country's image.
Similarly, Nigeria was reluctant to accept desperately needed foreign assistance to fight terrorism, despite the country's armed forces being clearly overwhelmed.
We were more worried about how requesting help might affect Nigeria's image than about forestalling the wanton destruction by the Islamist militant group Boko Haram.
In October 1960, Nigeria was loosed from the shackles of imperialism when the colonialists packed their bags and left.
But over five decades later, Nigerians remain in captivity: Foreigners control our self-image.
What the West thinks of us often takes manic precedence over who we really are, what we know and feel about ourselves.
The Europeans who first landed in Africa were unconcerned when the people they regarded as monkeys equally assumed that the white interlopers were ghosts.
The Germans can shrug it off when they are stereotyped as humourless; the Russians can dismiss it when they are described as cold.
But the Nigerian just has to kick up a tornado whenever he is perceived unpalatably.
He is touchy because he has no alternative image on which to base his confidence.
Like many Africans in the diaspora, a number of Nigerians abroad have erected careers out of defending their people's image.
With indignant frowns and stern tones, they strut from one global stage to the other like superintendents, dismantling stereotypes and whitewashing sepulchres.
A woman having her hair done at a hair salon in Lagos Island, Lagos, Nigeria - April 2014 Lagos is home to a burgeoning middle class.... Children playing in the Makoko slum in Lagos, Nigeria (Archive shot) It also has many poor suburbs to accommodate the rapidly expanding population of the city This passion probably sprouts from a desire to blend into their host communities, to not be perceived as savages from some nihilistic jungle.
Unknowingly, they reinforce the subconscious message that has been passed down to generations of Nigerians and other Africans: That the West's opinion of us is paramount; that enlightening and convincing foreigners matters more than discerning who we are and who we want to be. Fret and panic
And so, when the West claps for us, we get excited.
When they tell us off, we get upset.
When they applaud one of us, we automatically join in applauding the person.
We frantically monitor foreign opinions and we panic at the slightest hint of a negative perception of us.
Nigerian reading newspaper headlines in Delta State - April 2011 Nigerians are anxious about how they are portrayed in the international media We fret about the many uncomplimentary stories from our land making the rounds on international media circuits, more than about the actual negative circumstances that birth those narratives.
From politicians to intellectuals to entertainers to terrorists, Nigerians have been socialised to rate themselves in the light of Western perceptions.
And as some of us have discovered first hand, the most effective way to draw the attention of our own people to any issue, is to speak to them through a Western medium.
It is unhealthy for a people's self-image to be hinged almost entirely on outside forces.
Nigeria expends too much valuable energy on sweeping dirt under carpets and stuffing skeletons inside closets.
Consequently, we deny ourselves the opportunity of frank dialogue, cultural criticism and self-examination—processes that are vital for a society to advance, by which the imperious West itself has developed thus far.
Nigeria can lead the rest of Africa in freeing our people from this image bondage. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-28015962 |
Politics › Re: 80% Of Those Fighting Me Are People Who I Have Given Billions Of Naira —amaechi by PointB: 8:10am On Aug 28, 2014 |
So basically, he's saying that he circumvented the Procurement Act, and awarded contract to unqualified and undeserving individuals in the name of political patronage? No wonder River State is now in comatose state. These politicians and second term syndrome. It such a big shame!
Btw, I hope EFFC is listening to his confession! |
Politics › Re: Nigeria Politics League(NPL) Transfer Window by PointB: 12:04pm On Aug 27, 2014 |
lol
Transfer window indeed.
With the way our politicians are jumping from one club to another, it's hard to see any difference in their ideology. Support any party at your own risk!
GEJ till 2019! |
Politics › Re: 2015: Only A Dreamer Sees APC In Aso Rock by PointB: 5:25pm On Aug 26, 2014*. Modified: 6:58pm On Aug 27, 2014 |
lol,
Funny thread.
Anyway, APC as currently constituted are just a bunch of hate mongering, and anger induced opportunistic failed politicians, who congregate in an unholy alliance with sole objective of wresting power from PDP! Beyond this ambition, there is little or no evidence to suggest that they will do any better than PDP. On the contrary there are strong evidence to suggest that APC, with Tinubu as the taskmaster, will only sell Nigeria to the highest bidder in the comity of nation, while our children will be enmeshed in unwieldy debt.
Nigerians know better than hand over the national treasury to Tinubu and his gang of thieves. Tufiakwa! Hence, keeping APC (Anger & Pain Contraption) as presently constituted away from, even the periphery, of power, is a task that must be done! |
Agriculture › Re: Private Sector Investment Shoots Rice Production To 4m Tons Annually by PointB: 2:02pm On Aug 26, 2014 |
And they say GEJ is clueless?
Abeg give me more of this type cluelessness! |
Politics › Re: APC Crisis : Ikimi Leaves APC by PointB: 1:37pm On Aug 26, 2014 |
BlackPeni5: How can today be 27th August 2014...Him dey resign from future? That's called tomorrows news today! ThisDay is now NextDay!  |