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"Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola - Politics - Nairaland

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"Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by tooloadedtofail: 11:01am On Apr 27, 2023
During the governorship and state house of assembly elections in March, the president, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.) enjoined Nigerians to go ahead and collect any monies distributed by vote-buying politicians but still vote their conscience. Ideally, it should be shocking that a country’s president—especially one who came to power as an anti-corruption crusader—would shamelessly endorse an electoral infraction. But he has let us down so often that pointing out this error will be a waste of everyone’s precious time.

The more annoying part of that thoughtless statement was that it negated his previous posturing on the naira redesign policy to protect electoral integrity. When he met King Charles in the UK in November, he insisted the policy had come to stay because it would protect Nigerians from those who would use their lush resources to manipulate the election outcome. After reiterating that he would ensure a level playing field for contestants, this conviction would swing only months later. So, if ensuring election integrity was not a deep resolve, why take people through so much pain and hardship?

This man and the “Sai Baba” men watched as Nigerians, already severely impoverished by his uninspiring leadership since 2015, underwent the diminishing effects of the poorly conceived and shoddily executed naira redesign. The dwindled loss of livelihood especially crushed the small-scale producers who work in the agricultural produce sector and operate within the informal economic system. We are not a society that knows how to count and account for lives and resources, so we will never be able to adequately comprehend the full scale of the debilitating effect of that policy. However, it is still certain that people died from the stress, and some of the crippled businesses will never recover. All for what?

Naira redesign policy was a disaster that Buhari superintended over as a military dictator. Even though he saw the brutal outcomes of the policy, he still repeated it 40 years later. As it turns out, there was no larger vision for either our elections or democratic processes that drove the agenda. There was no gain for democratic institutions to which they were committed, it was just another one of the sadistic ideas that Buhari cranks out of his sociopathic mind each time he feels that Nigerians have not suffered enough. If there was no profound objective to be derived from the whole redesign policy, and he himself could advocate people taking money from their corrupt politicians, why did he not just leave people to collect their N5000? Why break things in the guise of trying to fix them?




That was the sort of ineptitude that defined Buhari’s regime. Several policies unleashed severe suffering but were hardly followed by any bigger plan to make the outcome meaningful. They banned food importation to stimulate local agriculture, but all we have to show for the economic ingenuity is the soaring costs of food prices. He closed the borders for almost two years to galvanise local manufacturing, making life even more unaffordable. After accumulating losses and hardship, they re-opened them. They could not point out anything remarkable they achieved through it. They said those ideas were why countries like China flourished, but ended up proving that half education is bad especially when running a country.

In not wanting to deal with either the complexities of planning or the messiness of human behaviour, Buhari’s regime treated social engineering as a process that could be automated. For instance, to make Nigeria a cashless economy, his administration restored far less cash into circulation than they took out in the form of the old notes. They imagined they could force people to use electronic means without first ensuring that the infrastructure to support such a massive scale of transaction was in place. That is his standard approach to governance: throw people into a desert and expect them to either stimulate their creative impulses and invent food, or eat sand and die.


Even his anti-corruption agenda was half-hearted. With too many Faustian bargains he had made to get to power, the best anti-corruption agencies achieved under him was to pursue the small fry while the real thieves of the Nigerian patrimony sashayed freely.


Last Friday, while giving his farewell message at the final Sallah homage at the Presidential Villa in the FCT, he reportedly said, “Having been a governor, minister, and the president twice, I think God has given us an incredible opportunity to serve as your president. And I thank God for that. So, please whoever feels I have done wrong to, we are all humans. There is no doubt I hurt some people and I wish you will pardon me. And those that think that I have hurt them so much, please pardon me.”

Here are two things he should note: First, we do not think or feel we have been hurt by his leadership, no. Those words suggest that the visceral impacts of his punitive leadership are simply a matter of individual perspective rather than objective reality. We have receipts that substantially demonstrate that he stole eight years from us. From rising and multidimensional poverty to out-of-school children rates, insecurity, corruption, and overall diminished quality of life, Buhari’s failure is not a matter of mere opinion or emotions. We live the insalubrious effects.

Second, saying we are all humans is fallacious. Who would look at the past eight years of his inhumane administration and not wonder if Buhari has a drop of humanity in him? When you look at Buhari, when you study his characteristic nonchalance to the high hopes and aspirations of Nigerians that his administration serially frustrated through their ineptitude, you cannot but understand why humans invented the concept of Satan. Some people’s wickedness is so unique that you need idioms of the supernatural to explain that degree of malevolence. Under Buhari’s watch, people were routinely kidnapped, and there was at least an instance where a community had to organise a fundraising to get money to retrieve their children abducted from school; entire communities were imperiled by rampaging herdsmen; prisons were serially attacked; terrorists and bandits killed poorly-armed security personnel in such high numbers that their bosses allegedly resorted to burying them secretly in order to hide the casualty rates; even the Nigerian Defence Academy was breached, and an Airforce Fighter jet shot down. Despite all the restlessness that defined his tenure, the man gaslit Nigerians by insisting we were doing better than ever before. How does that lack of fellow feeling qualify him to be categorised as “human”?

Buhari admitted he got all he wanted by becoming the president, but what of Nigerians? What did they get in return? Now he says he will no longer be burdened by the country’s issues. If over-solicited after May 29, he promised to relocate to Niger republic across the border. He might have said that as a joke, but that is in fact quintessential Buhari. He has a pattern of expecting others to do things he ought to do because he is lazy and inept. He is never responsible for anything. He got into power by pretending to be poor because he was incorruptible even though his election was sponsored by people whose hands were soiled by public corruption. He achieved little, and now expects Nigerians to clean up his failures.

For him to ascribe his failures to the fallibility of humanity when he barely even tried is another failure in itself. As someone who has had the privilege of living off Nigeria’s resources his entire adult life, Buhari failed spectacularly because he took and took and took but never gave back. He has not only failed as a leader, but also as a human being. He does not deserve forgiveness from even an all-merciful God.


Source: https://punchng.com/buhari-doesnt-deserve-forgiveness/

60 Likes 10 Shares

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by xtravanganza: 11:14am On Apr 27, 2023
Just go and rest.
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Racoon(m): 11:19am On Apr 27, 2023
Buhari is a disaster Nigeria never deserved. However, wicked fellas imposed him so that they can claimed emilokan.

42 Likes 3 Shares

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Racoon(m): 11:21am On Apr 27, 2023
"From rising and multidimensional poverty to out-of-school children rates, insecurity, corruption, and overall diminished quality of life, Buhari’s failure is not a matter of mere opinion or emotions. We live the insalubrious effects.

Under Buhari’s watch, people were routinely kidnapped, and there was at least an instance where a community had to organise a fundraising to get money to retrieve their children abducted from school; entire communities were imperiled by rampaging herdsmen.


Prisons were serially attacked; terrorists and bandits killed poorly-armed security personnel in such high numbers that their bosses allegedly resorted to burying them secretly in order to hide the casualty rates; even the Nigerian Defence Academy was breached, and an Airforce Fighter jet shot down.

Despite all the restlessness that defined his tenure, the man gaslit Nigerians by insisting we were doing better than ever before. How does that lack of fellow feeling qualify him to be categorised as “human”?

26 Likes 2 Shares

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Isobug: 12:11pm On Apr 27, 2023
They will call him Igbo or even as far as calling him IPOB just for not in tune with Bihari or APC

24 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by rexel99: 12:15pm On Apr 27, 2023
Buhari, the punishment inflicted on Nigerians by God.

What a man. Worse still is the gullible ones that still think Buhari is the best thing to have happened to Nigeria.

Who will free my people from their ignorance.

15 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by socialmediaman: 3:36pm On Apr 27, 2023
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Diligent1(f): 3:36pm On Apr 27, 2023
My heart refuse to forgive him

15 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by othermen: 3:38pm On Apr 27, 2023
One can actually do a PhD thesis on Buhari’s laziness.

Fashola also called him lazy when he said the inverted below.

“President Muhammadu Buhari is the type of football coach that will sit in the dugout…and believe there is nothing he can do.”
Raji Fashola

11 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Emola12(m): 3:38pm On Apr 27, 2023
BUHARI didn't offend us buh people who voted for him nain offend us Nah God go punish all of dem

24 Likes 2 Shares

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by SultanOfAbia: 3:38pm On Apr 27, 2023
I will cheat on my wife for 8 years
Then ask her for forgiveness

Since all of us want to dey mad nii..

13 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Wealthoptulent(m): 3:38pm On Apr 27, 2023
Taah, God only do forgive.
To err is human; to forgive, divine.
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by HomorBj(m): 3:39pm On Apr 27, 2023
Spell Buhari

Fa (ehen)
il-(ehnehn)
ure(ehnehn)

I don't think Nigerians would forget this man tenure so easily,worst ever experienced,bad omen,big failure, his government is the worst in the whole of the world,regardless of party afflictions.

6 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by KingAlayinde(m): 3:40pm On Apr 27, 2023
Nelsononu:
Frankly speaking, its really Been a long journey for past 8 years. With many lost lives. Not to mention the deprivation

Indeed Nigerians are strong people




Buhari na one chances, hope was placed on him to be our country saviour instead he saboteurs it more

3 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by saucygal193: 3:40pm On Apr 27, 2023
Buhari's government disappointed many Nigerians, but there's no need to keep bearing the grudge after May 29th.

1 Like

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Akwamkpuruamu: 3:43pm On Apr 27, 2023
Hmm, the way some Yoruba people are distancing themselves from Buhari administration beggars belief this days. One will begin to ask, who are the wailing wailers then and now?

When some of us knew a forehand that good governance and national economic growth and development vis a us Buhari as a person are parallel lines, they called us shidren of 8.

Now, I wonder who is hating Buharis now and what should we call them

7 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Oblitz(m): 3:45pm On Apr 27, 2023
angry
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Cassandraloius: 3:46pm On Apr 27, 2023
Buhari is a player. cry
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Mitsurugi(m): 3:46pm On Apr 27, 2023
Buhari should go f.ck himself. I saw businesses destroyed during his abysmal tenure. Forgiveness also goes with restitution? Restore the lives and businesses lost and perhaps then......

6 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Funkyswagzz(m): 3:46pm On Apr 27, 2023
Nigerians are not yet ready to make the country better. Only few are willing to do that the rest is on tribal sentiment

2 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Peruzzie: 3:49pm On Apr 27, 2023
grin
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by flexyrule(m): 3:50pm On Apr 27, 2023
Buhari deserves a statue in each the 36 states of the federation. The statue should be renovated every four years, once the elections are approaching. This is to remind Nigerians of the effects of electing a bad leader out of sentiment.

Neither Buhari, BAT or even PO can change Nigeria.

Nigerians are Nigeria's problem.

Corruption, gross misconduct, mismanagement, abuse of power and public office etc are already rooted deep in our DNA.

Even those clamouring for change, put them in position of leadership today and watch them do worse.

This morning, I saw a traditional ruler blaring sirens with his escorts driving roughly around city gate in Abuja...

A mere traditional ruler oooooo

If that one becomes a senator or governor... We won't share that road with him again.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Flier: 3:50pm On Apr 27, 2023
Buharis children will never get to any post that involves electorates again

1 Like

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by atobs4real(m): 3:51pm On Apr 27, 2023
then keep that to urself. So far God forgives who am i not to forgive
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by SUFFERInSMILIIN(m): 3:52pm On Apr 27, 2023
tooloadedtofail:

During the governorship and state house of assembly elections in March, the president, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.) enjoined Nigerians to go ahead and collect any monies distributed by vote-buying politicians but still vote their conscience. Ideally, it should be shocking that a country’s president—especially one who came to power as an anti-corruption crusader—would shamelessly endorse an electoral infraction. But he has let us down so often that pointing out this error will be a waste of everyone’s precious time.

The more annoying part of that thoughtless statement was that it negated his previous posturing on the naira redesign policy to protect electoral integrity. When he met King Charles in the UK in November, he insisted the policy had come to stay because it would protect Nigerians from those who would use their lush resources to manipulate the election outcome. After reiterating that he would ensure a level playing field for contestants, this conviction would swing only months later. So, if ensuring election integrity was not a deep resolve, why take people through so much pain and hardship?

This man and the “Sai Baba” men watched as Nigerians, already severely impoverished by his uninspiring leadership since 2015, underwent the diminishing effects of the poorly conceived and shoddily executed naira redesign. The dwindled loss of livelihood especially crushed the small-scale producers who work in the agricultural produce sector and operate within the informal economic system. We are not a society that knows how to count and account for lives and resources, so we will never be able to adequately comprehend the full scale of the debilitating effect of that policy. However, it is still certain that people died from the stress, and some of the crippled businesses will never recover. All for what?

Naira redesign policy was a disaster that Buhari superintended over as a military dictator. Even though he saw the brutal outcomes of the policy, he still repeated it 40 years later. As it turns out, there was no larger vision for either our elections or democratic processes that drove the agenda. There was no gain for democratic institutions to which they were committed, it was just another one of the sadistic ideas that Buhari cranks out of his sociopathic mind each time he feels that Nigerians have not suffered enough. If there was no profound objective to be derived from the whole redesign policy, and he himself could advocate people taking money from their corrupt politicians, why did he not just leave people to collect their N5000? Why break things in the guise of trying to fix them?




That was the sort of ineptitude that defined Buhari’s regime. Several policies unleashed severe suffering but were hardly followed by any bigger plan to make the outcome meaningful. They banned food importation to stimulate local agriculture, but all we have to show for the economic ingenuity is the soaring costs of food prices. He closed the borders for almost two years to galvanise local manufacturing, making life even more unaffordable. After accumulating losses and hardship, they re-opened them. They could not point out anything remarkable they achieved through it. They said those ideas were why countries like China flourished, but ended up proving that half education is bad especially when running a country.

In not wanting to deal with either the complexities of planning or the messiness of human behaviour, Buhari’s regime treated social engineering as a process that could be automated. For instance, to make Nigeria a cashless economy, his administration restored far less cash into circulation than they took out in the form of the old notes. They imagined they could force people to use electronic means without first ensuring that the infrastructure to support such a massive scale of transaction was in place. That is his standard approach to governance: throw people into a desert and expect them to either stimulate their creative impulses and invent food, or eat sand and die.


Even his anti-corruption agenda was half-hearted. With too many Faustian bargains he had made to get to power, the best anti-corruption agencies achieved under him was to pursue the small fry while the real thieves of the Nigerian patrimony sashayed freely.


Last Friday, while giving his farewell message at the final Sallah homage at the Presidential Villa in the FCT, he reportedly said, “Having been a governor, minister, and the president twice, I think God has given us an incredible opportunity to serve as your president. And I thank God for that. So, please whoever feels I have done wrong to, we are all humans. There is no doubt I hurt some people and I wish you will pardon me. And those that think that I have hurt them so much, please pardon me.”

Here are two things he should note: First, we do not think or feel we have been hurt by his leadership, no. Those words suggest that the visceral impacts of his punitive leadership are simply a matter of individual perspective rather than objective reality. We have receipts that substantially demonstrate that he stole eight years from us. From rising and multidimensional poverty to out-of-school children rates, insecurity, corruption, and overall diminished quality of life, Buhari’s failure is not a matter of mere opinion or emotions. We live the insalubrious effects.

Second, saying we are all humans is fallacious. Who would look at the past eight years of his inhumane administration and not wonder if Buhari has a drop of humanity in him? When you look at Buhari, when you study his characteristic nonchalance to the high hopes and aspirations of Nigerians that his administration serially frustrated through their ineptitude, you cannot but understand why humans invented the concept of Satan. Some people’s wickedness is so unique that you need idioms of the supernatural to explain that degree of malevolence. Under Buhari’s watch, people were routinely kidnapped, and there was at least an instance where a community had to organise a fundraising to get money to retrieve their children abducted from school; entire communities were imperiled by rampaging herdsmen; prisons were serially attacked; terrorists and bandits killed poorly-armed security personnel in such high numbers that their bosses allegedly resorted to burying them secretly in order to hide the casualty rates; even the Nigerian Defence Academy was breached, and an Airforce Fighter jet shot down. Despite all the restlessness that defined his tenure, the man gaslit Nigerians by insisting we were doing better than ever before. How does that lack of fellow feeling qualify him to be categorised as “human”?

Buhari admitted he got all he wanted by becoming the president, but what of Nigerians? What did they get in return? Now he says he will no longer be burdened by the country’s issues. If over-solicited after May 29, he promised to relocate to Niger republic across the border. He might have said that as a joke, but that is in fact quintessential Buhari. He has a pattern of expecting others to do things he ought to do because he is lazy and inept. He is never responsible for anything. He got into power by pretending to be poor because he was incorruptible even though his election was sponsored by people whose hands were soiled by public corruption. He achieved little, and now expects Nigerians to clean up his failures.

For him to ascribe his failures to the fallibility of humanity when he barely even tried is another failure in itself. As someone who has had the privilege of living off Nigeria’s resources his entire adult life, Buhari failed spectacularly because he took and took and took but never gave back. He has not only failed as a leader, but also as a human being. He does not deserve forgiveness from even an all-merciful God.


Source: https://punchng.com/buhari-doesnt-deserve-forgiveness/

I have stayed in Nigeria's problem is not leadership or government the problem of Nigerians all over the world is illiteracy. All over the world even in developed countries want boat-ed.com the brain of Nigerians go into their anus. Nigeria only put for somebody to destroy them even in developed countries they know a Nigerian can do nothing for them but still vote for a Nigerian to destroy them this is the height of illiteracy

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by onlyboyson(m): 3:53pm On Apr 27, 2023
Who wan forgive am before grin grin grin grin grin

2 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Gajagojo: 3:53pm On Apr 27, 2023
He built the second Niger bridge which Goodluck Jonathan failed spectacularly to do despite boasting loudly

1 Like

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Boyooosa(m): 3:55pm On Apr 27, 2023
Wow
Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by ClearFlair: 3:55pm On Apr 27, 2023
APC failed woefully

2 Likes

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by Pharaoh4rin(m): 3:56pm On Apr 27, 2023
If not forgiving buhari and Yakubu Mahmoud will lead me to hellfire, I will love to go to hellfire ten times over.

1 Like

Re: "Buhari Doesn’t Deserve Forgiveness" By Adelakun Abimbola by happney65: 3:56pm On Apr 27, 2023
I always look forward to seeing Adunni Adelakun's Thursday tonic at the Punch.

Direct with lots of punches here and there.

As for Buhari, ENKR

4 Likes

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