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Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" - Politics - Nairaland

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Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by UncleAyo(op): 9:11pm On Jun 17
The phrase "knowledge is power" was popularized by Francis Bacon centuries ago.
Today, many thinkers argue that knowledge alone is no longer enough because information is abundant and accessible to almost everyone.

A more accurate modern version might be:
Applied knowledge is power.
Or even:
Execution is power.

If Mr. Peter Obi has knowledge of electricity generation, he should at least share the secret with Anambra state government now that power generation has been decentralised. That is if he even has any knowledge he claimed in the first place or better if he care about his people and not just governance.

Several countries dramatically improved their electricity sectors despite facing severe shortages, unreliable grids, corruption, underinvestment, and rapid population growth. While no country's situation was exactly the same as Nigeria's, these examples offer practical lessons.

1. Vietnam

Previous Situation
- Frequent blackouts in the 1980s and early 1990s
- Low rural electrification
- Weak transmission infrastructure
- Rapidly growing demand

What Vietnam Did
1. Created a long-term national electricity master plan
Planned generation, transmission, and distribution decades ahead.

2. Massive investment in transmission lines
Built high-voltage networks connecting regions.

3. Expanded generation aggressively
- Hydropower
- Coal plants
- Gas plants
- Renewables

4. Rural electrification campaign
Government prioritized connecting villages.

5. Allowed private and foreign investment
Government did not fund everything alone.

Result
Electrification reached nearly all households.
Electricity became reliable enough to support manufacturing growth.

Lessons for Nigeria
- National grid expansion must be treated as critical infrastructure.
- Consistent long-term planning beyond election cycles.
---

2. India

Previous Situation
- Massive power shortages
- Frequent load shedding
- Electricity theft
- Poor revenue collection

What India Did

1. Reduced electricity theft:
- Smart meters
- Digital monitoring
- Strong enforcement

2. Separated generation, transmission, and distribution:
- Improved accountability.

3. Expanded power generation
- Coal
- Solar
- Wind
- Hydro
- Nuclear

4. Large-scale rural electrification
- Connected millions of homes.

5. Competitive renewable energy auctions
- Reduced solar costs dramatically.

6. Strengthened state and federal regulation

Result
- Huge increase in power capacity.
- Significant reduction in shortages.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Metering and revenue collection reforms are essential.
- Electricity theft must be tackled systematically.
---

3. Bangladesh
Previous Situation
- Extremely low electrification rates
- Widespread outages
- Limited generation capacity

What Bangladesh Did
1. Focused on quick power additions
Added generation capacity rapidly.
2. Used public-private partnerships
Encouraged private investment.
3. Expanded gas-based generation
Utilized domestic resources.
4. Massive rural electrification
Connected remote communities.
5. Promoted solar home systems
Millions of households gained electricity before grid arrival.

Result
Access to electricity increased dramatically.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Mini-grids and solar solutions can complement the national grid.
- Waiting only for grid expansion slows progress.


4. Brazil

Previous Situation
- Regional shortages
- Energy crises
- Large underserved areas

What Brazil Did
1. Massive transmission investments:
Connected distant generation sources.
2. Expanded hydropower:
Leveraged natural resources.
3. Created strong electricity regulators:
Improved investor confidence.
4. Allowed private-sector participation
5. Universal electrification programs:
Reached remote communities.

Result
One of the largest and most stable power systems in the developing world.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Strong regulation attracts investment.
- Transmission infrastructure is as important as generation.



5. Rwanda

Previous Situation
- Very low electricity access
- Weak infrastructure
- Limited generation

What Rwanda Did

1. Strong political commitment:
Electricity became a national priority.
2. Clear implementation targets:
Every year had measurable goals.
3. Investment-friendly policies:
Encouraged foreign and local investors.
4. Mini-grids and off-grid solar:
Rural communities did not wait for the national grid.
5. Reduced losses:
Improved utility management.

Result
Rapid increase in electricity access and reliability.

Lessons for Nigeria
Decentralized power can solve rural electrification faster than grid-only approaches.

What Nigeria Should Copy Immediately

If Nigeria wants reliable electricity within 10–15 years, the highest-impact actions from these countries are:

1. Fix Transmission First:
Nigeria often generates power that cannot be fully transmitted.

2. End Estimated Billing:
- Universal smart metering.
- Every customer pays for actual consumption.

3. Reduce Electricity Theft:
- Smart meters
- Digital monitoring
- Special electricity courts for large-scale theft

4. Encourage State-Level Electricity Markets:
Since recent constitutional reforms, states can play a bigger role in electricity generation and distribution.

5. Massive Gas-to-Power Expansion:
Nigeria has some of the world's largest gas reserves yet generates relatively little electricity from them.

6. Promote Solar Mini-Grids:
Many villages can receive electricity years before grid arrival.

7. Attract Private Capital:
Government alone cannot fund the hundreds of billions of dollars needed.

8. Build New Transmission Corridors:
A modern high-voltage backbone should connect major generation centers and demand centers.

9. Create Stable Policies:
Investors need confidence that rules won't change every few years.

10. Make Electricity a National Development Mission

Countries that succeeded treated electricity like a strategic national project, similar to roads, defense, or education.

The Most Relevant Example for Nigeria

Among these countries, India and Vietnam provide the closest large-scale lessons for Nigeria because they had huge populations, rapidly growing economies, infrastructure deficits, and enormous electricity demand. Their success came not from a single solution but from combining:

- More generation,
- Strong transmission networks,
- Better billing and collections,
- Private investment,
- Long-term planning,
- Consistent government commitment over many years.

Nigeria has abundant natural gas, solar resources, and a large market. The challenge is less about resources and more about execution, governance, investment, and infrastructure development.

Any AI program can give you a better response.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by favor914: 10:06pm On Jun 17
That nonentity Agulu messiah will come with stories that touch.

Person wey never give em local government electricity, wan give the whole Nigeria?
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Charito1: 10:32pm On Jun 17
UncleAyo:
The phrase "knowledge is power" was popularized by Francis Bacon centuries ago.
Today, many thinkers argue that knowledge alone is no longer enough because information is abundant and accessible to almost everyone.

A more accurate modern version might be:
Applied knowledge is power.
Or even:
Execution is power.

If Mr. Peter Obi has knowledge of electricity generation, he should at least share the secret with Anambra state government now that power generation has been decentralised. That is if he even has any knowledge he claimed in the first place or better if he care about his people and not just governance.

Several countries dramatically improved their electricity sectors despite facing severe shortages, unreliable grids, corruption, underinvestment, and rapid population growth. While no country's situation was exactly the same as Nigeria's, these examples offer practical lessons.

1. Vietnam

Previous Situation
- Frequent blackouts in the 1980s and early 1990s
- Low rural electrification
- Weak transmission infrastructure
- Rapidly growing demand

What Vietnam Did
1. Created a long-term national electricity master plan
Planned generation, transmission, and distribution decades ahead.

2. Massive investment in transmission lines
Built high-voltage networks connecting regions.

3. Expanded generation aggressively
- Hydropower
- Coal plants
- Gas plants
- Renewables

4. Rural electrification campaign
Government prioritized connecting villages.

5. Allowed private and foreign investment
Government did not fund everything alone.

Result
Electrification reached nearly all households.
Electricity became reliable enough to support manufacturing growth.

Lessons for Nigeria
- National grid expansion must be treated as critical infrastructure.
- Consistent long-term planning beyond election cycles.
---

2. India

Previous Situation
- Massive power shortages
- Frequent load shedding
- Electricity theft
- Poor revenue collection

What India Did

1. Reduced electricity theft:
- Smart meters
- Digital monitoring
- Strong enforcement

2. Separated generation, transmission, and distribution:
- Improved accountability.

3. Expanded power generation
- Coal
- Solar
- Wind
- Hydro
- Nuclear

4. Large-scale rural electrification
- Connected millions of homes.

5. Competitive renewable energy auctions
- Reduced solar costs dramatically.

6. Strengthened state and federal regulation

Result
- Huge increase in power capacity.
- Significant reduction in shortages.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Metering and revenue collection reforms are essential.
- Electricity theft must be tackled systematically.
---

3. Bangladesh
Previous Situation
- Extremely low electrification rates
- Widespread outages
- Limited generation capacity

What Bangladesh Did
1. Focused on quick power additions
Added generation capacity rapidly.
2. Used public-private partnerships
Encouraged private investment.
3. Expanded gas-based generation
Utilized domestic resources.
4. Massive rural electrification
Connected remote communities.
5. Promoted solar home systems
Millions of households gained electricity before grid arrival.

Result
Access to electricity increased dramatically.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Mini-grids and solar solutions can complement the national grid.
- Waiting only for grid expansion slows progress.


4. Brazil

Previous Situation
- Regional shortages
- Energy crises
- Large underserved areas

What Brazil Did
1. Massive transmission investments:
Connected distant generation sources.
2. Expanded hydropower:
Leveraged natural resources.
3. Created strong electricity regulators:
Improved investor confidence.
4. Allowed private-sector participation
5. Universal electrification programs:
Reached remote communities.

Result
One of the largest and most stable power systems in the developing world.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Strong regulation attracts investment.
- Transmission infrastructure is as important as generation.



5. Rwanda

Previous Situation
- Very low electricity access
- Weak infrastructure
- Limited generation

What Rwanda Did

1. Strong political commitment:
Electricity became a national priority.
2. Clear implementation targets:
Every year had measurable goals.
3. Investment-friendly policies:
Encouraged foreign and local investors.
4. Mini-grids and off-grid solar:
Rural communities did not wait for the national grid.
5. Reduced losses:
Improved utility management.

Result
Rapid increase in electricity access and reliability.

Lessons for Nigeria
Decentralized power can solve rural electrification faster than grid-only approaches.

What Nigeria Should Copy Immediately

If Nigeria wants reliable electricity within 10–15 years, the highest-impact actions from these countries are:

1. Fix Transmission First:
Nigeria often generates power that cannot be fully transmitted.

2. End Estimated Billing:
- Universal smart metering.
- Every customer pays for actual consumption.

3. Reduce Electricity Theft:
- Smart meters
- Digital monitoring
- Special electricity courts for large-scale theft

4. Encourage State-Level Electricity Markets:
Since recent constitutional reforms, states can play a bigger role in electricity generation and distribution.

5. Massive Gas-to-Power Expansion:
Nigeria has some of the world's largest gas reserves yet generates relatively little electricity from them.

6. Promote Solar Mini-Grids:
Many villages can receive electricity years before grid arrival.

7. Attract Private Capital:
Government alone cannot fund the hundreds of billions of dollars needed.

8. Build New Transmission Corridors:
A modern high-voltage backbone should connect major generation centers and demand centers.

9. Create Stable Policies:
Investors need confidence that rules won't change every few years.

10. Make Electricity a National Development Mission

Countries that succeeded treated electricity like a strategic national project, similar to roads, defense, or education.

The Most Relevant Example for Nigeria

Among these countries, India and Vietnam provide the closest large-scale lessons for Nigeria because they had huge populations, rapidly growing economies, infrastructure deficits, and enormous electricity demand. Their success came not from a single solution but from combining:

- More generation,
- Strong transmission networks,
- Better billing and collections,
- Private investment,
- Long-term planning,
- Consistent government commitment over many years.

Nigeria has abundant natural gas, solar resources, and a large market. The challenge is less about resources and more about execution, governance, investment, and infrastructure development.

Any AI program can give you a better response.
ogbeni stop being mischievous here. Kindly used this your so called analysis to advise your President Tinubu on electricity problem in Nigeria.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Charito1: 10:35pm On Jun 17
favor914:
That nonentity Agulu messiah will come with stories that touch.

Person wey never give em local government electricity, wan give the whole Nigeria?
mtcheewww abeg leave matters for Matthias and face your frustration. Peter Obi is not the architect of your downfall.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by favor914: 11:05pm On Jun 17
Charito1:
mtcheewww abeg leave matters for Matthias and face your frustration. Peter Obi is not the architect of your downfall.
Keep trying your best to change the narrative, quite obvious that you cannot even defend your Agulu messiah huh.

Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Charito1: 12:10am On Jun 18
favor914:
Keep trying your best to change the narrative, quite obvious that you cannot even defend your Agulu messiah huh.
. The same applies to your President Tinubu. You can't even defend your so called President Tinubu.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by helinues: 1:08am On Jun 18
Peter Obi is unexposed hence his consistent goofing
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by UncleAyo(op): 10:22am On Jun 18
Good morning my people, are you feeling OK? OK, OK
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Image123(m):
Interesting convo.

When Peter Obi says he wants to add 10,000MW to Nigeria’s electricity supply, they expect him to explain the location of every power plant, the serial number of every transformer, the route of every transmission line, the name of every engineer, and the registration number of every truck that will deliver the equipments.

That seems to be their definition of “how.” 😂 olodo.
https://x.com/i/status/2067290994605744209

Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Image123(m): 10:51am On Jun 18
Image123:
Interesting convo.


https://x.com/i/status/2067290994605744209
Nobody is asking him for details. To add 10,000MW he would need $30bn in investment over 4 years, in a highly illiquid sector, with $4bn legacy debt, 26% collection loss, 5.1m metering gap, tariff shortfall and gas shortages.

This is outside the messed up transmission that can barely wheel 6,000MW. How will he raise the money and what will he do with power tariffs and gas prices?
https://x.com/i/status/2067304265647886440
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by EmiloCorn: 10:53am On Jun 18
We must support our own son no matter what people say.

The Ibo do it and the Hausa do it too so why is our own turn now supposed to be different
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Image123(m): 10:54am On Jun 18
Wow, so you knew all this and never told Tinubu? That’s unfortunate, because at this rate he might lose his second term. 🤔
https://x.com/i/status/2067312582554267779

PBAT has signed the Electricity Act to allow states generate, transmit and distribute power.

- PBAT has transferred full regulatory powers to State Electricity Agencies to regulate and create their laws that fit their electricity market.

- PBAT is completing 2 major gas pipeline to pipe gas across the country for thermal plants - AKK and OB3. The last major pipeline Escravos - Lagos, was built in 1989.

- PBAT has floated a bond to pay N4trn legacy debts owed to Gencos for 13 years. This is will help restore investor confidence in the sector.

- PBAT has unbundled the TCN to create a Nigerian Independent System Operator stripping TCN of regulatory powers and allowing it to focus on physical infrastructure.

- The $2.3bn Siemens transmission expansion project is ongoing

- The Presidential Metering Initiative is ongoing.

You guys have zero ideas on how nations are built.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Image123(m): 10:56am On Jun 18
EmiloCorn:
We must support our own son no matter what people say.

The Ibo do it and the Hausa do it too so why is our own turn now supposed to be different
Not sure that's what's happening here, but more of no visible credible alternative that'll do better. Tinubu is from the same tribe as his fiercest critics. No other tribe criticize Tinubu more than the likes of Sowore or that OAP on Arise or Ednut. Tinubu has support from all over Nigeria unlike other contestants.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by EmiloCorn: 10:57am On Jun 18
Image123:
Not sure that's what's happening here, but more of no visible credible alternative that'll do better. Tinubu is from the same tribe as his fiercest critics
Don't mind them
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Moroccoguy: 12:44pm On Jun 18
Charito1:
ogbeni stop being mischievous here. Kindly used this your so called analysis to advise your President Tinubu on electricity problem in Nigeria.
Only for the state governor and private individuals to take the advantage of what the president has done with electricity acts.
Electricity acts was signed less than 2 weeks when Tinubu came in to power which allows state and individual to generate and distribute electricity at their own discretion, only few states are taking the advantage.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by UncleAyo(op): 11:19am On Jun 19
Good day my people, are you feeling OK? OK, OK
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Elusive001: 11:38am On Jun 19
Tinubu’s supporters are mad that Peter Obi did not allow them peep from his answer sheet on how to improve electricity in Nigeria

The one una peep on subsidy removal, wetin una do with am? Una go copy without asking how. Na so we dey know unintelligent students.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by DatNiggaDaz:
UncleAyo:
The phrase "knowledge is power" was popularized by Francis Bacon centuries ago.
Today, many thinkers argue that knowledge alone is no longer enough because information is abundant and accessible to almost everyone.

A more accurate modern version might be:
Applied knowledge is power.
Or even:
Execution is power.

If Mr. Peter Obi has knowledge of electricity generation, he should at least share the secret with Anambra state government now that power generation has been decentralised. That is if he even has any knowledge he claimed in the first place or better if he care about his people and not just governance.

Several countries dramatically improved their electricity sectors despite facing severe shortages, unreliable grids, corruption, underinvestment, and rapid population growth. While no country's situation was exactly the same as Nigeria's, these examples offer practical lessons.

1. Vietnam

Previous Situation
- Frequent blackouts in the 1980s and early 1990s
- Low rural electrification
- Weak transmission infrastructure
- Rapidly growing demand

What Vietnam Did
1. Created a long-term national electricity master plan
Planned generation, transmission, and distribution decades ahead.

2. Massive investment in transmission lines
Built high-voltage networks connecting regions.

3. Expanded generation aggressively
- Hydropower
- Coal plants
- Gas plants
- Renewables

4. Rural electrification campaign
Government prioritized connecting villages.

5. Allowed private and foreign investment
Government did not fund everything alone.

Result
Electrification reached nearly all households.
Electricity became reliable enough to support manufacturing growth.

Lessons for Nigeria
- National grid expansion must be treated as critical infrastructure.
- Consistent long-term planning beyond election cycles.
---

2. India

Previous Situation
- Massive power shortages
- Frequent load shedding
- Electricity theft
- Poor revenue collection

What India Did

1. Reduced electricity theft:
- Smart meters
- Digital monitoring
- Strong enforcement

2. Separated generation, transmission, and distribution:
- Improved accountability.

3. Expanded power generation
- Coal
- Solar
- Wind
- Hydro
- Nuclear

4. Large-scale rural electrification
- Connected millions of homes.

5. Competitive renewable energy auctions
- Reduced solar costs dramatically.

6. Strengthened state and federal regulation

Result
- Huge increase in power capacity.
- Significant reduction in shortages.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Metering and revenue collection reforms are essential.
- Electricity theft must be tackled systematically.
---

3. Bangladesh
Previous Situation
- Extremely low electrification rates
- Widespread outages
- Limited generation capacity

What Bangladesh Did
1. Focused on quick power additions
Added generation capacity rapidly.
2. Used public-private partnerships
Encouraged private investment.
3. Expanded gas-based generation
Utilized domestic resources.
4. Massive rural electrification
Connected remote communities.
5. Promoted solar home systems
Millions of households gained electricity before grid arrival.

Result
Access to electricity increased dramatically.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Mini-grids and solar solutions can complement the national grid.
- Waiting only for grid expansion slows progress.


4. Brazil

Previous Situation
- Regional shortages
- Energy crises
- Large underserved areas

What Brazil Did
1. Massive transmission investments:
Connected distant generation sources.
2. Expanded hydropower:
Leveraged natural resources.
3. Created strong electricity regulators:
Improved investor confidence.
4. Allowed private-sector participation
5. Universal electrification programs:
Reached remote communities.

Result
One of the largest and most stable power systems in the developing world.

Lessons for Nigeria
- Strong regulation attracts investment.
- Transmission infrastructure is as important as generation.



5. Rwanda

Previous Situation
- Very low electricity access
- Weak infrastructure
- Limited generation

What Rwanda Did

1. Strong political commitment:
Electricity became a national priority.
2. Clear implementation targets:
Every year had measurable goals.
3. Investment-friendly policies:
Encouraged foreign and local investors.
4. Mini-grids and off-grid solar:
Rural communities did not wait for the national grid.
5. Reduced losses:
Improved utility management.

Result
Rapid increase in electricity access and reliability.

Lessons for Nigeria
Decentralized power can solve rural electrification faster than grid-only approaches.

What Nigeria Should Copy Immediately

If Nigeria wants reliable electricity within 10–15 years, the highest-impact actions from these countries are:

1. Fix Transmission First:
Nigeria often generates power that cannot be fully transmitted.

2. End Estimated Billing:
- Universal smart metering.
- Every customer pays for actual consumption.

3. Reduce Electricity Theft:
- Smart meters
- Digital monitoring
- Special electricity courts for large-scale theft

4. Encourage State-Level Electricity Markets:
Since recent constitutional reforms, states can play a bigger role in electricity generation and distribution.

5. Massive Gas-to-Power Expansion:
Nigeria has some of the world's largest gas reserves yet generates relatively little electricity from them.

6. Promote Solar Mini-Grids:
Many villages can receive electricity years before grid arrival.

7. Attract Private Capital:
Government alone cannot fund the hundreds of billions of dollars needed.

8. Build New Transmission Corridors:
A modern high-voltage backbone should connect major generation centers and demand centers.

9. Create Stable Policies:
Investors need confidence that rules won't change every few years.

10. Make Electricity a National Development Mission

Countries that succeeded treated electricity like a strategic national project, similar to roads, defense, or education.

The Most Relevant Example for Nigeria

Among these countries, India and Vietnam provide the closest large-scale lessons for Nigeria because they had huge populations, rapidly growing economies, infrastructure deficits, and enormous electricity demand. Their success came not from a single solution but from combining:

- More generation,
- Strong transmission networks,
- Better billing and collections,
- Private investment,
- Long-term planning,
- Consistent government commitment over many years.

Nigeria has abundant natural gas, solar resources, and a large market. The challenge is less about resources and more about execution, governance, investment, and infrastructure development.

Any AI program can give you a better response.
grin grin

See dem here. Data boiz putting knowledge in thesame sentence. Thesame creatures who had no knowledge of their darling daddy for 8 years are thesame creatures who stood on a mandate of a faaaake certttifficcate hollldderr

Go and help your roasted electricity fraud with knowledge
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Tenses: 2:13pm On Jun 19
favor914:
That nonentity Agulu messiah will come with stories that touch.

Person wey never give em local government electricity, wan give the whole Nigeria?
Op should share his knowledge with tinubu nah.

No more expose for you people. Unah go cry tire, PO no go open book for unah.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by favor914:
Tenses:
Op should share his knowledge with tinubu nah.

No more expose for you people. Unah go cry tire, PO no go open book for unah.
Emu Cho Cho Cho Agulu Empty Barrel.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Tenses: 8:51pm On Jun 19
favor914:
Emu Cho Cho Agulu Empty Barrel.
And yet you people are begging him for solutions
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by favor914: 9:04pm On Jun 19
Tenses:
And yet you people are begging him for solutions
Three blind mice, three blind mice, See Obidients how they run, see how they run, They all ran after the president’s wife, Who cut off their tails with a carving knife.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by favor914: 9:13pm On Jun 19
Elusive001:
Tinubu’s supporters are mad that Peter Obi did not allow them peep from his answer sheet on how to improve electricity in Nigeria

The one una peep on subsidy removal, wetin una do with am? Una go copy without asking how. Na so we dey know unintelligent students.
Ok, he refused to give them the secret on how to give u electricity?

Sorry 😐o, u can remain in darkness for now, until the Agulu ebenezer scrooge reveals his Tesla secret.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Tenses: 9:23pm On Jun 19
favor914:
Three blind mice, three blind mice, See Obidients how they run, see how they run, They all ran after the president’s wife, Who cut off their tails with a carving knife.
Three blind mice? Nah, three loud lies,
stumbling in circles with hollowed-out cries,
you chant like a loop, no truth in the lines,
just recycled noise from tired old minds.

You ran after drama, got lost in the thread,
while reality stood where you refused to tread.
Swinging dull rumors like they cut deep and wide but it’s all just bark with no bite inside.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by favor914: 9:29pm On Jun 19
Tenses:
Three blind mice? Nah, three loud lies,
stumbling in circles with hollowed-out cries,
you chant like a loop, no truth in the lines,
just recycled noise from tired old minds.

You ran after drama, got lost in the thread,
while reality stood where you refused to tread.
Swinging dull rumors like they cut deep and wide but it’s all just bark with no bite inside
.

Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by KillahPriest: 9:29pm On Jun 19
We have seen those who have knowledge have tumbled Nigeria till an extent they were throwing bread from moving vehicles to grand parents in Ekiti state like wild dogs. God forbid bad thing
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Elusive001: 10:58pm On Jun 19
favor914:
Ok, he refused to give them the secret on how to give u electricity?

Sorry 😐o, u can remain in darkness for now, until the Agulu ebenezer scrooge reveals his Tesla secret.
Nigeria had been in a sorry state since APC took over in 2015. It's not new.

Una god hear say Peter Obi promised subsidy removal and he quick ran with it. He dieven wait to copy well. See where the country is now.

Abeg make Obi no talk again because una god will still bungle it. Copy and paste president.
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by favor914: 11:02pm On Jun 19
Elusive001:
Nigeria had been in a sorry state since APC took over in 2015. It's not new.
Ok, u were enjoying in the zoo before 2015 abi?
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Elusive001: 11:37pm On Jun 19
Tenses:
Op should share his knowledge with tinubu nah.

No more expose for you people. Unah go cry tire, PO no go open book for unah.
No mind them.
Na ordinary subsidy removal he peeped na im leave Nigeria like this
Re: Electricity: What Mr Peter Obi Still Don't Understand About "Knowledge" by Brendaniel: 6:35am On Jun 20
Moroccoguy:
Only for the state governor and private individuals to take the advantage of what the president has done with electricity acts.
Electricity acts was signed less than 2 weeks when Tinubu came in to power which allows state and individual to generate and distribute electricity at their own discretion, only few states are taking the advantage.
So, why is the OP blaming Peter Obi or what is he blaming Peter Obi for ?
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