Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by lordsterlin(m): 7:55am On Sep 06, 2020 |
On daily basis, what you hear in the news is one scary tale of how the Security Operatives had this confrontation or the other with the membership of the now proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra(IPOB).
When you hear this news, what comes to every sane Nigerian's mind is, these young men and even women who dare to confront law enforcement agents do they think at all? Do they consider that by doing what they are doing, they are deliberately putting themselves and the members of their families in arms way? How some of them die like chickens doesn't even occur to the remainder of the members as on daily basis, one hears of new dimension of madness from them.
As I tried to critically analyze why these men are so drawn to the cause of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the only conclusion I got was that he may be using them to play a hard game of chess. He may also be a student if Robert Greene and his 48 Laws of Power.
In that book, Robert Greene took time to explain how leaders can grow a cultlike following amongst those they lead. According to the work by Mr Greene, "people have an overwhelming desire to believe in something. Become the focal point of such desire by offering them a cause, a new faith to follow. Keep your words vague but full of promise; emphasize enthusiasm over rationality and clear thinking. Give your new disciples rituals to perform, ask them to make sacrifices on your behalf. In the absence of organized religion and grand causes, your new belief system will bring you untold power".
Now the question is how did Mazi Nnamdi Kanu gain this kind of following amongst the Igbos in the Southeastern part of Nigeria and even among those in the diaspora? I daresay, he may have gone ahead to execute the five steps mentioned by Robert Greene. The steps are:
To create a cultlike following, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu needed to catch peoples' attention with something easily believable without much thinking. He knew how the Igbo's followed the Late Ikemba of Nnewi, Chief Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegu Ojukwu! He knew the Biafran story as espoused by the late icon. With former President Goodluck Jonathan losing the presidential election in 2015, he knew how disillusioned and discombobulated the people of the Southeast and Niger Delta were and so he capitalized on this seeming frailness and announced the pursuit of a fathom Brafra! Robert Greene had said, to gain attention, your initial speeches and conversations must include two elements: "on the one hand, the promise of something great and transformative, and on the other a total vagueness". You would agree that this has a way of stimulating your audience with certain dreams whether achievable or not.
The second step according to the steps mentioned by Robert Greene, is to deliberately avoid anything that would result to boredom and skepticism amongst the flocks. Of course, where there is skepticism, have the potential of making the membership think rather rationally which ultimately may dismember the group, so the author advised that you dazzle your followers with some kind of visual splendor. To practically do this, Mazi Kanu attends political campaign activities of leading international leaders like that of President Donald Trump. He deliberately takes a picture and shares same on Social Media, making the people believe that he's meeting these leaders and that in no time, the object of his fancy, a sovereign state of Brafra would emerge from the cloud.
Whenever he observes that the people are becoming fed up with his antics, he manufactures the notion of "Nigerian government did not like Igbo's". So it is a situation of " us versus them". To achieve this, he sponsors the media to be silent on positive news in favour of those in the Southeast but elaborately sensationalize appointments made to those in the North. Expectedly, those who are not properly informed buy into this gimmicks and conclude that Nigeria under successive government particularly the one headed by President Buhari is anti Igbo.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is no doubt a very smart man. His strategies so far has made members of his group continue to swell beyond even his own imagination. This growth has enabled him to also become stupendously rich as most of them do monthly and yearly contributions to finance his many oversea trips.
Making them part with their hard earned money is easy but sustaining it might not be hence he moved ahead to organize his followers into a kind of hierarchy with various titles and positions that seem to make them think they are a part of a grand scheme for the liberation or restoration of Brafra.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu knows from day one that his supposed quest for a new state of Brafra is not genuine. If it were, he would've encouraged his followers to massively participate in the politics of the Southeast to elect federal and state lawmakers who will champion a constitutional amendment to include the absent referendum in the constitution. This way it can be lawful for Nigerians from the east to through a referendum determine whether to remain or go. 6 Likes |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by EmptyGarden(m): 7:58am On Sep 06, 2020 |
It doesn't take a genius to know this. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 8:09am On Sep 06, 2020 |
Hate kanu all you want ...I hate his methods ...I hate his approach
But the guy has succeeded in putting the idea of Igbo nationhood back to the mind of igbos
Our eyes are now open ...the years of hatred we have ignored is not noticed
Take me for example few years ago I would swear I would never support Biafra , but today ? I don't mind donating millions to achieve it ...same with my friends
Soon a better leader would come up ... obviously after 2023 13 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 8:09am On Sep 06, 2020 |
Nnamdi kanu remains the most useless 4 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Yobabad: 8:26am On Sep 06, 2020 |
He is not a fraud, Bola Tinubu is a well known frauster both Home and Abroad 9 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Charleys: 8:48am On Sep 06, 2020 |
Igbochief001: Hate kanu all you want ...I hate his methods ...I hate his approach
But the guy has succeeded in putting the idea of Igbo nationhood back to the mind of igbos
Our eyes are now open ...the years of hatred we have ignored is not noticed
Take me for example few years ago I would swear I would never support Biafra , but today ? I don't mind donating millions to achieve it ...same with my friends
Soon a better leader would come up ... obviously after 2023 guy there is no 2023. number one will be dead before then. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by kingzizzy: 8:55am On Sep 06, 2020 |
Nigerians are just hypocrites. A Nigerian will go out to celebrate his independence from Britain every 1st of October. But when Nnamdi Kanu agitates for the independence of his people from Nigeria, the same Nigerian will act like he doesn't know what independence is. 8 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by kingzizzy: 8:58am On Sep 06, 2020 |
lordsterlin:
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu knows from day one that his supposed quest for a new state of Brafra is not genuine. If it were, he would've encouraged his followers to massively participate in the politics of the Southeast to elect federal and state lawmakers who will champion a constitutional amendment to include the absent referendum in the constitution. This way it can be lawful for Nigerians from the east to through a referendum determine whether to remain or go. There would be no point doing this since all the votes of the East is far short of what is required to amend the constitution. It like telling a bird to keep flying because it will one day reach the moon. 4 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by StaffofOrayan(m): 9:00am On Sep 06, 2020 |
Someday, someone would have to confront these mad people called Nigerian leaders, your father didn't do it, you won't do it, trust me bro, your children would do it. The worst thing you can do is take sides with ur oppressors, let people agitate! 9 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 9:10am On Sep 06, 2020 |
Charleys:
guy there is no 2023. number one will be dead before then. Bros breaking up Nigeria would take 10 years minimum |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by goodnessme1(f): 9:28am On Sep 06, 2020 |
MelesZenawi: Nnamdi kanu remains the most useless But still better than your father. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by goodnessme1(f): 9:29am On Sep 06, 2020 |
The ZOO must go down,love or hate Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. 3 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Wiseandtrue(f): 9:30am On Sep 06, 2020 |
lordsterlin: On daily basis, what you hear in the news is one scary tale of how the Security Operatives had this confrontation or the other with the membership of the now proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra(IPOB).
When you hear this news, what comes to every sane Nigerian's mind is, these young men and even women who dare to confront law enforcement agents do they think at all? Do they consider that by doing what they are doing, they are deliberately putting themselves and the members of their families in arms way? How some of them die like chickens doesn't even occur to the remainder of the members as on daily basis, one hears of new dimension of madness from them.
As I tried to critically analyze why these men are so drawn to the cause of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the only conclusion I got was that he may be using them to play a hard game of chess. He may also be a student if Robert Greene and his 48 Laws of Power.
In that book, Robert Greene took time to explain how leaders can grow a cultlike following amongst those they lead. According to the work by Mr Greene, "people have an overwhelming desire to believe in something. Become the focal point of such desire by offering them a cause, a new faith to follow. Keep your words vague but full of promise; emphasize enthusiasm over rationality and clear thinking. Give your new disciples rituals to perform, ask them to make sacrifices on your behalf. In the absence of organized religion and grand causes, your new belief system will bring you untold power".
Now the question is how did Mazi Nnamdi Kanu gain this kind of following amongst the Igbos in the Southeastern part of Nigeria and even among those in the diaspora? I daresay, he may have gone ahead to execute the five steps mentioned by Robert Greene. The steps are:
To create a cultlike following, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu needed to catch peoples' attention with something easily believable without much thinking. He knew how the Igbo's followed the Late Ikemba of Nnewi, Chief Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegu Ojukwu! He knew the Biafran story as espoused by the late icon. With former President Goodluck Jonathan losing the presidential election in 2015, he knew how disillusioned and discombobulated the people of the Southeast and Niger Delta were and so he capitalized on this seeming frailness and announced the pursuit of a fathom Brafra! Robert Greene had said, to gain attention, your initial speeches and conversations must include two elements: "on the one hand, the promise of something great and transformative, and on the other a total vagueness". You would agree that this has a way of stimulating your audience with certain dreams whether achievable or not.
The second step according to the steps mentioned by Robert Greene, is to deliberately avoid anything that would result to boredom and skepticism amongst the flocks. Of course, where there is skepticism, have the potential of making the membership think rather rationally which ultimately may dismember the group, so the author advised that you dazzle your followers with some kind of visual splendor. To practically do this, Mazi Kanu attends political campaign activities of leading international leaders like that of President Donald Trump. He deliberately takes a picture and shares same on Social Media, making the people believe that he's meeting these leaders and that in no time, the object of his fancy, a sovereign state of Brafra would emerge from the cloud.
Whenever he observes that the people are becoming fed up with his antics, he manufactures the notion of "Nigerian government did not like Igbo's". So it is a situation of " us versus them". To achieve this, he sponsors the media to be silent on positive news in favour of those in the Southeast but elaborately sensationalize appointments made to those in the North. Expectedly, those who are not properly informed buy into this gimmicks and conclude that Nigeria under successive government particularly the one headed by President Buhari is anti Igbo.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is no doubt a very smart man. His strategies so far has made members of his group continue to swell beyond even his own imagination. This growth has enabled him to also become stupendously rich as most of them do monthly and yearly contributions to finance his many oversea trips.
Making them part with their hard earned money is easy but sustaining it might not be hence he moved ahead to organize his followers into a kind of hierarchy with various titles and positions that seem to make them think they are a part of a grand scheme for the liberation or restoration of Brafra.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu knows from day one that his supposed quest for a new state of Brafra is not genuine. If it were, he would've encouraged his followers to massively participate in the politics of the Southeast to elect federal and state lawmakers who will champion a constitutional amendment to include the absent referendum in the constitution. This way it can be lawful for Nigerians from the east to through a referendum determine whether to remain or go. |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 9:36am On Sep 06, 2020 |
goodnessme1: But still better than your father. that's y u father sings holy holy even at his old age. mbok 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by goodnessme1(f): 9:40am On Sep 06, 2020 |
MelesZenawi:
that's y u father sings holy holy even at his old age.
mbok At least he can sing Holy holy holy Nnamdi Kanu Is a another saviour but you father no get mouth again. 1 Like 2 Shares |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 9:51am On Sep 06, 2020 |
goodnessme1: At least he can sing Holy holy holy Nnamdi Kanu Is a another saviour
but you father no get mouth again. yawns. go and look for fellow Igbos and engage in Igbos discussion with them. I don't spare such time again. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Wiseandtrue(f): 9:57am On Sep 06, 2020 |
lordsterlin: He may also be a student if Robert Greene and his 48 Laws of Power. So you know about these laws and you cannot apply it to stop Bokoharam, Fulani herdsmen and the bandits
It shows you are not wise if harmless people are your source of worries instead of terrorists!!!
Mtcheeeeeew, I am out of here abeg 2 Likes 3 Shares |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by goodnessme1(f): 9:57am On Sep 06, 2020 |
MelesZenawi:
yawns.
go and look for fellow Igbos and engage in Igbos discussion with them.
I don't spare such time again. Why should you be discussion with Igbos when your boko haram brothers are out there. 2 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by OBUKSBAYELSA: 10:05am On Sep 06, 2020 |
The worst fraud is Orji Uzor Kalu, where these Kalus comes from only God knows. All are wayorist, is it Stockfish, Okrika clothes or 419? you will find thier hands there. Heavy Poo. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Wiseandtrue(f): 10:05am On Sep 06, 2020 |
goodnessme1: Why should you be discussion with Igbos when your boko haram brothers are out there. People wey never get their bearing finish now wants to counsel great people who refused to be enslaved into their backward ideology
when they are in dire need of freedom from brainwash that has categorically crippled and brought them to their kneels
They should go and meet Obasanjo so that he can tutor them about the Igbos
Yeye dey smell 1 Like 1 Share |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 10:05am On Sep 06, 2020 |
goodnessme1: Why should you be discussion with Igbos when your boko haram brothers are out there. yawns. go and look for fellow Igbos and engage in Igbos discussion with them. I don't spare such time again. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Yujin(m): 10:06am On Sep 06, 2020 |
lordsterlin: On daily basis, what you hear in the news is one scary tale of how the Security Operatives had this confrontation or the other with the membership of the now proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra(IPOB).
When you hear this news, what comes to every sane Nigerian's mind is, these young men and even women who dare to confront law enforcement agents do they think at all? Do they consider that by doing what they are doing, they are deliberately putting themselves and the members of their families in arms way? How some of them die like chickens doesn't even occur to the remainder of the members as on daily basis, one hears of new dimension of madness from them.
As I tried to critically analyze why these men are so drawn to the cause of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the only conclusion I got was that he may be using them to play a hard game of chess. He may also be a student if Robert Greene and his 48 Laws of Power.
In that book, Robert Greene took time to explain how leaders can grow a cultlike following amongst those they lead. According to the work by Mr Greene, "people have an overwhelming desire to believe in something. Become the focal point of such desire by offering them a cause, a new faith to follow. Keep your words vague but full of promise; emphasize enthusiasm over rationality and clear thinking. Give your new disciples rituals to perform, ask them to make sacrifices on your behalf. In the absence of organized religion and grand causes, your new belief system will bring you untold power".
Now the question is how did Mazi Nnamdi Kanu gain this kind of following amongst the Igbos in the Southeastern part of Nigeria and even among those in the diaspora? I daresay, he may have gone ahead to execute the five steps mentioned by Robert Greene. The steps are:
To create a cultlike following, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu needed to catch peoples' attention with something easily believable without much thinking. He knew how the Igbo's followed the Late Ikemba of Nnewi, Chief Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegu Ojukwu! He knew the Biafran story as espoused by the late icon. With former President Goodluck Jonathan losing the presidential election in 2015, he knew how disillusioned and discombobulated the people of the Southeast and Niger Delta were and so he capitalized on this seeming frailness and announced the pursuit of a fathom Brafra! Robert Greene had said, to gain attention, your initial speeches and conversations must include two elements: "on the one hand, the promise of something great and transformative, and on the other a total vagueness". You would agree that this has a way of stimulating your audience with certain dreams whether achievable or not.
The second step according to the steps mentioned by Robert Greene, is to deliberately avoid anything that would result to boredom and skepticism amongst the flocks. Of course, where there is skepticism, have the potential of making the membership think rather rationally which ultimately may dismember the group, so the author advised that you dazzle your followers with some kind of visual splendor. To practically do this, Mazi Kanu attends political campaign activities of leading international leaders like that of President Donald Trump. He deliberately takes a picture and shares same on Social Media, making the people believe that he's meeting these leaders and that in no time, the object of his fancy, a sovereign state of Brafra would emerge from the cloud.
Whenever he observes that the people are becoming fed up with his antics, he manufactures the notion of "Nigerian government did not like Igbo's". So it is a situation of " us versus them". To achieve this, he sponsors the media to be silent on positive news in favour of those in the Southeast but elaborately sensationalize appointments made to those in the North. Expectedly, those who are not properly informed buy into this gimmicks and conclude that Nigeria under successive government particularly the one headed by President Buhari is anti Igbo.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is no doubt a very smart man. His strategies so far has made members of his group continue to swell beyond even his own imagination. This growth has enabled him to also become stupendously rich as most of them do monthly and yearly contributions to finance his many oversea trips.
Making them part with their hard earned money is easy but sustaining it might not be hence he moved ahead to organize his followers into a kind of hierarchy with various titles and positions that seem to make them think they are a part of a grand scheme for the liberation or restoration of Brafra.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu knows from day one that his supposed quest for a new state of Brafra is not genuine. If it were, he would've encouraged his followers to massively participate in the politics of the Southeast to elect federal and state lawmakers who will champion a constitutional amendment to include the absent referendum in the constitution. This way it can be lawful for Nigerians from the east to through a referendum determine whether to remain or go. Can you answer these questions? 1. What's your solution to the demands of Boko Haram? 2. If giving them Borno state will stop them from attacking entirely, will you agree to it? Your response will determine if I'm to engage you or not. |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Wiseandtrue(f): 10:10am On Sep 06, 2020 |
MelesZenawi:
yawns. go and look for fellow Igbos and engage in Igbos discussion with them. I don't spare such time again. You don't have any genuine contribution
You are only doing the bidding of your master
You don't have time, but here you are
Infact there's hardly any of their thread, your name mises in their register |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 10:11am On Sep 06, 2020 |
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Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by nairalandankrah: 11:20am On Sep 06, 2020 |
lordsterlin: On daily basis, what you hear in the news is one scary tale of how the Security Operatives had this confrontation or the other with the membership of the now proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra(IPOB).
When you hear this news, what comes to every sane Nigerian's mind is, these young men and even women who dare to confront law enforcement agents do they think at all? Do they consider that by doing what they are doing, they are deliberately putting themselves and the members of their families in arms way? How some of them die like chickens doesn't even occur to the remainder of the members as on daily basis, one hears of new dimension of madness from them.
As I tried to critically analyze why these men are so drawn to the cause of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the only conclusion I got was that he may be using them to play a hard game of chess. He may also be a student if Robert Greene and his 48 Laws of Power.
In that book, Robert Greene took time to explain how leaders can grow a cultlike following amongst those they lead. According to the work by Mr Greene, "people have an overwhelming desire to believe in something. Become the focal point of such desire by offering them a cause, a new faith to follow. Keep your words vague but full of promise; emphasize enthusiasm over rationality and clear thinking. Give your new disciples rituals to perform, ask them to make sacrifices on your behalf. In the absence of organized religion and grand causes, your new belief system will bring you untold power".
Now the question is how did Mazi Nnamdi Kanu gain this kind of following amongst the Igbos in the Southeastern part of Nigeria and even among those in the diaspora? I daresay, he may have gone ahead to execute the five steps mentioned by Robert Greene. The steps are:
To create a cultlike following, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu needed to catch peoples' attention with something easily believable without much thinking. He knew how the Igbo's followed the Late Ikemba of Nnewi, Chief Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegu Ojukwu! He knew the Biafran story as espoused by the late icon. With former President Goodluck Jonathan losing the presidential election in 2015, he knew how disillusioned and discombobulated the people of the Southeast and Niger Delta were and so he capitalized on this seeming frailness and announced the pursuit of a fathom Brafra! Robert Greene had said, to gain attention, your initial speeches and conversations must include two elements: "on the one hand, the promise of something great and transformative, and on the other a total vagueness". You would agree that this has a way of stimulating your audience with certain dreams whether achievable or not.
The second step according to the steps mentioned by Robert Greene, is to deliberately avoid anything that would result to boredom and skepticism amongst the flocks. Of course, where there is skepticism, have the potential of making the membership think rather rationally which ultimately may dismember the group, so the author advised that you dazzle your followers with some kind of visual splendor. To practically do this, Mazi Kanu attends political campaign activities of leading international leaders like that of President Donald Trump. He deliberately takes a picture and shares same on Social Media, making the people believe that he's meeting these leaders and that in no time, the object of his fancy, a sovereign state of Brafra would emerge from the cloud.
Whenever he observes that the people are becoming fed up with his antics, he manufactures the notion of "Nigerian government did not like Igbo's". So it is a situation of " us versus them". To achieve this, he sponsors the media to be silent on positive news in favour of those in the Southeast but elaborately sensationalize appointments made to those in the North. Expectedly, those who are not properly informed buy into this gimmicks and conclude that Nigeria under successive government particularly the one headed by President Buhari is anti Igbo.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu is no doubt a very smart man. His strategies so far has made members of his group continue to swell beyond even his own imagination. This growth has enabled him to also become stupendously rich as most of them do monthly and yearly contributions to finance his many oversea trips.
Making them part with their hard earned money is easy but sustaining it might not be hence he moved ahead to organize his followers into a kind of hierarchy with various titles and positions that seem to make them think they are a part of a grand scheme for the liberation or restoration of Brafra.
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu knows from day one that his supposed quest for a new state of Brafra is not genuine. If it were, he would've encouraged his followers to massively participate in the politics of the Southeast to elect federal and state lawmakers who will champion a constitutional amendment to include the absent referendum in the constitution. This way it can be lawful for Nigerians from the east to through a referendum determine whether to remain or go. Your brain is filled with shit.. But, your government defraud you on a daily basis? 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by helinues: 12:08pm On Sep 06, 2020 |
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Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by WhizdomXX(m): 4:20pm On Sep 06, 2020 |
I don't think he's a fraud, but if he's really serious he should know that they are better ways.
How come most south-eastern governor's and lawmakers denounce IPOB, it shows majority of Igbo's don't what Biafra, if not they'll put in representatives that reflect their views.
What I'm I saying? If Kanu and most Igbo's want Biafra, he should direct them to vote in leaders that want Biafra equally. That will be far effective in combination with his actions so far. Unless he's in the minority in Igbo land. I don't know, let the Igbo's speak for themselves.
Come to think of it, it's only now that Igbo representatives are using Biafra as a threat for Igbo Presidency that's a threat of war and we know where that led to last time. Sad but true.
God bless Nigeria. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by bigpriik: 4:43pm On Sep 06, 2020 |
Hate nnamdi KANU all you want ,a seccesionist can never be loved. 1 Like |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Guyman02: 4:46pm On Sep 06, 2020 |
Leave Nnamdi Kanu alone and focus on your Tinubu and Ganduje |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Peacemaker5129(f): 5:03pm On Sep 06, 2020 |
goodnessme1: The ZOO must go down,love or hate Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. yet this nonentity want southeast presidency in 2023 |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by allcomage: 5:23pm On Sep 06, 2020 |
WhizdomXX: I don't think he's a fraud, but if he's really serious he should know that they are better ways.
How come most south-eastern governor's and lawmakers denounce IPOB, it shows majority of Igbo's don't what Biafra, if not they'll put in representatives that reflect their views.
What I'm I saying? If Kanu and mjost Igbo's want Biafra, he should direct them to vote in leaders that want Biafra equally. That will be far effective in combination with his actions so far. Unless he's in the minority in Igbo land. I don't know, let the Igbo's speak for themselves.
Come to think of it, it's only now that Igbo representatives are using Biafra as a threat for Igbo Presidency that's a threat of war and we know where that led to last time. Sad but true.
God bless Nigeria. The biggest problem of black man is poor thinking faculty.You want ipob to contest or vote for sympathetic candidates. Just like imo state? Where the 4th position candidate eventually became 1st. Like the way abiola was sworn in when he won? It's unfortunate that you don't know what will solve the multitude problems Nigeria has is disintegration. |
Re: Why I Think Nnamdi Kanu Is A Fraud by Nobody: 5:28pm On Sep 06, 2020 |
Mazi Nnamdi Kanu knows from day one that his supposed quest for a new state of Brafra is not genuine. If it were, he would've encouraged his followers to massively participate in the politics of the Southeast to elect federal and state lawmakers who will champion a constitutional amendment to include the absent referendum in the constitution. This way it can be lawful for Nigerians from the east to through a referendum determine whether to remain or go. Word. But as they would say....the Hausas won't let them Democracy is hard work.Scotland's 2014 referendum was a work of 80 years.... |