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Politics / Re: President Goodluck Jonathan Is The Answer To The Prayer Of All Nigerians, Ribadu by prophetone(m): 10:52pm On Aug 18, 2014
Pataki: I have never supported or even liked this dude since 2011 election.

A garrulous being who talks faster than he thinks.

Gbawe, what say you to this man you passionately supported since 2011? undecided

I know what you mean, but despite his runny mouth, it's difficult to conceive that he could be this unprincipled and brazen in his taunting of everything that symbolizes his essence in recent history.

1 Like

Politics / Re: President Goodluck Jonathan Is The Answer To The Prayer Of All Nigerians, Ribadu by prophetone(m): 10:32pm On Aug 18, 2014
The Plot Thickens. All these developments further concretize my belief that Ribadu is going to be the worst nightmare of the PDP. He is there for a reason, and enlightened minds can decipher what it is. What I can tell for free is that the APC has everything to gain from this defection. Keep your eyes peeled.

[size=14pt]BUHARI/FASHOLA 2015[/size]

5 Likes

Politics / Re: The Aesthetics And Politics Of Oshodi, Lagos. by prophetone(m): 10:29pm On Aug 18, 2014
My screen will never be the same again.

1 Like

Politics / Re: How El Rufai’s Son Reacted To Ribadu’s Defection From APC To PDP by prophetone(m): 10:17pm On Aug 18, 2014
Bello should be wary of his future without his father. Except he decides to berth with politics, his unnecessary comments might impact his career or business choices in the future. However his comment is welcome as it is a manifestation of the degree of confidence he has reposed in his fathers loyalty to the APC.
Politics / Re: What Happened To The Igbo?j by prophetone(m): 9:40pm On Aug 18, 2014
Delydex: How Emeka Ojukwu’s war of blame has made the Igbo marginal players in Nigeria (1)

There is a common saying that truth is very bitter. Indeed, my experience is that very few people are really able to handle the truth, especially when it has to do with them. As a result, they tend to live a lie, while some others construct grand illusions and remain in them.
There are some basic truths about the Igbo in Nigeria today. Two of such are self evident. The first is that the typical Igbo is deeply unhappy with his lot in Nigeria and believes that both the Nigerian state and successive governments at the centre are not only biased against them, but also effectively marginalize them. Perhaps unknown to many Nigerians, this feeling of marginalization is deeply felt by the Igbo and permeates their entire being. During the hey days of military rule, the story of Igbo marginalization was like a swan song. It also reverberated rather loudly especially during the early period of former president Olusegun Obansojo’s first term as president. The rise of Niger Delta militancy and the strident agitation for resource control upstaged the issue of Igbo marginalization from the centrestage of national discourse. So, it is not that the Igbo have stopped feeling marginalized, rather it is that their voices have been drowned out by the better calibrated voices of other groups, who experience their own group challenges.




The current champions in that regards is the North, whose extremist and fundamentalist wing, BOKO HARAM, has forced the issue of ”Northern neglect and poverty” to the centre of both national and international discourse. The BOKO HARAM campaign of violence has been so successful that the world is now talking of measures to address the mass poverty and under development of the North. However, what I find so very curious in the whole issue, is the refusal of diverse commentators to locate the issue of poverty in the North within the context of its true cause.
The North chose freely, to embrace poverty by its rejection of Western education, enterprise and modernity. Afterall, as Boko Haram aptly captured, western education is ”haram,” evil! Pray, tell me, how can anyone enrich a decidedly illiterate population in the modern age? It is a fundamental principle of economic theory that wealth creation is a consequence or derivative of value addition. So how can anyone enrich a people who have no skills or value to add? Of course some would argue that the first order of business in such a circumstance would be to educate such a people. But then how do you educate people who believe intrinsically that education is an inherent sin, punishable by death?



Nevertheless, despite such glaring realities, the dominant narrative, locally and internationally, is that violence in the North was primarily caused by poverty, and that poverty was created by the disparity in the allocation of Nigeria’s oil wealth. Nigeria, according to the Americans, is made up of a rich South and a poor North. According to this warped logic, the wealth of the Nigerian nation was used to develop the south at the detriment of the North! What an asinine joke! In which country did that happen? This same Nigeria, which had been ruled and dominated by a succession of Northerners? No, sirs! It is simply most untrue. The truth of the poverty in the North is more accurately located in the choices both Northern leaders and Northerners made. Their choice was to be the Lords of the Nigerian nation, the privileged class who were maintained by the state.

Successive Northern leaders of Nigeria promoted a culture of cronyism and nepotism, favouring mainly Northerners in the choice of top managers of state-owned institutions, even strategic ones, and nurturing a culture of dependence and patronage. Thus the average Northerner lacked the requisite incentive to excel in virtually any field. As an undergraduate at the University of Calabar in the early 80′s, my school mates who hailed from the North were paid level 8 salaries as bursaries. Poor me, the then Imo state government never paid me a kobo. Even at that, you could count on your fingertips the number of students from the North. Today, there are still more candidates from Imo state applying for the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board Examination, (JAMB) than candidates from the whole nineteen states of the North. And Kano state is hardly an exception. Oyo and Edo sates each offer more candidates for JAMB examination each year than the entire Northern states put together.

The true facts of contemporary Nigerian history is that the North has not been marginalized. Rather, consistent with the old Peter’s principle of management, the North has merely risen to its level of incompetence.

The wonder however, is why this intellectual fallacy of Northern marginalization has not been challenged? Where are the Southern intellectuals, academics and journalists? The answer is shocking and demoralizing. The fact of the matter is that there is no such thing as the Southern intellectual or public commentator. What there is in truth, is the South West intellectual and public commentator. During the years of military rule and Northern domination of political power, it was the Yoruba intellectual and activist who mounted a sustained campaign against the North. Since the emergence of President Jonathan and the rise of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as Yoruba leader, there has been a redefinition of Yoruba strategic interests, and “enemies.” It would now appear as if the Yoruba interest is in tandem with the interests of the North while the archetypal Northerner, no longer fits within the Yoruba definition of “enemies”.



The enemy now is apparently President Jonathan, “the son of a drunken fisherman”, in Bola Tinubu’s infamous barb. And because Tinubu is in defacto control of the mass media, the voice of the Yoruba intellectual, hitherto vibrant and eloquent, has been muted. As a result, patently erroneous narratives have been allowed to gain currency.
Some would wonder why the Igbo voice has been muted and why there is no whimper from the South/South. Well, for the South/South, there is no distinct voice. Whereas it is true that a large segment of the media is owned by the South/South, it is the world view of the South/West that dominates the media. The South/South voice has therefore been eclipsed by the South/West. As for the Igbo, its lack of a voice is part of the loss of relevance that has been its lot since Emeka Ojukwu launched his war of blame in 1967. In truth, the Igbo march into irrelevance began even before then. It started that fateful day when one Igbo Army Officer, Major Chukwuma Nzeogwu, embarked on a shooting spree in a misguided bout of patriotism.



It was then accelerated by the crass naivety of another Igbo man, Major General J.T.U Aguiyi Ironsi, who enacted the notorious Decree 33 that sought to unify Nigeria, thereby effectively terminating the wonderful regional system of government which had so greatly served Nigeria well. The final nail on the Igbo coffin was nailed by Emeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, whose decision to take his ill-prepared people to war must rank as one of the worst strategic policy blunders of the 21st century. As Dr Nnamdi Azikwe once said of him: “Emeka Ojukwu’s capacity for wrong judgement is monumental.”
The great tragedy of the Igbo is that they fought a war, which in all honesty should not have been fought, and especially in such a manner.



The consequences of that war have made the Igbos, their children and children’s children marginal members of the Nigeria state. Sadly, Igbos do not seem to know this. So they locate their pathetic situation within different causative factors and thus keep blundering under the load of self-pity, marginalization, recrimination and group impotence. Unknown to many Nigerians, almost every Igbo including some of their best and brightest, feels deep anger and frustration, whether they are in government or out of it. Amazingly, even under President Jonathan, allegedly the first “Igbo President “of Nigeria, the feelings of marginalization have not abated. If anything it has even worsened in some ways and across the Igbo country, today, there is despair, sadness and quiet bitterness. Many Igbos ask quietly and often privately, “what do we have to show for all our support for him (Jonathan)?

"Propaganda does not deceive people; it merely helps them to deceive themselves" - Eric Hoffer
Politics / Re: The Aesthetics And Politics Of Oshodi, Lagos. by prophetone(m): 8:07pm On Aug 18, 2014
thewarrior72: Shut up aboki terrorist tongue, when u see evil condemn it or else it will come to take abode in ur home

The Igbo chop sand band drummers are here. Bloody cannibalistic Nyamiri why can't you stay out my mentions? You will always be migrant settlers in Lagos and wherever you go. You greedy pigs want to take your granny raping_ pygmy selves to Alausa abi? Oniranu!

5 Likes

Politics / Re: The Aesthetics And Politics Of Oshodi, Lagos. by prophetone(m): 3:08pm On Aug 18, 2014
Descartes:
Aboki you are here for me as a certified Jester cool tongue

Ok. Swerve.

By the way descartes, do you recognize any of your brethren that robbed my people in Sokoto?

20 Likes

Politics / Re: The Aesthetics And Politics Of Oshodi, Lagos. by prophetone(m): 3:04pm On Aug 18, 2014
Descartes:
Notice ke.
Are you done with the Chibok's girls cheesy grin

I can see you're bored. Say something bright and we might have a conversation.

10 Likes

Politics / Re: The Aesthetics And Politics Of Oshodi, Lagos. by prophetone(m): 2:59pm On Aug 18, 2014
Descartes:
Aboki stop attacking the messenger, just focus on the message conveyed here. angry

Nyamiri, you have been noticed. Swerve.

7 Likes

Politics / Re: The Aesthetics And Politics Of Oshodi, Lagos. by prophetone(m): 2:32pm On Aug 18, 2014
oluwasegunfummi: I'm from ogun state

And I'm from Jupiter. Are you ashamed of ala'igbo?

12 Likes

Politics / Re: The Aesthetics And Politics Of Oshodi, Lagos. by prophetone(m): 2:27pm On Aug 18, 2014
Do we not know Nigeria is a developing country? Lagos State is the most developed state in Nigeria, and the OP knows it. The efforts of Fashola in beautifying Lagos cannot be denied. Let the OP mention his state and wait for me, I will remind him what an erosion ravaged slum it is.

26 Likes

Politics / Re: New List Of Top 21 Richest Persons In Nigeria. by prophetone(m): 8:34am On Aug 18, 2014
scribble: Rubbish list

where is dangote's competitor that owns bua

forbes recognized him, ur list is like that compiled by a 10 year old dreamer

Exactly...you took the words out of my mouth. Where is Abdulsamad Rabiu?

The list apparently, is rubbish
.

5 Likes

Politics / Re: ‘Lai Mohammed Detained For Abusing Jonathan’ by prophetone(m): 12:49am On Aug 18, 2014
opiaoku:

And that spirit of slavery that have been hunting an average aboki is now hunting you

Degenerate scum, akpu grubbing cannibal have I not warned you not to bother your elders? Anuofia.

1 Like

Politics / Re: ‘Lai Mohammed Detained For Abusing Jonathan’ by prophetone(m): 12:42am On Aug 18, 2014
arewafederation:

Sharrap you stoopid goat and stop diturbing people around.






Useless goat!

The psychological scars of northern soldiers kicking his ancestors heads is what has genetically been transferred to him.

1 Like

Politics / Re: “You Are Subjecting Ndigbo To Perpetual Beggarly Status”–APC Blasts Igbo Leaders by prophetone(m): 9:14pm On Aug 17, 2014
[size=28pt]Ndigbo-Chop-Sand-Band Drummers[/size]

grin grin grin
grin grin grin
grin grin grin

15 Likes

Health / Re: President Jonathan, Fashola, Sambo Use Hand Sanitizer During Meeting On Ebola by prophetone(m): 7:12pm On Aug 17, 2014
Cluelessness is a plague worse than Ebola. How many Nigerians can identify that automated soap dispenser as a hand sanitizer knowing that they have never seen one before, and the government is unlikely to install same in public facilities? The sanitizer masses are likely to see in the market are manually operated bottled ones. A clear thinking leader would demonstrate using a recognizable hand sanitizer to set an example, otherwise what is the point of a demonstration?

By the way, hand sanitizer is the same thing as hand wash (anti-bacterial soap). That device is simply a motion-activated soap dispenser.

3 Likes

Politics / Re: Chadian Troops Rescue 85 Nigerian Hostages From Boko Haram by prophetone(m): 2:39pm On Aug 17, 2014
biz2get:

dumbness is written all over you... just look at the spelling of your "sence" is that rigth?? according to my dictionary "thats how idio'ts spell "sense" get a life bro and stop hating

Haba bros, see the way you shot yourself in the foot grin
Politics / Re: Chadian Troops Rescue 85 Nigerian Hostages From Boko Haram by prophetone(m): 2:28pm On Aug 17, 2014
jahchild34:
hey! hey!! Hey!!! Hold it dia my friend, what do u mean by that? We have a lot of unemployed nigerians who have been buying short service form and all the NA does is accepting 4 to 6 in the southern states but northerners have up to 25 to 30 collected, why won't d army be dumb when they have a lot of ram, cows and goat in the army. My point is that put intellectuals in place and we would not be having this problems. Like it or not, i don yan i don yan.

In other words, what you're saying is that Northerners have been the greatest peace-keeping force Africa has ever seen (Nigerian Army), restoring peace in Liberia, Sierra-Leone, Darfur etc. The problem now is they have an incompetent Commander-in-chief, aided by a COAS lacking in capacity, and these weaknesses have been transferred to the rank and file of what is arguably the best Army in Africa.

1 Like

Health / Re: First Nigerian Ebola Survivor Not Treated With "Nano Silver" - Health Minister by prophetone(m): 8:00am On Aug 17, 2014
That's funny undecided

If that's the case, then the doctors case should be treated as a peculiar one, which might give us a roadmap to the proper cure. God help us.

1 Like

Politics / Re: Defectors To PDP Are Ticket Hunters, Says APGA by prophetone(m): 9:43pm On Aug 16, 2014
Mr. Peter Obi almost earns my respect because loyalty is the stuff of men of virtue. It's unfortunate however that his loyalty to APGA is diluted by his dilly-dally with the PDP and unwavering support for the ruling party's candidate in the next elections.

If your party is not ruling, and you are not being an opposition, what are you?
Politics / Re: Defectors To PDP Are Ticket Hunters, Says APGA by prophetone(m): 9:19pm On Aug 16, 2014
Mr. Peter Obi almost earns my respect because loyalty is the stuff of men of virtue. It's unfortunate however that his loyalty to APGA is diluted by his dilly-dally with the PDP and unwavering support for the ruling party's candidate in the next elections.

If your party is not ruling, and you are not being the opposition, what are you?

1 Like

Politics / Re: Massive, Minnesota Made Fire Trucks Flying Overnight To Jigawa State Nigeria by prophetone(m): 11:20am On Aug 16, 2014
asha80: prophetone so sule lamido is apc?lord have mercy...also do not dare change what you have already written.

Why would I change it? I take responsibility for my mistake.

1 Like

Culture / Re: Culture Shock: Have You Ever Experienced It? by prophetone(m): 8:41am On Aug 16, 2014
lalasticlala: another one, I just discovered that there are very few storey buildings here in Kaduna, unlike in the East where storey buildings are the other of the day. in fact it's as if they are in competition to build storey buildings ooo in the east.

Storey buildings are necessary where there is scarcity of land, or land has to be utilized to its maximum value. In the North, the sheer land mass available makes it cheap. Consequently, you have a more of an occurrence of huge complexes as opposed to storey buildings. The lack of good Land in the East as a result tiny land mass and the scourge of erosion must be the reasons for the maximization of what is available.

Having said that, there are dozens of storey buildings dotting the Kaduna skyline and that of other cities. I don't know what part of Kaduna you live, or what your objectives are with this propaganda.

9 Likes

Politics / Re: Massive, Minnesota Made Fire Trucks Flying Overnight To Jigawa State Nigeria by prophetone(m): 4:49am On Aug 16, 2014
Validated:

Na so? When he stole, he remains a PDP governor but when he does something good he is an APC governor. I dey laugh these APC hypocrites,


PDP is a party of corruption and mismanagement. APC represents change. What party did he belong to when the funds were looted? Lamido will be whipped into order if he misbehaves under the watch of the great General MB.

2 Likes

Politics / Re: Peter Obi Resignes From APGA BOT by prophetone(m): 4:39am On Aug 16, 2014
What sin did Obiano commit that is flinging APGA onto it's path of demise? Until the SE eat the humble pie and abandon their politics of exclusion, they will continue to suffer the consequences of political irrelevance. No party is going to try to integrate anyone who is filled with contempt about that party.

6 Likes

Politics / Re: 2015: ACF Warns Pro-jonathan Campaigners by prophetone(m): 3:54am On Aug 16, 2014
She is only admonishing you all for your own safety, using the sad demise of those innocent youth corpers as reference, to emphasize the potential risk of fatalities that might occur. Yet some myopic posters still find faults to pick. Typical of cankerworms to spite logic.

suwailad: [size=16pt]Before you guys foolishly write them off, be prepared to face the onslaught like the one those nysc members died. Not that i want it to happen, but if it does nobody will save you guys. Go and foolishly join this nonsense TAN that promises to pay you N10k because you are jobless, then you wear their shirt and start running around the streets campaigning for the failure called GEJ because he dashed you N10k. Idioticc Youths, dont try this in the NORTH. You have been warned. The NYSC members that were hacked to death, has there been any justice for them till date? NO! Be warned! [/size]
TV/Movies / Re: Jobless Jonathan Hosts Omoni Oboli For Private Screening Of Her Movie by prophetone(m): 3:25am On Aug 16, 2014
Fxwarrior:

Lol. I never knew private and public can come together before. Issorai.

The deep concentration with which he was privately screening her goods (?) would not let him be aware that he was in public.

3 Likes

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