RubiesBanking's Posts
Nairaland Forum › RubiesBanking's Profile › RubiesBanking's Posts
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EvilPOTATO:Will send something little but please your the last person I'm doing this for. |
I also wish to help, first two private teacher who need help should quote me will send 10k to each of them. NB: Must show abit of proof while quoting me. Abeg I can't do past 2 ooh Done thank you. |
Casemiro:There should be a small switch to turn on/off the power bank, when next it does that try pressing it to turn it back on. |
The terminus of perpetual hunger leads to frustration which in ultimate leads to aggression |
Funkyswagzz:You claim someone is sending you a phishing link, the only way for you to know is through the email address of sender, and besides what's sensitive in that? |
Funkyswagzz:Send the email address of sender |
adonainana:Bruh use exchange site like instantcoins.ng, I use them anytime I have urgent need to sell BTC and it's instant, once BTC is sent and 1 confirmation is in they credit account immediately, it's better than having to stress yourself with most of this sellers. |
southniyikaye:Maybe you can get him that Samsung Gear Headphone. Good for answering handfree while driving and the rest because it's wireless. |
I noticed this on most high end phones, even if the ram is about 6gb, 4gb is already being used when nothing is being done on background and same thing also occur for higher end devices. |
Kindly give the following details so we will congratulate you. Name of job Address where the job is located Name of employer Recruitment agency Your name Job position you applied for. Thank you very much as we congratulate you.... I'm just joking ooh.. Congratulations tho |
bigeliot: lol someone already addressed issues. They're mostly scammers and they know most Nigerians won't fall for this trick because you have to pay money for fees if at all they fall for it, Nigerians will give them big problem.
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Darkseid:Ps5 won't be out till November |
rottennaija:One shown on his phone notch is measured in MB/s |
![]() Finally got my dream device the Redmi Note 9 Pro same day delivery from Nurex01 with no issues whatever. If you guys need to buy this device or any phone gadget especially if you need it same day I advise you buy from him, you won't regret it. Here some pics of the device, I had to use the Note 9 Pro to take a picture of the pack and my old device redmi 7a to take a picture of the pack with phone. At Nurex01 I appreciate you for this.
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![]() Finally got my dream device the Redmi Note 9 Pro same day delivery from Nurex01 with no issues whatever. If you guys need to buy this device or any phone gadget especially if you need it same day I advise you buy from him, you won't regret it. Here some pics of the device, I had to use the Note 9 Pro to take a picture of the pack and my old device redmi 7a to take a picture of the pack with phone. At Nurex01 I appreciate you for this.
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valdesmond5:Holy! Lord God Almighty Early in the morning....... |
Lol even if I want to buy phones with pay before delivery, it won't be from such monikers. I rather prefer people like nobody with long thread history of his sales and people vouching and not some random dude coming to say pay before delivery. |
President Buhari |
Zuckerberg doesn't just wear any old plain grey Hanes t-shirt, though his are specially ordered from Brunello Cucinelli, and reportedly cost between $300 and $400.
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elocas:Go to task manager and look at the processes, try to see if there is any software that does not look familiar with you and uninstall but it's advisable to completely do a reinstall. |
Not true. The boy down is her son David Jr named after his Nigerian father and her husband David
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One thing in common with transsion phone users Big Battery Big Ram Big Screen Everything must be big even if the processor can't handle it |
Xiaomi Nigeria should be careful the people they employ, I was planning to buy the air dot s from their official store, I asked them if they got what I want, dude brought it out and started telling me 11k, worst of it all it's the gateman that was selling this stuff outside their saying they can't let customers in because they are observing social distancing and I did not come to buy a phone, it was even the old version he brought, I simply told him I will try find another store to get what I want because what was advertised was 8k on their advertisement page for the old version and around 14k for the new Airdot S because he did not know the difference between these two, I went to another Xiaomi store and saw it for around 7k the old version. Don't know why they allow this sort of people to be messing up their business. |
Rollyluv:Unfortunately it was a hack, gotv had a backend that they bypassed to make the subscription but they rectified and all gotv users who did the hack got their subscription terminated. |
After Release After Mr. McMillian’s release in 1993, he worked hard to educate people about the death penalty especially among the black folks, sharing his experiences with students, community groups, and elected officials across the country. His case drew public attention to wrongful convictions, and many more people were exonerated in the years after his release. In 1998, he joined other survivors at a national conference on Wrongful Convictions and the Death Penalty attended by more than 1,000 lawyers, law students, professors, and criminal justice reform advocates. On April 1, 1993, Mr. McMillian spoke to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee about the urgent need to end the death penalty. “I am deeply troubled by the way the criminal system treated me and the difficulty I had in proving my innocence" he told the committee. “I am also worried about others. I believe there are other people under sentence of death who like me are not guilty" Mr. McMillian’s testimony specifically addressed the failure to provide adequate legal help to people in prison and on death row. “When you are poor and under sentence of death you worry about a lot of things. One of the biggest worries is whether you’ll get the kind of legal assistance you need to save you from execution,” he testified. “For many death row inmates, it takes years to get the kind of legal representation and investigation necessary to prove your innocence.” EJI filed civil rights lawsuits against state and local officials for incarcerating Mr. McMillian on death row before his trial in violation of his rights. An effort to hold the sheriff accountable went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, but the Court ruled that Sheriff Tate was protected from liability based on immunity laws. Police, prosecutors, and judges are immune from judgments that require them to make payments to people victimized by abuse of authority. Years later when the case settled, the compensation was much less than had been hoped. Sheriff Tate was never removed from office; he retired in 2019. Mr. McMillian’s experience on death row was traumatic. “I have suffered pain, agony, loss, and fear in degrees that I had never imagined possible,” he testified in 1993. “I have survived these six long years, but I am a different man.” He explained the horror of seeing seven other men executed during his time at Alabama’s Holman Prison: I experienced the executions with the greatest pain and with enormous fear about whether this would happen to me. From my cell you could smell the stench of burning flesh. The smell of someone you know burning to death is the most painful and nauseating experience on this earth.The trauma Mr. McMillian experienced led to early-onset dementia. He had lost his logging business and sold car parts until he became too ill to work. In the last two years of his life, he couldn’t enjoy the outdoors or get around much without help. He died on September 11, 2013. Learn more about Walter McMillian by reading his book "Just Mercy". |
EJI’s Bryan Stevenson Work In 1988, Bryan Stevenson met Walter McMillian and began working to appeal his conviction and death sentence. As Mr. Stevenson and the staff of EJI investigated the case, they discovered a ton of evidence that proved Mr. McMillian was innocent. They found evidence that the State’s witnesses against Mr. McMillian had been coerced, including tape recordings proving that the State’s only eyewitness had been pressured to testify falsely at Mr. McMillian’s trial. EJI presented this dramatic new evidence but it took six years of hearings and appeals before the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals finally ruled that Mr. McMillian’s conviction was unconstitutional. A new investigation was ordered. The Alabama Bureau of Investigation ultimately confirmed the evidence uncovered by EJI and determined that Mr. McMillian was innocent, but prosecutors still wavered on whether they would join the motion filed by EJI to dismiss all charges against Mr. McMillian. EJI's Bryan Stevenson took on the case in postconviction, where he showed that the State’s witnesses had lied on the stand and the prosecution had illegally suppressed exculpatory evidence. Mr. McMillian's conviction was overturned by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals in 1993 and prosecutors agreed the case had been mishandled. Mr. McMillian was released in 1993 after spending six years on death row for a crime he did not commit. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shzMjyuijRU The case had generated an unusual amount of media coverage. Bryan Stevenson and EJI received death threats. Resistance to acknowledging Mr. McMillian’s innocence was intense. But the overwhelming evidence of innocence ultimately forced the State to agree to drop the charges. Mr. McMillian was released from death row as a free man in March 1993. Walter McMillian was among the first exonerees from death row in the modern era. A 60 Minutes segment and other national press coverage about his case led to other exonerations. Today, more than 160 people who were on death row have been proved innocent and released. https://eji.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Walter-and-Bryan-1024x536.jpg Brayan Stevenson taking Mr Mcmilian's case after post conviction https://eji.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Walter-hearing-1024x536.jpg EJI proved state's witnesses had lied on the stand https://eji.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Walter-Leaving-Prison-1024x536.jpg Mr Mcmilian's Conviction was overturned and he was released from death row https://eji.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Walter-released-1024x536.jpg Supporters celebrating Mr. McMilian release |
Imagine coming back from work after a long day's work and suddenly get stopped by the police and accused of brutally kill[sub][/sub]ing a white teenager with no evidence, This is the similar experience Walter McMilian never expected to happen to him. https://eji.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Walter-McMillian.jpg Walter McMillian, who is black, was convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of a young white woman who worked as a clerk in a dry cleaning store in Monroeville, Alabama. Mr. McMillian was held on death row prior to being convicted and sentenced to death. His trial lasted only a day and a half. In 1986, an 18-year-old white woman named Ronda Morrison was murdered in downtown Monroeville, Alabama. The crime sent shock waves of fear and anger through the small community. Police could not solve the crime. After six months with no leads or suspects, their attention focused on Walter McMillian. Mr. McMillian was an unlikely suspect. He had no prior criminal history and was a 45-year-old self-employed logger who had done work for many people throughout the community. What seemed to bring him attention is that he’d had an affair with a married white woman. A very public divorce between this woman and her husband pulled Mr. McMillian into the limelight and he soon went from someone having an interracial affair to someone thought to be capable of murder. Three witnesses testified against Mr. McMillian and the jury ignored multiple alibi [alibi ~ In a criminal action, a defense that the defendant was somewhere other than the scene of the crime when the crime was committed. ] witnesses, who were black, who testified that he was at a church fish fry at the time of the crime. The trial judge overrode the jury’s sentencing verdict for life and sentenced Mr. McMillian to death. A white man accused of crimes in another county was pressured by police and ultimately made false statements accusing Mr. McMillian of murdering Ms. Morrison. This set off a chain of events that changed Mr. McMillian’s life forever. He was arrested by Monroe County Sheriff Tom Tate and eventually charged with capital murder. The sheriff arranged for Mr. McMillian to be placed on death row before his trial—when he hadn’t even been convicted of a crime. Known to his friends and family as “Johnny D,” Mr. McMillian spent 15 harrowing and tortuous months on Alabama’s death row before trial. Mr. McMillian was with his family 11 miles away from the dry cleaning store where Ms. Morrison was murdered at the time of the crime. There were dozens of black people who could testify to his innocence but they were ignored. The nearly all-white jury convicted Mr. McMillian of capital murder and sentenced him to life imprisonment without parole. In Alabama, elected trial judges were authorized to override a jury’s life verdict and impose the death penalty. Judge Robert E. Lee Key overrode the jury’s sentence of life imprisonment and sentenced Mr. McMillian to death by electrocution. Mr. McMillian was sent back to his cell on death row, where he ultimately spent six years. https://eji.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Walter-McMillian-Arms-Up-1024x536.jpg |
Op is actually correctly, as postulated by Karl Marx, Religion is the opium of the masses, a sign that all is not well with society. Religion arises due to suffering,injustice and inequality in the society, If we can deal with this problem as a nation religion will loose its grip. Religion is just used to maintain human suffering, it makes us blind to the fact that God can solve all our problems. Human beings need to rise up for themselves and solve this problem without necessarily depending on God to solve all our personal and societal problems. This what actually the middle age or mideval suffered due to religion and it's still not helping as a whole in this country. |
It depends, Etisalat 3g network is much faster than glo 4g network. I really can't wait till 5g network reach Nigeria |
When we eat chips we find them filled till half of the packet. During my childhood, I had misconception that manufacturers do this intentionally to make profit but then I understood the purpose. As chips contain fats and oils in them, they can get rancid. Rancidity is biochemical reaction of fats getting oxidised to produce foul smell and taste which makes the product unfit for consumption. So to avoid this, manufacturers fill the packets of chips with nitrogen gas molecules. Since, Nitrogen gas does not react with fats and oils, the chips are safe from getting rancid. Moreover, a gas in the bag serves as a cushioning agent and prevents chips from crumbling. So although we feel it's unfair that packet is filled upto half, it's for a good reason. So I conclude some things may seem wrong but are for right purpose. Source:Quora
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lol someone already addressed issues. They're mostly scammers and they know most Nigerians won't fall for this trick because you have to pay money for fees if at all they fall for it, Nigerians will give them big problem.
