SantaMafia's Posts
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iconize: You're a pure m_oron!sharaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaap magg0t. I guess you are drunk from inhaling too much generator fumes,huh? this goat is suffering from hallucinatory aria igbo dog hahahaha how market? fuckeduppedness shitnigeria is the armpit of the world ![]()
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hahahahahahahaha I'll be back shortly. hahahahaha ebe like say fuel don finish for inside una generators abi. fooooooooooooooooooooooooooools we Ghanaians will continue to kick your azzess because you are all foooooooooooooooooooooooools hahahahahahahahahahaha we don't give a fvck about fooools because we have their medicine Bleep ya all Federal Republic of Foooooooooooooooooooooooooooools Good night, ediots! hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha ![]() |
hahahahahahaha and they breed unhindered, like pigs. The MUMUs will have 10 children when they hardly have enough to feed themselves- thereby breeding robbers, pr0stitutes, vagabonds etc ![]() sh1tnigeria is primitive sh1thole run by sh1tmongering twats- a dystonian sh1thole! ![]() There are no words to describe shitnigeria ![]()
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what an impoverished sh1thole! sufferiung and smiling a failed state https://www.nairaland.com/315838/naija-failed-state chei they even import fuel from niger ![]() OMG naked women protesting hardship in shitnigeria https://www.nairaland.com/1611454/protest-jonathan-visits-yola-half-unclad ![]() https://www.nairaland.com/1600374/nigerians-dumb-35-questions-ponder too many dumb people in the sh1thole ![]() sheer wickedness chei naija we wail oooooh[img]http://1.bp..com/-AyMdqI9I0os/Uvpt-BlSfpI/AAAAAAAAHIU/tr7z9CM-c2Y/s1600/father_padlock_son.jpg[/img] ![]() |
Nigeria: A Nation of 160million Fools ![]() By Dan Amor , 081 5180 8817 (sms only pls) danamor67@yahoo.com When the Union Jack (the British flag) was, at the glittering mews of the Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos on October 1, 1960, lowered for a free Nigeria’s green-white-green flag, gloriously fluttered in the sky by the breezy flurry of pride and ecstasy, it was a great moment pregnant with hope and expectation. The whole world had seen a newly independent Nigeria, a potential world power, only buried in the sands of time. Endowed with immense wealth, a dynamic population and an enviable talent for political compromise, Nigeria stood out in the 1960s as the potential leader in Africa, a continent in dire need of guidance. For, it was widely thought that the country was immune from the wasting diseases of tribalism, disunity and instability which remorselessly attacked so many other new African states. But when bursts of machine gun fire shattered the predawn calm of Lagos its erstwhile capital city in January 1966, it was now clear that Nigeria was no exception to Africa’s common post-independence experience. During the following four years (1966-1970), the giant and ‘hope’ of Africa measured its full length in the dust. Two bloody military coups, a series of appalling massacres and a protracted and savage civil war which claimed over a million lives threatened to plunge the entire country into oblivion. It also deprived Black Africa, already weakened and disillusioned, of a crucial element of strength and leadership in the growing confrontation with White Africa along the Zambezi. As God would have it, at the end of the civil war in 1970 the nation experienced an oil boom and a staggering wealth never before recorded in the history of young nations. This new status, coupled with the emergence of a dynamic leader in the person of the late General Murtala Mohammed, in the mid-1970s, launched Nigeria back to a position of relevance in Africa when it proffered a new meaning and identity for the continent. Today, instead of a consummation of that hope and expectation, what confronts Nigeria is the story of a nation that has turned full circle as a giant with feet of clay: a big national and international nuisance and embarrassment. We are experiencing an unnerving weight of fuel scarcity in the sixth largest exporter of crude oil in the world. A sadistic cabal of recycling local imperialists in both khaki and agbada has since hemmed the supposedly “giant of Africa” in a colony where misrule, ineptitude, crass opportunism and corruption have been elevated to a national culture. More than half a century into this circuitous game in which the nation’s till has been pillaged and her vast wealth frittered away abroad, the rot is peaking; and the hapless people are paying the imponderably colossal price. At the moment, in spite of a record huge revenue from the sale of crude oil and other domestic sources, the social services sector, which more directly impugn on the people’s lives, is almost at the height of a complete system collapse. The story of virtually every social responsibility of the state to the people; of every area where the state remain relevant to her subjects under the unwritten social contract code, has been rewritten on its head: hospitals have graduated from mere prescription clinics into mortuaries as even medical doctors and other health workers are constantly on strike. The public school system is in a shambles; roads, including hitherto smooth expressways are now death traps; and almost a century after electricity supply debuted in Nigeria, her citizens still live more in darkness than light. Here is a complete story of retrogression and decay. Above all, there is an alarming rate of insecurity in the land. Nigeria is in a ferocious state of anomie. This is made worse by a tired and disheartened bitterness among the citizenry. If Hilaire Belloc is right in his opinion that ‘readable history is melodrama’, the true story of the first decade of the twenty-first century in Nigeria, which also doubles as the longest tragic period of civil misrule since the past 99 years of the forced union by Lugard, should be mind-boggling. It has been a decade of turmoil, with the elemental passions predominant. Never have Nigerian public officials in responsible positions, directing the destiny of the nation, been so brutal, hypocritical and corrupt, leaving the country to swim in infrastructural decay, unemployment, hunger and desperation as in the past fourteen years of quasi-democracy. The outcome is the pervading poll of insecurity which is threatening to drive the country into yet another civil war. Like a demented society, Nigeria is soaked with irrational impulses, stress and tension as the people can no longer elect their leaders. Aside from armed robbery which has rendered the entire police force vulnerable, there is candidly speaking, an alarming rate of mockery killings in Nigeria. There are indeed gruesome stories of rapes, perversities, and child murders. Hostage taking is now a booming business in the country. An extremely partisan and sympathetic public is willing to read and believe anything as even the crime pages of our national dallies appear tinged with sadism. Yet, where is that Nigerian who does not know that the real criminals in our midst today are our rulers? Who does not know that much of the savagery connected with our current state of hopelessness and bloodletting could be explained in the character of the buccaneers who have misruled us for all these miserable years? How did Ghana which was at the level we are today in early 1980’s make it to now become an enviable haven where our foreign and local investors now relocate to? Why has Nigeria suddenly relapsed into a country where violence has become a national pastime? It is interesting at this point to draw a historical parallel between Nigeria and India, a former victim of colonialism which has now turned itself to a world power due to political doggedness and economic independence. For a country like Nigeria still paying lip-service to the ideals of a federated union, the Indian Federation is an enduring model. There is a high level of competition with every state controlling its economy, separate army and police. Hence the drive for massive, unprecedented investment in education and manpower development as India exports more than 800 scientists annually to the Silicon Valley of the United States who manufacture made-in-America goods. The difference in age between India and Nigeria is 13 as India gained political independence from Britain in 1947. But the question is: can Nigeria attain the height India has reached in the next 13 years? From a position of relative despair and frustration, India has bequeathed to her children hope and happiness while Nigeria is still dancing in circle. Nigeria, where is thy soul? We are indeed a nation of 160million fools! ![]()
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Check out a typical front page of NL………………….. Boko Haram Kill 10 Christians in Borno State Petrol Sells for N250 Per Litre in Calabar $5000 Stolen from Pastor’s Vault Tears of a Wounded Corper Jonathan and the $31 billion Question Governor’s ADC Beats Policemen to Coma Pregnant Woma Dies in Port Harcourt Over N20,000 Deposit Traders Shut Down Nnewi Market over Kidnap Menace The face of Nigerian gays 22 officers arrested over jaji and SARS Attacks Four Arrested for Killing Recharge Card Seller no wonder Obasanjo said the sh1thole is cursed ![]()
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hahahahaha welcome to Shitnigeria nigayria Dummies, what name do you give to a country of kidnappers, ritualists, pr0stitutes,419ners, scammers and spammers, terrorists, militants, armed robbers, book haram, friggin eediots rule? A country where nothing works? ![]() chei naija we wail ooooooh roforoforoforofo www.nairaland.com/attachments/1570248_image_jpeg9f360c5ab7736510df54c882e9dbf188 ![]()
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hahahahaha the fate of shitnigerians hahahaha human life is worth less than that of animals people get killed for pleasure in that cursed land ![]() www.nairaland.com/attachments/1588646_Bokoharam_jpg7e26778b25cb2186cebf03fe258084c4 ![]() what a jungle inhabited by apes and dogs ![]() www.nairaland.com/attachments/1570247_image_jpeg9f360c5ab7736510df54c882e9dbf188 ![]() |
hahahahahaha chei i no fit laugh ooooh hahahahaha regoroforo the modafakas even fvck cows ; what better confirmation do you need to proof these are animals ln human skin? hahahahahahahaha laugh wan tear ma belle sef ![]()
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hahahahaha wicked and callous magg0ts what did this poor little shitnigerian ape do to get his mouth padlocked? furckeduppedness[img]https://www.nairaland.com/1630132/father-padlocked-4-year-old-son-mouth[/img] ![]() selling human meat is normal in the sh1thole [img]https://www.nairaland.com/1610849/man-caught-red-handed-selling[/img] ![]() hahahahah even people walking about naked is also very normal in the Federal Republic of Fooools ![]() [img]http://4.bp..com/-6qejBJ2PuFM/T2C0ydlC--I/AAAAAAAAEUo/vOnSwhKooUo/s1600/1.jpg[/img] ![]() |
buzzmania: You are such a delusional fellow,it is a world acclaimed fact that your boyscouts are the most useless ever.They go on peace keeping just to wash plates and shine boots.You cant save your weak assses from boko,how much more liberia.OMG chei boys scouts paaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa roforofo naija boys scouts chei
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buzzmania: Blame it on your poor educational system for your lack of comprehension shitnigerians live in a zoo with a zookeeper for president ![]() |
hahahahaha seems there is a lot of weeping and gnashing of teeth in that dustbin country walahi the suffering is too much ooh no electricity, ritualusts, kidnappers, armed robbers, boko haram everywhere chei no wonder life expectancy is just 52 years a shithole where nothing works omo naija generator republic ![]()
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SAD: Shitnigeria leads the world in global child deaths – UNICEF ![]() September 18, 2014Tobore Ovuorie and Nnenna Ibeh polio-africa-nigeria https://media.premiumtimesng.com/wp-content/files/2012/09/polio-africa-nigeria.jpg Nigeria lags only behind India in countries that witnessed global under-five deaths in 2013, a new report has stated. In its latest report, the United Nations body, UNICEF, revealed that half of the global deaths among children below the age of five occur in only five countries. The countries are India (21 per cent), Nigeria (13 per cent), Pakistan (six per cent), Democratic Republic of Congo (five per cent), and China (four per cent). In the report titled ‘Committing to child survival: A promise renewed,’ high-income countries only accounted for nearly two per cent of global under-five deaths in 2013. However, the report indicated that these countries accounted for only about 11 per cent of all births as well as 11 per cent of all children under age five in the world in 2013. UNICEF, in the 2014 progress report, noted that Sub-Saharan Africa faces an additional challenge of extra efforts to decrease the child death rates needed to undo the projected increase in live births and population of children below the age of five. “If current demographic trends continues, an estimated five billion children will be born worldwide between 2015 and 2050, 1.6 billion of them in Sub-Saharan Africa. By 2050, 37 per cent of the global under-five population will be living in sub-Saharan Africa, compared to just nine per cent in 1950,” UNICEF warned. The report also states that the burden of child death is mainly among the world’s poorest regions and countries. For instance, all 12 countries with an under-five mortality rate of 100 or more deaths per 1,000 live births are in sub-Saharan Africa- a poor region. Ten of these are in West and Central Africa. Also, one out of every 11 children born in sub-Saharan Africa dies before their fifth birthday. Compared to high-income countries, it is nearly 15 times the average rate (one in 159). Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia produced the greatest numbers of child deaths. In 2013, about half of global under-five deaths occurred in Sub-Saharan Africa with Nigeria leading while 32 per cent was in South Asia. The report, however, noted that there were some improvements in health statistics globally. It indicated that while major efforts have been made towards improving child survival, the under-five death rates have declined by almost half since 1990. It said that the child death rate dropped from 90 to 46 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2013. It further indicated that the total number of under-five deaths was cut by half during the same period from 12.7million to 6.3million, thus saving 17,000 lives every day. Also, under-five death is falling faster than any other time during the past two decades. It is also falling among the poorest children in all regions. However, despite the progress, the toll of under-five deaths in the past two decades (1990 to 2013) appears large; 223 million children worldwide have died before their fifth birthday. By all indication, the progress made, the report states, is ‘insufficient’ to meet the Millennium Development Goal 4 (MDG) – to reduce child mortality by two-third by 2015. It also noted that if current trends continue in all countries, the target will only be reached globally by 2026; 11 years behind schedule. - See more at: https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/168301-sad-nigeria-india-lead-the-world-in-global-child-deaths-unicef.html#sthash.JFK7Ui9H.dpuf |
OMG roforoforoforo ![]() Lessons From Ghana For Nigerians foools ![]() It was Karl Marx, radical German philosopher and founder of the Marxist School of thought who argued that the only thing that is constant in life is change. Invariably, change is inevitable in any and every human social formation. Given this irrefutable reality, social scientists have continued to harp on the dynamism and fluidity of the human society. Consequently, no society is static or exists in a continuous state of suspended animation, given the inherent contradictions therein. The resolution of the contradictions defines the order of societal progression. But it would seem that while some societies are undergoing positive transformation through the embracing of change, others unfortunately suffer relegation either because they cannot cope with change or are unwilling to accept change. Ghana, which shares close historical, cultural and political affinity with our country would seem to have broken loose from the decay and retrogression of the past, and thrusts itself on an irreversible path of progress and development. A recent trip to that country by this writer was indeed a big eye opener, as it was quite revealing. Upon arrival at the Kotoka International Airport, Accra, and driving through the well-paved and sparkling streets of the city, one was struck by the functionality of the state and disciplined conduct of the citizenry. If what was glimpsed from Accra and its environs-functioning infrastructure, civilised social behaviour, enlightened and polite police force, conducive university environment, austere and focused political leadership, patriotic political class - is anything to go by, the reformist changes embarked upon by the Ghanaian state in the 90s would seem to have yielded and continue to yield handsome dividends. Ghana has made remarkable progress over time. A major area where this is clearly evident is human capital and social infrastructure. From the courteous immigration and other airport officials to taxi drivers and hotel staff and ordinary people on the lively streets of Accra, the country appears to be a study in disciplined social conduct and forthrightness. There are useful lessons to be drawn from Ghana which in the late 70s and 80s presented a classical case of a failed state. It will be recalled that following the collapse of the Ghanaian economy within the period, the country suffered one of the worst cases of human capital flight, with several of her citizenry escaping to Nigeria and other neighbouring countries to evade the ravaging hardship and hunger in the land. It is indeed amazing to say the least that the country that suffered such tragic fate not too long ago has risen from the ashes of the economic ruins of the past to rediscover itself and is making steady progress in all facets of human endeavour. The impressive functional infrastructure, crime-free neighbourhoods and organised way of life of the people contrast sharply with our own situation here. We, in Nigeria have always had this self-delusion that our country is the giant of Africa and leader of the continent. Yes, in our state of delusion of grandeur, we can permit ourselves the indulgence of such self-adulation. But the truth of the matter is that the giant status of Nigeria finds expression and meaning only within the context of our numerical strength. And this is not lost on Ghanaians who in contrast see their country as the gateway to Africa. After the calamitous events in Ghana in the 70s and 80s which shook the nation to its very foundation, the country has remained an oasis of stability within the crisis-ridden West African sub-region. Inspite of the fact that Ghana is a multi-ethnic and multi-religious country like Nigeria, the issue of the National Question has been satisfactorily resolved through the granting of autonomy to the constituent regions in the country. Besides, the question of political succession which has been the bane of several post-colonial states in Africa is no longer an issue in that country. The defeat of the ruling party in the 2000 elections in Ghana and the successful transfer of power to the opposition party, National Patriotic Party (NPP) led by John Kuffour is a rare feat in Africa, comparable perhaps to similar precedents in Zambia and Benin Republic. The 2003 Presidential elections in Nigeria is still a subject of litigation at the Supreme Court almost one and half years after. Certainly we have one or two lessons to learn from Ghana in this respect. Ghana is a society driven by law and order. It does not operate on the whims and caprices of anybody no matter how highly placed. As a first time visitor, one does not need any tutorials from Government agents to appreciate that Ghana's democracy is firmly anchored on the rule of law. It is self-evident. Much more importantly, Ghana boasts of a vibrant and robust press, unfettered by any institutional inhibitions, fearless judiciary, strong civil society and above all, an enlightened police force. Indeed, the audience that witnessed a public lecture delivered by the Inspector-General of Police of Ghana Nana Owusu-Nsiah at the Accra International Conference Centre on Thursday September 9, 2004 on the "Role of the Police Force in a Democracy" were more than thrilled by his expose on the level of sophistication that has been attained by the Ghanaian police in the discharge of its mandate under a democracy. From the presentation and confirmation by ordinary Ghanaians, Ghana's Police Force has undergone a remarkable transformation with resultant civility in the enforcement of the law. According to the Inspector General of Police, "The police must obey the law. The law is the only sensible guide in a democracy". He went further to state that Chapter 5 of the Ghanaian Constitution enjoins the police to ensure that human rights and fundamental liberties of the people are not trampled upon in the course of law enforcement. For him, gone were the days when a suspect being arrested or under custody was subjected to brutalisation or any form of indignity. He also disclosed that the Ghanaian police was bound by the law to provide protection for those organising a protest march provided that the organisers give the police five days' notice. Much more than every other thing, what impressed me most was the disciplined conduct of the people, orderliness on the roads, neatness of the streets, functioning infrastructure (I was informed that in the last five years Ghana has had uninterrupted power supply), absence of street urchins and security of lives and property. Indeed, the deputy governor of Nasarawa State, Mr. Labaran Maku, who was also a guest speaker at the Accra International Conference Centre, better captured the on-going revolution in Ghana in his chat with me. According to him, Ghana has moved away from a state driven by raw power to an idea-based society. As we grapple with the challenges of nation building, we must begin today to re-define our values as people with a view to enriching the moral content of our democracy. If Ghana can get it right, Nigeria can also get it right if we begin to imbibe the right ethos. * Nwosu, former Media Adviser to the Senate President, lives in Abuja. Source: Nwosu, Emeka |
Antell95: Chai!!!MUMUgerian kids are busy begging their Ghanaians counterparts in Russia to survive https://www.nairaland.com/1292269/nigerian-students-scholarship-russia-beg ![]() Being tethered to a bottom-dwelling sh-ithole could indeed be very, very frustrating. Abeg as I was saying before this fuleish goat interrupted, let some sucker with a brain of a fish play me my favourite song………. Naija jagajaga… Nigeria jagajaga ![]()
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In shitnigeria, young girls are impregnated and kept in secret locations. When they give birth, the babies are taken away and sold to the highest bidder! LOL. Just like they do for animals..like goats,sheep and cows! https://www.osundefender.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/pregnant-factory-teenagers.jpg ![]() |
hahahahahaha shitnigerians are hated everywhere? LOL the dirtiest animals in the whole world just see how this American babe just finished the modafakas [img] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxsfP7KkTQ4[/img] ![]() http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxsfP7KkTQ4 ![]() |
the whole maggot-infested sh1thole named shitnigeria is a slum 120 million without electricity https://www.nairaland.com/1314971/120m-nigerians-without-electricity-fg no wonder lagbaja said you apes are foooools http://fabmagazineonline.com/fab-outburst-nigerians-are-mumus-fools-lagbaja/ ![]() omo naija generator republic https://www.nairaland.com/1728602/generator-fumes-kill-family-lagosthe most hated nation https://www.nairaland.com/1717235/nigeria-th-most-hated-country ![]() LOL no wonder the frustrated apes are spewing insults https://www.nairaland.com/1716876/nairalanders-frustrated-why-insultive ![]() hahaha shitnigerians youthst are the least happy in the world frustrated and impoverished magg0ts suffering and no longer smiling? https://www.nairaland.com/1694439/nigerian-youth-least-happy-world#22547342 ![]() Hahahahaha nigayria? Bvllsh1t country inhabited by azzholes and thieving scvmbags ![]() Such a miserable ,dirty stinking place ![]() Nigeria jagajaga, Everything scatter scatter Poor man dey suffer suffer Gbosa, gbosa, gunshot inna de air. hahaha go chop your miserable eba and dog meat eew ![]() iconize: You're a god-accursed odious t_wat from the gorillas clan with an IQ lower than a toad's.
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Utter nonsense! 250 million cedis equals 800,000 naira or $6,000? hahahaha wahala dey oooooooooo chei I am not surprised oooooh! shitnigerians are the dumbest people on earth a shitnigerian secondary school was asked what was 30 minus 28 and the ape's answer was 18![/size][size=8pt] fuckeduppedness ![]() you nigerian monkeys are such a disgrace to the human race! You animals are unfuckinbeliavable! Fuckeduppenedness a nation of fooools http://dailyindependentnig.com/2013/02/nigeria-a-nation-of-160million-fools/ ![]() Being tethered to a bottom-dwelling shitnigeria could indeed be very, very frustrating Chineke, you are the most phucked person in the whole wide world. Clueless, bombastic and fuelish vulture-eating wizard with a brain of a two-day old baby! Kiss my arse, ugly bas-tard! ![]() Most of these eediots with a brain of a fish have never even stepped outside Nigeria in their miserable lives. All they hear is the half-truths and propaganda their incompetent, clueless and corrupt officials tell them. ![]() hahahahaha see shitnigerian bleached wowo female apes being trafficked abroad as sex slaves. heard in some homes families even sell off properties to send their daughters abroad to go and do pr0stitution http://www.channelstv.com/home/2013/06/24/nigerian-girls-scattered-abroad-as-sex-slaves/ ![]() Whack a con! dirty, ugly pig! Is it my fault your country is so phucked? You better find something to do with your miserable life, maggot! You can join the kidnappers association and do what millions of your demonic countrymen are doing,huh? People are kidnapped for gala and coke in your sh1thole ![]() Undernourished, undereducated, unemployable eediot! ![]() Zoharariel: Charley,
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Zoharariel: Yes! Even Dangote's Eight Seater Private Jet was $45Million in 2010arrant nonsense! do you know how much 250 million Ghana cedis is worth in dollars, compared with 250 million naira? such crass stvpidity |
[s] iconize: "Cowardice is made in gayna" even santamafia refused to quote me, he'll rather post a comment and scamper for safety immediately.[/s] hahahahaha damn fvcking self righteous demon! the goat talking from its aNuS, as usual. ![]() at least Ghanaians are not eating from the dustbin like they do in your cursed country see your ape-like brothers fighting over fashola's left-over fanta in lagos if workmen can disgrace themselves this way, can you imagine what young unemployed suffering-and-no-longer smiling shitnigerians can do? no wonder your people are fleeing to Ghana in their thousands every day suffering and smiling every shitnigerian is desperate for a Ghanaian passport because the shitnigerian passport is as worthless as tissue paper who'll give a shitnigerian visa? omo naija generator republic ![]() whack a con! The shitnigerian’s problem starts from birth. Hahahahaha nurses use torchlight to deliver babies in that sh1thole! No wonder they suffer all forms of deformities and brain dysfunction! Chei, these modafakas are indeed a disgrace to mother Africa. https://www.nairaland.com/1282283/nurses-use-mobile-phone-torchlights#15605877 ![]() too many mor0ns in that sh1thole https://www.nairaland.com/1613936/nigeria-country-too-many-morons ![]() disgracing Africa since 1800! see what these fuelish shitnigerians are doing just take a look at the photos below. see what iconise, aka collnzoo's- wife is doing showing off her dirty butt and pooosie ![]()
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Arrant nonsense! you talk like a fooooooooooooool! and you think your economy is doing any better? all it takes is for the price of crude to fall and we'll see you magg0ts running shelter-skeeter. just a drastic fall in the international price for crude and we'll see your generator-driven economy in free fall. even now it is not as if your economy is doing better than the Ghanaian economy. It is even worse when it comes to taking a look at socio-economuc indexes within the context of the United Nations Human Development Index. In any case even with your so-called largest economy ……….. How come life expectancy in your sh1thole is a miserable 52 years, compared with 64 years for Ghana? How come 90% of your long-suffering, boko haramed, crime-prone, depraved people survive on $2 a day, compared with 52% people in Ghana? How come your country is rated 139th most corrupt, Ghana is 64th How come 120 million nigerians don’t have access to electricity, and yet 70% of Ghanaians have electricity? How come 143 out of 1000 children in nigeria die before their fifth birthday, while in Ghana 74 children out of 1000 suffer death before their 5th birthday? How come the Dupont Food Security Index ranked nigeria 86 in terms of food security and the general wellbeing of its citizens, and Ghana was ranked 68? How come your generator-driven economy grew at 6.9 percent in 2013, while that of Ghana expanded by 8 percent? whatever challenges Ghana is going through are just short-term fiscal imbalances, ediot! Ghana is even lucky because its economy is more diversified than that of your dustbin country! all it takes is for oil prices to fall and your magg0t-infested sh1thole will be worse than Somalia! arrant nonsense! [s] matify: You must be racist and for the invectives you spewed in your post, you just unmasked you schizophrenic identity worsened by ingestion of adulterated anti-psychotics.[/s]
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matify: We better pull out from this ECOWAS free travel shit before we are inundated by another wave of Ghanian influx like the one of the 80's which ended with the " Ghana must go" saga.rubbish rant from a deluded monkey! The Ghanaian economy is still growing at nearly 7 percent and Ghana is the third largest recipient of foreign direct investment in africa and you are here talking trash? do you know the number of calls I get each from your clueless, shambolic and shameless shitnigerian goat brothers and sisters each day wanting to come to Ghana? the shitnigerian stvpidity has no limit,walahi! ![]() at least people are not eating from the dustbin in Ghana as they do in your sh1thole! fuckeduppedness
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Buttocks: Ghana would be the worst-hit because those people would give anything to lick white sccrotum.MUMU, foooolish shitnigerians with inferiority complex. you magg0ts worship "white" skin- even that of a bleached albino no wonder skin cancer as a result of excessive skin bleaching is ravaging the sh1thole ![]() didn't one your broadcasters say on national TV that being white is a blessing? meaning having a black skin is a curse? you need to get rid of the generator fumes in your tiny, stvpid brain!
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