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Jobs/Vacancies / Re: First Bank Is Recruiting Tellers!!!!!! by suskumayaya(m): 4:18am On Sep 14, 2012 |
LAdepartment: Hello Adewunmi can u pls let me understand wat u meant by Hard copy CV, I've heard abt it but don't much undastandHard copy is the print out of your cv. |
Business / Re: Lagos Assembly Chides MTN Over Promo by suskumayaya(m): 2:35pm On Sep 13, 2012 |
Politics / Re: 2015: Igbo's Stand On Presidency Uncertain by suskumayaya(m): 7:10pm On Sep 12, 2012 |
bashr8: one day some people and news papers will die of heart attack because of igbo people, igbo dis igbo dat yet we dont give a damm about you people.Bros, its just a media report. No one gives a damn. |
Politics / Re: Obasanjo Is A Good Farmer But A Bad Economist - Sanusi by suskumayaya(m): 8:04am On Sep 12, 2012 |
s.ANUS.i should just shut up and listen to the people. Ok, OBJ is not an economist but what he did in a year will take this Fulani and his boss GEJ a decade to understand not to talk of accomplish |
Events / Re: Where Were You On September 11th 2001? by suskumayaya(m): 10:53pm On Sep 11, 2012 |
I was in OAU Campus Ile-Ife precisely in a Cafe (Eldorado). |
Politics / Re: 2015: Igbo's Stand On Presidency Uncertain by suskumayaya(m): 9:07pm On Sep 10, 2012 |
Summary: Igbo traditional leaders in Northern Nigeria held a meeting to discuss their stand on the security issues of Nigeria especially as it affects their businesses in the 19 northern Nigerian states. They also declare their support for GEJ as regards 2015 Elections. The MASSOB leader said there will be no reprisal attacks on Boko Haram. |
Politics / 2015: Igbo's Stand On Presidency Uncertain by suskumayaya(m): 4:04pm On Sep 10, 2012 |
WHERE will the Igbo stand in 2015? Will they back an Igbo candidate or align with President Goodluck Ebele Azikwe Jonathan – if he decides to run? Three questions implex at the weekend, with Igbo traditional rulers from the 19 northern states pledging to join forces with President Jonathan. Former Anambra State Governor Chukwuemeka Ezeire spoke for the Igbo leaders when he told reporters that “2015 is a very big thing (project), we are going to play a game of co- operation with Jonathan forces”. Chief Ezire spoke as Movement for the Actualisation of Survival of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) leader Ralph Uwazuruike reiterated the determination of the Igbo not to carry out reprisal attack on Northerners for attacks on Igbo in the North. The duo spoke in Abuja at a meeting of Ndi-Eze Igbo in the 19 Northern states hosted by the Chairman of the group, His Royal Highness Nwobu Ibe, Igbo 1 of Abuja. At the meeting were the Eze Nri and custodian of Igbo culture and tradition, Eze Obidiegwu Onyesoh; Eze Cletus Ilomuanya of Obinugwu in Imo State who is the chairman of the Southeast Council of Traditional Rulers; Chairman, Ndi Eze Igbo in 19 States, the host, Dr Ibe, the former governor of old Anambra State, Dr Ezife. According to the MASSOB leader, the meeting was at the instance of the security and welfare of the Igbo in the North. “As you can see, we came from Igbo land and we are here to see what has been happening to our people here in the North to talk with them, know their feelings and know the areas we can be of help to them,” Uwazuruike said. He declined comments on the Federal Government’s measures aimed at curbing the attacks, saying: “This is not for me to say here, if I’m not satisfied with what is happening. I have a way of communicating with them,” Uwazurike nonetheless assured that the Igbo would not embark on reprisal. He said: “I have said it before, our people will shun reprisal attacks because we don’t believe in killing someone just because another person was killed. We shall continue to advise our people to refrain from reprisal attacks and ensure that we do not encourage that. “However, governments should accept their responsibilities by making sure that people ‘s lives and property are secured”. Ezife who noted that the forum would also explore means of seeking the government’s proactiveness of government in curbing the incidents, regretted that the Igbo were adversely affected by the attacks. He said: “We are here to also find out how we can develop a response to it in terms of pleading with the government to do more. “How much affected the Igbo were by the attacks does not matter because we all know that when you go and bomb a church, you are bombing the Igbo; when you go and bomb a spare part-markets, it is the Ndigbos that are more affected. “This is not to say that we are the only target but we are involved but as Christians, we are the dominant people, so anybody attacking Christians is invariably attacking us also though not necessarily because we are Igbos but because we are also Christians.” On the way forward, Ezeife said: “Nobody knows we are ever going to get to this level because suicide bombing is alien to us. How do you relate to person that has made up his mind to die. “The long term solution is enlightenment, public education on religious matters that will make it certain that our brothers, Christians and Muslims, know the meaning and limit of what their scriptures are saying. Source:thenationonlineng.net/2011/news/60965-2015%3A-igbos-stand-on-presidency-uncertain.html |
Romance / Re: Don't Fall For A Dreamer by suskumayaya(m): 11:15am On Sep 07, 2012 |
AmBeautiful: Please what course is this and when is the exam; |
Romance / Re: Don't Fall For A Dreamer by suskumayaya(m): 11:13am On Sep 07, 2012 |
Most single ladies in their 30s are guilty of the analogy provided. (Now, am talking of those that are interested in marriage) |
Romance / Don't Fall For A Dreamer by suskumayaya(m): 11:00am On Sep 07, 2012 |
IN the archives you would find poems that tell tales about your status in a particular relationship. It is indeed a very long list that examines what you are desiring; sadness, friendship,'I love you and thinking about you' messages. One of such romantic poems that yours truly ran into recently goes thus: "Every moment spent with you is like a beautiful dream come true….. “My favourite place to be is inside of your hugs, where it's warm and loving”. Sounds nice and very romantic indeed. Some, however, would say it is only for dreamers and dreams, like we all know, are usually a temporary thing. Just when you begin to feel and imagine the goodies in store, it vanishes into thin air. So, you try to run after your dream and the more you try, the more elusive it becomes. Almost like chasing shadows and you get exasperated in the process. In your frustration, you may just wish you never had this dream in the first place. What is the point dreaming of something you can never have? What is the point having emotions that are bottled up? What is the point having emotions that you just can't express? When you can't attain this love height, then you have endless dreams. What you need is endless love and then you begin to wish and wish - thoughts that need a vehicle for expression. Love can, therefore, be very colourful if you can express your dreams. Here you need to be understood, you need to communicate properly, and there must be moderation in the things you do or do not do. You must carry your partner along and do not expect them to conform to your 'myopic' idea of love. A pretty gal got the best bargain from the one she loved. Instead of falling in line with this love tango, she chose to be a dreamer. She wanted a perfect Romeo, and instead of enjoying her dreams, she converted it into a nightmare. Here is a story of a dreamer. ....Banke & Tolu..... If you call Banke a daddy's girl, you would certainly not be wrong at all. Her father is her superhero, the man she grew up to love and adore. Well, she was lucky because he was always there for her and the other siblings. A man with a sacrificial heart, always giving and asking for nothing or little in return. Happily, she scrolls back in years, painting picture of some memorable moments shared together and you agree that he was, indeed, a great father. As she takes you through his scale of preference then, you just cannot help but marvel that our friend was blessed with a wonderful father. Luckily, for the old man, everyone appreciated his kind gestures. Today, those efforts have actually yielded good fruits and each time he takes a walk down memory lane he usually sheds tears of joy. Yes, everyone would certainly be proud to have such a man as a dad. Even though this has become a positive reference point in the family, it has also become a minus for our dear Banke. Unfortunately for her, she has become tied to his apron strings in such a way that almost everything she does revolves around her dear father. Her father actually saw it coming and so he took time to caution his beloved daughter to loosen up a bit .Like a bad habit, it was quite difficult to shift at all. Luckily for her, things went smoothly for a while and then one day she met Tolu at a friend's place. From the moment their paths crossed they liked and admired each other. It was indeed a sizzling romance and almost everyone thought it was going to take them to the altar, where they would both take the vows, 'to live happily together forever'. Midway into this love tale, things just began to fall apart. Naturally, we would think that Tolu was playing around or was just being impossible. No, not at all! He was a wonderful beau, a very straight character with a loving heart. Tolu was always ready to give as much as 70 or 80 per cent, just giving and playing his part well. Banke wasn't a bad girl either. She had a loving heart and was dutiful; the snag, of course, was the habit of seeing every man fitting into her father's shoes. Every action was seen from her father's perspective and on a daily basis she compared notes and kept on nagging Tolu and his attitudes, which he acquired overtime, like an' headmistress.' Change certainly is the most constant thing, but then you just can't force the other person to comply. Even if you want a change, it would take some time and conviction on the part of the person. Here, Tolu was indeed a square peg and perfectMiss Banke expected him to fit into her definitions according to daddy's gospel. Each time he tried to impress Banke dearest, he was shocked to find her holding fastidiously to daddy's 'ancient 'ways of doing things. Initially, Tolu thought it was a phase that would ultimately pass away. Unfortunately, it didn't. She got worse and at a stage very irritating, thus taking away the shine from their relationship. He moved from hot to cold and the emotional sparks they used to experience vanished along the line. It was, therefore, obvious that his sweetheart was never going to change. Instead of having to fight emotional battles all the time, poor Tolu just had to let go. He also did not like the idea of fighting with this stubborn lover. “There is no point hanging on, if all we are going to be doing is to look for each other's fault. That would definitely defeat the purpose and make me sad. I can't imagine shouting at her; I won't just like to hurt her at all.” He had come to the realisation that his sweetheart was so in love with 'daddy'. You just can't bend her; she is definitely going to be Daddy's girl forever. |
Jobs/Vacancies / Re: Nigeria Breweries Plc 2nd Ability Test by suskumayaya(m): 11:44am On Sep 04, 2012 |
Since you applied as a brewer, the expected questions will be strictly on the functions of a brewer. So base your readings on brewing and necessary work precautions. |
Travel / Re: The Most Expensive Places To Live In Nigeria! by suskumayaya(m): 5:08pm On Sep 03, 2012 |
dj187: Maitama (abuja) is d most expensive area in naija followed by banana island (lagos).......A plot of land Maitama = N600,000,000 & above , Banana island = N250,000,000 & aboveThey are both 250m and above. |
Car Talk / Re: New Lagos Traffic-Law Catches First-Victim - Bullion Van Driver by suskumayaya(m): 5:28pm On Aug 29, 2012 |
Paul John: But this bankers are wicked. They're begging for the release of the Bullion van and not even the driverMost of the drivers are seconded staff i.e not a direct staff of the bank. So The driver is on his own while the bullion van is the bank's property and hence, their action. 1 Like |
Politics / Re: Which Is D Most Peacefull African State? by suskumayaya(m): 9:23am On Aug 27, 2012 |
There seems to be orderliness in Botswana when compared to other African countries. |
Politics / Re: Jonathan Is Not A Drunk, Glutton –abati by suskumayaya(m): 9:19am On Aug 27, 2012 |
Why must Abati respond to every comments ascribed to the presidency on social network? There are other pressing issues that begs for attention. |
Business / Re: Lagos Assembly Chides MTN Over Promo by suskumayaya(m): 10:52pm On Aug 26, 2012 |
Brand_new: No one ever wins anything. They`re having a field day with all these fake promos with no winners. MTN is supposed to be sent packing. I agree with you. |
Business / Re: Lagos Assembly Chides MTN Over Promo by suskumayaya(m): 10:24pm On Aug 26, 2012 |
I won't be surprised if no one wins the star prize(aeroplane) at the end of the promo. |
Business / Lagos Assembly Chides MTN Over Promo by suskumayaya(m): 10:15pm On Aug 26, 2012 |
The Lagos State House of Assembly has lampooned telecommunication giant, MTN, over its wonder promo. Chairman of the House Committee on Information, Strategy, Security and Publicity, Hon. Segun Olulade, blasted the firm for encouraging Lagosians to participate in the promo that promises luxurious gifts such as aero plane with a fee of N200. The promo, he said, has the tendency to contribute to the growing trend of moral decadence in the society. Olulade said it creates the impression among youths that there are undignified short cuts to wealth, negating the ideals of labour and responsibility. He argued that marketing hypes of this kind would go a long way to further insult the collective intelligence of Nigerians and defeat the purpose they are meant to serve. The lawmaker advised MTN to consider the far- reaching implications of the controversial promo on its brand’s integrity in Nigeria, especially if the promises are not fulfilled. He urged MTN to devise more dignifying sale strategies and intensify efforts in the area of Corporate Social Responsibility CSR). He called on the Nigeria Communication Commission (NCC) as well as the Consumers Protection Council (CPC) to critically look into the modalities surrounding the various business promos in the country. Source: www.thenationonlineng.net/2011/news-update/59105-lagos-assembly-chides-mtn-over-promo.html |
Politics / Is Tinubu Stating The Fact Or Mere Seeking International Recognition? by suskumayaya(m): 9:56am On Aug 25, 2012 |
This is a long speech but it seem to worth the time because it touched on some political issues in Nigeria. Text of Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s speech at the Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, DC. on August 22. I am honored to be here today at the Woodrow Wilson Centre and thank you for inviting me. I commend the work that you do. This is an institution known for scholarship, lively discourse and the search for policies that advance peace and development. By shining the light of knowledge, you help dispel ignorance and explore solutions to conflicts. Therefore, I will do my humble best to speak in the spirit that is the hallmark of this venerable institution. •Nigeria is the focus of our conversation today and I will attempt to briefly capture the challenges that confront us as a nation. I have devoted most of my adult life to promoting democracy in Nigeria. The battle has been neither short nor easy. I have lived in exile, unsure if I would ever see my homeland again. My life has been under threat to the point where I did not know if I would see the next sunrise. I say these things not to boast. There are thousands who made similar or greater sacrifice. I say these things so you may understand that my address to you is based on the long-term perspective of a person who has occupied the trenches from the onset of the struggle for democracy versus dictatorship in Nigeria. I am not of that class of politicians who have benefitted from the struggle without participating in it. Because they never invested themselves in this clash between liberty and blind might, these politicians do not fully appreciate, nor do they seek to advance the cause of democracy. Because my life has been defined by the achievements and setbacks recorded in this struggle, I understand with every sinew and fiber of my being how far we have come and how far we have yet to go. Background: The House has not fallen but its structure is weak Nigeria currently is tossed by four distinct but related storms. First, we exist in political limbo. Although uniformed generals no longer formally control the levers of government, the ways and manner of military rule still dominate the political landscape. We hold elections in Nigeria. But that isolated fact does not a democracy make. •Nigeria exists in that strange dimension where we have a civilian government equally possessed of the attributes of authoritarian rule as if democratic governance. Everyday Nigeria awakens, it awakens to this hybrid existence and a vexing question: To which side shall the balance tip? Although most of us consider this an unfortunate predicament, numerous actors profit from the current state of affairs. Leading figures in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have repeatedly proclaimed the objective of ruling Nigeria for an uninterrupted sixty- year period. Such dynastic aspirations are at variance with true democracy. •Then there are those of us who believe the veneer of democracy is insufficient in this day and age. We believe Nigeria cannot remain a confused hybrid without succumbing to national regression. The nation must move either toward real democracy or real disaster. People are fond of saying that Nigeria is at the crossroads. Our situation is more complex than what the phrase usually implies. We are like a person with multiple personalities standing at the crossroads. Consequently, we remain locked in a struggle simultaneously pulling Nigeria in different directions. Democratic and authoritarian forces engage in a tug-of-war in which the soul of Nigeria’s governance is the prize at stake. •Due to the fact that competing elements of the political class have been locked for the last 13 years in this struggle to define the nature of government, there has been insufficient governance for the benefit of the people. We certainly have not seen much good governance. To be honest, we have not even had much in the way of purposeful democratic governance. Unfortunately, we have suffered more from inertia and confusion than from rule of intelligent but malevolent design. •Second, mostly due to Boko Haram and criminal groups in the northern and eastern parts of the country, internal security has ebbed to a low point. This has led to fear and uncertainty. Tension now dominates religious and political activities. It has had a profound chilling effect on economic activity in many areas. In many places, for example, children no longer go to school and farmers neglect their fields, fearing attacks by Bolo Haram. •Third, ethnic and sectional divisions are presently higher in Nigeria than at any time in recent memory. The ruling party resides in a state of chronic indigestion regarding the ethnic and regional allocation of top offices in the party and government, especially that of the president. Although members of the same “ruling” party, political figures from the north and south hurl often reckless accusations at each other not because of differences over substantive issues but because of regional loyalties. They don’t differ over substantive issues because they rarely think about such matters. No, they bicker across the widening geographic and ethnic divide that they have helped to create. Those who should aspire to the status of statesmen lunge at one another like street brawlers. Talk of disintegration now is fashionable in some quarters. Two weeks ago, a faction of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) issued a Declaration of Independence in Nigeria and designed a flag representing the sovereignty of the Ogoni people. Calls for self-determination by the South East-based Movement for the Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) have intensified. Last week, MASSOB was reported to have applied for UN observer status. Add to these developments, the new sense of Ijaw ethnic consciousness, similar ethnic agitations and Boko Haram’s anomie and you realize all is not well with Nigeria. It is clear that centrifugal forces have gained strength and this noxious gain is substantially due to the intramural machinations that define the ruling party. •Fourth, for the majority of Nigerians, the economy functions as an obstacle not an ally. Government claims that Nigeria enjoys the world’s third fastest growing economy with annual GDP growth of roughly 7 percent. This handsome figure contrasts with the unattractive lives most people endure. Income inequality is among the worst in the world. A higher percentage of Nigerians now wallow in abject poverty since the ruling party came to power. With insecurity escalating across large swaths of the land, electricity generation at a miserable 4,000 MGWs for an entire nation of over 150 million people, the collapse of the manufacturing industry and spiraling unemployment figures of youths and college graduates, it is difficult to take the GDP figure at face value. The Nigerian government finds it convenient to lie. If by happenstance the GDP approximates the truth, it means super- elite within the elite benefits enormously while the rest of the nation suffers. True national prosperity cannot be founded on such a top-heavy architecture. Most Nigerians believe their lives are much harder now more than 13 years ago and getting worse. The hope that people still have about the future has nothing to do with the quality of government economic policy. It is mostly due to an innate sense of optimism that is a uniquely Nigerian trait which defies the normal standards of logic. It is one of the things that keeps Nigeria afloat though so many things say it should have already drowned. • The picture I have painted is stark but accurate, harsh but not hopeless. If I thought things were beyond hope, I would pursue another vocation. I am glued to this path because I believe a democratic, responsive government can improve Nigeria. However, if it persists along current policy lines, the federal government will resolve nothing and will preside over a worsening state. •I do not claim the opposition to be a choir of angels. We are not. Not all who call themselves to be opposition politicians are bona fide democrats. There is a principled opposition and an opportunistic one. Some are disgruntled elements of the current regime who have slipped into the opposition for a chance to settle personal scores or to advance personal ambitions through a different route. These people are opposition in name only; in reality, they are but the photographic negative of the status quo they purport to oppose. •Nor do I believe those in power are evil incarnate. Some are decent people. However, the governing system they have created and the dominant values under which that system operates extinguishes these people’s finer qualities. The overriding concern of the PDP political community is to retain power, not to advance the public welfare. With all our gaps and imperfections, the opposition is possessed of greater civic purpose and has in mind substantive policies qualitatively better than the toxin the current government is brewing. •In the rest of this address, I will contrast the policies of my party, the Action Congress of Nigeria, with those of government. You will see that we have significantly different visions. The problem with our current rulers is not that they don’t love Nigeria. They love the concept of Nigeria well enough. The real problem is that they care little for the average Nigerian. •Insecurity: A growing nemesis igeria is fast becoming one of the most dangerous places on earth. The stories of militia killings, brutal attacks and bombings we thought restricted to Afghanistan, Iraq or Somalia are now daily fare in Nigeria. In Boko Haram, Nigeria confronts a creeping, low-grade, brutal insurgency. These extremists oppose more than the current Administration; they threaten Nigerian democracy. Large parts of the country now lie outside the authority and control of federal government. People in these areas are more cognizant of the extremists’ senseless violence than they are assured of the government’s ability to stop it. •There has been energetic debate whether poverty or a distorted Islamic radicalism feeds Boko Haram’s emergence. The debate is unnecessary. Both are factors. Poverty is a terrible weight that most of its sufferers bear silently. What rankles is not simply poverty but poverty occasioned by injustice. When young people concluded that their lives are finished before they start and that the reason for this is the corruption of government and established leaders, enter radical and violent ideas about Islam as the wrecking ball to tear down the corrupt edifice. Without this combustive mixture of poverty and injustice, Boko Haram would be a fringe movement with a few members engaged in petty crime. Because of this combination, Boko Haram is a socio-political reality with many members and even more sympathizers. Boko Haram is succeeding in its agenda to upend Nigeria. Not only has it challenged government authority across the North, it has revived ethno-religious antagonisms that were better left buried. •In the face of this threat, government has been ambivalent. One day, government states it will forcibly deal with the group. The next day government leans toward negotiations. Although this problem has been with us for some time, policy coordination remains ineffective. Because Government fears decisive action will produce political fallout, they have resolved to be irresolute. Thus, government has done little except leave an over-stretched and under-equipped police force, backed by army units in the most heavily-scarred locations, to respond to Boko Haram attacks and dispel their cells. The most one can say is that government policy is one of soft containment. This has proven to be ineffective, and perhaps counter-productive. • Government must realize BH is more than a law enforcement problem. It is a socio-political threat of such magnitude that confronting it can no longer be subservient to crass political calculations. Government must operate on a grander scale. While I do not fully agree with Assistant Secretary Carson’s proposal to create a Ministry of Northern Nigeria, I endorse the implication central to his recommendation: bold, strategic innovation is required. •Correct policy must be twofold. First, it must protect the people from repeated attacks. Second, it must weaken the extremist organization. Clandestine groups of this nature are comprised of factions of hardliners, pragmatists and casual followers. The task at hand is to drive a wedge between the other sub-groups and the hardliners. The pragmatists will be amenable to negotiation and reintroduction into society. As a socio-political solution is being fashioned in a way that reduces the number, operational breadth and political strength of BH, government can then treat the reduced number of hardliners as more strictly a law enforcement matter. What follows are important suggestions that government should explore to achieve these objectives: •Improve local community-based information-gathering and sharing. www.thenationonlineng.net/2011/news-update/58892-the-role-of-opposition-in-meeting-nigerias-challenges.html |
Phones / Re: Should BlackBerry Phone Be Banned In Nigeria? by suskumayaya(m): 2:25pm On Aug 24, 2012 |
The article is trash. 2 Likes |
Politics / Re: Adamawa Is Nigeria's Least Developed State by suskumayaya(m): 9:04pm On Aug 23, 2012 |
So Taraba State is more developed than Adamawa state. I think the index is flawed. |
Celebrities / Re: Rick Ross At Eko Hotel For Summer-Jam-Fest (Pics) by suskumayaya(m): 3:45pm On Aug 18, 2012 |
poweredcom: |
Celebrities / Re: Rick Ross At Eko Hotel For Summer-Jam-Fest (Pics) by suskumayaya(m): 3:43pm On Aug 18, 2012 |
poweredcom:How am i feeling inferior? Is it because i quoted his lyrics? Would i be feeling superior if i had quoted M.I's lyrics? you are yahnin dust. Stop the beef. your initial post was nothing but 'i too know'. Mind you, Hyping is an integral part of entertainment. |
Celebrities / Re: Rick Ross At Eko Hotel For Summer-Jam-Fest (Pics) by suskumayaya(m): 10:28am On Aug 18, 2012 |
poweredcom:Eeeeediotah, you are here yahning poo while your mate is making money rapping friction. keep living in your fools paradise, ode. |
Celebrities / Re: Rick Ross At Eko Hotel For Summer-Jam-Fest (Pics) by suskumayaya(m): 10:15am On Aug 18, 2012 |
muktar mtt: mumu welcm my ass shut up joe mtswMumuktar, why you deh announce your foolishness |
Career / Re: Should I Lie About Job Experiences? by suskumayaya(m): 9:32am On Aug 18, 2012 |
@OP It is not advisable to fake experience especially when you don't have one. My take on this issue is that you can add more period of time to your stated experience in your cv e.g if you have 6months experience and you know they require for 1or2 years experience in the job you are applying for, you can edit your cv to suit their requirements as long as you can defend your job roles. |
Celebrities / Re: Rick Ross At Eko Hotel For Summer-Jam-Fest (Pics) by suskumayaya(m): 8:49am On Aug 18, 2012 |
Revolva:You deh madt ni, why do u have to refer to my quote? Can't u comment without insulting? musicians says a lot of unrealistic things in their musics, so its not limited to ricky. And what do you know about mafioso? Stop criticizing blindly. |
Celebrities / Re: Rick Ross At Eko Hotel For Summer-Jam-Fest (Pics) by suskumayaya(m): 6:00pm On Aug 17, 2012 |
U r d bozz man. 'Bow to the boss in the presence of a don Started on the corner nigga, didn't have a coin Playing my position for a club that I can join Never in the draft, but that boy know he going Throw me a bone, get me a brick That's on the Quran I'ma go and get the chips Go and get a rental, I got a cute bitch She's showing some potential, so we taking trips Nigga, assets last while memories fade' *increasing it to d max vol* Welcome2naija 10 Likes |
Sports / Re: London Olympics 2012: Live Updates Of The Opening Ceremony by suskumayaya(m): 11:00pm On Jul 27, 2012 |
If u are from Zimbabwe go and sleep, they are the last on the list |
Sports / Re: London Olympics 2012: Live Updates Of The Opening Ceremony by suskumayaya(m): 9:49pm On Jul 27, 2012 |
MR BEAN wan kill me with laff o |
Fashion / Re: Ghana-Must-Go Shirt & Cap On Model by suskumayaya(m): 6:41pm On Jul 27, 2012 |
Crazitivity! 1 Like |
Romance / Re: Thank God I Haven't Paid Her Exam Fees? by suskumayaya(m): 12:10am On Jul 19, 2012 |
What is wrong with this guy? What's your point? As if you will give her for free. Nonsense What is wrong with this guy? What's your point? As if you will give her for free. Nonsense |
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