Teymanhenry's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Teymanhenry's Profile › Teymanhenry's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 (of 77 pages)
At this point, it is painfully clear that the president is unable—or unwilling—to protect the lives of Nigerians, especially Christians. Each time tragedy strikes, we hear the same words: “The president has ordered…” But these orders always come after innocent people have been slaughtered, after villages have been burned, after families have been destroyed. We did not need prophecy to know where the danger was. We know the high-risk areas. We know the forests where these killers hide. By now, every village should have been protected by forest guards, soldiers, and police. Instead, our people were left exposed, helpless, and forgotten. What hurts the most is the feeling that these deaths could have been prevented—that our leaders saw the danger coming and chose silence, delay, and indifference. Nigerians are not dying because protection is impossible; they are dying because it was denied. |
Our problem isn’t lack of information—it’s deliberate ignorance. We read less, watch less, and pretend not to know. Are we really unaware of the growing insecurity and terrorism in Venezuela? Yes, the U.S. may be interested in Venezuela’s crude oil, but the bigger question is this: why would a government allow its country to become so weak and unstable that it’s exposed to foreign interference? Nations are rarely destroyed from outside first—they are weakened from within. |
The day I get things kind money, na only police or army go make me no fit chop am. I go either change identity and location completely, leave naija, or become a ghost.... Omoh 330 milli?? Haba |
Nothing destroys lives faster than stigma—whether it comes from others or from within ourselves. The fear of being identified as a Person Living with HIV (PLHIV) often convinces us that disclosure equals rejection, shame, or the end of life. But that fear is built on myths, not truth. HIV is a manageable medical condition, just like COVID-19, diabetes, or hypertension. With proper treatment, people living with HIV live long, healthy, and fulfilling lives. The real danger is not the virus—it’s the silence, the shame, and the self-imposed prison stigma creates. When we confront stigma, seek treatment, and choose knowledge over fear, HIV loses its power over our lives. Break the stigma, embrace care, and you’ll realize that HIV is not a death sentence—it’s a journey that can be walked with strength, dignity, and hope. |
Odobaone:They've tolerated them already. With our failed security system have been politicized. we all know that once a terrorist is caught and isn't killed, there is a higher chance that he'll be set free to roam. Instructions will always come from ogas at the top. |
GEJDHERO:Stupid girls. The level of shamelessness in this world is alarming |
At this point every shameless woman in the church would come with stories of how he either had sex with them or got them pregnant. The good thing is they are not minors. You are having sex with your pastor and still got the balls(vagina) to come and shamelessly announced it to the public |
This crisis has no political party, no religion, no tribe, and no region. It is a matter of life and death. Yet we have been deceived into believing our leaders care. The truth is harsh: basic amenities are not absent by accident — they are denied by design. As long as we keep fighting ourselves along party, religious, or ethnic lines, nothing will change. Only when we stand together will Nigeria stand a chance. |
Greed. Corruption. Religion. Nepotism. Four horsemen driving hardship straight into the lives of ordinary people. Our leaders know the truth. When fuel dropped from ₦1,600 to ₦800, did transport fares come down? No. Not even by ₦50. Everyone noticed. Nobody acted. Now look at flight tickets—prices shooting into the stratosphere with zero justification. No explanation. No regulation. Just “manage it.” And here’s the painful part: the job of the Federal Government is not to give speeches. It is to make policies, enforce them, and punish defaulters. Control excesses. Protect citizens. That’s governance 101. But hell no—nothing happens. Why? Because the offender is “one of us.” Because of religion. Because of politics. Because someone knows someone who knows someone. So rules exist only on paper, sanctions are selective, and accountability is a luxury reserved for the poor. The rich break laws, the connected bend them, and the rest of us are told to endure. This isn’t suffering by accident. It’s hardship by design. |
I want to believe this to be a ploy to deceive the terrorists. Else how can the US publicize their next move |
Raf4:😂 You are delusional |
Raf4:😂 Yu are delusional |
CodeTemplarr:It's a basic illustration, to make delusional people understand this simple concept |
CodeTemplarr:You think so?? Only a few persons probably less than 5 in the whole nation knew the target location . And this is done life with satellite zoom zone. They know and can see the targets. It works exactly how you see in the movies |
maasoap:People perish or turn to clowns because they don't read. Israel have never been a Christian country as a matter of fact, Christians are only about 2% of the total population of Israel |
My greatest joy about this whole scenario is how Tinubu decide to ignore everyone on this, kept quiet and let the USA do their thing. He's realized that the sponsors of terrorism in Nigeria are same people he dines with. He federal government have publicly shown its agreements to collaborate with the USA to protect the lives of its citizens since it has failed to do that in over 20years. This route would definitely reduce the heightened rate of terrorism in the country |
odejimioflagos:So you want them to notify the public( terrorists) that they'll strike?. How deeply ignorant are you? Haven't you seen an agreement with the Federal government already? If you haven't, please go and read the papers before you shamelessly expose your ignorance here |
stuffs2002:As an M&E professional with experience across multiple facilities, this is no longer a matter of opinion but evidence. Christians may appear to have more “baby mamas,” but many of these women would likely be married in an Islamic setting. Because Christianity largely practices monogamy, fewer women get married, leading to more births outside wedlock. Islam permits up to four wives, not counting divorce and remarriage, which naturally increases marriage coverage and fertility. In practice, Muslim women also tend to have higher parity—on average nearly double that of Christian women. This is consistent with facility data. In programs like AP3 Amplified, we often counsel Muslim women on family planning, sometimes discreetly providing methods like Sayana, Depo, or Implanon when spousal consent is an issue. This is data, not bias. Once emotion enters a factual discussion, learning stops. |
Biodun556:Israel would ban Christianity too cause they are mostly Jewish and Christianity disgust a good number of them |
Raf4:So how many have converted or seen converted ? |
CyynthiaKiss:Look at Nigeria carefully, not emotionally. One of the quiet forces shaping religious numbers isn’t preaching, miracles, or debates—it’s demography. In many Muslim communities, polygamy is normal and accepted. One man, two, three, sometimes four wives. Naturally, that means more households, more children, more rapid multiplication. It’s not addition; it’s compound growth. On the other hand, Christianity largely promotes monogamy—one man, one wife. Growth here is mostly by addition, not multiplication. Two parents, a few children, and that’s it. So while Christians are often busy arguing doctrine, Muslims are quietly expanding their numbers at home. No noise. No controversy. Just biology and culture doing the work. Does this mean Islam will “dominate” Christianity? Not automatically. Numbers alone don’t tell the full story. Education, urbanization, personal belief, and conversion still matter. But ignoring population dynamics is like ignoring the engine while arguing about the paint color. It’s not an insult. It’s not fear-mongering. It’s just a conversation about reality. And the uncomfortable truth is this: Growth favors systems that multiply faster. Whether Christianity responds with strategy, adaptation, or simply awareness—that’s another conversation entirely. |
Let’s be clear, this was not a U.S. strike. The coordinates and distances alone make such an error practically impossible. North-West Nigeria is far from Kogi State, and any professional military operation would factor that in. What we’re likely seeing instead is a deliberate attempt at manipulation. This is most likely an ISIS or Boko Haram tactic aimed at confusing the public and shifting blame. Misinformation is one of their strongest weapons, and we must not fall for it. Critical thinking matters now more than ever. |
A simple rule of thumb: don’t kill wall geckos—they’re your silent helpers, feeding on cockroaches and keeping their numbers in check. To stay ahead of infestations, make it a habit to use green leaves, especially inside your kitchen cupboards. Never leave used plates or kitchen utensils overnight; roaches go wherever food is available. Store all food in airtight containers, keep fruits in the refrigerator, and maintain a clean kitchen at all times. Most importantly, clean your home regularly and use green leaves routinely,even when you don’t see any cockroaches. Prevention, after all, is better than infestation. |
This is what strong collaboration looks like. With the Nigerian government working hand in hand with the United States, the tide is finally turning. Their supply lines have been cut off, their hiding places exposed, and now they are under constant attack. There is nowhere left to run, nowhere left to hide. One by one, these terrorists will be forced to surrender, and peace will slowly return to our land. |
Nigerian churches will tell you to bring gifts for Jesus. Bunch of scammers |
EmperorGodswill:No matter what you do, don't vote a man from North |
If you operate on a busy route and your keke runs on gas, it is possible to earn well over ₦10,000 daily. In fact, during a survey we conducted in Nasarawa State, some keke riders reported making as much as ₦25,000 per day. Their major complaint, however, was not low income but the burden of daily remittances to keke owners, who are often politicians. |
People like him can easily help their people win elections because of population they bring to the table . However, the downside is that if his children may left poor and neglected, they could grow up with a strong likelihood of causing unrest and mayhem within the community. |
budaatum:Have a wonderful Chrsitmas |
budaatum:Your response says it all.... 😂 Merry. Christmas in advance |
budaatum:They should have trained you well enough to understand that you don’t bring your dirty linen to social media and still expect all the responses to be positive. |
budaatum:You'll understand when he goes out to mount another woman. You can only use that against a broken husband... You are not happy with him and will allow him to mount you but will collect money when he hands it over to you right? |
