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Politics › Re: IMF Warns Nigeria Over Proposed $5 Billion Derivatives Financing Deal by Udomaogodo: 5:12pm On Jun 11 |
tiger28: Did you read the REST of IMF STATEMENTS ??
You definitely ignored the excellent news .
Emergency lovers of Nigeria! Professor please go and sleep. Warning na warning |
Politics › Re: Three Senators, Two Governors, One King, And One President (pic) by Udomaogodo: 11:12pm On Apr 06 |
SlavaUkraini: I am 74..... My younger sister is 82..... My daughter is 62
Who am I.... ? An ancestor from Iragbiji. Thank you |
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Politics › Re: Obi: Why I’ll Work With Malami, El-Rufai Despite Corruption Allegations by Udomaogodo: 10:22pm On Apr 01 |
ZACHIE: This guy dull true true His desperation is top notch indeed Buhari could not change Malami and it is Peter that will change in the name of Jesus? Peter will marry a prostitute just so he can change her. He is that filled with the holy ghoust. You're not dull but you're here capping dust. Mr Smart. |
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Politics › Re: Lagos Demolitions: Law, Justice, And Compassion - Peter Obi by Udomaogodo: 10:26am On Oct 07, 2025 |
Well said sir. oluwaseun, mezuzia nke fonu. i mean the remaining chara......... |
Politics › Re: Nigeria At 65: Nigerians Hungry For Food, Not Just Statistics – CAN by Udomaogodo: 10:29pm On Oct 01, 2025 |
helinues: But we are yet to read about anyone dying of hunger The hunger go first kpai you and your family |
Politics › Re: May Nigeria Keep Happening To Me — Reno Omokri by Udomaogodo: 11:48am On Oct 01, 2025 |
franchasng: May God's mercy continue to be my portion and that of my family and everything connected to me.
May my life, my livelihood, my children and family not depend on the economy and policies of Nigerian government, may we continue to enjoy the mercy, favor and grace of God Almighty that I serve, forever in Jesus name,
May God Almighty in His infinite mercy continue to exempt me, my children, family and generation from the insecurity and calamities brought upon Nigeria by bad leaders and failed government policies and actions. Me too.IJN AMEN |
Politics › Re: Tinubu Not Lying, Actual Naira Value Was ₦2,000/$ Under Buhari — Reno Omokri by Udomaogodo: 7:19am On Sep 05, 2025 |
casualobserver: This Reno’s sychophancy is getting too annoying even for me who is a Tinubu supporter.
Tinubu never said he met is at N1900. He said when I came in. When I came in is an ambiguous statement. The problem like I always say is NIgerians and their poor English comprehension.
The word “met” is a very specific word. He never said “he met”. When I came in is broad. When I came in could be any time in the early days of his administration.
When I came in could mean he met it at N1900 or at the early days or inception of his administration it was N1900. Met is specific because met means it was a condition that existed before he was president. He never said “met”. Those who are reporting it are saying “met”…..that’s not what he said.
Although the president himself would help by not using vague language when addressing people who anre not properly schooled in English, Nigerians need to work on their English. We have a habit of hearing one thing and interpreting it as we wish.
Or else why would someone say when I came in it was 1900 and when you report it you change the word to met and say I met it at 1900?
At least use the exact words he used! Grammarian.Teacher teach me nonsense. |
Politics › Re: Dollar No Longer King But Atiku, El-rufai, Obi Won’t Celebrate - Onanuga by Udomaogodo: 7:26am On Sep 03, 2025 |
helinues: Has your Google stopped working?
No dey ask me jamb question Itibolibo . Oya sue me now ooooóoooooo |
Politics › Re: The Top 10 Best-governed African Nations In 2025 by Udomaogodo: 11:59am On Aug 30, 2025 |
Chai. Naija will never be there courtesy of a rotten head. Tufiakwa. Talk of any wrong index we will be toping the list. |
Politics › Re: Osun Monarch Jailed Four Years In US For $4.2 Million COVID-19 Fraud by Udomaogodo: 7:42am On Aug 27, 2025 |
MaziObinnaokija:
serves him RIGHT.Hope Apetu OLOYEDE won't come out after 4 years and tell us he's not the one Exactly. Oh just like the one in charge of nija. |
Travel › Re: 411 Nigerians Killed In 2024 While Scooping Fuel From Fallen Tankers – FRSC by Udomaogodo: 7:34am On Aug 27, 2025 |
Dianna344: People are really sick upstairs...see examples here You're the sick one here my dear. Oga complete the thing. |
Romance › Re: HELP!! A Tomboy Is In Love With Me by Udomaogodo: 12:18pm On Aug 25, 2025 |
ChristCee: Ur a worker in the house of God and you speak carelessly like this?? you see am? |
Politics › Re: Obi Won 2023, Northern Elder Blasts Tinubu-i’d Never Work With This Power-drunk by Udomaogodo: 2:52am On Aug 12, 2025 |
Bitterest truth  .The thief fit kpai before 2027 |
Politics › Re: 2027 Elections Will Be Between Nigerians Of Conscience And The Rest — Rufai by Udomaogodo: 3:24am On Aug 03, 2025 |
Obi/El-rufai is a goal. Oga help me complete the thing.Thank you. |
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Politics › Re: Obi Was Co-Opted, He Never Formed The Obidient Movement - Iyere by Udomaogodo: 4:03am On Jul 14, 2025 |
raddyworld: Shebi u go soon hide as u dey u frustrated level when tinubu won in 2023. U just copy ur general saying of paying salary on everyone. Do u know who I am?
Listen and write it down Obi will won't have up to what he has in 2023. And that is what gave birth to Lagos reaction after the presidential vote in 2023. Please always quote me maturely not those childish stereotype commonly used by frustrated Lp group. Tinubu will only win Lagos in 2027 by rigging . Oga help me complete the thing. |
Politics › Re: Peter Obi Sharing Food At An Event (Photos) by Udomaogodo: 8:57pm On Jul 10, 2025 |
Putindbutt: This should be in Kaduna or Katsina, somewhere in the North. Why is this dude doing this to himself because of votes?. Holy sh!t 😭😭😭
Show us where your so called servant leader served you foods in Anambra or anywhere before?. Coalition primaries is building up gradually and this scammer don dey fish on people's sentiments 😂 Oga, go and rest this is not kaduna nor katsina but in his home state. |
Politics › Re: Reno Omokri's X account hacked hours before "Explosive" podcast by Udomaogodo: 4:32pm On Jun 23, 2025 |
Joker. I thought he has been appointed an ambassador but still has this much time to gossip around. |
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Politics › Re: Be Patient With Me, Tinubu Begs Nigerians by Udomaogodo: 8:21am On Jun 01, 2025 |
bcomputer101: From Hunger to Hope: Reflecting on Nigeria’s Journey Since “Ebi n Pawa”
“Ebi n pawa!” That expression — “We are hungry” — wasn’t just a complaint two years ago. It was a cry from the soul of a nation. It echoed from Lagos to Kano, Port Harcourt to Maiduguri. You didn’t need a microphone to hear it; it was in the faces of mothers at the market, fathers at the bus stop, young men on the streets, and children waiting for meals that never came. It became the anthem of pain, the chorus of a people grappling with the shock of sweeping reforms introduced by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in his very first week in office.
Nigeria was in turmoil, not because the policies were necessarily wrong, but because their timing hit a society already living on the edge. So the question we now face — two years later — is both urgent and fair: Are we still that hungry?
Back in May 2023, when Tinubu took the reins of power, the foundation of the Nigerian economy was cracked. No, not cracked — shattered. The nation was drowning in debt, most of it incurred not for building railways or factories, but for paying salaries, maintaining a fuel subsidy that lined the pockets of the rich, and defending an artificial exchange rate that stifled growth.
What the new president inherited was more than a moribund economy; it was a ticking time bomb. Oil had already been sold forward, meaning Nigeria was effectively broke. There was no money coming in from crude exports — our primary source of income — because it had been mortgaged in advance.
The previous administration of Buhari had quietly printed money, devaluing the naira without the courtesy of telling the public. But Tinubu couldn’t cry foul too loudly — some of those who caused this mess were his political allies.
He could have chosen the path of least resistance, the usual Nigerian way: kick the can down the road and pretend everything was fine. But he didn’t. In one of the boldest opening acts in Nigerian political history, he removed the fuel subsidy.
Suddenly, the price of fuel tripled. Transporters raised fares. Traders hiked prices. Even sachet water vendors felt the pinch. The people who were already struggling now felt like they were suffocating. The frustration was real, and so was the anger. Social media went ablaze. Protests flared. Opposition voices got louder. “Ebi n pawa!” they cried — and rightly so.
But that wasn’t the end of the storm. Next came the unification of the exchange rate. Nigeria had operated a dual-rate system for years, one for the privileged few who accessed dollars at official rates, and another for the rest of us who scrambled for forex in the black market. It was a system ripe for corruption, creating billionaires overnight while choking real businesses.
By merging the rates, Tinubu wiped away a major incentive for fraud. It wasn’t smooth — it never is. The naira plunged. The cost of imported goods spiked. But this was the price of honesty, of facing the truth about how things really were.
So, yes, we were hungry. But that hunger wasn’t just about food. It was about the pain that comes with correction — the sting of necessary surgery. The old system was bleeding us dry, and for once, someone decided to stitch the wound instead of just covering it up with another bandage.
Fast forward two years, and the picture is beginning to shift. No, it’s not yet paradise. Inflation is still biting. Prices of rice and garri still bring tears to the eyes. But compared to the chaos of 2023, we’re not where we used to be. Take a closer look — not with emotions, but with the eyes of understanding — and the signs of progress become clear.
Today, Nigeria has exited the IMF debtors’ list. That’s not just a statistic — it’s proof that we are no longer borrowing just to survive. The Tinubu administration cleared a $1.61 billion debt and restored Nigeria’s credibility on the global stage. Foreign investors are watching, and they’re starting to return. The stock market is booming. When he took over, the All Share Index stood at 55,738 points. Now, it’s over 103,000. Market capitalization has crossed ₦63 trillion. That’s not magic — it’s investor confidence fueled by clearer, bolder policies.
And what about infrastructure? The fuel subsidy money is no longer going into the pockets of oil marketers. It's now being used to build things we can see — roads, rail lines, and power projects that matter to everyday life. The Renewed Hope Infrastructure Fund is not just a slogan; it’s real. The foundations are being laid for a stronger, more connected Nigeria.
Tinubu's federal government has embark on major road construction and rehabilitation projects across all geopolitical zones, from the Abuja- Kaduna-Zaria-Kano Dual Carriageway, the 9th Mile-Oturkpo-Makurdi Road, the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, Abuja-Lokoja-Benin Road, Enugu-Onitsha Expressway, Oyo-OgbomosoRoad, Sokoto-Badagry Road, Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway, Second Niger Bridge Access Road to Bodo-Bonny Road among hundreds of ongoing road projects across the country.
Let’s talk food. Yes, hunger still exists. But the grip of the grain cartels — those faceless hoarders who manipulated scarcity for profit — has been broken. When the price of rice soared beyond ₦100,000, Tinubu’s team didn’t just watch. They acted. Tariffs on food imports were suspended. Mechanized farming equipment was imported from the US, Brazil, and Belarus. Local farmers received incentives.
Gradually, food production is rising. The goal is clear: Nigeria must feed itself. The youth have not been left out. From the Skill-Up Artisans Programme to the National Youth Talent Export initiative, young Nigerians are being prepared to compete globally.
NYSC members now earn ₦77,000, up from ₦33,000. That’s not just a raise — it’s dignity restored. And for those struggling with tuition, the Student Loan Scheme now offers real hope. No one should drop out because they can’t afford fees, and that’s the message this administration is sending.
Even the average Nigerian can now dream of owning appliances or even a car through the Consumer Credit Corporation. Over ₦200 billion has been set aside so that ordinary citizens can buy goods and pay over time. For a country where “cash and carry” was once the only way, this is revolutionary.
Security is still a challenge, yes, but there’s movement. The military has been better equipped. Inter-agency coordination has improved. Kidnappings haven’t disappeared, but many sleeper cells have been dismantled. The approach is shifting — not just guns, but intelligence and strategy. Revenue?
In just six months of 2024, government revenue rose by ₦9.1 trillion. That’s more than double what we had in the same period the year before. And for the first time, all three levels of government — federal, state, and local — are receiving steady, increased allocations. That means more power to the grassroots, where change is most visible.
Wages have gone up too. The new national minimum wage stands at ₦70,000. Not everyone in the informal sector is feeling it yet, but it's a signal — that this government recognizes the dignity of labor and is ready to walk the talk.
Still, let’s not pretend that all is well. Many Nigerians are tired. The pain of the past two years is real. Prices are still high. The naira still needs more stability. And the wounds from the fuel subsidy removal are still fresh in many homes.
But transformation is never painless. It comes with dislocation. It requires sacrifice. And it demands patience. What Nigeria is undergoing is not just reform — it’s a full-blown economic reset. We’ve moved from illusion to reality, from quick fixes to long-term solutions. It hurts now, but it heals later.
And so we return to that haunting slogan: “Ebi n pawa.” Are we still hungry? Not in the same way. We are no longer hungry because of hopelessness; we are hungry because we are in transition. We are adjusting. We are healing. And we are learning to live in a system that finally tells the truth.
The hunger of 2023 was panic — confusion in the face of sudden change. The hunger of 2025 is different. It is the hunger of a nation finding its feet, discovering its strength, and realizing that growth is a process. But processes need time. Buildings need completion. Foundations need walls and roofs. We cannot afford to abandon the journey at halftime. President Tinubu has started something bold — something rare in our history. He didn’t play to the gallery. He played for the future. Now that we see the first fruits, do we go back to the same policies that brought us to the brink? Or do we press on?
Let’s be honest with ourselves: for any meaningful reform to succeed, continuity is key. Interrupting this process in 2027 would be like removing a doctor halfway through surgery and expecting a miracle. Nigeria cannot afford to go back to subsidy games, dual exchange rates, and lazy borrowing. The path is tough, yes. But it’s also clear. And with Tinubu at the wheel, the destination is visible.
So, no — we are not as hungry as we were. We are still hungry, but now with hope, with direction, and with purpose. We are no longer lost. We are no longer blind. We know where we’re going. And if we truly want to see the end of this hunger — not just a temporary fix but a lasting solution — then we must let this government finish what it started.
Come 2027, we must not change direction for the sake of change. We must hold on to the one leadership bold enough to break the old and build the new. Because what Nigeria needs is not just another election — what it needs is consistency, courage, and continuity.Oga small small. Your baba just admitted that his reform has no visible impact yet. |
Politics › Re: Tinubu Destroyed Everything He Met On Ground Within Two Years – Peter Ameh by Udomaogodo: 8:02am On Jun 01, 2025 |
bcomputer101: I pray this government should. It's as if you don't understand the damage previous government has done to Nigeria.
From Hunger to Hope: Reflecting on Nigeria’s Journey Since “Ebi n Pawa”
“Ebi n pawa!” That expression — “We are hungry” — wasn’t just a complaint two years ago. It was a cry from the soul of a nation. It echoed from Lagos to Kano, Port Harcourt to Maiduguri. You didn’t need a microphone to hear it; it was in the faces of mothers at the market, fathers at the bus stop, young men on the streets, and children waiting for meals that never came. It became the anthem of pain, the chorus of a people grappling with the shock of sweeping reforms introduced by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in his very first week in office.
Nigeria was in turmoil, not because the policies were necessarily wrong, but because their timing hit a society already living on the edge. So the question we now face — two years later — is both urgent and fair: Are we still that hungry?
Back in May 2023, when Tinubu took the reins of power, the foundation of the Nigerian economy was cracked. No, not cracked — shattered. The nation was drowning in debt, most of it incurred not for building railways or factories, but for paying salaries, maintaining a fuel subsidy that lined the pockets of the rich, and defending an artificial exchange rate that stifled growth.
What the new president inherited was more than a moribund economy; it was a ticking time bomb. Oil had already been sold forward, meaning Nigeria was effectively broke. There was no money coming in from crude exports — our primary source of income — because it had been mortgaged in advance.
The previous administration of Buhari had quietly printed money, devaluing the naira without the courtesy of telling the public. But Tinubu couldn’t cry foul too loudly — some of those who caused this mess were his political allies.
He could have chosen the path of least resistance, the usual Nigerian way: kick the can down the road and pretend everything was fine. But he didn’t. In one of the boldest opening acts in Nigerian political history, he removed the fuel subsidy.
Suddenly, the price of fuel tripled. Transporters raised fares. Traders hiked prices. Even sachet water vendors felt the pinch. The people who were already struggling now felt like they were suffocating. The frustration was real, and so was the anger. Social media went ablaze. Protests flared. Opposition voices got louder. “Ebi n pawa!” they cried — and rightly so.
But that wasn’t the end of the storm. Next came the unification of the exchange rate. Nigeria had operated a dual-rate system for years, one for the privileged few who accessed dollars at official rates, and another for the rest of us who scrambled for forex in the black market. It was a system ripe for corruption, creating billionaires overnight while choking real businesses.
By merging the rates, Tinubu wiped away a major incentive for fraud. It wasn’t smooth — it never is. The naira plunged. The cost of imported goods spiked. But this was the price of honesty, of facing the truth about how things really were.
So, yes, we were hungry. But that hunger wasn’t just about food. It was about the pain that comes with correction — the sting of necessary surgery. The old system was bleeding us dry, and for once, someone decided to stitch the wound instead of just covering it up with another bandage.
Fast forward two years, and the picture is beginning to shift. No, it’s not yet paradise. Inflation is still biting. Prices of rice and garri still bring tears to the eyes. But compared to the chaos of 2023, we’re not where we used to be. Take a closer look — not with emotions, but with the eyes of understanding — and the signs of progress become clear.
Today, Nigeria has exited the IMF debtors’ list. That’s not just a statistic — it’s proof that we are no longer borrowing just to survive. The Tinubu administration cleared a $1.61 billion debt and restored Nigeria’s credibility on the global stage. Foreign investors are watching, and they’re starting to return. The stock market is booming. When he took over, the All Share Index stood at 55,738 points. Now, it’s over 103,000. Market capitalization has crossed ₦63 trillion. That’s not magic — it’s investor confidence fueled by clearer, bolder policies.
And what about infrastructure? The fuel subsidy money is no longer going into the pockets of oil marketers. It's now being used to build things we can see — roads, rail lines, and power projects that matter to everyday life. The Renewed Hope Infrastructure Fund is not just a slogan; it’s real. The foundations are being laid for a stronger, more connected Nigeria.
Tinubu's federal government has embark on major road construction and rehabilitation projects across all geopolitical zones, from the Abuja- Kaduna-Zaria-Kano Dual Carriageway, the 9th Mile-Oturkpo-Makurdi Road, the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, Abuja-Lokoja-Benin Road, Enugu-Onitsha Expressway, Oyo-OgbomosoRoad, Sokoto-Badagry Road, Enugu-Port Harcourt Expressway, Second Niger Bridge Access Road to Bodo-Bonny Road among hundreds of ongoing road projects across the country.
Let’s talk food. Yes, hunger still exists. But the grip of the grain cartels — those faceless hoarders who manipulated scarcity for profit — has been broken. When the price of rice soared beyond ₦100,000, Tinubu’s team didn’t just watch. They acted. Tariffs on food imports were suspended. Mechanized farming equipment was imported from the US, Brazil, and Belarus. Local farmers received incentives.
Gradually, food production is rising. The goal is clear: Nigeria must feed itself. The youth have not been left out. From the Skill-Up Artisans Programme to the National Youth Talent Export initiative, young Nigerians are being prepared to compete globally.
NYSC members now earn ₦77,000, up from ₦33,000. That’s not just a raise — it’s dignity restored. And for those struggling with tuition, the Student Loan Scheme now offers real hope. No one should drop out because they can’t afford fees, and that’s the message this administration is sending.
Even the average Nigerian can now dream of owning appliances or even a car through the Consumer Credit Corporation. Over ₦200 billion has been set aside so that ordinary citizens can buy goods and pay over time. For a country where “cash and carry” was once the only way, this is revolutionary.
Security is still a challenge, yes, but there’s movement. The military has been better equipped. Inter-agency coordination has improved. Kidnappings haven’t disappeared, but many sleeper cells have been dismantled. The approach is shifting — not just guns, but intelligence and strategy. Revenue?
In just six months of 2024, government revenue rose by ₦9.1 trillion. That’s more than double what we had in the same period the year before. And for the first time, all three levels of government — federal, state, and local — are receiving steady, increased allocations. That means more power to the grassroots, where change is most visible.
Wages have gone up too. The new national minimum wage stands at ₦70,000. Not everyone in the informal sector is feeling it yet, but it's a signal — that this government recognizes the dignity of labor and is ready to walk the talk.
Still, let’s not pretend that all is well. Many Nigerians are tired. The pain of the past two years is real. Prices are still high. The naira still needs more stability. And the wounds from the fuel subsidy removal are still fresh in many homes.
But transformation is never painless. It comes with dislocation. It requires sacrifice. And it demands patience. What Nigeria is undergoing is not just reform — it’s a full-blown economic reset. We’ve moved from illusion to reality, from quick fixes to long-term solutions. It hurts now, but it heals later.
And so we return to that haunting slogan: “Ebi n pawa.” Are we still hungry? Not in the same way. We are no longer hungry because of hopelessness; we are hungry because we are in transition. We are adjusting. We are healing. And we are learning to live in a system that finally tells the truth.
The hunger of 2023 was panic — confusion in the face of sudden change. The hunger of 2025 is different. It is the hunger of a nation finding its feet, discovering its strength, and realizing that growth is a process. But processes need time. Buildings need completion. Foundations need walls and roofs. We cannot afford to abandon the journey at halftime. President Tinubu has started something bold — something rare in our history. He didn’t play to the gallery. He played for the future. Now that we see the first fruits, do we go back to the same policies that brought us to the brink? Or do we press on?
Let’s be honest with ourselves: for any meaningful reform to succeed, continuity is key. Interrupting this process in 2027 would be like removing a doctor halfway through surgery and expecting a miracle. Nigeria cannot afford to go back to subsidy games, dual exchange rates, and lazy borrowing. The path is tough, yes. But it’s also clear. And with Tinubu at the wheel, the destination is visible.
So, no — we are not as hungry as we were. We are still hungry, but now with hope, with direction, and with purpose. We are no longer lost. We are no longer blind. We know where we’re going. And if we truly want to see the end of this hunger — not just a temporary fix but a lasting solution — then we must let this government finish what it started.
Come 2027, we must not change direction for the sake of change. We must hold on to the one leadership bold enough to break the old and build the new. Because what Nigeria needs is not just another election — what it needs is consistency, courage, and continuity.The Book Of Epistles.You dey cap dust. |
Celebrities › Re: Phyno Celebrates Daughter's 2nd Birthday With Heartwarming Post (photos) by Udomaogodo: 9:37pm On May 12, 2025 |
Slimwhyt: Are you high?  Seriously high on hot urine |
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Celebrities › Re: May Your Vision For Nigeria Be Blessed With Success, Tonto Dikeh To Tinubu by Udomaogodo: 3:03pm On Mar 30, 2025 |
77up: You will be put to shame. Asiwaju will succeed, this country will succeed. Keep up the delusion |
Celebrities › Re: May Your Vision For Nigeria Be Blessed With Success, Tonto Dikeh To Tinubu by Udomaogodo: 3:01pm On Mar 30, 2025 |
muykem: He will succeed as it concerns me and my family. He will fail as it concerns you and your family. Mumu talk |
Politics › Re: APC LG Chairmen Take Over In Osun (Photos) by Udomaogodo: 1:34pm On Feb 24, 2025 |
NairalandVDM: Good for Democracy. I remember what my govt teacher, Mr olonta once taught me in govt about the principles of the rule of law.
"Equality before the law" Oga go hustle |
Politics › Re: Nigerians Are Suffering Because We Chose Darkness Over Light — Bishop Kukah by Udomaogodo: 2:40pm On Dec 25, 2024 |
Think9ja: Point of correction Sir; we didn't choose it, we inherited it.
If you inherited a piece of land from your ancestors, will you just fold your hands and watch someone snatch it away from you? I guess no!
So we inherited darkness, and we are fighting those that want to give us light and insha'Allah, we'll forever remain in darkness because that is our common patrimony.
For the morons and the baboons that think Tinubu is the darkness he's referring to and that your lord and personal saviour Hoebi is the best thing since virgin kpekus, just know that every Nigerian was born/raised into darkness since 1960 and no mortal can change that. And yes, not the idiot that parades himself as the Messiah Are you normal sir? |
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