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We Nigerians are friendly people, we don't have a problem with such. Should millions of unskilled white people descend on Lagos, we 'll provide them with Good fertile land to farm. |
^^ Are you a black african or an unskilled white person? ![]() |
An illiterate WARRI man travelled abroad.He entered a Restaurant and wanted to order chicken but he couldnt remember what chicken is called in English.Luckily for him, he sees another man on the next table with 4 eggs on his plate, happily he calls out to the waiter and points at the eggs on the mans plate, "Abeg, i want their mama!" |
harakiri:@Harakiri - Well Said. |
BY TOYOSI OGUNSEYE The suspected suicide of Motunrayo Ogbara, a 26-year-old ex-banker in Lagos State, is still generating a lot of comments in the metropolis and beyond, as many people are still shocked that a young lady that was full of life could have killed herself. It is speculated that Ogbara, a graduate of Economics from the University of Lagos, was depressed and had made an earlier attempt at suicide last year. Just as the news of Ogbara's death was breaking, a Lagos politician, Mr. Al-Mustaim Alade Abaniwonda, was also said to have jumped into the Lagos lagoon, after he alighted from his chauffeur-driven car at the Leventis Bus Stop, Marina. Ogbara and Abaniwonda are among the many Nigerians who are reported to have taken their lives this year. On July 7, Elizabeth Andrew of No. 17, Irawo-Owuro Street, Isheri Oshin, Lagos, was found hanging on the metal burglary bars behind a window in her apartment. Before help could reach her, Andrew was dead. A month before that, Afeez Olaoye was also found hanging in his room at No. 4, Ajibulu Street, Mafolukwu, Oshodi, Lagos. In the month of March, three suicide cases were also recorded in Lagos. The State Criminal Investigations Department got a report on March 26 that one Nnamdi Osita was found hanging in a classroom in a primary school at Satellite Town. Just before Osita's case was reported, Ekpesikpe Iman was found dead in her brother's Ajegunle house after hanging herself. Similarly, Azeez Nurudeen of No. 9, Amusa Street, Layeni, Ajegunle, was found hanging in his apartment. These suicide cases are among the few that were reported to the police in Lagos this year. Last year, the police did not have any record of suicide between March and December 2010; while only one suicide was reported between January and March 2010. The suicide cases are not limited to Lagos alone. In Jalingo, Taraba State, a 30-year-old woman, Mrs. Bilkisi Gidado, committed suicide after her husband reportedly took a second wife. Gidado was said to have set herself ablaze and eventually fell into a well in her residence. Also in Ajuwon, Ogun State, Tobilola Ajihun killed herself after her longtime boyfriend, Simeon Akinremi, rejected her pregnancy. Her suicide note read, "Please, I killed myself by taking rat poison because he rejected my pregnancy. I was sincere to him and I never double-dated. So, I decided to take my life and my God will revenge because I did not forgive him." In Katsina, a 36- year-old man, Sabo Lawal, was said to have committed suicide by hanging himself with an electric cable in his house at the abattoir area of the town on July1. According to the witness, Lawal was a drug addict and had been living alone since he divorced his wife a few months ago. In Okigwe, Imo State, Andrew Uba, 26, reportedly committed suicide over Manchester United's inability to win the UEFA Champion's league final on Saturday after placing a N100,000 bet on them to win ahead of FC Barcelona, reports said. A few days before Uba's death, a 29-year-old man, Emmanuel Peter, allegedly committed suicide in the Girei Local Government Area of Adamawa State after medical results revealed that he was HIV positive. No doubt, this year has witnessed an increase in the number of Nigerians committing suicide; and the cause of the deaths varies across sexes, while the method used predominantly was hanging, followed by self-poisoning. Even in Ghana, suicide is fast becoming a common occurrence. In a report released by the International Association for Suicide Prevention, the number of reported cases for 2009 was 21,500, and the statistics has continued to increase. Most of the reported cases, according to the IASP, resulted from the complex interaction of casual factors, including mental illness, poverty, substance abuse, social isolation, losses, relationship difficulties and workplace problems. The main methods used by the victims, IASP says, are hanging, shooting with fire arms and poisoning. A consultant psychiatrist at the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomosho, Oyo State, Dr. Adeoye Oyewole, says that even though there is an increase in the number of people committing suicide, cases of this nature have always occurred but people are hardly open about them. He said, "Suicide is not just happening. It's just that Africans have mechanisms in their culture and religion that hide it. It is often considered a taboo for anyone to broadcast information that pertains to suicide, especially when it concerns royalty. In the past, we have had so many kings and monarchs in our environment commit suicide, but no one is willing to discuss it. "The implication of this is that it is underreported and even the police do not get to hear about it because of the stigma attached to it. So, under-reportage is a major issue here." Oyewole further said that suicide was on the increase as a result of socio-economic pressure. "There is an erosion of the traditional values and the family system. We've always had a fair share of economic pressure, but the presence of the Internet and mobile phones have increased the pressure. Most families want to send their children abroad for holiday and when these children come back, they pressurise their parents to give them what they saw during their visits. "Also, young ladies in urban areas want to give birth abroad, whether their husbands can afford it or not. That is why more suicides are recorded in urban regions." Denys de Catanzaro, an evolutionary psychologist, says that those that face the greatest risk of suicide include the elderly, especially those who are a burden on their family, anyone who is ostracized by their kin, someone unable to provide for their kin, dependent on their reproductively capable kin, or anyone who has difficulty relating with the opposite sex. He said, "All of these conditions will lead to emotional and psychological conditions that will make suicide more likely." In the last 45 years, suicide rates have increased by 60 per cent worldwide. The World Health Organisation reports that it is now among the three leading causes of death among those aged 15-44 (male and female). According to WHO, suicide attempts are up to 20 times more frequent than completed suicides; and although suicide rates have traditionally been highest amongst elderly males, rates among young people have been increasing to such an extent that they are now the group at highest risk in a third of all countries. Sadly, youth suicide is increasing at the greatest rate. http://odili.net/news/source/2011/jul/24/826.html |
What a jolt! He is a very lucky man, they could have buried him. ![]() |
Lol! I can't believe the morgue attendants ran away from a man screaming for help because they thought he was a ghost. Dead people usually don't start screaming and pleading for help. Ghosts are said to be spirits, with no physical form whatsoever, meaning they wouldn't have the vocal cords necessary to make screaming sounds. |
A 50-year-old South African man thought to be dead woke up in a chilly morgue on Sunday and shouted to be let out, scaring off two attendants who thought he was a ghost, local media reported. "His family thought he had died," health spokesman Sizwe Kupelo told the Sapa news agency. "The family called a private undertaker who took what they thought was a dead body to the morgue, but the man woke up inside the morgue on Sunday at 5:00 pm and screamed, demanding to be taken out of the cold place." This caused two mortuary attendants on duty to flee the building in the small town of Libode in the rural Eastern Cape as they thought it was a ghost. After calling for help and returning to find the man alive, an ambulance was sent to fetch the man who had "been exposed to extreme cold for nearly 24 hours" said Kupelo. He said the public should not assume that a sick person had died and contact a mortuary, the report said. "Doctors, emergency workers and the police are the only people who have a right to examine the patients and determine if they are dead or not." http://news.yahoo.com/african-corpse-wakes-scares-off-morgue-staff-report- |
LOL @ carpenter. On a serious note, you are suppose to ask her WTF she meant by saving your name as Carpenter? ![]() |
[b]Erelu Olusola Obada [/b]was the immediate deputy governor of Osun state. Trained as a lawyer, she acquitted herself well as the person in charge of coordinating some of the agricultural policies of the state. Some of that experience in government would come in useful in her new role as Minister of State for Defence. The ministry is in charge of defending the nation's territorial integrity, and coordinating the activities of the Nigerian Army, Nigerian Air Force and the Nigerian Navy, as well as other defence agencies. She and her superior, Dr. Haliru Bello, will tackle the daunting task of professionalising and training the military and modernising its equipment to fit with the times. This has to be done in the face of fiscal restraint. She would also have to contend with the serious security breaches on the nation's borders as some elements of Boko Haram, a fanatical religious sect that is causing security havoc in the country, reportedly slipped in through them. Her ministry is also tasked with keeping the peace in crisis-prone regions such as the Niger Delta and Borno State through the Joint task Force, as well as Plateau State. Recently, President Goodluck Jonathan remarked that the Nigeria's foreign policy needs overhauling. He was dead right. There is the need to push a vibrant and purposeful foreign policy agenda for Nigeria, one that fosters the nation's agenda as a people and its interest in the comity of nations. It is no longer enough to expend resources - human and financial - in the name of fighting and containing violence in Africa and the rest of the world through peace keeping roles. There must be commensurate returns for all these efforts. Nigeria must henceforth weigh the cost and benefits of this policy. It would therefore behoove on Professor Viola Onwuliri, a professor of biochemistry and running mate of former Imo State governor, Ikedi Ohakim, in the last election, and her new boss in the foreign affairs ministry, Ambassador Olugbenga Ashiru, to spearhead the new direction of decisive leadership with economic interest at the forefront of this agenda. Perhaps it may make a lot of difference in the fact that Professor Onwuliri, who has been appointed minister of state in the foreign affairs ministry, will be working with a career diplomat to steer her in the right direction. Before her appointment as Minister of State of the Niger Delta ministry, [b]Hajia Zainab Ibrahim Kuchi [/b]was the president/chief executive officer of the Daralkuchi Group of Companies and its subsidiaries. She was also an active member, Executive Committee of the Global Shea Alliance, an international, non-profit association of industry stakeholders whose mission is to represent and further the shared interests of the Shea sector. Thus, her new placement could benefit from her capacity building initiatives and executive managerial skills. The Ministry of Niger Delta, though created by the late President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, is an initiative deemed long overdue in the light of the obvious marginalisation and underdevelopment of the region responsible for about 90 percent of the nation's income. As a coordinator of the intervening agencies in the zone, the Niger Delta ministry is of significant importance to the security and stability of the polity. Although, Kuchi is serving as a junior minister, she has an assignment that weighs up with some substantive ministries. While it may be safe to say the ministry has begun to enjoy a degree of stability owing to the amnesty programme and other similar initiatives designed to cushion the effect of long years of marginalisation, all eyes are on Kuchi and her senior minister, Elder Godsday Orubebe, to roll out development project in the Niger Delta states. |
A former professor of education and former Dean, Faculty of Education at the Bayero University, Ruqayyatu Rufai was a health commissioner as well as an education and science commissioner in her home state, Jigawa State. She joined President Jonathan's cabinet shortly after he was named president last year. The education sector, admittedly, showed some promise during her brief tenure as the helmswoman of the Federal Ministry of Education. It was under her watch that several developmental activities were jump-started. It is also to her credit that Jonathan increased the budgetary allocation to the sector. Her reappointment to this ministry could therefore be seen as a tacit endorsement by the president. But does she really deserve to be returned? Yes, one year might indeed be too short to evaluate a minister's performance in such a key ministry. Still, the current appalling state of the sector in Nigeria cannot be ignored. From primary to tertiary level, it is the same sad tales of falling standards, low enrolment records by pupils at primary and secondary school level, poor performance in examinations, poorly trained and ill-motivated teaching and academic personnel at all levels, and inadequate funding. Worse still, the national policy on education is weighed down by bureaucratic hurdles and inability of the ministry to effectively implement its supervisory role. Even the minister attested to this during her screening for reappointment. Hajiya Zainab Maina is from Adamawa State, north-east of Nigeria. She attended the Kaduna Polytechnic where she bagged a Diploma in Administration and Higher National Diploma in Catering and Hotel Management. She later added a certificate in Secretarial Studies from the Federal Training Centre Kaduna and also Centre for Development and Population, Washington DC, United States where she received a Certificate in Institution Building Activities. Before her appointment as Minister for Women Affairs, Maina had been board chairman of several financial and educational institutions. As a politician, she holds sway as a notable member of the Peoples Democratic Party in different capacities. Importantly, however, as executive director, Women Affairs of the Jonathan/Sambo Presidential Campaign, Maina's new posting may be the right fit for someone used to managing women initiatives. But beyond the limited scope of the ruling party's arrangement, she is expected to have a broader and wider vision of her assignment, more so as a minister serving Nigeria and not the PDP. Her activities are expected to reflect national spread while developmental initiatives for girl-child/female education, economic empowerment, and skills acquisition for the feminine gender should be given focus and priority. Pepple is from the Perekule ruling family in Bonny, Rivers State. She is an alumna of the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University), Ile-Ife, where she graduated in 1975 with a First Class Bachelor of Science degree in Political Science. She also holds a Master's degree from the School of Oriental and African Studies, London. A seasoned technocrat, Pepple was named Head of Service of the Federation on June 16, 2008, a position she retired from on June 16, 2009 after attaining the mandatory retirement age of 60. Now as Minister of Lands and Housing at a period the country is in dire need of reform in many aspects of its national life, Pepple faces a critical challenge. She would be expected to drive the executive's input in the efforts to reform the Land Use Act, which have been in the works since the Obasanjo era. Pepple would also be expected to lead efforts to improve the country's housing policy, particularly as it relates to housing for public servants and low income earners. Olajumoke Akinjide was born on August 4, 1959 in Ibadan. The daughter of Second Republic Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Chief Richard Akinjide, she was educated at King's College London, where she obtained a Bachelor of Law degree and Harvard School of Law, where she graduated in 1981 with a Master's degree. She attended the Nigerian law School in Lagos and was called to the Nigerian Bar as a Solicitor and Barrister in 1982. Akinjide cut her teeth in legal practice in her family's law firm, Akinjide & Co, in Lagos, and later practised in London. In 2001, she was appointed Special Assistant to the President on the Federal Capital Territory by the then president, Olusegun Obasanjo, and subsequently held the office of Special Assistant on G-77 Matters and Nigerians in the Diaspora Organisation. She contested the Oyo Central senatorial seat in the last general elections on the platform of Peoples Democratic Party but lost to the Action Congress of Nigeria's candidate. |
If there is any minister who has to work twice as hard as her colleagues, it would have to be Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, Minister of Petroleum Resources. The fact that she got into the cabinet despite a virulent campaign against her is a testimony of the confidence President Goodluck Jonathan has in her. This alumna of Howard University and Cambridge University, both in the United States and Britain respectively, first got into the cabinet, having spent several years working in Shell, on July 26, 2007 as Minister of Transportation. She was later redeployed to the Ministry of Mines and Steel and subsequently to the Ministry of Petroleum Resources in April 2010. In her first year as petroleum minister, she was pitted against multinationals over her agenda, especially her enthusiasm to ensure compliance with the Nigerian Content Act that opened the door for more Nigerian participation in the oil and gas sector. She was also instrumental to signing landmark agreements that would usher in investments worth billions of dollars in gas development and distribution for power generation and petrochemical and allied industries in the country. With her return to the ministry, Alison-Madueke, 50, is expected to take measures to end the nation's dependence on the importation of fuel, especially by ensuring the reification of her hope that Nigeria will become a net exporter of refined products by 2014. This she is vigorously pursuing with the memorandum of understanding signed by NNPC and a Chinese construction firm and banks for the construction of three Greenfield refineries in Lagos, Bayelsa and Kogi States. Until recently, Mrs. Omobola Olubusola Johnson was the Managing Director of Accenture, Nigeria - the first woman to hold the position in the country. A Bachelor's Degree holder in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from the University of Manchester, she also has a Master's degree in Digital Electronics from King's College, London. She joined Accenture, then Andersen Consulting in 1985. At Andersen, she majored in the areas of enterprise transformation, having worked with boards and management of several banks, including the Central Bank of Nigeria. She is coming in as the first minister of a newly-created Ministry of Communication Technology. One of the primary challenges of communication technology ministry will be to draft a broadband policy and a legal and regulatory framework that would engender the broadband access for economic development. Her biggest task, however, would be to consolidate the multiplicity of government agencies starting from the Nigerian Communications Commission, Nigerian Broadcasting Commission, National Information Technology Development Agency, Galaxy Backbone Plc, National Spectrum Board and Nigerian Communication Satellite Company, among a host of others, in the communications and technology sector that are duplicating and falling over each other in the sector. Although Johnson comes with a resume that can take on the challenges of starting a new ministry, she would still have to contend with the overlapping role her ministry would have with the Ministries of Information and Communications, and Science and Technology, and the turf wars certain to take place as her ministry tries to instill sanity in the ICT sector. [b]Ochekpe [/b]was born in 1961 in Benue State and is married to a Plateau State indigene, the state from which she got her nomination. She holds Bachelor and Master of Science degrees in Political Science. She also has a Master of Public Administration degree from the University of Jos. A civil rights activist, Ochekpe would be expected to bring her skills in advocacy and grassroots mobilisation, particularly in the area of rural development, by rolling out pipe-borne water schemes and dam irrigation projects for agricultural production. As the nation diversifies its energy sources, her ministry will also be expected to play a vital role in hydro-electric projects, such as the proposed Mambilla power plant, among others. |
Until her appointment as Minister of Finance by the then President Olusegun Obasanjo on July 15, 2003, only a few Nigerians, outside the economic and financial sectors, knew of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. By the time she left on August 3, 2006, shortly after her redeployment to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, she had become a household name. Okonjo-Iweala, a product of two of the best American tertiary institutions -Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology- distinguished herself in the Obasanjo cabinet by establishing the Debt Management Office, but more significantly, when in 2005 she led the team that negotiated with the Paris Club to secure a historic $18 billion debt relief for the country. She also engendered transparency in public finances through the publication of monthly allocations from the Federation Account to the 36 states and helped Nigeria to obtain its maiden sovereign credit rating from Fitch and Standard & Poor's. She would also be remembered as being part of the economic team that set up the Excess Crude Account to shield Nigeria from the exogenous shocks of fluctuating oil prices, and drafted the home-grown economic blueprint, the National Economic Empowerment Development Strategy, which got the approval of the International Monetary Fund in its Article IV consultation with Nigeria. Like his predecessor, President Goodluck Jonathan fished her out from her job at the World Bank, where she was the managing director, to head the finance ministry, with an expanded mandate to be in charge of the economy. During her second stint on the job, Okonjo-Iweala will be expected to help drive the president's transformational agenda, especially by instituting fiscal reform, a reduction in recurrent spending to the neglect of capital projects, job creation and ending a regime of deficit budgeting. Largely, her success would depend on the quality of other members of the economic team and the political will of the presidency and legislature to institute widespread reforms in public finances. She would also play a key role in deciding what to do with the fuel subsidy regime, which skives off over N1 trillion from the treasury annually, as a decision on whether to remove the subsidy entirely or increase the pump price of petrol has become inevitable. Stella Oduah-Ogiemwonyi was born in 1962 in Onitsha, Anambra State. She joined the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation in 1983 following her return from the United States where she had gone to further her education and had bagged both her Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Accounting and Business Administration. In 1992, she left the NNPC to establish Sea Petroleum & Gas Company Limited (SPG), an independent marketer of petroleum products in the country. Today, Oduah-Ogiemwonyi is Nigeria's Minister of Aviation, a key ministry in the economy. Unfortunately, Oduah-Ogiemwonyi has been posted to a ministry that is almost comatose. Her ministry superintends four international airports in the country - Lagos, Port Harcourt, Kano and Abuja - and a plethora of domestic airports that are all in a complete mess. The Murtala Muhammed International Airport, the nation's foremost gateway, in particular, is in dire need of an upgrade and facelift to burnish Nigeria's image. This should include the installation of large baggage screening machines that would eliminate manual screening by security personnel at the airports. In addition to this is the reorientation of customs, immigration and security personnel posted to the airports to comport themselves professionally and discreetly. The new Minister of Environment, Hadiza Ibrahim Mailafa, is perhaps, coming into office at a most challenging period. No thanks to the recent flooding that nearly submerged many states of the federation including Lagos, Ogun and Rivers. This, of course, will not only put to test her track record, but further task her ingenuity in terms of her proactive reflexes and seeing to the passage of the bill on Climate Change. For the record, the primary mandate of the environment ministry is to protect and improve water, air, land, forest and wildlife, as mandated by Section 20 of the constitution. The administration's policy thrust is summarised in the Environmental Renewal and Development Initiative (ERDI). The objective of ERDI, however, is to take full inventory of all natural resources, assess the level of environmental damage, design and implement restoration and rejuvenation measures. http://allafrica.com/stories/201107170110.html |
9jafetish:9jafetish, i thought you were a reasonable young lady? Don't you see your comments reeks of idiocy? The poster keeps ignoring you, but like a maggot in a pit full of feces you still had to rear your ugly head. sucka! |
@POSTER - You wicked no be small o! Imagine your GF to be your sis, and someone dumping her after 9 years. What will you do? Methink you have other reason to want to do away with her now, it's not because she gained weight. There is something you are not telling us. |
^^^Kandikane - Start gathering them before it becomes too late. ![]() |
Gibberish! |
Politicians may have been inspired by the wordings of Leviticus, Chapter 16: 8,10,26. where a goat was used in the ritual of Yom Kippur, and was symbolically loaded with the sins of the Israelites, and was then sent into the wilderness to perish. The priest was said to have made atonement over the goat bearing "upon him all the iniquities unto the a land not inhabited." Later, after the Jews had modified the law of Moses, "the goat was conducted to a mountain." At this place, the unfortunate beast was pushed down the slope of the steep mountain side to ensure that the it would not recover from its fall. In politics, it has been found that a group of people, either through envy, hatred, insecurity etc, have been isolated or singled out to bear the blame for others. When an insecure politician or political party wants to ride through nationalistic tide into power, but is afraid or unsure of the ballot box; or that there is mass discontent among the ruled due to the biting effects of austerity measure/dire financial strait, he or she would tap into the popular ire over certain class of people to get more support from voters. These isolated people are the scapegoats, and what he or she is playing is what I would call the politics of scapegoatism. The masses would be told that their economic or political woes are due to the presence of ”those people.” Did not Hitler make the Jew his scapegoats? This form of politics occurs both on international, as well as national level. A few years ago the Soviet Union collapsed. We all know the cause of the demise of the empire – the utterly wretched failure of the political structure, Communism to deliver the goods. But not that said many Russian commentators at that time. Africa was to blame. They contended that the Soviet Union spent too much money and time on a ”primitive” continent, who spend their time climbing palm trees. The entire world in general, and Europe in particular know why Germany, after the collapse of the cold war went bankrupt. It indeed went through an economic trough. It bled, and the reason was that it had to bankroll the modernisation of eastern Germany, a former Soviet satallite. But many Germans at that time did see it that way. They blamed African immigrants. After the cold war, the French right wing parties gained power. The success of their election was made possible by making vituperative statements about black people living in France; a system in which politicians pandered to the more xenophobic of their citizens. In this regard, Africa has become the world scapegoat even when the actual causes are located somewhere. The politics of "those other people out there" seems to have found its base in Nigeria too. On Thursday, June 18, 2011, one of the Directors of SSS appeared on Channels Television and made this pronouncement: "That the people behind the riots bombings etc., in the North are those who strongly believe that it is their birth right to rule Nigeria." What makes the statement very disturbing is that it came from a top security officer. If we therefore position his statement rightly, we would agree that the youth who unleash the carnage we have been witnessing are being brainwashed that it’s ”those people out there” that are responsible for their social, economic and political woes. This a domestic politics of scapegoatism. The direct executioners of these waves of violence that have bedeviled the nation should be seen as surrogates. They are proxies, fighting for a cause they do not actually grasp its genesis. Proxy fighters are not independent. Their activities are teleguided with remote control. They are told where and when to strike without caring a hoot whether kids and the aged, who have nothing to do politics would be among the casualties and fatalities. The benefit of using proxy attackers to achieve political end has many advantages. There is this perception that once the whole political game is covert, it shields the behind-the-scene-cool-operator from direct blame or accusation. It is within this context that such actors find the system attractive. They anchor their confidence on the understanding that they are politically and legally protected from direct involvement. Our profound sympathy should be to the innocent youth who are used as cannon fodders. If, as the Director of the SSS has disclosed, violence in Nigeria has its behind the scene actors, one is tempted ask this simple question, Who are they? Are they too shadowy that they cannot be isolated? How long will they perpetuate the ongoing carnage before we dam the runaway dynamics of their conflicts? Gazing at our sheltering blue sky, we can sense or even hear the more threatening sound of distant thunder of violence. I lost three persons when the NYCS camp was torched, and so did many others. Are we afraid of stirring the hornet’s nest by arresting the culprits behind the ongoing mayhem? Can a fraction be bigger than a whole number? |
Lmao at putting Juju on you. If you believe all this bullcrap then it works on your mind, but if you don't believe it, it doesn't do poo on you., |
Richvkunt not all men are pontential polygamist. Get ur fact right. |
^^^You have eyes, but you can't see. You have ears, but you can't hear. And i 'm sure you have d*ick, but you can't fu*ck. |
^^^ Who are you referring to here? Is this a 419 love letter or what? You aren't getting any Mugu here ok. Retard. |
If you are a religious person, i think you should be able to forgive him. Forgiveness is seen through the prism of religion. |
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