Yarduni's Posts
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I didn't see anything special in the stunt |
Lucasbalo:I totally feel you. Imagine the dump calling for imprisonment of Americans for expressing their free speech by burning American flags. That's real white nationalist, just as dangerous as Hitler |
The FBI can take down this thread for you know what i mean |
I heard reports that they were ill prepared before they left, no warm-up matches and most played without underwears. Many people wrote them off. |
Its like i'm seeing pictures from another country ![]() |
bbmpin:Anyone who tries to call you out will be fooling himself. You have a valid argument there. The picture is photoshopped so it begs the question of validity so its nothing to me. But then, the passion of people having headache over nothing. |
Many conspiracy theorists and end of the world prophets have been very quite about Trump victory. It has shown that there is actually nothing like illuminati or one world government, because if there was their choice was Hillary. Now is there is no fodder for the conspiracy theorists, what do we expect? I've not seen any prophecy from God, No one is revealing anything about Trump? That is an ominous situation |
I'm just sorry for the direction of the world in the next three years. I just hope his actions don't embolden boko haram the more. Trump is erratic and unhinged. A very destructive personality. His reign will bring a strong definition of class. If he stays long, we may start seeing societies arranged according to class like we saw in films like colony, hunger games. That's how divisive this man would be. |
jusRadical:Even christians have terrorist arms too. Guess trump has already ignited them with these extreme alt-right white nazi groups attacking people of color all over there. Hypocrisy is like a thing to you |
Lucasbalo:The fact is that these guys don't follow facts. There is something far deeper that worries them, the same thing is tied to trump. If i cite Huffington post so they can learn that these allegations were rightly false and condemn, they will quote alex jones and conspiracy theorists |
jusRadical:The problem is that you think this is between you and me. I forgive you for the insults. Lets be very objective, trump is already changing the american laws and it will become drastic as soon as he is sworn in. So many enemies are already morphing and you think its going to be easy? |
Mindfulness:He is going to take America back to the 1950's. White privilege will be gone because those white collar jobs will now turn dirty collar jobs. White people once again will start working like their Nepalese counterparts in Bahrain. |
Onopa:Oh no, trump is not going to last for eight years. It's going to be a grinding harrowing experience of the next four years and you know Americans are not like ipob touts who follows the breeze wherever the asss farts. |
Rossikki:He didn't get the popular votes. Hillary was actually America's choice but then the electoral map which unfortunately favors white people robbed them of good years ahead. Trump is already a disaster |
lomaxx:It's hunger and craze for traffic including adsense clicks that makes them concoct wild stories without any facts. |
AmadiAba:I would ban you straight away if i was a Mod. You create fake titles that does not correspond to the contents. Stop making things up. |
There is nothing like recession. You guys are making up all these in your minds. So because of talk of supposed recession which is not there, you can make your twisted views of a perfect optimistic message. |
ivandragon:You are the one concocting trash. When were you born? All these gibberish is what you have been fed not what you verified is correct history. So with all these your noise, does it mean jonathan, patience and their cronies did not steal money? so we should just leave them and blame buhari for everything? Nitwit |
9ijaprince:Why wouldnt he blame Jonathan? You guys are still the same arm chair critics that will blame IBB, Obasanjo even as far back as Tafawa Balewa for where we are today. But when Buhari blames jonathan for the mess we are in, you see something wrong. All these arm chair noisemakers, always noise, no substance |
[size=18pt]People can be mischievous and wicked for little things they could not muster patience for understanding. Many people would use this forum to tag unsavory business deals as scam. Nigerians are inherently angry people so many maligned here might not be who we think they are. The only person that knows the truth of the matter is the one putting out peoples property on a faceless forum. Shame! but scammers will burn in hell[/size] |
senatorbayor:You aint making sense |
Everybody is rejecting the move. I hope they will stay as they are |
Donald Trump Is Failing His Crash Course in Leadership Jeff Nesbit Nov. 28, 2016 Jeff Nesbit was the communications director to former Vice President Dan Quayle (R-IN) at the White House. He is the author of Poison Tea Will he learn in time? President-elect Donald Trump is taking a crash course in how to be the leader of the free world. Trump played fast and loose with the facts during the presidential campaign and was careless with the types of advisors he listened to (Alex Jones comes to mind). All of that changes now as he moves into the Oval Office. Facts matter a great deal when people could be harmed. And, in this new role, the people he listens to matter. This past weekend—when Trump used a blatantly fake news account drawn largely from Jones’ notorious InfoWars website to proclaim that there were three million illegal votes in the 2016 election—is precisely the sort of scenario that his own advisors had hoped to avoid. Trump is clearly angered by the election recount underway in Midwest states, but his response to that challenge isn’t just un-presidential—it’s not tethered to reality. Trump managed somehow to de-legitimize an election that he won. It’s led many to wonder if he’ll ever learn in time. It seems that Trump wants to learn how to be presidential. He talks regularly with President Obama and has expressed a willingness to learn. But then, Trump, as he did so often during the campaign, lunges for the microphone with no apparent thought for what his words might convey. Trump’s breathtaking learning-curve challenge was on full display in the extraordinary on-the-record discussion Trump had recently with editors, columnists and reporters at the New York Times—the first time he has really answered questions from the media in any formal, public setting since the election. On big, important issues like national security, immigration, climate change and health-care coverage for the poor, Trump’s responses were based on personal anecdotes and disputed arguments that are a decade old and almost irrelevant now. Trump’s answers to questions on climate change from columnist Tom Friedman, and a follow-up question from editorial page editor James Bennet, are the most obvious examples. Trump has said that he’ll withdraw from the Paris climate agreement, the historic global accord that nearly every world leader on the planet agreed to at the end of 2015. Friedman asked him if this was really true. “I have an open mind to it. We’re going to look very carefully,” Trump said. He added that “a lot of smart people” disagree with scientists on the issue; and talked at length about how his own beliefs on the climate issue were shaped by his uncle, who was a professor at MIT “a long time ago.” He referred to an incident from nearly a decade ago where someone hacked into the emails of climate scientists—which showed nothing more than the simple fact that scientists argue among themselves, genuinely believe in the scientific process and hold firm to a peer-review process that has produced a near-consensus on the fact that humans are contributing significantly to climate change. When pressed by Bennet, Trump said that there was “some connectivity” between human activity and climate change. He also compared his environmental record to the golf courses he’s built. Meanwhile, as journalists have reported since the election, Trump Tower has stacked the leadership of the transition teams at federal agencies and departments with people who have worked for years in political networks that deliberately confuse the public on the science of the issue. To say that this is a somewhat messy, unstructured way of engaging with an important issue would be an understatement. The very real question, on this issue and many others, is this: who is Trump listening to and taking guidance from as he careens full tilt through a chaotic, unpredictable effort to learn how to be a president? If he selects Mitt Romney as Secretary of State it means Trump is paying attention to world leaders who wish to see a steady hand at the helm of U.S. foreign affairs. If he selects Rudy Giuliani, it means Trump continues to trust those who are closest and most loyal to him, regardless of the message it might send. These choices will define the trajectory of the Trump presidency because the advisors who influence what he says publicly now matter in ways that simply didn’t during the campaign. The Times questioned Trump on his selection of his campaign CEO, Steve Bannon, as his chief strategist at the White House—a move that signaled to many that he intended to continue to publicly echo the sorts of alt-right, racist and anti-Semitic language that Bannon’s former publication, Breitbart News, has built its reputation around. “I’ve known Steve Bannon a long time,” Trump said. “If I thought he was a racist, or alt-right, or any of (those) things…I wouldn’t even think about hiring him. First of all, I’m the one that makes the decision, not Steve Bannon or anybody else.” What Trump doesn’t realize—at least, not yet—is that his advisors do matter, even if he makes every important decision. What is also extraordinary is that longtime Republican Party insiders and professionals in Washington—many of whom are angling to have influence in the new administration—all say privately that they have no idea whatsoever how Trump Tower is choosing to create his administration. When a new name appears in media coverage, they’re often surprised as everyone else. “We’re trying very hard to get the best people,” Trump told the Times. “Not necessarily people that will be the most politically correct people, because that hasn’t been working.” The second part of this answer has world leaders wondering just what the 45th president of the United States will ultimately believe, say and do once he’s in office. For now, it’s clearly a work in progress—a breathtaking crash course in how to run a military and economic superpower in a fragile, uncertain world. http://time.com/4584098/donald-trump-presidential-crash-course/ |
aariwa:thats clear and present danger |
When you leave EFCC holding that card and no hearing, no court cases and no media attention, that is the biggest testimony. Thank You God |
These people just like washing their dirty pants in public. You guys make marriage awful. How long did you guys marry, you like the publicity. Keep your life to yourself |
Buhari is staying there after 2019. Politics is not noise making and chest beating |
Keneking:If MMM scammeros see this dough, they will close up sharp sharp |
The way he greeted the ooni looked strange |
The latest actions of Donald Trump is not just dangerous but it will be the color of his presidency if he ever gets there. Now he has openly claimed millions voted illegally so it's right for everyone to call for a recount. But the source of his claim is alarming. Imagine a president who is bait of infowars, alt right and nazi ideology, the fodder of conspiracy theorists encore. There is trouble if trump becomes President |
prettysolid:Put it back i dare you, olosho |
Presidiotbuhari:E-diot, must everyone be the same? |
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