Fill this form ASAP!!!
https://t.co/EgjfAD1JnU
The first to answer the questions correctly gets @NftRyuJin GTD free mint Spot.
The remaining OG Spot will be raffled among those who fill late
Go to: https://t.co/4v2nR02LeL
-Submit email address to join waitlist
-Confirm verification code
-Take SS of the whole process
-Put it all in a Google doc (attach your waitlist email and Solflare wallet address)
Head to: https://t.co/JJSOxu0QMdβ¦
Submit google doc link
πDoneβ
The fire in Jahanam will not touch the person who recites "Allahumma Ajirni Minan Nar" 7x after fajr & maghrib.
If you choose to RETWEET this, it will be a Sadqatul-Jaariya for you and me
(Abu Dawood)
This whole Japa Syndrome benefits countries like the UK, US, Canada and others far more than it benefits Nigeria. These developed nations often gain from the continued underdevelopment of poorer countries, as it allows them to access cheap labour, extract raw materials at prices they can influence, and attract most of the brightest professionals and talents from those nations.
So it is in their interest for countries like Nigeria to remain unstable or economically weak, because that weakness drives the migration of skilled professionals abroad while making natural resources easier and cheaper to acquire. If countries like the UK or US had to source all the labour, expertise, and mineral resources they rely on to remain developed at full market price or value, the cost would be significantly higher.
That economic reality creates strong incentives to depend on poorer nations where weak economies, low currency values, and limited industrial capacity make both labour and resources far cheaper. It is in their own interest for Nigeria and other underdeveloped countries to remain Insecure and underdeveloped, so they can continue taking our raw materials and the brightest amongst us and use us to keep their own Developed country running while downplaying all our contributions.
This raises an uncomfortable but important question, if instability in poorer nations like Nigeria provides strategic and economic advantages to richer countries, do those developed nations truly have any incentive to support lasting peace and development there?