@officialABAT The worst part is that, this guy tinubu thinks he's doing us a favor by sitting his old ass in aso rock. No body wants you there and you rigged ur mfk self to that position. Just resign instead of campaigning for next election old fool.
Before Britain left Nigeria in 1960, there were negotiations.
Have Nigerians ever asked what exactly was negotiated… and for who?
Britain did not negotiate independence with Nigerians as a people.
They negotiated with regional elites (Nnamdi Azikiwe (East), Obafemi Awolowo (West), Ahmadu Bello / Tafawa Balewa (North) ).
No referendum.
No mass consultation.
No national consensus.
Just elite handover.
The biggest negotiation was FEDERALISM.
Not because Britain loved diversity, but because it was the easiest way to manage a country they forcibly merged in 1914.
Federalism was a colonial compromise, not a Nigerian vision.
The regions were structured to preserve imbalance.
The North was protected with:
• Population advantage
• Political dominance
• Indirect rule continuity
This wasn’t accidental. It was negotiated.
Power was transferred, but only to familiar hands.
Britain ensured:
• Colonial civil service remained
• Colonial laws remained
• Colonial mindset remained
Flags changed. Structures didn’t.
Economic independence?
British companies retained control of:
• Mining
• Cash crops
• Trade
• Banking
Railways and ports were built to export raw materials, not to develop Nigerians. This is why unseen hands are seriously fighting Dangote for building a refinery. It's against the original plan.
Political independence ≠ Economic freedom.
The military Nigeria inherited was a colonial control force. This explains the military coups. The Nigerian military was designed for internal control, not national defense
Built to:
• Quell internal dissent
• Protect colonial order
Not to:
• Defend democracy
• Protect citizens
That design choice still haunts us today.
What Britain never negotiated was nationhood.
No shared identity.
No integration plan.
No fairness framework.
Just: “Here is a country. Good luck.”
So let’s be honest:
Nigeria did not start as a nation.
It started as a colonial project with negotiated elites and protected interests.
And 60+ years later, we are still arguing inside that unfinished deal.
Until Nigerians renegotiate:
• Federalism
• Resource control
• Power balance
• National identity
We will keep fighting symptoms instead of the root.
History matters because what you don’t renegotiate… will continue to rule you.
I’ll never forget the day my professor changed my whole perspective on love. The class was loud until he asked, “If you’re in a relationship, do you still get crushes?” Silence washed over us. He drew a heart, wrote “Loyalty” and “Faithfulness” inside. “So if love contains these, why does someone else still catch your attention?”No one could answer. I whispered, “Because it’s not love.” He turns, smiles knowingly. “Exactly. Just because you’re in a relationship doesn’t mean you’re already in love. Sometimes we’re only in a relationship because we love the idea of being with someone who cares for us.” That line stayed with me. He wasn’t just teaching a subject… he was teaching life. 🫶
Nigeria is not a true country, but an artificial neo-colonial construct of the British, to empower Northern Nigerian islamists (who the British viewed as easier to control) to dominate over everyone else. But I guess you like that, considering you worked for the former despot of Nigeria Buhari (or shall I call him Jubril of Sudan). Your so-called democracy is not real democracy, but a bad joke!
Their Plan B if all fails when they try to penetrate your land, is to poison your food supply. Most food items come from the North. They’re also smuggling in their weapons with their trucks and hiding them inside mosques. Peace out ✌️
A Brigadier General is dead and was killed on Live TV by Terrorist.
The National Security Adviser still has not been sacked?
Allegedly Nuhu Ribadu is your incoming president in 2031 and to reach that goal Tinubu must win 2027 through him.
They don't care about your security.