@SasDantata If a school's dress code directly contradicts your belief. Simple don't attend there If you decide to attend, you have to abide by the dress code
As a certified worker of RCCG, I can say this unapologetically: this is the most tribalistic church in the history of mankind.
Tribal bigots. Top to bottom!
Intermarriage between the Hausas, Yorubas, and Igbos needs to become something very common in Nigeria.
It will go a long way in curbing the hatred and tribalism between these major ethnic groups.
I think it will go a long way toward the development of this country.
A piece of advice to anyone with ears:
If you are a nurse, a doctor, a health worker or a care worker in any professional capacity, please I beg you do not post videos like this where you are partying hard few hours before you go to attend to unwell, vulnerable, dying, helpless or sick patients.
I expect that the usual dumb clowns on social media will applaud something like this because they never think beyond the superficial on any matter, but if a patient under your medical/nursing care dies or develops a serious complication due to suspected negligence, and the family decides to sue/take it up, they can use reckless videos like this to argue a case of deliberate medical negligence on your part. Smart lawyers will argue, quite rightly so, that you intentionally chose to put patient’s lives at risk by your actions.
In addition to that,
Your professional body can suspend and/or withdraw your practising license for gross unprofessional conduct if an official complaint is made against you purely on grounds of wilfully putting the lives of vulnerable patients at risk.
Imagine your mother is sick and dying in hospital. Then you come on social media to find the nurse attending to her in the morning shift, posted herself clubbing hard till 3am just few hours before the shift. Will you not worry about your mother’s safety? If your mother died on that nurse’s shift, will a part of you not wonder if the nurse was negligent?
Nigeria is lawless so there’s a lot of daily madness that is easily excused and overlooked. But please I’m begging you, if you are a professional working in healthcare, whatever your role may be, and if you work in a sane sensible country, or even if you work in Nigeria, I’m begging you:
Please don’t make yourself a scapegoat and don’t lose your hard earned license because of a few likes online from empty-headed olodos who celebrate reckless crap like this, that can get you in serious but avoidable professional trouble that you will regret for a long time.
You are a professional.
You are a health professional.
Human lives are in your very hands.
You must never forget that. You can’t afford to be posting reckless videos that may suggest that you are intentionally putting vulnerable people’s lives at risk with your deliberately stupid decisions.
Some of you don't understand the dangers of putting out contents like this out, if a Patient dies on your watch, even if you did everything right, the family can sue you an average lawyer can put you in jail by simply using this post. God abeg
@dee_elleea@ogaga_didii The drugs is art
Looking anorexic is art
Self harming is art
Projecting blame and avoiding accountability as an adult is art.
Yall support rubbish in the name of freedom of expression
To those Fulani threatening me or claiming that I was sponsored by Christians, Jews, Berom, or Kataf, you should know that it was Fulani who killed my brother, Jamilu Tanimu, and Karima. It was Fulani who kidnapped my brother's two daughters, Naja'atu and Aisha. It was Fulani who shot my grandfather, Musa Imam, leaving him crippled. It was Fulani who killed my intimate classmate and seatmate, Badamasi Ibrahim. It was Fulani who kidnapped many of my siblings and friends, displaced my village for a long time, and made my village poorer than ever before.
It was not Christians, Berom, Kataf, or Jews. It was Fulani who caused these problems for my family and for many Hausa people in general.
I will never love those who committed these acts of terrorism against my family. Even now, if I step into my mother's room, I will see Asmau, the daughter of my younger brother, Jamilu, who was killed by Fulani terrorists.
This is my true life story. These are my views and my opinions. I can't love my enemies and Fulani are my true enemies
Earlier today, I was out in Surulere to personally inspect our monthly environmental sanitation cleanup.
Seeing residents working side by side with the Ministry of Environment teams to clear the drains and sweep the streets was very encouraging. We must always remember that keeping Lagos clean is a shared responsibility that directly protects our health and prevents flooding.
I know many of you are frustrated with current waste disposal issues, and I want to assure you that we are tackling this head-on. To fix this permanently, we are bringing in 150 new compactor trucks, deploying locally assembled tricycles for inner streets, and building facilities that will process thousands of tonnes of waste daily.
We are also actively supporting our PSP operators to overcome their current operational challenges.
Thank you to everyone who rolled up their sleeves to join us today. We are putting the right infrastructure in place, but we need your daily dedication to keep our neighborhoods safe and clean.
Our collective effort is what truly keeps Lagos moving forward.