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EXCLUSIVE: An Old Tinubu Associate Who Schooled With Peter Obi, Dropped This Mind-Boggling Revelation 👀👀
A Professor of Statistics in Canada, and an old associate of Tinubu, and also a former schoolmate of Peter Obi, came on the Emir Sirdam Show last night, and what he had to say is mind-boggling. 🤦🏾♂️
Every Nigerian needs to see and hear this.
@EmirSirdam we need him here on X.
Dear Young Nigerians,
One lesson from the 2023 elections, particularly in Lagos, should never be forgotten.
In the period following the presidential election and leading up to the governorship election, we witnessed a troubling shift in public discourse. Conversations that should have focused on competence, governance, development, and the future of our nation were gradually diverted towards tribal sentiments, ethnic divisions, and unnecessary suspicion among citizens.
Many sincere and well-meaning Nigerians participated in these conversations without realising that they were being drawn into narratives carefully designed by others.
Throughout history, whenever politicians find it difficult to compete on ideas, performance, character, or vision, some resort to exploiting the fault lines of ethnicity, religion, and identity. Their calculation is simple: a divided people are easier to manipulate than a united people.
Today, I see similar efforts emerging again, sometimes in more subtle and sophisticated ways. Narratives are planted, amplified, and circulated, often by individuals who genuinely believe they are defending a worthy cause, without recognizing the broader agenda behind such campaigns.
Let me state clearly that Pastor Enoch Adeboye remains one of the foremost fathers of faith in our nation. For decades, he has consistently preached the virtues of peace, prayer, love, reconciliation, and national unity. Even when faced with provocation, his response has always reflected humility, restraint, wisdom, and grace.
At 84 years of age, it would be unfair for young and able-bodied Nigerians to transfer to him responsibilities that properly belong to them. The task of building a better Nigeria rests primarily on the shoulders of the younger generation. It is their duty to lead the conversations, champion the reforms, and drive the positive change our nation urgently requires.
We must be careful not to become instruments in the hands of those who secretly nurture division while publicly preaching unity. In most cases, their target is not the individual being attacked; instead, it is the person who is attacking. Their real objective is to weaken the bonds that hold us together as one people and one nation.
I therefore urge all young Nigerians: do not allow anyone to recruit you into hatred. Do not allow anyone to weaponise your ethnicity, your faith, or your admiration for respected leaders.
Question every narrative. Verify every claim. Follow the facts. Resist manipulation.
The Nigeria of our dreams can only be built by citizens who refuse to be divided, who choose unity over hatred, and who place our collective future above narrow interests.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
I voted for Peter Obi in the last election after they counted the total votes casted in my ward and Obi won, I went back to my hotel.
I regretted that action, never again
So this election, after casting my vote and counting it in my ward, I will be following the inec returning officer to AMAC and making sure Obi wins there too, if possible I will park at ICC gate and make sure Peter Obi is declared the winner before driving back to my hotel this time around.
If the mandate is stolen again, this time around I will start protest from there straight to the National Assembly.
It's 8:30 PM on a Wednesday. Tunde just walked into the house after spending two freaking hours in traffic on Third Mainland Bridge. He is exhausted, his shirt is soaked in sweat, and he just wants to drop his bag and drink some cold water.
Kemi is in the living room, fanning herself because there is no light. She looks at Tunde, then looks at his empty hands. He forgot to buy the petrol for the generator, which he promised he would pick up on his way home.
If Kemi was just angry or frustrated, she would complain. She might say, "Tunde, ah-ah! I reminded you about this fuel this morning. Now we have to sleep in this heat, and the food in the freezer will spoil. I am really upset." That is a normal complaint. It focuses on the mistake and how it affects her.
But contempt is different. Contempt doesn't attack the mistake... it attacks the person.
Instead of complaining, Kemi hisses loudly, rolls her eyes, and looks at him with pure disgust.
"You cannot even remember to buy ordinary fuel. Is it until I write it on your forehead? I don't even know why I expect anything from you. It's like living with another child. You are completely useless when it comes to taking simple responsibility."
Tunde freezes. He knows he messed up. He doesn't feel like a partner who made a mistake... he feels like a foolish schoolboy being scolded by his headmistress. His pride is crushed. Instead of going out to find fuel, he gets defensive, hisses back, and walks into the bedroom, slamming the door.
Contempt doesn't ruin a marriage in one day.
It is a slow leak. Day by day, insult by insult, it drains away all the love, respect, and friendship until there is nothing left.
Thaddeus Attah, contested against Banky W for the Eti-Osa Federal constituency and won under the influence of Labour Party"TOP TO BOTTOM"
Few months after winning, he was among the first 8 law makers to boldly defect to APC.
Haven defected, he held the position of "the APC choir master" of ON YOUR MANDATE WE STAND.
Infact, he has different colors/ brands of the asiwaju cap and has flaunted it even in his constituency, hence telling the people who voted him to go hug a transformer.
With the current political wave, he has started following Peter Obi, singing praises and eulogies, just to ride on his popularity.
He has moved to ADC and now in NDC, and has promised Nigerians a change of heart as he intends to throw away all the "on your mandate caps in his closet" if the people vote for him again.
God forbid bat-ting
1. My son, currently in 400 Level Medicine and Surgery scored 333 in JAMB but his name did not even APPEAR on the Admission List. I was later told by the Institution that, my son could be offered Micro Biology. I told the Registrar of the institution POINT BLANK that, "I have spent HUGELY (Several Millions of Naira) to get my Son to this Point of Entry (PoE) to become a Medical Doctor and not to become a Biology Teacher through her offer of Micro Biology. This Registrar was so MEAN. She simply told me, we are very sorry, Micro Biology is the BEST we can OFFER your son.
2. At this Juncture, I proceeded to JAMB Headquarters, Abuja to meet with Prof. Oloyede who swiftly asked for my son's JAMB details, punched these details into his laptop and everything concerning the university came up on his screen.
3. Prof. Oloyede said and I quote: "Dr. Muyiwa Kayode, please go back home and sleep with your two eyes closed. From what I am seeing on my screen, your son is No.3 on the List of Medicine and Surgery of this institution with a JAMB SCORE of 333 which comes behind two other JAMB scores of 348 & 334 respectively. Unfortunately, none of these chaps, including your Son (i.e JAMB Score 348, 334 and 333) made the Admission List"
4. Prof. Oloyede continued and I quote: "Dr. Muyiwa Kayode, in SANE countries, this Institution should have sent the College Driver with an official vehicle to go and fetch your son from Ekiti to campus having projected himself into the MERIT LIST of this Institution but unfortunately, the endemic corruption in these institutions will just not allow them to follow Due Process"
5. Right in my presence, Prof. Oloyede put a call through to the Vice Chancellor of this Institution, setting his phone on speaker and spoke angrily at the Vice Chancellor, lamenting on the endemic corruption under his nose as it concerns university admission. This Vice Chancellor apologized to Prof. Oloyede saying what has just happened must have been an ERROR of OVERSIGHT on the part of his Management Team & promised Prof. Oloyede that he will personally ensure the Error of Oversight is corrected.
6. Within 24 hrs of that conversation between Prof. Oloyede and the Vice Chancellor, my son checked the university's Admission Portal and discovered his name has been INCLUDED as Number Three on the admission list while the names of the other chaps that scored 348 & 334 also appeared on the admission list as Number One and Number Two respectively.
7. The good news in all of these is that, my son that would have been CRIMINALLY denied admission ab-initio now TOPS his class with a G.P.A of 4.85
This is neither Federal nor State government doing... Every sector of the economy in Nigeria is corrupt.
Photo: Prof Ishaq Oloyede, Registrar, Joint Admission and Matriculation Board ( JAMB )
@PeterObi Nigeria needs leadership that is focused less on optics and more on productivity; less on ceremony and more on measurable economic results.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
State visits by Leaders are not tourism, and diplomacy is not a fashion parade. Every foreign trip undertaken by a government must deliver measurable benefits to the people, including investments, technology transfer, trade agreements, factory expansion, industrial partnerships, and job creation.
During President Trump’s recent visit to China, the American delegation reportedly included a few top government officials, and many of the biggest figures in global business and technology:
Consequently, huge trade deals worth several billion dollars including about 200 Boeing orders were achieved.
The list of the entourage included
1. Donald J. Trump – President of the United States
2. Marco Rubio – Secretary of State
3. Pete Hegseth – Secretary of Defence
4. Elon Musk – CEO, Tesla & SpaceX
5. Jensen Huang – CEO, Nvidia
6. Tim Cook – CEO, Apple
7. Larry Fink – CEO, BlackRock
8. Stephen Schwarzman – CEO, Blackstone
9. Kelly Ortberg – CEO, Boeing
10. Brian Sikes – CEO, Cargill
11. Jane Fraser – CEO, Citigroup
12. Larry Culp – CEO, General Electric
13. David Solomon – CEO, Goldman Sachs
14. Sanjay Mehrotra – CEO, Micron Technology
15.Cristiano Amon – CEO, Qualcomm
16. Dina P. McCormick – President of Meta
17. Ryan McInerney – CEO, Visa
18. Michael Miebach – President, Mastercard
19. Jim Anderson – CEO, Coherent
20. Jacob Thaysen – CEO, Illumina
That is how serious nations approach diplomacy, by aligning foreign policy with economic expansion, industrial growth, innovation, and national productivity.
I hope that lessons can be learned from these recent visits comparing them with the President of Nigeria’s recent state visit to the United Kingdom.
A large entourage of politicians, aides, and government officials travelled, yet Nigerians are still asking a simple question: what exactly did Nigeria bring home?
Which factories are coming to Nigeria?
What power, technology, manufacturing, agricultural, or industrial agreements were secured?
How many direct jobs will this visit create for Nigerian youths?
What investments were attracted?
What measurable economic outcomes can the ordinary Nigerian point to?
The delegation reportedly included:
1. President Bola Tinubu
2. Senator (Mrs) Tinubu
3.12 governors
4.9 ministers
5.7 members of the National Assembly
6. Over 20 senior State House staff
7. Over 30 security personnel
8. Over 10 domestic staff
9. Several supporters and associates
It is not enough to ride horses, wear matching uniforms, attend royal banquets, and release glossy photographs. Symbolism without substance cannot feed hungry citizens.
Today, Nigeria is in decline, battling serious insecurity, food insecurity, unemployment, a weakened naira, declining industrial productivity, and worsening poverty.
At a time when millions of Nigerians struggle daily to afford food and survive economic hardship, every kobo spent on foreign trips must produce tangible national value: investments, factories, jobs, exports, infrastructure, and economic opportunities.
Nigeria needs leadership that is focused less on optics and more on productivity; less on ceremony and more on measurable economic results.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
OBI on Channels TV 📺: Politics Today.
SEUN: Mr. Peter Obi, Atiku said so many things about you. He said it would take a miracle for you to win the election. What’s your take on that?
Atiku said it would take a miracle for you to win?
OBI: Well, my political journey has been a miracle. So many things have happened in my life that people never thought would be possible.
In 2003, I contested the Anambra governorship election under a party that was just one year old. People said it would take a miracle for me to win that election, but I won.
Six months later, I was impeached. I challenged the impeachment in court. People said it would be impossible for me to return to office, that no governor had ever returned to office after impeachment. They said it would take a miracle for me to win the case in court, but I won the case.
I came back to office and, in 2007, another election was conducted and Andy Uba was declared the winner. I went to court again to seek the interpretation of our laws. I told the court that the tenure of a governor is four years and that I should be allowed to complete my tenure. People said it would take a miracle for me to win that case, but I won.
So, my political journey has been like a miracle, and I’m waiting for the bigger miracle to happen.
SEUN: Alright. Atiku also said that 90% of Northerners are not on social media, so he is not bothered about your popularity online. What’s your take on that?
OBI: Well, that’s the problem I am coming to solve as President of Nigeria. I have said it before: the North will become our new oil. I will convert that population into wealth through education and production.
I will invest in education so that those who do not know how to use the internet in the North will learn how to use it. The North is our new oil.
On liver cancer and what to do;
This is very important information:
One of the commonest causes of liver cancer is Hepatitis B (which is an infection/inflammation of the liver).
You can get hepatitis B through:
Unprotected sex,
Sharing needles as a drug user,
Unsafe blood transfusions,
Sharing clippers with others,
Getting tattoos at unsafe/unaccredited places,
On unprotected sex,
The risk is higher with unprotected anal sex, especially with multiple partners, and especially in men who have sex with men,
Untreated/undiagnosed hepatitis can lead to liver inflammation, liver damage and liver cancer.
What to do:
Please avoid unsafe/unprotected sex,
Please avoid multiple sex partners,
Please avoid sharing needles and clippers, please avoid getting tattoos at medically unsafe/unaccredited centers,
Most importantly;
PLEASE GO AND GET THE HEPATITIS B VACCINE. This singular action can save your life.
The hepatitis B vaccine protects from hepatitis B for a lifetime and prevents liver cancer. You only take 3 doses of the vaccine and you are protected for a lifetime from hepatitis B infection.
•1st Shot - At any given time.
•2nd Shot - At least one month (or 28 days) after the 1st shot.
•3rd Shot - At least 4 months (16 weeks) after the 1st shot and 2 months after the 2nd shot.
The hepatitis B vaccine is also known as the first “anti-cancer” vaccine because it prevents hepatitis B infection which is the leading cause of liver cancer worldwide.
Please go to any general hospital, reputable private hospital or accredited pharmacy near you and request to get the Hepatitis B vaccine.
You can read more here:
https://t.co/26qvnamCSt
The most important thing is this:
PLS GET HEPATITIS B VACCINE TODAY.
The Hepatitis B vaccine protects you from Hepatitis B infection for a lifetime.
This is one singular action you can take today to prevent hepatitis B infection and prevent liver cancer for yourself and your loved ones. Please share this information everywhere.
Help save someone’s life today.
“Do You Have Any Challenges?”
Those Were The Words Of Governor Alex Otti After He Suddenly Stopped His Convoy And Walked Into a Military Base Along Ngwa Road During a Routine Inspection In Aba.
“How Are You? How Is Work Going? Is The Commander In?” Governor Otti Asked The Soldier On Duty.
The Officer Quickly Took Him To Meet The Commander, Captain T. Yabiteigha, Who Was Clearly Surprised By The Unplanned Visit.
Governor Otti Said:
“Sorry We Took You Unawares. I Was Just Passing And Decided To Check On You People. Are There Any Challenges We Should Know About?”
Before The Officer Could Say Much, Governor Otti Looked Around And Added:
“I Can Already See This Place Needs Renovation.”
The Soldiers Then Showed Him Their Faulty Operational Vehicles And Poor Working Conditions.
Immediately, Governor Otti Directed That The Vehicles Be Repaired Or Replaced Without Delay And Ordered The Renovation Of The Base, Including Installation Of Solar Lights.
Then Came The Emotional Moment.
Captain Yabiteigha Told The Governor:
“Sir, You May Not Remember Me, But Last Year You Paid My Hospital Bills And Supported The Family Of Our Colleague Who Died During An Attack. You Even Gave Scholarship To His Children. I Have Been Looking For a Way To Thank You For Saving My Life.”
In 2023, I was stranded in Oshodi while coming back from an interview. No cash, no money in the account. Phone at 4%. Rain was beating me black and blue with no hideout.
I posted: “Please, is anybody around Oshodi? My phone is about to go off and I’m stuck at Arena Junction. I need 2k for transport to get back home. I’ll pay back tomorrow. No jokes please.”
I tagged three of my closest friends, people that called me “sister” on birthdays.
First reply was laughing emojis. “LMAO, you don finally cast.”
Second reply: “Omo, trek am, exercise.”
Third person saw it and posted a meme two minutes later.
My phone died. I sat on a bench laid across the walkway, soaked, watching Lagos run past me, thinking this is how it ends for two thousand naira.
After a few minutes, a car parked close to where I was. The car windows rolled down and a voice asked, “Are you Ireoluwa?” I nodded. “One guy say make I carry you go Abule Egba. E don pay.”
I got in without thinking twice.
Halfway, my phone buzzed on the driver’s power bank. A DM from a stranger I never followed:
“Hey there, I saw your post. I really don’t know you but I know that feeling. Bolt is paid to your street. Get home safe. No need to pay back. Just help someone else one day when you can.”
I got home and checked his page. He’d been job hunting for three months and was probably broke. But he sent me a ride and some money. Now we are good friends even though we have still never met.
My friends with jobs posted me for cruise.
A stranger with nothing posted me for life.
That night I learned friendship doesn’t define family. Sometimes your lifeline is the person you’ve never met.
America has 50 states.
And every single one of them operates under its own laws, courts, policing systems, and legal culture while still being bound by federal law.
That is the difference.
The United States understood something long ago that Nigeria still refuses to confront:
You cannot effectively govern hundreds of millions of people with completely different realities from one central authority.
In America, federal law handles national matters:
immigration
national security
constitutional rights
interstate crimes
currency
But individual states control much of what affects daily life:
policing
criminal justice
business regulations
education
taxation
property law
civil disputes
So what works in Texas does not have to be forced on California.
What works in Florida does not automatically become law in New York.
Each state adapts to its own people, culture, economy, crime rate, and social realities.
That decentralization is one of the greatest strengths of the American system.
It creates speed.
It creates accountability.
It creates competition between states.
It prevents dangerous levels of power concentration.
And most importantly, it allows local problems to be solved locally.
Meanwhile Nigeria calls itself a federation, but operates like an overprotected unitary state wearing a federal costume.
Everything leads back to Abuja.
Security? Abuja.
Policing? Abuja.
Major judicial power? Abuja.
Revenue dependence? Abuja.
Even governors that are called “Chief Security Officers” cannot fully control police operations in their own states.
Think about how absurd that is.
A governor can watch insecurity spread in real time and still wait for federal approval before meaningful action can happen.
That is not federalism.
That is administrative dependency.
Nigeria is trying to centrally manage over 200 million people across completely different ethnic, economic, religious, and security realities as if Sokoto and Port Harcourt experience the same problems.
They do not.
And the damage is obvious.
Our courts are overloaded.
Judicial processes move at a painful pace.
Security coordination is weak.
States wait for federal allocations instead of building real economic independence.
Every election becomes a war because too much power is concentrated at the center.
Control Abuja and you practically control the country.
That is why political tension in Nigeria is always explosive.
Too much authority sits in one place.
America distributed power intentionally.
Nigeria concentrates power dangerously.
And that difference affects everything from policing efficiency to judicial speed to economic development.
The American system is not perfect.
Far from it.
But one thing it understood correctly is this:
Local realities require local solutions.
Nigeria still governs like every state is the same country inside the same problem.
It is one of the biggest reasons governance keeps failing, institutions remain weak, and justice feels painfully distant from the average citizen.