Apparently the nurse told them visiting hours was over and this is how they treated her💔
Incident happened at community 22 Polyclinic. The man in this video has to be arrested honestly.
The ambulance meant to carry victims from the collapsed building at Adenta reportedly failed to start and had to be pushed by people, delaying the evacuation of the injured.
I love this app. I’ve always loved this app.
Maybe because writing has always been my strongest superpower. I express myself better when I write. It also allows me to hide my face, my environment, my circumstances. And it used to be a lot of fun to joke, laugh, and argue with people on here.
But in a world where people have always debated (read: argued) to win rather than to learn, building a platform that rewards engagement monetarily was always going to have consequences. Monetization didn’t create that problem, but it certainly poured fuel on it.
Imagine a massive parliament where everyone is screaming at each other, not because they care deeply about the positions they're defending, but because attention has become a currency. Some people genuinely believe what they're saying. Most are simply playing to the crowd. Either way, the loudest and most outrageous voices tend to travel the furthest.
I understand the ideal behind it all. I really do. A place where everyone can voice their opinions on issues they care about is a great thing. But when money gets tied to attention, people naturally gravitate toward whatever earns more of it. Sometimes that means saying things they don't believe. Other times it means becoming more extreme versions of who they already are. Both outcomes concern me.
And in a time when so many kids are growing up online instead of outside, that matters. The internet isn't just reflecting culture anymore; it's helping shape it. When the most rewarded behaviour is outrage, performance, and conflict, that doesn't stay on the screen. It spills over into how people think, talk, and relate to one another.
These days, I post, reply to dms and then leave because scrolling through gives me too much anxiety.
And even though I'm saying how I feel, the quote that will probably get the most engagement on this post will read something like:
"Janice, STFU."
Maybe they're right and I’m just too old for this app.
This line… baffles me.
“We shoulda been together like Paul and Peter but dem choose to be bitter”
In case you missed Sunday School, let me break it down.
Peter was the less educated of the two, but he walked directly with Jesus. Paul, on the other hand, was highly educated and came to know Christ through revelation, study, and spiritual transformation. Now, between Stonebwoy and Shatta Wale, who has pursued formal education further? I’ll leave that for you to answer.
But that’s not even the point.
Paul and Peter had disagreements. Serious ones. Public ones. Yet they never lost sight of the bigger picture. They remained pillars of the Church and helped build something greater than themselves. By invoking Paul and Peter, Stonebwoy appears to be saying that despite differences, rivalries, and opposing approaches, major players in the industry should be building together, not tearing each other down. You can disagree and still make history together.
Which brings me to the confusing part.
If that’s truly the message, why was Stonebwoy uncomfortable with Sarkodie and Shatta Wale finding common ground? Sarkodie himself said in an interview that he realized he and Shatta ultimately want the same thing for Ghanaian music, even though they have different approaches. If Stone believes Paul and Peter could coexist despite their differences, why describe that relationship as fake or convenient friendship when you literally want the same thing with Shatta?
Even more interesting, there are multiple interviews where Stonebwoy has dismissed the idea of collaborating with Shatta Wale or engaging him lyrically. So why sing this line now?
Maybe the answer is simpler than we think. Your idol will always be your idol, even when admitting it is difficult. Especially when your rise was championed by people who positioned themselves against that idol. Sometimes admiration hides behind rivalry.
Save this post. One day, and perhaps sooner than many expect, “I WANT TO BE LIKE BANDANA” will no longer be remembered as just a Facebook post. It will become a reality people can no longer ignore.
The clock is already ticking.