My Vision for a Productive and Prosperous Nigeria
Today, being the 1st of July, 2026, I wish to humbly recall that when I decided to contest for the office of President of Nigeria, I pledged to place Nigeria on the path of unity and national transformation. Now, as the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) candidate, I will, in the coming weeks and months, provide insights into the roadmap that I am confident will help curb abuse in government, halt the decline in the quality of life of Nigerians at all levels, and usher in an era of unity, peace, sustained progress, and prosperity.
This vision is anchored on a commitment to unity, inclusion, social justice, equity, and the freedom of every citizen to pursue lawful dreams.
Central to this proposed roadmap are significant reforms in education and healthcare, which are at the core of human capital development.
Robust human capital is indispensable infrastructure for national progress. It serves as the fundamental capital upon which daily life, economic expansion, and the delivery of essential public services depend.
These are foundational areas that we must reform with energy and determination if we are to reap the demographic dividend of our youthful population.
From the outset of my presidency, we will establish a task force dedicated to drastically reducing the menace of out-of-school children. We will place greater emphasis on Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) to support our drive for massive industrialisation, anchored on our agricultural endowments and value addition across value chains organised around industrial parks to be located in development zones across the geopolitical regions of the country.
Funding and improving the equipment of TVET institutions, through partnerships among government, the private sector, and social entrepreneurs such as faith-based educators, will facilitate apprenticeship opportunities in the private sector, similar to the German dual education system.
The situation in which unemployment remains high while Nigerian entrepreneurs establish businesses elsewhere because skilled labour is scarce must be confronted decisively. Doing so is essential for the common good and for facilitating our transition from a consumption-driven economy to a production-driven one.
Character and civic education, emphasising the values that foster trust - an essential ingredient for enterprise and leadership - as well as shared national values, will receive significant attention within the tripartite approach to governance that we propose.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
Please do not do this!!! Register on Pnet or Offerzen. Inflate your fucking work experience and practice, practice so you can back that shit up... It's just coding buddy not human anatomy surgical procedures...
This is the last time I'm telling you this...
How to Sort Every NGX Stock Into Two Piles.
Pile One: Stocks that will likely make you money.
Pile Two: Stocks that will likely cost you money.
Most Nigerian investors cannot do this because nobody taught them the method. The method is not complicated. It just requires knowing what to look at.
This thread teaches you. Save it before your next trade.
How to Sort Every NGX Stock Into Two Piles.
Pile One: Stocks that will likely make you money.
Pile Two: Stocks that will likely cost you money.
Most Nigerian investors cannot do this because nobody taught them the method. The method is not complicated. It just requires knowing what to look at.
This thread teaches you. Save it before your next trade.
THE NIGERIAN STOCK MARKET — A Complete Beginner’s Guide
I’ve been getting tons of DMs asking how to start investing in Nigerian stocks.
So I put together the most detailed thread you’ll ever read on this topic.
Bookmark this. Share it. Your future self will thank you.
🧵👇
I’ve spent the past couple of weeks building Looters: a public archive of Nigerian political corruption since the 1990s.
Governors, ministers, shell companies, Swiss accounts, the Jersey trusts, — one searchable graph.
You too can connect the dots: https://t.co/faIfzWfAIp
Lol, why would I delete it?
Back in 2020, because of the exceptional performance of Seyi Makinde during his first term, I said he had the qualities to be President. Fast forward to 2023, while he was contesting for reelection as governor, Peter Obi came on the scene and, based on his track record, I volunteered to be his campaign photographer pro bono because I genuinely believed he was fit for the job.
I didn’t stop at taking pictures. I went back to my polling unit on election Day, voted, bought snacks, and encouraged people to stay until every single vote was counted. Peter Obi won there too. For context, that polling unit is close to the PDP national secretariat in AkwaIbom, and Udom Emmanuel was the PDP campaign DG.
In 2025, I returned and continued my work as his photographer. So why exactly should I be ashamed that I saw visionary leadership in 2020 and wanted it at the national level?
Unlike some political jobbers who once praised Peter Obi and later switched up, I’ve never changed my stance on Seyi Makinde. I’ve never insulted or disrespected him.
I’m not just a supporter of Peter Obi, I work for and with him. He has the capacity to lead this country, and Seyi Makinde does too, based on proven track records.
At the end of the day, it’s better for productive and competent people to contest elections than to leave leadership in the hands of drug dealers, certificate forgers, and people with no traceable background.
I want a Nigeria that works and I’m happy the race is competitive, unlike the coronation some people were hoping to have.
Dear @WorldBankGroup
STOP GIVING NIGERIA FRESH LOANS!
STOP GIVING NIGERIA FRESH LOANS!
STOP GIVING NIGERIA FRESH LOANS!
STOP GIVING NIGERIA FRESH LOANS!
STOP GIVING NIGERIA FRESH LOANS!
You already approved a whopping total of $9.35 billion in loans & credits between June 2023 & May 2026 for the BAT administration
Enough is enough! Add your voice & repost this until The World Bank does the needful. 💔💔
Anthropic’s Claude Code team just showed how to automate your engineering workflow in under 30 minutes.
straight from the people who built it and it’s completely free.
SOMEONE JUST KILLED THE REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY
A guy scanned an entire house with his phone. Uploaded it.
Now anyone on Earth can walk through it in a browser tab. No app. No VR. No agent. No appointment.
Click → you’re inside. Every room. Every angle. Every shadow. Photoreal.
The numbers are insane:
- Agent fee on a $500k home: $15,000
- Cost to make this scan: ~$200
- Time to “tour” 50 houses: one evening
- File size: smaller than a TikTok
The science is wild too:
It’s called 3D Gaussian Splatting instead of polygons (how games render), it uses millions of tiny glowing “splats” of color and depth.
AI reconstructs reality from your photos. The result loads on a phone and looks like you’re THERE.
The grift opportunity is even wilder:
Freelancers are already charging $300–$800 per scan for realtors, Airbnbs, venues, car dealers, museums.
One person + one phone + one weekend = a business.
Open source. Built on PlayCanvas.
Free GitHub: https://t.co/ew6Ql8Ad6u
Dear @Pamilerin I can understand your confusion. People like you hear that Peter Obi appointed professionals; people who already had real careers outside politics, and get confused because in your world, politics is a retirement plan.
When you see people come into government, do their job, and then go back to their careers, you are confused.
“How can someone have a life outside politics?”
“How can public service not be a lifetime occupation?”
It is a strange concept to you, I know.
But let me educate you a little.
In more functional systems, you don’t build teams based on who has mastered party slogans or perfected loyalty gymnastics. You bring in people who actually understand the job; economists to handle the economy, engineers for infrastructure, educators for education.
Competence over convenience must really be wild to you.
When those professionals finished serving, they returned to their fields because they had value before politics, and they still have value after.
Obviously, this is difficult to unpack if you are used to career politicians treating governance like a full-time hustle. But for those who understand how serious societies work, it is actually the standard.