@charlesgava_256 There are some things which even when sanitizer, they are still wrong and the conscience simply cannot allow them. Hence the mask. It's a sign to say, I am also under captivity but just have to do it for the sake of my well being but I won't show my full face for the media.
One of the biggest complaints one hears about Africa is that good reliable data is hard to come by. I disagree; not if you know where to look and read the signs. For example if the leaders of a company go to State House to meet the President and together they announce that in October the company will begin exporting product Y worth $50 million a month and employ 3,500 people, the chance that it will happen is 12.5%. If the President visits the company and the announcement is made on the factory floor with the big man wearing a safety helmet and white lab coat, the chances that it will is 25%. If the company holds a big launch event, invites 50 social media influencers and a leading musician, plus a minister or ambassador to “flag off” the 1st consignment, the chances that it will succeed drop to 5%. If it does nothing, doesn’t invite the President or send out a press release, and only posts a photo of a chubby-cheeked smiling worker which doesn’t give away much on their social media page, put some of your money there. Their chance of success is about 65%.
@PathyKlinn@mtnug Have you used the "5G_Router"? You will be humbled.... they said the battery was for 8 hours, but in 30 minutes it's off, then the network service at best is 2G, but the pricing is 5G. Oligopoly at the moment, suffering for all
@UEDCLTD this is the 3rd day without power. Ref 465249I. Now one of your technicians says that we need to come to your offices as a mob with the LC1 letter, to get it sorted. Is that really the way things should be escalated?
How angry should the mob be for you to respond today?
Thatcher inherited a Britain where the state owned everything from steel mills to telephone lines. Unemployment hit 11.9% in 1984, inflation ran at 18% when she took office, and strikes paralyzed entire industries for months (the three-day work week wasn't a lifestyle choice).
She privatized British Telecom in 1984, British Gas in 1986, and rolled back union power that had strangled productivity for decades. The results speak louder than any economic theory: Britain's GDP per capita rose from $10,000 in 1980 to $19,000 by 1990.
Critics still blame her for "inequality" - missing the point entirely. You can't redistribute wealth that doesn't exist first. The alternative wasn't some egalitarian paradise... it was Argentina.
In the year 2000, Lee Kuan Yew gave a 2-hour masterclass on leadership worth more than an MBA.
He built Singapore into a First World nation in one generation
All your politicians need to attend his class