Omo you guys, those children and their teachers are still in the forest o. One month and counting, they’re still being held captive by Fulani terrorists. Na so?
One of my sons that works with one of the security agents told me yesterday that his office was instructed to do intensive investigation going back up to 1980 about Peter Obi to just find one thing to incriminate him. And they could not find even ONE.
— Apostle Chibuzor (Omega Power Ministry, 1st January, 2023).
Me: You now understand why they have not arrested Peter Obi. If Peter Obi had any form of misappropriation of Anambra State's money even if it's one naira, they would have arrested him since.
Nigeria will be OK ✌️🇳🇬
I've been thinking about something.
Through the Olympiads, Maths Quizzes, and competitions we run, we come across some exceptionally brilliant children. Not just students who score high once, but young people who consistently demonstrate extraordinary problem-solving ability.
What if companies could identify and invest in these students early?
Not as charity.
As talent investment.
Imagine a company picking a brilliant 14 or 15-year-old student, funding their education, providing mentorship, laptops, internships, exposure, and opportunities throughout secondary school and university.
In return, the student gains a clear pathway into a career, while the company gets early access to exceptional talent. We can all agree that finding exceptional talents is high, and with an early investment a company can access this privilege.
We do this for sports.
We do this for entertainment.
Why don't we do it for intellectual talent?
Some of these children will become future engineers, scientists, founders, researchers, and innovators. The challenge is that many brilliant young people never get the support they need at the stage when it matters most.
Perhaps we need to start thinking about academic talent the same way the world thinks about football talent.
Does this make sense?
I was in SS3 when my father died. We had not yet enrolled for WAEC because we had just resumed SS3.
While on his sickbed, he called me and asked about my preparations. I explained my challenges to him and told him I had not yet bought the recommended textbooks.
After listening to me, he lifted his pillow and gave me money to buy the textbooks. I bought the books and returned to show them to him. He prayed for me and told me to ensure that nothing distracted me from reading them and furthering my education.
That advice changed my life because it came from the heart of a dying man. Every word from my father's lips exposed his genuine desire to see me succeed. He spoke to me with his eyes fixed to my eyes, in a tensed but solemn atmosphere.
I saw hell after my dad's demise, but each time I felt like giving up, I remembered his words.
My dad was not rich. I knew what it meant for him to empty his savings from under his pillow just to ensure that I had a future.
To every father out there who is struggling and making sacrifices for his children, may God make life easy for you. The world may not celebrate you, but the hearts of the children whose lives you touch will never remain the same.
Happy Father's Day, heroes!
Tinubu ended every thing good in Nigeria, he took away our peace, unity, security and joy.
If you are from the Southwest and you are still supporting Tinubu, you have no conscience or moral values.
“How can you give me a ballot paper that has been thumbprinted already?”
- HIS BALLOT WAS ALREADY VOTED FOR HIM. A voter in Ekiti State received a ballot paper that was already thumb printed before he even entered the booth.
Professors in Nigeria are not good examples to imitate. They are election riggers, Political jobbers that have singlehandedly contributed in destroying Nigeria since 1999 till date.
In other climes professors are well respected for making lives better for fellow citizens through their knowledge and skills. They are symbols of academic excellence, role models, upright in character and incorruptible.
But in Nigeria, our professors are tools in the hands of politicians and politcal paries. Agberos for election rigging. Gluttonous corrupt entities without shame.
I genuinely cannot believe we're in this position.
Keir Starmer won a huge mandate from the British people. He transformed the Labour Party from one that had suffered its worst defeat in generations into a party capable of winning power and changing the country.
And yet, just two years into government, we're talking about leadership speculation instead of the job we were elected to do.
I'm not pretending everything is perfect. Government is hard. The challenges facing Britain are immense. There are difficult choices to make and there are no easy answers. If solving these problems was simply a matter of better communications or finding a catchy slogan, someone would have done it already.
What frustrates me is the idea that replacing one leader magically makes those challenges disappear. It won't.
Whoever leads Labour will face the same economic realities, the same fiscal constraints, the same online discourse and the same difficult decisions.
Some seem determined to oversimplify those realities in pursuit of their own ambitions. I think that's a mistake.
This Government has real achievements to be proud of. Growth is returning. NHS waiting lists are falling. Interest rates are coming down. Small boat crossings are down. There is still a huge amount of work to do, but progress is being made.
The public don't want a Labour Party consumed by itself. They want a Labour Government focused on them.
Right now, our energy should be on delivering for the country, winning elections and building on the progress we've made…not tearing ourselves apart.
Because if we don't learn that lesson now, what happens when the next leader faces the same difficult decisions in a year or two's time?
If people genuinely believe Burnham won’t receive the exact same media onslaught, they’ve not been paying attention.
Starmer is not, objectively, bad. This idea that he is somehow the worst PM in British history is frankly laughable.
Liz truss lasted 49 days, crashed the pound and was laughed out of Downing Street.
Since Labour took office, Keir Starmer’s government has:
• Scrapped the two-child benefit limit, lifting hundreds of thousands of children out of poverty and putting money back into some of the hardest-pressed households in the country.
• Expanded free school meals, cutting costs for families and making sure more children get a proper meal during the school day.
• Expanded funded childcare, reducing one of the biggest monthly costs facing working parents and making it easier for people to stay in work.
• Raised the National Living Wage, increasing pay for millions of low-paid workers.
• Strengthened workers’ rights, giving people greater protection against insecure work and bad employers.
• Introduced statutory sick pay from the first day of illness, so workers are less likely to choose between their health and their wages.
• Ended no-fault evictions, giving renters more security in their homes.
• Brought rail operators back into public ownership, taking key services out of failed private hands and giving the public a stronger stake in how they are run.
• Cut NHS waiting lists from their post-pandemic peak, meaning more patients are being seen sooner.
• Raised the state pension through the triple lock, protecting pensioners’ incomes against rising costs.
• Scrapped the old non-dom tax regime, making some of the wealthiest people in the country pay more fairly.
• Added VAT to private school fees, raising money from those most able to contribute.
• Removed business rates relief from private schools, ending an unjustified tax break.
• Increased neighbourhood policing, putting more officers and PCSOs back into communities.
• Helped bring knife crime down, meaning fewer families face the devastation of serious violence.
• Recorded the lowest homicide rate since the 1970s, a material improvement in public safety.
• Created Great British Energy, giving Britain a publicly owned clean energy company.
• Created the National Wealth Fund, backing investment in industry, infrastructure and clean energy.
• Passed planning reforms aimed at getting homes and major projects built faster.
• Improved relations with the EU, reducing diplomatic hostility and rebuilding practical cooperation.
• Agreed a UK-EU security partnership, strengthening cooperation on defence and European security.
• Signed a long-term partnership with Ukraine, reinforcing Britain’s support against Putin’s invasion.
• Secured new trade agreements, opening up markets for British businesses.
• Helped restore seriousness to government after years of scandal, chaos and decline.
People do not have to like Starmer. They do not have to vote Labour. But pretending this is the record of the worst Prime Minister in British history is absurd.
APC should not celebrate over the By-election results yesterday in Ekiti, Kano & Enugu.
NDC'election will officially commence on the 16th of Jan 2027 with OK. You guys will see voting/performance you have never seen before.
Presure for pressure
Vote for vote
Numbers for Numbers
If Keir Starmer does resign, history will look back on his reign and scratch its head as to why the hell he was so hated.
On paper, he's probably delivered more to working British people in such a short time than any PM for decades.
After inheriting an absolute mess: NHS waiting lists fallen. Worker's rights improved. Rail operators nationalised. Improved relations with EU and improved UK's global reputation. Removed non-dom tax status. Halved childcare costs. Boosted state pensions. Lowest homicide rate in 50 years. Lifted 550k children out of poverty. Immigration vastly reduced.
We are in the age of billionaire funded misinformation, whose sole purpose is to topple democratically elected leaders, and insert leadership that favours the wealthy elites over the working people. Looks like the game plan is working...