In La Liga. What did he do in Ligue 1? He scored 6 goals his first season and followed it up with 16 goals. That’s facts and evidence but you choose to ignore it. It forced him to a semi-retirement at 35 as he moved to the MLS. His World Cup performances had come against weaker teams and has taken more penalties than anyone in the last 20 years, that’s another fact and evidence. Don’t ignore it, use it to process and form new beliefs. You’re still stuck in Chapter 1.
Bias is not the absence of facts; it is the refusal to acknowledge them, even when the evidence contradicts deeply held beliefs. Instead of viewing new evidence as an opportunity to learn, biased individuals often perceive it as an attack on their identity or worldview. Those who reject facts simply because they challenge their existing beliefs seldom expand their understanding or evolve their perspective. As a result, they often remain stagnant, while true growth and progress require a willingness to adapt, learn, and change. Take your sub Pessi fans.
We will not renovate government owned schools anymore nor offer to train their teachers. They have the resources to do that and they can fix them if they wish.
For ISEE we will build modular container schools across communities in the South East, hire and train our own teachers, use of own 21st century globally relevant blended curriculum to train the children.
We will also give out scholarships, sponsor sports competitions, support technical education, apprenticeship education, invest in science and innovations.
We must remain independent and laser focused with top level management of our investments.
We are getting ready for the announcement tomorrow.
This will be the beginning of a lot of greatness yet to come for our children.
Our children will be prosperous on a scale never seen before.
There is something truly special about seeing our culture celebrated on the global stage.
Nigeria’s Director-General of the World Trade Organization, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, proudly showcased the richness of Igbo heritage by bringing vibrant masquerades and energetic traditional dancers to the WTO Open Day.
Culture is our identity, and today, the world got a glimpse of the beauty of Ala Igbo.
Just look at Master Chisom Unachukwu.
It’s rewarding to be a teacher.
He said the dream he couldn’t achieve as a student, he is now achieving it as a teacher.
Focusing a major part of my education intervention in the South East is not tribalism.
I am not a political office holder. I’m just an ordinary citizen like you.
If you feel upset about it, why not focus on your region?
Our collective efforts will make Nigeria better.
The South East is making a choice.
We will double down on eliminating illiteracy.
Every child who cannot read, write and reason represents lost potential for our economy, our security and our future.
We are studying the education systems that consistently produce some of the world’s strongest learning outcomes, including Singapore and China.
We are no longer educating children just to survive.
We are educating them to compete globally and lead.
That is the future we are building.
The Fulani who are killing you are the same people who instill hatred of the Igbo in you, telling you that they are Biafrans. Has any Igbo person ever come into your home, killed you, or raped your women?
Instead, it is the Fulani—who tell you that you are one people and brothers—who are killing you and raping your women. Then their leaders appear in the media and shift the blame onto you, claiming that you provoked them first and that they only took up arms in retaliation.
If you are Hausa, know that you have no greater enemy than the Fulani. It is the Fulani who kill you, displace you from your homeland, and steal your wealth, leaving you trapped in extreme poverty.
Then a Fulani group worst than Boko Haram will emerge they will seize our farmland rape our women kill our people and their master will protect defend and even arm them because their sole agenda is to enslave us forever.
Those who cannot see it now will soon see it.
MAZI NNAMDI KANU
We concluded today’s tour at St. Peter’s Square, Vatican City.
Listen to Egejurum Onyedikachi’s remark on his experience today.
He is in Primary 6 and just 11 years old.