Those children and their teachers in Oyo slept in the coldest forest. For two uninterrupted weeks.
Bola Tinubu is in his palatial Ikoyi residence. Hosting political visitors and strategizing over power dynamics for the 2027 elections - his major preoccupation.
Seyi Makinde has visited the families of the victims on three different occasions. But, the President has not deemed it fit to leave his Lagos mansion to even say hello to the grieving families. We have a mindless, wicked and cold President who does not give a damn. Empathy? Not Tinubu.
He would quietly return to Aso Villa in a few days. And Oyo is right behind him in Lagos.
Bola Tinubu continues to dare us to do our worst. The choice is left for us in 2027.
We pacify and cuddle our docility with prayers.
We make ourselves believe there is nothing we can do but pray. So we pray and sigh “It is well”.
In a democracy, if all of us come out and grind this evil leadership to a halt, it will flee. But No! We want the little comfort we barely enjoy. We like how we are managing while life is still being squeezed out of us everyday.
The politicians know, so they encourage us to pray. It is a mockery. They know that your prayers mean nothing as long as you choose not to revolt. They want us to accept fate while they determine it.
They also know that your prayers wishing them death are futile. They’ve made peace with the fact that they are evil. Hence, they’ll do anything to stay alive at our expense.
Afterall, the God that didn’t kill Buhari can choose not to kill Tinubu. And if he does now, Tinubu has lived a full life on Nigeria’s resources while many futures have been ruined by death, poverty and insecurity. Gowon is still alive, so is IBB.
Praying alone cannot work. We can, and should do more than pray. God will not start a protest. We must have the willpower to enforce righteousness in Nigeria.
God is not a Nigerian.
3years of poverty.
3years of hunger.
3years of insecurity.
3years of state-excused terrorism.
3years of wastage and squandering.
3years of government-denied genocide.
3years of blatant executive insanity.
Congratulations to BAT on 3years of absolute incompetent uselessness.
The year is 2043, Man Utd have appointed Kobbie Mainoo as interim manager, Spurs have been promoted from the National League South, and Arsenal have sealed their 21st second place finish in a row behind champions Lincoln.
If anything sha happens to me, we would all know who the people responsible are.
Talmabout her department and hostel details are available on request.
Because I said I no longer want Tinubu as my president? Gosh you guys are not so different from him. You really are not.😭
All Muslim countries had a different dominant religion before Islam:
🇹🇷 Turkey: Christian, now 97.1% Muslim
🇪🇬 Egypt: Coptic/Christian, now 95.2%
🇮🇩 Indonesia: Hindu/Buddhist, now 87.0%
🇵🇰 Pakistan: Hindu/Buddhist, now 96.5%
🇧🇩 Bangladesh: Hindu/Buddhist, now 91.1%
🇸🇾 Syria: Christian, now 94.2%
🇮🇶 Iraq: Zoroastrian/Christian, now
99.5%
🇮🇷 Iran: Zoroastrian, now 99.8% (online surveys show significantly lower)
🇦🇫 Afghanistan: Buddhist/Hindu, now 99.9%
🇲🇦 Morocco: Amazigh/indigenous, now 99.7%
🇩🇿 Algeria: Amazigh/indigenous, now 98.4%
🇹🇳 Tunisia: Punic/Berber, now 99.3%
🇱🇾 Libya: Amazigh/indigenous, now 99.0%
With a few exceptions, these countries today are characterized by:
•Limited freedom of expression
•Poor or suppressed women's rights
•Low technological development
•Little to no religious tolerance
•Dominance of Sharia or religious legislation
•Little room for personal freedom and criticism
And yet Europe continues to mass-import people from these societies.
Europe must protect its own identity, values, and culture. That can only be achieved through remigration.
- @DutchKafir
From Pharisee to Tax Collector: Rethinking Tinubu’s Kenyan Comparison
In a recent remark in Yenagoa, Bola Ahmed Tinubu suggested that Nigerians should find solace in being “better off than Kenya and other African countries.” While this may have been intended to soften the impact of economic hardship and rising fuel prices, the comment risks downplaying the severity of the current crisis. It echoes the biblical parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector in the Gospel of Luke (18:9–14). A similar warning is found in the Qur’an (53:32), which cautions against self-righteousness.
Like the Pharisee who boasted of his superiority over others to mask his own spiritual void, such downward comparisons serve more as a refuge than a remedy. This validated an earlier dismissive remark by President Ahmed Bola Tinubu during electioneering: “Na statistics we go shop?” Yet statistics remain indispensable - they are the language through which nations understand their condition and chart progress. No country can develop in isolation from measurable realities or without comparing itself with peers. Comparisons, when properly grounded, are not instruments of escapism but tools of accountability. What is objectionable is not comparison itself, but comparison stripped of credible, verifiable data—mere tax collector comparisons that soothe rather than solve.
On key development indicators such as security, the Human Development Index, life expectancy, GDP per capita, literacy levels, and electricity access, Kenya consistently outperforms Nigeria. Nigeria is the fourth most terrorised nation in the world, while Kenya is not among the ten worst. Kenya’s HDI ranking is 143 out of 180 countries, with a coefficient of about 0.630, compared to Nigeria’s ranking of 164 out of 180, with a coefficient of about 0.530. Its GDP per capita is roughly $2,200–$2,300, compared to Nigeria’s $807–$835. Kenya’s poverty rate is about 43% of the population (approximately 23 million people), while Nigeria’s is about 63% (around 150 million people), over six times that of Kenya. Kenya’s life expectancy is about 67 years, while Nigeria’s is about 54 years. The literacy rate in Kenya is approximately 81–85%, compared to Nigeria’s 62–65%.
Kenya’s electricity access is higher, while Nigeria has one of the lowest levels of electricity access in the world. Kenya has about 3.5 million out-of-school children, while Nigeria has about 20 million. Kenya’s inflation rate has been about 4.5% or lower over the past three years, while Nigeria’s has remained above 15% within the same period. Kenya’s exchange rate has been around USD 1 to KES 130 over the past three years, whereas Nigeria’s exchange rate rose from below ₦500/$1 to above ₦1,250/$1 within the same period. Even with developments in the Middle East and rising oil prices, Kenyans have not experienced the sharp increases in petroleum product prices seen in Nigeria.
Across other key indicators, Kenya also performs better. In the end, these indices clearly show that Kenya ranks higher than Nigeria on several development metrics. The standard of living of Kenyans is better than that of Nigerians. If the President considers Kenyans to be suffering despite these stronger figures, then Nigerians are in a far more difficult situation. He should therefore refrain from self-consolation and, in honest reflection, take responsibility for the situation and make a determined effort to drive improvement. This requires a posture of humility, accountability, and commitment to addressing the factors that have slowed Nigeria’s development.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
A number just called me from @gtbank_help still arguing with me that I used my card for online transactions..
Why is @gtbank_help trying to force me that t I use my card.... A card that I destroyed ....so are you saying after I destroyed a card...it can be used for a web transaction...
@gtbank_help investigate the card well ....the last time my card was used for online transactions was in 2024..
Stop calling me and forcing a narrative...
You stole my money and I need it back