@Cr7Godbrand@OluwatobiIsre11 You are me and I am you, I never beg for sex even when I was still single. You come to my house to sleep over and you said no to sex I will never touch you till next day and that maybe the last time you are coming to my house
You speak from a place of ignorance. Let me speak from a place of experience.
I have fought alongside the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) in the North‑East. I have seen them navigate terrains that military GPS could not map. I have watched them lead ambushes, identify hideouts, and save soldiers' lives not because they have better weapons, but because they know the ground.
The Forest Guard initiative is not a replacement for the military. It is a force multiplier.
You ask: "Will 1,000 individuals be effective against terrorists the military has fought for over a decade?"
Yes. Because the military is already effective. The Forest Guards are not substitutes – they are scouts, guides, and local defenders. They know which path leads to a village and which leads to an ambush. They know which farmer is a collaborator and which herder is a spy. That is not training. That is local knowledge and no amount of military drills can replicate it.
You call the Forest Guards "less prepared." But the CJTF started as volunteers with no training and no weapons. Today, they are a critical component of Operation HADIN KAI in the North East. They have paid the supreme price. They have rescued civilians. They have mapped every creek in the Tumbuns, Mandara Mountain and Timbuktu Triangle.
The military remains the best bet. But the military cannot be everywhere at once. It cannot live in every village. It cannot monitor every forest path.
That is where community security forces come in – not to replace soldiers, but to complement them.
If you think the Forest Guards "won't stand a chance," you do not understand asymmetric warfare. The enemy hides among the population. The only way to find them is with the help of the population.
That is not a campaign job. That is a survival strategy.
Let's stop mocking solutions we do not understand.
People really think I am joking when I support Tinubu.
You think it was easy for someone who has never collected a voters card in his life to go and line up three times just to get one?
Let me explain my reason.
I see politicians who are against Tinubu — and I know exactly why they are against him. He is closing the loopholes they have fed from for decades.
I see the masses who are feeling the full impact of the economic reforms — and I understand their pain. It is real.
But here I am a thinker.
And as a thinker I believe President Tinubu needs more support not less. Not because he is perfect but because the process he has started is bigger than the man himself.
So I will not just support him quietly.
I will go further — I will engage, I will explain and I will win more people over to understand what is actually happening to this economy.
Because Nigeria deserves people who think before they react. 😎
Dear @Dammi_Esq
I know you may not be a Muslim, but I dare say Islam has got you covered on what to do.
You have to realize that the moment you accepted that money and issued a receipt, the ownership of those 150 bags of cement moved from you to that customer. You are no longer the owner.
The ruling here is that a completed sale is binding. You cannot change the price of a deal that is already finished just because the market moved four months later.
There is a legal principle called Al-Kharaj bid-Dhaman, which means the benefit of an asset belongs to the person who carries the risk of losing it.
If the price of cement had crashed to half of what he paid, would you have voluntarily given him a refund of the balance when he showed up? Most likely, you would have told him that a deal is a deal. Justice works both ways.
You are acting as the Amin (the trustee) for his property. Demanding more money now or trying to force a refund on him so you can sell to someone else at a higher price is what the scholars would call a breach of trust.
My advice to you is to give the man his 150 bags and let him go in peace. It feels like you are losing money because you are looking at today's price, but you already made your profit the day he paid you.
Trying to claw back more because of "market price" is how people lose the Barakah in their business. He is not cheating you. He is asking for what he already bought. Don't let a temporary price hike make you fall into the sin of betraying a contract.
Give him his goods, wish him well on his recovery, and move on to the next sale.
Allah knows best.
Are you all blind or just cowards?
This Isolo Rep Okey-Joe Onuakalusi used Lagos money, our ancestors’ land, to empower nearly 40 Igbos!
One tribe eating everything while indigenes are sidelined.
If he’s doing this openly, imagine the underground looting for his people.
Lagosians, wake up and get angry! This is daylight tribal robbery!
@HOJ_Onuakalusi@jidesanwoolu@mudashiru_obasa@GRVlagos@tokunbo_wahab@sowore@channelstv @ariise_tv @punchnewspapers