We Nigerians are not naturally strong people as we often claim; we have simply become experts at surviving dysfunction, hardship, and negativity.
What we call “strength” is too often just our ability to adapt to things that should never have been normal.
@Zicoboy18@Apostlekay7 Not defending Blord, but this narrative is just to justify the action.Sowore said he’d push for his release he did. Case closed.
@Zicoboy18@Apostlekay7 He will simply take the matter to court. I understand it’s difficult to unlearn what you’ve always believed is the way out, but this is a new era one where we must compel our oppressors to do the right thing.
@mcashwide1@IbraheemmHalima@TonyElumeluFDN That’s exactly my point do they truly not understand this, or have they become so used to being oppressed that they now see it as normal?
The truth is, if someone like Omoyele Sowore becomes President of Nigeria, people like VeryDarkMan may lose some relevance because basic institutions like the police would function better. Their influence largely exists because of the current system.
@bunmi_speaks The The truth is, if someone like Omoyele Sowore becomes President of Nigeria, people like VeryDarkMan may lose some relevance because basic institutions like the police would function better. Their influence largely exists because of the current system.
@Barrex@Olaolu_thaniel Must you guys show yourself, he speaks like an intellectual why can't try and bring something logical to the discussion rather than tribal.
@dammiedammie35 Compare and contrast this carefully. Let’s properly dissect the post I originally wrote and the version VDM and his cohorts edited to falsely attribute it to Omoyele Sowore.
Would Sowore realistically write “me, Omoyele Sowore” about himself?