The automated graveyard shift at the lunar outpost was usually silent, save for the hum of the life support systems.
Leo sat at the main console, staring at a static-filled monitor. He was three days away from completing his solo six-month tour. He was ready for crowds, fresh air, and gravity that didn't make his knees ache.
Suddenly, the proximity alarm chimed. A blinking red dot appeared on the radar, just outside the airlock.
He checked the external cameras. The lunar surface was a sea of monochrome dust, empty and still. Nothing was there. Yet, the sensor insisted an object weighing exactly 75 kilograms was standing right on the doormat.
1-0 Arsenal.
GOOOOOOOOOOOAAAAAAAAAAAAAALLLLLLLLLLLL KAI HAVERTZ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! KAI HAVERTZ SCORES IN THE CHAMPIONS LEAGUE FINAL VS PSG !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THIS IS A HISTORICAL GOAL !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ARSENAL TAKE THE LEAD IN THE FINAL !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Power Belongs to the People: The Principle Behind Hon. Shehu ABG’s Message
By: El-Masjid Abdul Umar (Masallaci)
28/05/2026
Standing before a cheering crowd, with the green and white of Nigeria waving in the background, Hon. Shehu ABG has delivered a statement that cuts through the noise of Nigeria’s political theater: “Political power comes from God through the masses and not from Aso-Rock or the power of incumbency.”
It is a simple sentence, but within it lies a rebuke of a political culture that has long inverted the true source of authority.
The phrase “power comes from God through the masses” is not mere rhetoric. It is a return to the foundational logic of democratic governance. In a republic, sovereignty does not reside in the corridors of the Presidential Villa, nor in the advantage of incumbency. It resides in the citizenry, farmers in Niger, traders in Kaduna, students in Enugu, and workers across every ward who lend their consent through the ballot.
Hon. Shehu ABG’s message reminds both the governed and the governors that public office is a trust, not a birthright. When leaders forget this, governance becomes extraction rather than service, and the state begins to drift from its purpose.
The second half of the statement is equally deliberate: power does not flow from Aso-Rock or from the machinery of incumbency. This is a direct challenge to the prevailing assumption that access to state resources and institutional leverage is a substitute for legitimacy.
Incumbency can facilitate governance, but it cannot manufacture consent. To suggest otherwise is to mistake control for authority. Hon. Shehu ABG’s words draw a line between those who govern because they must, and those who govern because the people have willed it. That distinction is the difference between a democracy and an oligarchy in disguise.
The setting of the message, amidst a jubilant crowd on a sports field, underscores its intent. Politics should be a contest of ideas and service, not a siege on the machinery of state. The image conveys energy, participation, and ownership. It suggests a politics that meets the people where they are, rather than one that expects the people to come to it on bended knee.
For Hon. Shehu ABG, this is not just a slogan for a campaign season. It is a governing philosophy. It insists that legitimacy is earned through accountability, that policy must be tested against the needs of ordinary citizens, and that no officeholder should confuse the temporary privilege of office with an entitlement to power.
Nigeria’s democratic project will only mature when its leaders internalize what Hon. Shehu ABG has articulated. Power that does not flow from the people is borrowed power, and borrowed power is always temporary.
The message is clear, and the moment demands it: leadership must return to its source. Not to Aso-Rock, not to incumbency, but to God, through the masses who are the true custodians of the nation’s future. @usmanbawa2
31-Year-Old South African Woman Transforms Into an Old Lady After Alleged 53xual Encounter With A Stranger Who Paid Her $20k
A 31-year-old South African woman named Nondie from Mtubatuba in KwaZulu-Natal has captured widespread attention on social media due to her shocking and rapid physical transformation.
Unconfirmed reports circulating online suggest that her dramatic aging began days after she allegedly had a one-night stand with a foreigner, who reportedly left $20,000 on the bed. However, confirmed details reveal she hails from KwaZulu-Natal and lived a normal life until around age 27.
In recent years, Nondie has suffered severe symptoms including intense body pain, frequent vomiting, difficulty walking, and accelerated changes to her skin, hair, and facial features. She now appears decades older, often mistaken for a woman in her 70s, 80s, or even 90s.
Medical experts believe she is suffering from Werner syndrome, also known as adult-onset progeria, a rare genetic disorder caused by mutations in the WRN gene, which impairs DNA repair and leads to premature aging.