🇳🇬 Ademola Lookman
👕 4 games
⚽️ 3 goals
🅰️ 4 assists
🇲🇦 Brahim Diaz
👕 4 games
⚽️ 4 goals
🅰️ 0 assists
As it stands, who is the favourite for AFCON 2025 player of the tournament?
Xavi will still fail at United. It’s the same mistake over and over. Trying to play system football. Man Utd is like Real Madrid in style. Quick Counter, sit back, Chaos football. That’s how you win at these clubs and not by imposing a system.
🇪🇸🗣️ Xavi: “I want to return as coach again. I’d like a good project — something like a ‘you have four years to work and make a project’ type of thing.”
“I would LOVE to work in the Premier League.”
America is not god, but as far as earth and man is concerned, anything you do, you only get away with it because they allow it.
Which is why I laugh at APC media using PR to counter the USA claims of a Christian massacre in Nigeria. They know every single person involved
If you think President Trump is not dead serious when he says, “we have the greatest military on earth,” just listen to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Dan “Raizin” Caine explain in detail how the military captured Maduro in the dark of night.
Unbelievably badass 🇺🇸
So many things are wrong with Nigeria. Look at how healthy that Elephant is, it will die if it lived in Nigeria. They will steal all allocations for maintenance and feeding.
A lady narrated how her UK-based brother, who married a woman with one child, later discovered that a young man had been travelling from Imo State to Abuja to secretly meet and sle£p with his wife👀🤯
According to her, the couple dated for six months before marriage. After the wedding, the husband tried to take her to the UK, but her documents were not ready. She insisted on relocating to Abuja, claiming she was schooling in Imo. Later, the husband’s friends in Owerri discovered that a young man had been frequently travelling to Abuja to meet a married woman. He openly admitted to the affair, not knowing he was being recorded. When the husband heard the recording, he realized the man was the same person his wife had earlier described as just helping her with school matters.
Prosperity cannot come by taxing Poverty
As I travel the world and meet leaders who have transformed their nations, one lesson is clear: lasting economic and social progress begins with national consensus. Transformative leaders—those who successfully unite their people around a shared vision—share a defining quality: honesty. Government must be transparent and truthful because citizens deserve nothing less from those who lead them. True leaders do not exploit their people to enrich themselves and a few cronies; they build trust, unity, and shared purpose - the foundation of sustainable progress.
It is against this standard of honest leadership that Nigeria’s current approach to taxation must be measured. If taxation is to function as a genuine social contract, it must be rooted in sincerity, fairness, and concern for the welfare of the people. Every tax policy should be clearly explained, including its impact on incomes and its expected contribution to national development. Without this transparency, taxation becomes a tool of confusion and burden rather than a mechanism for growth and development.
Nigeria must rethink taxation if it is serious about economic growth, national unity, and shared prosperity. The purpose of sound fiscal policy is not merely to raise revenue; it is to make the people wealthier so that the nation itself becomes stronger. Yet today, Nigerians are asked to pay taxes without clarity, explanation, or visible benefit.
The solution begins with empowering small and medium-sized enterprises in every community. When small businesses thrive, jobs are created, incomes rise, and the tax base expands naturally. You cannot tax your way out of poverty - you must produce your way out of it.
This makes the ongoing tax fraud saga particularly alarming. For the first time in Nigeria’s history, a tax law has reportedly been forged. The National Assembly itself has admitted that the version gazetted is not what was passed into law. Yet citizens are being asked to pay higher taxes under this manipulated framework—without transparency, without explanation, and without corresponding benefits.
There is no virtue in celebrating increased government revenue while the people grow poorer. Taxing poverty does not create wealth; it deepens hardship. Any tax system that makes citizens poorer violates the fundamental principles of good governance and sound fiscal policy.
Nigeria needs a fair, lawful, and people-centred tax system—one that supports production, rewards enterprise, protects the vulnerable, and restores trust between government and citizens. Only then can taxation become a true tool for unity, growth, and shared prosperity. -PO
“My Fellow Americans, Don’t Visit Nigeria. It’s Not Safe. They Don’t Even Have a President. So Much Is Going On In That Country Corruption, Extortion, And Insecurity. Before You Go To a Store To Buy Something, You’ll Pass Through Countless Checkpoints And Police Officers Begging For Money. Other African Countries Are Far Better And Safer Than Nigeria.”~ Black American Lady Warns Foreign Tourists