This Senegalese number 8 killed the game. That guy Kamara, entered in less than 8 minutes got booked, same guy lost the ball for the first goal, same guy was ball watching for the setup to the Belgium second and now he conceded a penalty this late. Awful
@JayTee_mow@whitenigerian The Nigerian national orientation agency, has a lot of work to do, because, what the heck is this…. Author is talking about weather, your understanding is certificate….
@Goyan_kakaa@whitenigerian Na out of hatred for Nigeria make you type like a senseless person, put hate aside and read what he wrote so you can engage accordingly.
Remember the 1980s? The IMF & World Bank forced Nigeria into Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP). They demanded massive naira devaluation, subsidy removal, privatization & austerity.
Result? Naira crashed from ~₦1.6/$ to over ₦4.6/$ almost overnight. Inflation exploded, prices skyrocketed, businesses collapsed, jobs vanished. Nigerians suffered real hardship while “experts” called it necessary medicine.
SAP wasn’t about helping Nigeria. It was about opening us up for foreign interests: cheap exports, debt servicing, and market access. Local manufacturing died from expensive imports. Poverty deepened. Families struggled to eat. That was the “immediate impact” they knew would happen.
Fast forward: IMF is at it again. Pushing Nigeria to hike taxes on telecoms and energy. More tariffs. More burdens on citizens already battling high data costs, unstable power, and rising living expenses.
History repeats. These institutions know higher taxes + energy/telecom costs will crush small businesses, spike inflation further, and make life harder for ordinary Nigerians. But they insist it’s the only way to get loans or “support.” Force the government, create pain, then prescribe more of the same.
Nigeria must learn from SAP’s scars. We don’t need recycled hardship disguised as advice. Prioritize local production, protect citizens, and negotiate from strength not desperation. Enough of policies that devalue our lives while claiming to save the economy.
History repeats. These institutions know higher taxes + energy/telecom costs will crush small businesses, spike inflation further, and make life harder for ordinary Nigerians. But they insist it’s the only way to get loans or “support.” Force the government, create pain, then prescribe more of the same.
Nigeria must learn from SAP’s scars. We don’t need recycled hardship disguised as advice. Prioritize local production, protect citizens, and negotiate from strength not desperation. Enough of policies that devalue our lives while claiming to save the economy.