An Old Tinubu Associate Who Schooled With Peter Obi, Dropped This Mind-Boggling Revelation 👀👀
Every Nigerian needs to see and hear this.
PS: He will be a live guest tonight on the ESS on TikTok live at 10 pm WAT. 🔥
Me wey never pray for years, as my papa dey hospital I start dey pray regularly. Three days into my prayer, my papa pkai.
You wan dey whine I am that I am?
@Damzynee12@Adiaha637780@pistachioczarr @MrModestus_ You haven't watched that man's videos? What he does with his hand. That's what you wanted to do to yourself
No matter where I go, my home is the same...my love is the same. I'm grateful for my blessings and I’m grateful to be able to capture these moments with my favourite people in the world.
My Love Is The Same 💙💜 Out Now
https://t.co/PRRflNS4bj
Enjoy.
Man utd would score one and start playing rubbish, this match should've ended since first half. Sesko couldn't even score the easiest ball given to him.
Now we'll be rejoicing with a draw
Amorim is losing himself, amad and mbeumo ain't working, dalot was a wasted sub, Bruno wasn't it. Everything is just annoying and I don't even want to rant about it cos it's exhausting
Why I Supported Peter Obi in 2023—and Will Again in 2027 (If He Runs)
My support for Peter Obi isn’t about hype. It’s based on lived experience and years in the development sector. I’ve seen enough to know that true, lasting development doesn’t come from roads and bridges alone but from building people. The hype of being called Mr. Infrastructure is good for politics but building people is better.
Building roads or chasing the Atlantic Ocean might look impressive, but it’s educated, healthy, and skilled citizens that drive real growth. Infrastructure helps but it needs human capital to drive it and make it more sustainable.
As governor, Obi got this. He aligned with the Millennium Development Goals. He overhauled schools, returned missionary institutions, paid off debts, invested in health care, trained teachers, empowered youth, protected the vulnerable, and still left billions in savings. His budgets were open, and people-focused. He wasn’t there to “settle the boys.”
Tinubu, on the other hand, prioritized infrastructure and political consolidation. His governance in Lagos was about building visible projects, not people. The goal? Power, not sustainability. His approach to governance is what I call the jeun-soke model- a model that creates short-term buzz and hype, but leaves long-term inequality and decay. Same approach happening to Nigeria now.
Let’s be honest: in Lagos, education and health reforms were weak during Tinubu’s era. Infrastructure projects became feeding bottles for cronies. Alpha-Beta’s grip on IGR is just one example of how public wealth was cornered. Lagos has Nigeria’s most opaque budget process and no Freedom of Information request has ever cracked it.
Obi’s model isn’t flashy but it’s sustainable. He attacked the roots of poverty: poor education, weak healthcare and youth unemployment. Tinubu’s model preserves elite dominance, not national upliftment.
Countries that developed, as Obi’s constantly reminds us, like Singapor , China and Bangladesh did so by investing heavily in human capital. Not just by building skyscrapers and flyovers. Nigeria cannot industrialize with poor schools and crumbling clinics.
Obi is not perfect but he’s honest, transparent, and understands what Nigeria needs. Even his critics admit he has conquered greed. He’s a leader, not a title-chaser.
He would have been a real antidote to Buhari’s years of waste and decay and not like these clowns who only want the perks of office. And if he contests again in 2027, he’ll have my vote again.
#PeterObi #Anambra #Nigeria2027 #Obidient