2025 will be remembered as the year where the rude actions that women did to men (and applauded shamelessly) were mirrored back to them in equal measure.
@RaenestApp So I am expecting my money today @RaenestApp but now you have suddenly switched account numbers as part of an update.
So what will happen to funds coming to old account numbers? I made a withdrawal this afternoon to Raenest
Because this fund is important for me this night
“Subsidy that was a burden to the entire country was removed, and ever since we have achieved foreign exchange stability” — Tinubu says during meeting with global investors in Paris
I dont have a problem with Maureen. She is a certified retard after that voodoo post.
It's the chief editor, who passed this garbage from his desk, that I have issues with.
Michael Jackson’s celebrity is so blinding, his music so compelling, that it cloaks him with an almost impenetrable shield from the truth: He was a stone cold pedophile, writes Maureen Orth. 🔗 https://t.co/LlxoLQN8ki
Can we just conduct an actual physical experiment to dead this foolery?
- A forest camp with men and another forest camp with bears.
- 5 women either camp.
- Set the clock 48 hours and report findings.
@ynlDestyni@_HeisUC_@thyserotonin His gimmick is tiring.
Started the year with this post:
"2026, folks, if you’d slow down… then imma show you how we finna do this."
Now, that 2026 has been dragged to April.
Gave the impression he was cooking good music in 2025. Followed it up with atrocious PR in 2026.
The most confusing part of the entire address.
Particularly where he asked us to "desist from condoning" the attacks against telhe military.
Only one person is condoning these attacks and it is not the Nigerian people.
From the reports I have received, our armed forces have been conducting sustained, intense land and air offensives against the insurgents, neutralising many terrorist fighters and commanders. The insurgents’ counterattack is a sign of desperation.
I extend my condolences to the families of our gallant soldiers, led by Brigadier-General Oseni Omoh Braimah, who made the ultimate sacrifice in the defence of our country in Borno State.
The government will never forget their sacrifices. Their sacrifices will not be in vain. Because of the courage and dedication of our troops on the frontline, our resolve to defeat terrorism and all forms of violence across Nigeria is stronger than ever.
I urge the Military High Command and our troops in all theatres of operation: Do not lose heart, do not be weary, do not be discouraged.
Our officers and men should continue to serve with honour, courage, and patriotism. The government will always stand by the Armed Forces, provide more of the equipment needed and ensure the welfare of all who risk their lives for our safety.
I urge Nigerians and the media to continue to support our Military in their relentless battle against insurgency and banditry. We should desist from celebrating or condoning the attacks against our troops. These soldiers are our heroes; unforgettable and irreplaceable.
My condolences also go to the government and people of Borno State. The Federal Government will continue to work with the state government to achieve total victory and lasting peace.
Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President & Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces
Federal Republic of Nigeria
From the reports I have received, our armed forces have been conducting sustained, intense land and air offensives against the insurgents, neutralising many terrorist fighters and commanders. The insurgents’ counterattack is a sign of desperation.
I extend my condolences to the families of our gallant soldiers, led by Brigadier-General Oseni Omoh Braimah, who made the ultimate sacrifice in the defence of our country in Borno State.
The government will never forget their sacrifices. Their sacrifices will not be in vain. Because of the courage and dedication of our troops on the frontline, our resolve to defeat terrorism and all forms of violence across Nigeria is stronger than ever.
I urge the Military High Command and our troops in all theatres of operation: Do not lose heart, do not be weary, do not be discouraged.
Our officers and men should continue to serve with honour, courage, and patriotism. The government will always stand by the Armed Forces, provide more of the equipment needed and ensure the welfare of all who risk their lives for our safety.
I urge Nigerians and the media to continue to support our Military in their relentless battle against insurgency and banditry. We should desist from celebrating or condoning the attacks against our troops. These soldiers are our heroes; unforgettable and irreplaceable.
My condolences also go to the government and people of Borno State. The Federal Government will continue to work with the state government to achieve total victory and lasting peace.
Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President & Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces
Federal Republic of Nigeria
When shit like this keeps popping up in my tl... I just know one super red-piller is being churned in a laboratory somewhere and will be released in a few months.
So I quietly wait.
All I’m saying is this would be the perfect time for men to speak up about the injustice this boy is facing instead of waiting till when women are talking about how men take advantage of the girl child to quote “but boys get raped too” or something like that. Treating it as some kind of “gotcha” moment.
Africa Did Not Create the Transatlantic Slave Trade; Europe's Demand Did
The idea that “Africans sold Africans” has been repeated so often that people treat it like complete history, when it is anything but. It strips away context and forces a modern racial reading onto a pre-colonial African world that did not organise itself around European ideas of race. Africa was not one people and it was not one identity. It was made up of kingdoms, empires, nations and ethnic groups with their own political systems, cultures and interests. So when conflict happened, it was not “Black people selling Black people” in the way that phrase is now used. It was political conflict between distinct societies, just as Europe had its own wars between rival states and kingdoms.
What Europe created through the transatlantic slave trade was something different in scale, structure and purpose. This was not simply an extension of local wars. It was a racialised, hereditary and industrial system built for profit, conquest and extraction. European demand drove it, expanded it and turned human beings into global commodities on a scale the world had not seen before. That is why the “Africans sold Africans” argument is not serious history. It is a lazy deflection that avoids naming Europe’s central role in designing, racialising and profiting from the transatlantic slave trade.