From Africa’s Largest Economy To Currency Shame: How Nigeria’s Naira Falls Below Zimbabwe’s Currency In Historic Humiliation Under Tinubu https://t.co/GZjrJtK7Si
On this day, 3rd May 1969, a group of women came together to launch the Biafran Women’s Front.
They called on the Biafran government to allow them to join the infantry and fight for Biafra.
Igbo women are strong and resilient. Igwe bu ike!
“He goes by the name bola tinubu but nobody knows his real name. His whole background is a mystery….
One of his college diplomas was for a female. He was forced to leave the US..”
- Mike Arnold continues to reveal tinubu’s identity globally
Workers Are the Backbone of Every Nation
On this Workers’ Day, I warmly salute workers across the world, especially Nigerian workers whose daily sacrifices continue to sustain our families, communities, institutions, and national economy, even in the face of severe hardship and uncertainty.
It is deeply painful that those who wake up every day to teach, heal, build, farm, produce, transport, protect, and serve our nation are still denied the dignity and fair reward their labour deserves. In today’s Nigeria, the minimum wage can no longer guarantee even the most modest standard of living, as inflation, rising food prices, transportation costs, and economic hardship continue to erode the value of honest work.
No nation can truly develop beyond the strength, productivity, and wellbeing of its workforce. The progress of any society rests on the quality of its human capital, the skill of its people, and the commitment of its workers. When workers suffer, the nation suffers. When workers are empowered, the nation prospers.
But beyond their labour, workers also possess another powerful tool, their voice and their vote. Through democratic participation, they have the power to shape governance and determine the future direction of the nation.
I therefore urge Nigerian workers to recognise the strength they hold collectively. They owe it to themselves, their children, and future generations to support and demand leadership built on competence, character, capacity, credibility, and compassion. By refusing to reward failure, corruption, ethnic division, and bad governance, they can help build a nation where hard work is respected and rewarded with dignity.
A productive nation must be built on justice, fairness, and respect for labour. That is the Nigeria we must work together to achieve.
With the support and participation of Nigerian workers, a New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
The Nigerian Government banned teaching of history in its schools for 15 years. Wonder why?
Here's all you need to know, in 85 seconds.
BTW, their new "history" curriculum was overseen by a man who literally wrote the Boko Haram academic manifesto -- purging Western thought and forcing Islamic ideology on 50M+ Nigerian children.
#earthshaker
The Tinubu Administration is spending millions lobbying Congress while failing to adequately address the genocide Nigerian Christians face daily.
@HouseAppropsGOP just passed our annual State Department funding bill which takes serious steps to address this crisis. 🧵
EFCC's Troubling Revelation on Our Students.
The worrisome statement by the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) that 6 out of every 10 Nigerian university students are involved in “419” is deeply troubling and must not be taken lightly.
Nigeria already has a very limited number of students in higher institutions, estimated at 2 to 2.5 million. If indeed about 60% of them, roughly 1.4 million young people, are involved in fraud, then we are not just facing a crime issue; we are confronting a serious moral and systemic failure.
The question we must ask ourselves is: what has brought us to this level? Who are the role models these students are looking up to?. What values are they learning from society?
We must understand that young people become what they consistently see. When a system appears to reward wrongdoing, when integrity is not upheld, and when those in leadership are associated with allegations of forgery and dishonesty without consequence, it sends a dangerous message.
It suggests that hard work does not matter, and that results, by any means, are acceptable. These points clearly point to a collapse of moral values.
As Socrates rightly said, “An unexamined life is not worth living.” Nigeria must now examine itself.
This is not about condemning our young people. It is about accepting that leadership sets the tone. If we do not demonstrate integrity at the top, we cannot expect it at the bottom.
We must urgently rebuild our value system, enforce accountability without bias, and create an environment where honesty, hard work, and discipline are rewarded. That is the only sustainable path to securing the future of our nation.
A new Nigeria is POssible! -PO
If Biafra had succeeded, Africa would have a world power.
Biafrans built tanks, jets, and gunboats from scrap.
Imagine what Biafra would have achieved as a sovereign nation, imagine a sovereign Biafra.