@Thinker65637@OtitoNosike So if you want to talk about corruption. Remember that there are foreign power like France that would make sure progress and development doesn't come to Africa .
@Thinker65637@OtitoNosike You are right , so am I. The issues is you think the whites or the American are holy and have no hand in the corruption going on in Africa .there are evidence they are invloyin killing and removing of good African leaders.
@OtitoNosike Same for the Nigeria former minister of petroleum Diezani Alison-Madueke. The UK government said the same thing and she currently resides there. When the UK or us government start protecting these criminals from.justice then they are the problem .
@OtitoNosike Ken Ofori-Atta a fugitive who is the former Ghanian finance minister wanted by Ghana for corruption was granted legal safety and permanent residency by the us government saying the Ghanian government didn't have enough credible to extradite him .
@o89806@shelovesore I'm even surprised this isn't public knowledge. The current insecurity in Nigeria where bandits and terrorist can put on dead soldiers uniform.
@nnatusd@Oluwamidunsin Bro .I'm so pissed that I spent my time reading that nonsense.i read and reread trying to understand the point the op is making . Omo !!!!!!!
@Oluwamidunsin You typed all these nonsense and still didn't give anything reasonable.i'm even more pissed at my self for reading this . "I stumbled on the 26mins full video and understood the danger of cut and join videos" . Did he say it or not ?? Which kin gaslighting be this self ?
@ntmgfrvr I daresay we actually do work 5×.
Who do you think would have to work harder to make their first 1k$ ?Anyone saying we don't work 5× is lying through their teeth.Even if you put the amount of hours spent working .the average or most Africans can spend that same time and earnless
@marked_ng@jay_mikee Different Ai . previous was Google Ai . Recent is deepseek .the prompt is right there . Asked it to verify if my claims are right or wrong .along with it replies it drops articles and research papers .
@marked_ng@jay_mikee https://t.co/M6cdXBKrou. Here is a research done back in 2022 .at least you can't say I tricked the Ai with some "silly tactics"
I know you won't read it so spare me the jargons you are going to type as a reply.
@_niggawhaat Guyy 😂😂😹dem say Na vigilant group .vigilant group dey carry sophisticated weapons , machine guns , I dey see army wear for some self .npf just useless .wtf
@fredrickofowora@Omodolapomayo "so that they can be sued " should tell you all you need to know .🤷I mean they could use Allah as the evil god they fight again .
Christians have every right to preach Christianity.
Muslims have every right to preach Islam.
Traditionalists have every right to practice Ìṣẹ̀ṣe.
The issue is something much deeper.
For decades, Yoruba traditional spirituality has occupied a very specific role in many Christian films: the VILLAIN.
The babaláwo is usually the manipulator.
The shrine is usually the source of darkness.
The Òrìṣà devotee is usually deceived.
The traditional priest is usually power-hungry.
The solution is almost always the same: the traditional religion must be defeated, exposed, humiliated or abandoned.
People keep saying, “We are only preaching Jesus.”
Fine.
Then why does preaching Jesus so often require portraying another people’s ancestral faith as demonic?
Christianity does not believe Islam is true.
Yet we do not see an entire film industry built around proving that Allah is powerless, that every imam is serving dark forces, and that every Muslim spiritual experience is demonic.
Christianity does not believe Hinduism is true.
Yet we do not see endless films where Hindu deities are dragged into every plot to demonstrate their weakness.
But when it comes to Yoruba spirituality, suddenly there is an obsession with proving powerlessness.
An obsession with showing defeat.
An obsession with demonstrating that the gods cannot save their worshippers.
An obsession with portraying traditional practitioners as either victims or villains.
That is why many people are questioning the pattern.
And before someone says, “Light versus darkness has no nationality,” that sounds good until you realize that the “darkness” in these stories almost always seems to wear indigenous clothes, speak indigenous languages and practice indigenous spirituality.
At some point people are entitled to ask whether this is evangelism or cultural conditioning.
Nobody is asking Christians to believe in Ifá.
Nobody is asking Mount Zion to worship Òrìṣà.
Nobody is asking them to abandon Jesus.
What many people are asking is much simpler:
Why is respect never enough?
Why must disagreement become demonization?
Why must another person’s sacred tradition always be reduced to an object lesson for your own faith?
You have every right to say, “I do not believe in Ìṣẹ̀ṣe.”
But if for decades your storytelling consistently portrays that faith as darkness, deception, bondage, evil and spiritual inferiority, then don’t be surprised when people start questioning the message behind the message.
Because there is a difference between preaching your faith and making a career out of portraying another people’s faith as spiritually worthless.
African Corrupt Leaders and The Hands Behind Them
Over the past couple of weeks, 2 former high level government officials from Nigeria and Ghana living in the UK and US respectively, who are both subjects of high profile corruption probes in their home countries, received legal guarantees of state protection against extradition to face trial at home. Once again, we are confronted with an issue that many in the Global North love to pretend does not exist.
Africa's "fantastically corrupt" governments are always cited as the reason behind the continent's state of underdevelopment. What is deliberately omitted by the Western loudmouths who recycle this talking point and infinitum is the foundational role that their own governments play in the acquisition, transfer and warehousing of stolen African state resources, as well as the shielding and protection offered to corrupt African government officials by the same Western governments that have a lot to say about "fighting corruption in Africa."
@Big_Mck explores this topic for The Spearhead.
@j_amensahnhyira@IddyBassey@jay_mikee Prove that the Ai is wrong .let go 10 MZ movies that involves traditional and cultural practices in them . let's verify if they demonize Yoruba culture or not .