INSANE: πΊπΈ U.S. billionaire and Walmart owner Stan Kroenke has reportedly promised a Rolls-Royce Phantom to every Arsenal player if they win the Champions League tonight! π€―
My younger brother saved up 200k+ and just asked me whether he should buy an XR or a Samsung S10, I just advised him to put it on a Arsenal win today and buy both next week.
Doctors here are claiming they know pharmacy and prescription job even more than the pharmacist themselves who spent years in school just studying to be pharmacist.
The level of delusion with those white coat wearing agama lizards needs to be studied
Do you know that for over 1,300 years, Doctors treated people based on the anatomy of monkeys and pigs, believing the lower jaw had two bones, your liver had five separate lobes, and your blood was constantly consumed by your flesh instead of being circulated.
This continued until when a 28-year-old Belgian rebel named Andreas Vesalius dropped a book called De Humani Corporis Fabrica and and told every Doctor since Galen: you have never once seen a human being. Vesalius was condemned to death by the Inquisition for dissecting a nobleman whose heart was still beating.
483 years later, a 22-year-old Nigerian named Thazhigilla will continue what he started by rendering the same anatomy in Black skin, and drawing the pathologies that medicine has spent centuries pretending don't look different on us.
I am Nigerian, and right now my dream is bigger than me.
Only about 4.5% of medical literature globally are represented on Black skin.
That means millions of Black patients are learning from systems that barely look like them. Medical students study diseases on skin tones that are not their own. Doctors are trained with visual references that often fail Black bodies.
That gap has consequences.
So I am deciding to build towards changing it.
Iβm starting with a book.
But the larger vision is far beyond that. I want to help build software and medical visualization tools that make Black medical representation impossible to ignore.
This is not just about diversity aesthetics, this is about accuracy, education, visibility and better healthcare outcomes.
One day, I want a Black child studying medicine anywhere on earth to see themselves fully represented in what they learn.
And I believe we can build that future.