“One day, we will have two big buildings in Abuja where we will put pictures of people—whether dead or alive—who have messed up this country so that their grandchildren will know their forefathers were part of Nigeria’s problems,”
~ Goodluck Jonathan says
The 1561 Nuremberg sky event is wild. Witnesses reported spheres, rods, crosses, and a giant black triangle clashing near the sun for over an hour, with some objects falling and smoking. Hans Glaser’s broadsheet turned it into apocalyptic art.
No aliens or secret battles though. It was almost certainly dramatic atmospheric optics—parhelia, halos, and ice crystals creating moving lights and shapes—plus maybe a meteor, all filtered through 16th-century religious awe. Classic case of people seeing the unknown and filling in the story.
Still one of the best creepy historical prints out there.
The assumption here is that national security strategy should be debated publicly like a campaign slogan.
In reality, no serious leader reveals operational security plans on live television. There is a difference between outlining principles and disclosing strategy.
If Peter Obi believes he has specific approaches to tackling insecurity, handing every detail to political opponents, criminal networks, terrorists, bandits, and kidnappers before assuming office would be strategically foolish.
Military doctrine, intelligence coordination, border security, counterterrorism operations, and rules of engagement are not matters that responsible leaders fully disclose in advance.
Anyone can disagree with Obi, but refusing to reveal every security detail publicly is not evidence that he lacks solutions. In many cases, it is exactly what a prudent strategist would do.
3 days at World Health Expo. 1 recurring conversation.
Healthcare providers told us the same thing:
So we listened.
We’re constructing PanaxNG around how Nigerians actually communicate—not how we think they should.
Starting with WhatsApp as our primary channel.