Look at the world we are now.
There is no wife!
No woman wants to be a wife, they think they can and should be but their lifestyle and wants are unrealistic, plus they can't stand in the gap for their man.
@jon_d_doe When did Klaus start this thing?
Watin they play with people self, I don't understand why when anybody leave here they have to announce it.
I don't get it.
We don't read and we are very quick to forget.
The major problem with Nigerians is that we as a collective fail to see that our country can be better if only we sit up and make the government work for us and not we working for them.
We would remain poor as long as we still hold on to this mentality that an igbo man/ Hausa is not my brother. We are all Nigerians FIRST, and that is exactly what matters.
Then again I say we fail to read and we lack comprehension, we prefer to pray for things that we can get, we ask for miracles for things that are basic to humans in other countries. We do not want better because our mindset is small and our brain is filled with bigotry.
The average Nigerian is a coward.
Come election day, half of the nation will vote because of the things the party will share and the other half will sit at home and say their vote will not count anyway.
I weep for my people.
Dear fellow Nigerians, π
No matter how quickly some may have forgotten what past administrations and political leaders have done to us and our families, never forget the period when access to your own money was taken away from you.
Never forget how naira notes were withheld close to the election period. You suffered. You begged. You had money sitting in your bank account, yet you could not access it freely. Even withdrawing your own hard-earned money became a struggle.
Never forget that some people lost loved ones because they could not meet urgent medical bills and other essential expenses. Never forget how businesses suffered, livelihoods were destroyed, and countless families were pushed deeper into hardship. The economic damage set Nigeria back in many ways.
We were told it was about changing the currency, yet cash suddenly became available during campaigns and after the elections. Many saw it as a deliberate attempt to weaken the people's freedom of choice. When people are hungry and desperate, survival becomes the priority. A hungry person is more vulnerable to manipulation and less able to think about the long-term future of the country.
Today, ask yourself some honest questions:
Has life become easier?
Can the average Nigerian comfortably afford food and basic necessities?
Are opportunities increasing or decreasing?
Are the promises made during elections being fulfilled?
Year after year, we hear promises. Year after year, many of those promises remain unfulfilled while the struggles of ordinary Nigerians continue.
Nigeria needs leaders with a clear vision, leaders who are committed to economic growth, national development, accountability, and restoring the country's reputation on the global stage. A nation cannot prosper when public office is treated as a means of enriching a few people while the majority continue to suffer.
When the time comes, remember your experiences. Remember the hardships. Remember the sacrifices. Let your vote reflect the future you want for your children and the generations that will come after us.
You have endured enough. You have worked hard enough. You deserve a country where your labour is rewarded, where opportunities exist, and where citizens can live with dignity.
I believe in Nigeria because we are abundantly blessed with natural resources and immense potential. As citizens, we deserve leadership that translates those blessings into a better quality of life for everyone.
We deserve peace. We deserve security from insurgency, banditry, and kidnapping. We deserve good roads, reliable infrastructure, quality healthcare, and access to the basic amenities that make life dignified and productive.
We deserve quality schools that can properly train and equip our young minds with the knowledge, skills, and values needed to compete and succeed in a rapidly changing world. The future of any nation depends on how well it educates its children.
We deserve to work hard and earn a fair reward for our labour. We deserve an economy where honest work can provide food on the table, a roof over our heads, and a decent future for our families.
Nigerians are resilient, hardworking, and resourceful. The issue has never been a lack of potential. The issue has always been whether our resources and opportunities are being managed in a way that benefits the people.
Nigeria can be better, and every Nigerian deserves to experience the prosperity, security, and opportunities that our great nation is capable of providing.
When the time is right, let your vote count.
Vote with wisdom.
Vote with your conscience.
Vote for the future.
We don't read and we are very quick to forget.
The major problem with Nigerians is that we as a collective fail to see that our country can be better if only we sit up and make the government work for us and not we working for them.
We would remain poor as long as we still hold on to this mentality that an igbo man/ Hausa is not my brother. We are all Nigerians FIRST, and that is exactly what matter.
Then again I say we fail to read and we lack comprehension, we prefer to pray for things that we can get, we ask for miracles for things that are basic to humans in other countries. We do not want better because our mindset is small and our brain is filled with bigotry.
The average Nigerian is a coward.
Come election day, half of the nation will vote because of the things the party will share and the other half will sit at home and say their vote will not count anyway.
I weep for my people.
How do you people settle down and count all these footballers body count?
Is that you don't have lives? Or has joblessness eaten deep into your mind.
I honestly do not understand.
Be a good friend and colleague, send money to the family, even if you have already done that send it again, money no they too much.
Don't be asking people to eat h a movie with a stupid promise of sending the proceed to the family.
I know most of you already saw this film years ago please rewatch for Alexx!
All proceeds from First Lady goes to his family. Now showing on @Omonioboli TV
Is it that rare because I experience this same thing most times.
Now I know better than to force urine or get up in haste. I have never fainted but I have had that scenario where I could feel my heart beat very very low, I could hear and feel it beat.
It's a very terrifying experience where you think you are dying, your vision becomes blurry and you become disorganized.
Once you come back to, you immediately break out a sweat. It's scary.
Someone just fainted during urinating.
His bladder was very full, and he was forcing the urine out fast. That entire thing triggered something in his body that slowed his heart rate and opened his blood vessels very wide and gbam. Fainted!
This is actually very rare
Is it that rare because I experience this same thing most times.
Now I know better than to force urine or get up in haste. I have never fainted but I have had that scenario where I could feel my heart beat very very low, I could hear and feel it beat.
It's a very terrifying experience where you think you are dying, your vision becomes blurry and you become disorganized.
Once you come back to, you immediately break out a sweat. It's scary.