Let's talk about digital skills.
There are no jobs in Nigeria, then why are youths like you,making money online doing this one thing .
If other are doing it you can do it even better
@seyikanbai@OurFavOnlineDoc Oga thank God you said you never heard. Maybe you're not current enough or you've picked the type of news that interests you already.
THE LEGENDS COLLECTION - SOLD OUT.
666 collectibles featuring @henrygayle, @SAfridiOfficial and @Eoin16 have found their way into the hands of fans, marking the start of a new chapter for sports on TON.
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More details 🧵
THE LEGENDS COLLECTION - SOLD OUT.
666 collectibles featuring @henrygayle, @SAfridiOfficial and @Eoin16 have found their way into the hands of fans, marking the start of a new chapter for sports on TON.
🔗 Marketplace: https://t.co/QkEaJIxkZD
More details 🧵
The 2M $SIXR allocation for the holders of The Legends Collection, featuring global cricket icons @henrygayle, @SAfridiOfficial, and @Eoin16 is now revealed.
🔗 Marketplace: https://t.co/8cuGYKeBah
Holder utilities below.
The fact that powerful nations like the U.S. are increasingly critical of Nigeria should tell you something; we’re finally charting an independent course. They don’t target irrelevant nations; they pressure countries whose rising influence threatens established interests.
Nigeria’s insecurity challenge has deep local roots but also external funding links; from the illicit arms trade to foreign-backed NGOs exploiting internal tensions. Even intelligence around the recent failed coup attempt pointed to external leanings. Yet, when over 48,000 Americans died from gun violence in 2023, or when a U.S. political figure was assassinated in broad daylight, the world didn’t call for “international intervention.”
Our security challenges are not religious; they’re strategic and economic. Nigeria must stop being a puppet to foreign narratives. We are a sovereign nation, and defending our independence; politically, economically, and militarily is not defiance; it’s dignity.
@DanielRegha The tragedy in Nigeria isn’t about religion, it’s about terrorism, failed governance, and impunity. Pain doesn’t wear a faith tag; both Christians and Muslims are victims of the same chaos. We need unity and justice, not divisive narratives. 💔🇳🇬
Trump says that "Radical Islamists" are responsible for the death of thousands of Christians who are being "k'lled". Now let's be clear, no-one is disputing the fact that Christians are being k'lled, but when it's put that way, it gives the impression that Muslims (and people of other faith) in the country are not being affected to a large degree. Mosques have been invaded severally, Muslims harmed, and communities where people live destroyed. Christians are not the only ones suffering, this act is commited by bandits across the nation, and therefore should be addressed as an act of terrorism, rather than pin it on one group, religion, or region.
@michaelgwaltz@NICKIMINAJ Where was @NICKIMINAJ when innocent souls were being killed in Gaza and where was she when thousands of Nigerians were killed and displaced? She wants to use a religious war agenda to chase clout. Please leave Nigeria alone
@michaelgwaltz@NICKIMINAJ I don't know why the West is always eager to jump in on others business and it's painful because they always have a negative agenda.
Nigerians have plenty of problems at hand already, we don't need your biased religious war
Most of you supporting this so called “Christian Agenda” because you don’t like Tinubu, I want to tell you what you don’t know, you are giving the west what they desperately need, “A Reason” to destabilize Nigeria. If you think this is the kind of politics you want to play, think again......
If this goes bad it means there will be ‘a reason’ to no longer be supply us necessary ammunitions to fight insurgents they sent to Nigeria, which automatically means if they are killing 2,000 innocent people now, it will be atleast 10,000 when we don’t have weapons to fight back, Nigerians both muslims and christians will be killed more. When we weaken our supply lines, when we provide an excuse for foreign powers to step in, we create the conditions for escalation.
Before you know, they will send their troops into Nigeria in the name of “trying to help”, further cause more commotion, in no time Nigeria will be a failed state, then boom we are another Sudan, Libya or Syria, you won’t have a country to call your own simply because you don’t like who is the president now..
Foreign interests rarely act out of selflessness, they act where there is advantage, whether strategic access, natural resources, or geopolitical positioning. Giving them “a reason” is handing them permission to meddle, to back groups, to choke logistics, to turn local grievances into international crises. Politics is not a game you play with the country as the stake.
I will pick Tinubu over the West 1000 times. I would rather live with a president I disagree with than hand my country to outsiders who will strip us of everything.
If you truly care about Nigerians both muslims and christians, if you really love this country, then think beyond party, beyond grievance, and refuse to be the pretext for our destruction.
Many lives have been lost to insecurity, hunger and poor leadership. Yet, @realDonaldTrump chose to pick a religious war. It's high time we all come to our senses that all our leaders are the same. They only cared about what benefits them. Nigerians suffering from far more
DEAR @realDonaldTrump@POTUS, @america,
Stop twisting the narrative. These are terrorists, not Muslims, not Christians, just bloodthirsty criminals destroying lives everywhere. Muslims are being slaughtered too, mosques burned, families displaced. This isn’t about religion, it’s about evil and failed leadership. Call it what it is: terrorism, not “Radical Islam.”