Hello #Oncology#TechTwitter
Last year was inconsistent
This year, I'm choosing consistency, visibility, and learning loudly.
I'm a medical physicist & UX designer. I am open to projects, hackathons, gigs, and new roles.
If you're building or pushing your career, let's connect.
@EKEDP Hi @EKEDP
Please is there a problem?
Since Wednesday night, no light till now. Small holiday to enjoy at home, no light. And there is light in other places.
@EKEDP
Please... give us light
It's Christmas and you didn't even give us light at all..
There is so much heat and some of us can't afford generator or inverter
This is not fair ๐ญ๐ญ๐ญ๐ญ๐ญ
We Are Finished!
I join millions of Nigerians in wishing Her Excellency, Mrs Oluremi Tinubu, a happy birthday. May God Almighty, who has been with her all these years, grant her many more healthy, fruitful, and happy years.
However, I was struck by irony reading her request: that instead of cakes or newspaper adverts, well-wishers should donate toward completing the National Library in Abuja. On the surface, it is noble and selfless. But beneath it lies an indictment of our nation.
I recall that, as Governor of Anambra State, I too urged that money meant for adverts be channelled into meaningful causesโcomputers for schools and classroom blocks. Such gestures were never meant to replace the governmentโs duty but to complement it. The state still bore the responsibility of providing those essentials. That is why it is shocking that, in our present circumstances, while billions are easily found for jets, yachts, unused mansions, endless trips abroad, and other frivolities, the nation must rely on birthday donations to complete its own National Library.
What kind of country must beg for charity to build the very temple of knowledge? What kind of leaders waste trillions on luxury and vanity, while the National Library - our intellectual furnace - remains abandoned in the capital? Serious nations treat libraries as sacred; but here we reduce them to afterthoughts, begging bowls, or birthday tokens.
Mrs Tinubu was right: education is the most enduring legacy a nation can give its people. Yet to know this truth and still prioritise vanity is both shocking and tragic.
If Nigeria will rise, it will not be on the wings of jets or the splendour of mansions, but on the strength of minds formed in classrooms and nourished in libraries. Until then, the lament remains trueโwe are finished. -PO