@_crowdeq@BashirAhmaad With your statement, it's obvious no one is more stupid than you, Oyo is for Making, he's not winning he will be voted and he's gonna win Oyo
There is something about terrorism in Nigeria that many people do not know.
Terrorism in Nigeria did not start with the prominent terrorist groups that we have today, and it does not only come from their activities.
The Muslim students who dragged Deborah from her house, stoned her, and burned her to death are also terrorists.
They do not have a name. They are your everyday normal Muslims that you see and talk to.
Some of them are your friends here online.
The people who killed Deborah were not illiterate almajiri. They were educated people she knew in her school.
So anytime we are talking about terrorism or genocide in Nigeria, we must understand how those groups were formed and the people who give them the inspiration and confidence to do what they do.
We must also understand that when we are done sending the known terrorists to the other side,
we will still have the big problem of the unknown, unpredictable terrorists who live with us in our schools, streets, markets, and communities.
We will have to, as a nation, go back and punish everyone who thought they had the right to take another person's life because of a belief or a fictional god.
We as a nation will have to make it abundantly clear and unambiguous that there is no such crime as blasphemy against any god, and you cannot insult a god that does not exist in our observable universe.and reality.
We as a nation will have to define belief as something personalโ for your own pocket.
You can believe whatever you want, but you must also understand that another person can also believe anything they want about what you believe.
And beliefs must not make you do anything that goes against our constitution, the rights laid down in it and collective social good and safety.
So if a fictional prophet wrote a book two million years ago and told you to kill people who insult him in 2026, you must immediately know that such a book is only a storybook in Nigeria as long as our laws are concerned.
Because if we allowed everyone to do whatever a book told them or whatever they believed in their head, we would not have a society today.
We need a solid, unambiguous law against all beliefs, religions, or practices that go against our constitution and classify them as personal fiction as far as the law is concerned.
If we cannot undo this belief that makes educated everyday Muslims murder people in the name of religion, then even if we eliminate all the terrorists in the bush of Nigeria..
we will still have bigger terrorists on our hands and they will be closer to our towns and shared spaces propagating that same ideology to the next generation.
Let those who have ears hear.
The whole Islamic world is angry with Israel because Israel is not afraid of them. Islamic radicalism preys on fear. They attack first and when you give them violence in return, they cry foul. They want to annihilate you without any hindrance.
Their anger with Israel is that they attacked on October 7, and Israel is making them pay for it.
This is my opinion.
Zidane is still in prison for defending his Christian community against Islamic terrorists and heโs been sentenced to death.
Self-defense is not a crime..
Free Zidane now !!!!
11 years ago today, 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians were beheaded by ISIS in Libya for refusing to convert to Islam.
Their last words were: โJesus, I love you.โ
Remember, no one marched for them.
No one protested for them!
The Choice: Either The Koran Or The Sword
โALIYU GWARZO
โ#When I say that the Presidency must come to the North next year, I am referring to the Hausa-Fulani core north and not any northern Christian or Muslim minority tribe.
โ#The Christians in the north, such as the Berom, the Tiv, the Kataf, the Jaba, the Zuru, the Sayyawa, the Bachama, the Jukun, the Idoma, and all the others, are nothing. The Muslim minorities in the north, including the Kanuri, the Nupe, the Igbira, the Babur, the Shuwa Arabs, the Marghur, and all the others, know that when we are talking about leadership in the north and in Nigeria, Allah has given it to us, the Hausa-Fulani.
โ#They can grumble, moan, and groan as much as they want, but each time they go into their bedrooms to meet their wives, and each time they get on their prayer mats to begin their prayers, it is we, the Fulani, that they think of, that they fear, that they bow to, and that they pray for.
โ#Some of them are even ready to give us their wives and daughters for one night's sport and pleasure. They owe us everything. This is because we gave them Islam through the great Jihad waged by Sheik Usman Dan Fodio.
โ#We also captured Ilorin, killed their local King, and installed our Fulani Emir. We took that ancient town away from the barbarian Yoruba and their filthy pagan gods. We liberated all these places and all these people by imposing Islam on them by force.
โ#It was either the Koran or the sword, and most of them chose the Koran. In return for the good works of our forefathers, Allah, through the British, gave us Nigeria to rule and to do with as we please. Since 1960, we have been doing that, and we intend to continue.
โ#No Goodluck or anyone else will stop us from taking back our power next year. We will kill, maim, destroy, and turn this country into Africa's biggest war zone and refugee camp if they try it.
โ#Many say we are behind Boko Haram. My answer is, "What do you expect?" We don't have economic power or intellectual power. All we have is political power, and they want to take even that from us.
โ#We must fight, and we will fight back in order to keep it. They have brought in the infidels from America and the pigs from Israel to help them, but they will fail. The war has just begun, the #Mujahadeen are more than ready, and by Allah, we shall win.
โ#If they don't want an ISIS in Nigeria, then they must give us back the Presidency and our political power. Their soldiers are killing our warriors and our people every day, but mark this: even if it takes one hundred years, we will have our revenge.
โ#Every Fulani man that they kill is a debt that will be repaid, even if it takes 100 years. The Fulani have very long memories.โ
THIS STATEMENT WAS MADE SOME WHERE AROUND 2013-2014
#Aliyu_Ismaila_Gwarzo background includes:
#Political/Government Roles: He served in several high-ranking security positions in Nigeria.
1 #Director General of the State Security Service (SSS): Appointed in June 1986 by General Ibrahim Babangida as the first Director General of the newly formed SSS, which was responsible for domestic intelligence.
2 #National Security Advisor (NSA): He was the NSA for President Ernest Shonekan and later for General Sani Abacha (starting in November 1993).
3 #Police Minister: He also served as the Minister of Police Affairs.
4 #Military/Service Background: He was a police officer who rose through the ranks in the Nigeria Police Force and retired with a senior rank.
FOR YEARS, CHRISTIANS IN NIGERIA HAVE ENDURED JIHAD IN DIFFERENT FACETS.
Nathanael Galadima
The Weaponization of Religion: The Solagberu Betrayal and the Modern Battle for Yorubaland
The history of West Africa is littered with tales of conquest, but none is as haunting for the Yoruba people as the fall of Ilorin. It serves as a stark historical blueprint for how religion can be used as a "Trojan Horse" to dismantle a civilization from within. The story of Solagberu is not just a 19th-century tragedy; it is a lens through which many now view the current religious and political tensions in Nigeria.
The Historical Blueprint: The First Betrayal
In the early 1800s, Ilorin was a strategic Yoruba military outpost under the command of Afonja, the Aare Ona Kakanfo. Among his closest allies was a man named Solagberu.
The Conversion: Originally a pagan and a key traditional ally to Afonja, Solagberu eventually converted to Islam. This shift changed his primary loyalty. He established Oke Suna, a settlement for Muslims, effectively creating a "state within a state" based on religious identity rather than ethnic kinship.
The Weaponization of the Jama'a: To gain independence from the Oyo Empire, Afonja and Solagberu welcomed the Fulani cleric, Shehu Alimi, and his band of Muslim soldiers (the Jamaโa). What began as a spiritual and military partnership quickly turned into a political takeover.
The Ultimate Betrayal: When the Jamaโa eventually revolted against Afonja to seize control of Ilorin, Afonja sent word to Solagberu, pleading for his brother-in-arms to help him. Solagberu refused. He argued that his religious bond with the Muslim Jamaโa was superior to his blood bond with the "pagan" Afonja.
Because of this betrayal, Afonja was killed, and Ilorinโa Yoruba landโbecame a Fulani Emirate. In a final twist of irony, the Fulanis eventually turned on Solagberu himself, destroying his settlement and beheading him. He died realizing that by betraying his kin for a religious ideology, he had paved the way for his own destruction.
The Modern Parallel: Sharia and the Sultanate
Today, many Yoruba intellectuals and traditionalists see the "Ghost of Solagberu" in the current political landscape of Nigeria. They argue that religion is once again being weaponized to expand the influence of the Sokoto Caliphate into the Southwest.
1. The Imposition of the Sultanate
The Sultan of Sokoto is officially recognized as the leader of all Muslims in Nigeria. However, a growing number of Yoruba Muslims refuse to accept this. They view the Sultanโs spiritual leadership as a form of indirect political rule. By making the Sultan the supreme authority over Yoruba Muslims, the North effectively bypasses Yoruba traditional rulers (the Obas) and places the Southwest under the spiritual jurisdiction of the North.
2. The Sharia Agenda
The push for Sharia Law in the Southwest is viewed by many as a modern-day "Oke Suna." Critics argue that:
It seeks to create a separate legal system that answers to Northern religious interpretations.
It erodes the secular, tolerant nature of Yoruba society, where Christians and Muslims have lived as brothers for centuries.
It uses the threat of violence and coercion to silence those who oppose the expansion of Northern-style Islamic governance.
3. The "Solagberu Syndrome"
The modern fear is that certain Yoruba political and religious leaders are repeating Solagberuโs mistake. By aligning with expansionist agendas for personal gain or out of a sense of religious "brotherhood," they risk sacrificing the sovereignty of Yorubaland. The narrative suggests that just as Solagberu was eventually executed by the very people he helped install, those who facilitate the erosion of Yoruba autonomy today will eventually be discarded by the same forces.
Conclusion: A Lesson from History
The "Weaponization of Religion" is a strategy as old as the fall of Ilorin. The history of Solagberu teaches that when a people prioritize external religious allegiances over their own communal survival and sovereignty, they lose both.
For the Yoruba today, the resistance against the centralization of Islamic authority in Sokoto is not an attack on Islam itself, but a defense against territorial expansionism dressed in religious robes. The lesson remains clear: those who allow religion to be used as a tool for their own subjugation often find themselves, like Solagberu, without a friend, without a home, and ultimately, without a head.
Fulanization by Islamization, the Fulani agenda
The reason Northern Muslims donโt want any Southern presidential candidate, especially from the South-East is because they know Southeasterners are about 99.9% Christian and will never handle Northern Islamic terrorism with kid gloves. They know their plans will face serious setbacks if any Igbo becomes president.
That is why a popular terrorist-sympathizing cleric (we all know who he is) openly said Northerners should never vote for any candidate who will kill their โwarriorsโ in the forests. That statement alone exposes the mindset behind the resistance to Southern leadership.
The Fulani agenda is Fulanization through Islamization, and it is already playing out. The major problem I have with Yoruba Muslims aligning themselves with Sokoto is their lack of historical knowledge. They ignore how the Fulani wiped out Hausa Islamic scholars and took over governance, reducing Hausas to second- and third-class citizens in their own ancestral land.
History shows that the Fulani first use people, then discard them. Many Hausa Islamic scholars who betrayed their own people were eventually eliminated. When the process of Fulanization is complete, todayโs allies will not be spared.
Nigeria must reject Fulanization by Islamization, especially through the political imposition of Sharia. A plural country cannot survive under a hidden agenda of religious domination.
Who made Sultan the leader of Muslims in Nigeria?
Who made the Sultan the leader of Muslims in the whole of Nigeria? Islam is a religion, not a monarchy, and religious leadership should not be imposed by history, ethnicity, or political convenience. I want to know clearly how the Sultan emerged as the so-called leader of Nigerian Muslims, and who granted him that authority over people who neither chose him nor recognize him.
The fact that he is a king in the North does not automatically make him a religious authority over Muslims in the South. That logic is flawed and dangerous. Nigerian Muslims are not a homogenous group, and Islam did not arrive in every region through the same history or under the same power structures. Southern Muslims do not owe allegiance to Northern traditional rulers simply because of shared religion.
Let it be said plainly, religious leadership does not come by imposition. I follow whoever I believe represents Islam with knowledge, justice, and integrity, not because of Fulani bloodline, northern monarchy, or inherited titles. Religion is a matter of conviction, not submission to ethnic dominance disguised as faith.
I commented on a post that if Fulani political or cultural dominance were ever extended into the Southwest, Yoruba Muslims themselves will be used as the entry point, just as Solagberu sold Ilorin to the Fulanis under the excuse of religion. That is historical fact, not hatred. Ilorin did not fall because of superior civilization, it fell because religion was weaponized to dismantle indigenous authority.
Today, the same pattern is being repeated. There is constant pressure to adopt Sharia law across states, while at the same time presenting the Sultan as the head of Islamic councils nationwide. That arrangement subtly but deliberately places other regions under Fulani ideological control. Call it whatever you like, but the implication is clear, political supremacy wrapped in religious packaging.
Let the North be North and the South be South. Southern Muslims do not need to submit to Fulani rulership under the guise of Islam. Islam is bigger than any tribe, and Nigeria is bigger than any region. Any religious structure that promotes ethnic hierarchy over faith is unacceptable.
Religion should guide morals, not redraw political boundaries or resurrect old conquests. If Islam is truly just, it does not need coercion, imposed leadership, or historical manipulation to survive.
Japan just opened a bar for people who want to quit their jobs ๐ถ๐ผ
In Yokohama, Tenshoku Sodan Bar offers free drinksโserved by bartenders who are actually career counselors helping guests talk through job changes.
Work stress meets career advice ๐๐
In a country known for intense work culture, the casual setup helps people open up about burnout, resumes, and job huntingโmaking career counseling feel less scary and more human. ๐ฏ๐ตโจ
I don't understand why people get k!lled for leaving Islam and they say it's not cult. You only get k!lled when you leave cult, Come out of that cultism called Islam!