🚨IMPORTANT 🚨
The Ogun State Government has restricted graduation ceremonies to terminal classes only across public and private schools in the state.
- Henceforth, schools can only organize graduation ceremonies for learners who are completing a recognized stage of their education: Primary 6, JSS 3, and SS3 only!
- The state government has also banned the use of canopies, Aso Ebi, customized attire, or any other form of extravagant social displays during the graduation ceremonies.
-Graduation ceremonies for learners in Primary Six, JSS 3, and SSS 3 shall be conducted in a modest manner and at NO FINANCIAL COST to learners, parents, or guardians.
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This insane obsession with blaming Yorubas for everything.
You used to call it Ibo because that was what it was popularly called, even among Igbos.
The awareness that it should be Igbo is so recent that even some Igbos still say Ibo.
*Yorubas are the absolute villains anyway.🤷🏽♂️
I watched the recent Peter Obi interview with Rufai Oseni, and honestly, I found him uninspiring.
To be fair to him, there are things I respect.
He clearly studies examples from other countries. When he talks about power, production, governance, security, or the economy, he often refers to places where those things are working. That is not a bad instinct. In fact, it is a good one. A serious country should learn from countries that have solved problems similar to ours.
He seems to operate with a simple principle: if you study what successful people are doing and apply it with discipline, you increase your own chances of success.
That part is commendable.
I also respect the fact that he is now speaking more deliberately about unity, inclusion, and not leaving any tribe or region behind. I wish he had discovered that language more clearly in 2023, but better late than never.
I also respect the fact that he keeps talking about doing only one term. Yes, the North-South power arrangement is informal, and if he ever became president, he could easily keep quiet about it, enjoy the advantages of incumbency, and position himself for re-election like most politicians would. Instead, he keeps bringing it up and putting it on record. Whether he will actually keep that promise remains to be seen, and politicians have broken bigger promises before. It is even possible that the one-term pledge is what he sold to Kwankwaso to agree to be his running mate. But regardless of the political calculation behind it, I still respect the fact that he is saying it openly.
So yes, I can give him credit where credit is due.
But my problem with him, he sounds like a man with good intentions, but good intentions do not rule Nigeria.
Nigeria is not a TED Talk.
Nigeria is not a spreadsheet.
Nigeria is not a country where you simply say, “I have seen how Egypt did it, I have seen how India did it, I have seen how Indonesia did it,” and then everybody should clap.
When Rufai pressed him on how he would deliver 10,000 megawatts of electricity, he refused to explain the details. His argument was basically: look at the person making the promise, look at my track record, trust me.
That is not enough.
Nigerians have been trusting people with beautiful promises since 1960.
The question is not only whether you know that other countries are working. The question is whether you understand the specific Nigerian obstacles that stop things from working here.
Power in Nigeria is not just about megawatts. It is about gas supply, transmission collapse, tariffs, distribution companies, debt, vandalism, regulation, political sabotage, and the federal-state confusion around electricity.
So when you say you will fix it, people have the right to ask: how?
And if your answer is “I will not tell you,” then you cannot be angry when some of us are not moved.
The same thing applies to insecurity.
When asked about insecurity, he spoke about commitment. He said he fought criminality in Anambra. He spoke about being ready to die for Nigeria. He said those who want peace will get negotiation, and those who want war will get war.
Again, good rhetoric.
But Nigeria’s insecurity is not just a problem of personal bravery.
It is an economy. It is intelligence failure. It is forest governance. It is arms flow. It is ransom financing. It is local complicity. It is weak policing. It is porous borders. It is corrupt security structures. It is politics. It is poverty. It is ideology. It is state absence.
So when you reduce all that to “commitment,” I get worried.
Because commitment is necessary, but commitment is not a security architecture.
This is where Obi’s politics worries me. He often sounds morally clean, but politically underprepared for the dirt of Nigerian power.
He left the PDP primaries because he believed the process was too transactional. I understand the argument. But if you cannot survive transactional primaries, how exactly will you survive transactional Nigeria?
What makes him think insecurity is not transactional?
What makes him think the National Assembly is not transactional?
What makes him think subsidy networks, power-sector interests, security contractors, oil thieves, governors, party structures, and ethnic power blocs are not transactional?
You cannot govern Nigeria by simply being the decent man in the room.
At some point, you must fight.
At some point, you must build a coalition.
At some point, you must bend people without breaking the country.
At some point, you must deal with people you do not like without becoming like them.
And that is where I still do not see the steel.
Then there is the northern question.
Obi’s supporters like to pretend that the North’s suspicion of him came from nowhere. That is not true.
Whether some of the allegations against him were false, exaggerated, or taken out of context, they exist in the political memory of many people: the “Yes Daddy” controversy, the mosque demolition allegation, the ID card allegation, and the general feeling around his 2023 campaign sectarian posture.
You cannot just shout “fake news” and move on.
Politics is not only about what is true. It is also about what people believe, why they believe it, and what you have done to repair that trust.
So far, I think Obi is trying to speak the language of unity now. That is good. But trust is not repaired by one interview. It is repaired by consistency, humility, and hard engagement with people who do not already love you.
That is why, overall, I still find him uninspiring.
He is not clueless or stupid. He is not unserious.
But I also do not see the extraordinary messiah that his supporters see.
What I see is a regular Nigerian politician the know some statistics.
Nothing more.
Maybe that is enough for some people.
For me, it is not.
Nigeria does not need only a man who knows what is working elsewhere.
Nigeria needs a man who understands why things refuse to work here, who can explain how he will break those obstacles, and who has the political courage to fight the interests that benefit from national failure.
So far, Peter Obi has shown that he can diagnose Nigeria.
I am still not convinced he can govern it.
Guy.. there's no way we will support someone who defend this government. Davido might have his flaws too, but he was bold enough to speak about the abducted children in Oyo, which Rarara didn't approve.
It's always Nigeria first before any tribe. So "debidoo" is mocking Rarara, not the entire Hausa tribe. Because a lot of us can pronounce Davido correctly.
Celine Dion is 58 years old
Shakira is 49 years old
Beyoncé is 44
Busta Rhymes 54
Bruce Springsteen is 76
Lionel Richie is 76
The oldest Backstreet boy is 54
All of these people have one thing in common. they still sing, perform and entertain till this day.
Peter is 44 but you dimwits are so ageist that you don’t even know what you bring down in the name of clicks.
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