Maybe Nigerians are not angry because of the akara comment itself. Maybe they’re angry because advice that once sounded motivational now sounds like policy.
struck many as a symbol of something deeper—a disconnect between everyday realities and national expectations.
People are not rejecting hard work. They are asking for an economy where hard work translates into stability, growth, and hope.
The issue was never akara.
Nigerians understand dignity in labour and many families have been built through small businesses. But in a country where people are asking questions about cost of living, jobs, and economic opportunities, hearing “start an akara business”
If we finally get an empathetic and sincere leader after these locusts, it’s then you’ll realize Nigerians are not adaptive as we assume.
They’ll demand for things they didn’t demand under the leaders that hate them.
@Codesorcerdev41@OkundiaJ@PoojaMedia You are the fool here someone is trying to correct a mistake instead of understanding his post you are here raining insults