🚨 “The era that favoured software jobs and MBA degrees is coming to an end and that the country must place greater value on trade skills such as welding, plumbing, electrical work and carpentry.”
- CEA Anantha Nageswaran.
The average Nigerian talent is a generalist. It’s that apparent "lack of focus" that feels that they’re not up to par when you ask for niche knowledge.
But to a foreigner that is used to niche talent, they see nigerian talent as “omo, hope I’m not underpaying this lad o?”. But the Nigerian talent doesn’t know this and sometimes underprices and undervalues themselves.
Some foreign clients even add to an earlier agreed budget because their conscience gets pricked. This is the reason why training Nigerian talent is the EASIEST thing in the world, because their generic knowledge makes them easily grasp anything.
I encourage you, if you're someone considering a field, new to a field or even experienced, please don’t undervalue yourself because one Ngor-Kpalla or Akungba man said you are lazy or not valuable.
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“This Experience Will Not Repeat Itself” - Another Presidential Promise fails in less than 24 Hours.
Less than 24 hours after President Tinubu stood at the Jos Plateau State airport on April 2, 2026, and promised the grieving Nigerian citizens, “I promise you that this experience will not repeat itself,” another brutal attack occurred in Nyamgo Gyel, Jos South LGA, resulting in the deaths of several innocent citizens.
Since then, and only a week following that reassuring promise from the President, Nasarawa State has been plunged into grief as the Akyawa and Udege Kasa communities fled for their lives after gunmen killed at least 11 people. Many homes were reduced to ashes, and numerous families remain missing.
In Zamfara State, 150 innocent Nigerians were abducted from the Kurfa Danya and Kurfan Magaji communities in one of the largest mass kidnappings in recent times. On the same day of the Zamfara kidnappings, terrorists in Borno State stormed Chibok, killing four officers and burning down homes.
Yesterday, on Easter Sunday, Benue State was rocked by violence again, with over 17 Nigerians massacred, entire communities left in ruins, and many individuals still unaccounted for. Today, in Kaduna State, several innocent citizens were killed by terrorists inside churches, with many others abducted in the Ariko community of Kachia LGA.
Yet we were told, “This experience will not repeat itself.” This represents a failure of leadership and responsibility, and sadly, Nigerians are paying for it with their lives.
These attackers are not ghostly figures; our inaction emboldens them. How can a President make such a categorical promise and, mere hours later, the nation continues to count the dead across multiple states? The primary responsibility of any government is to protect lives and property; however, this responsibility is failing today. Nigerians are being slaughtered in their homes, in their communities, and in the very places they should feel safest. Even the President did not enter these communities, so who is truly safe in Nigeria?
This is a national emergency. Nigeria is bleeding, and the situation is worsening and increasingly helpless.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
Tinubu in Jos Confirms ‘Don't Vote for Me’ Prediction on Power Supply
During the 2023 campaign, President Tinubu made a clear electoral promise: “If I don’t give you constant electricity in four years, don’t vote for me for a second term.”
When he took office in 2023, Nigeria had a power supply of over 4,000 megawatts and lower tariffs. Today, the electricity power supply is less than 4,000 megawatts on the average, and Nigerians are paying higher tariffs. Nigeria currently has the lowest per capita electricity consumption in the world, with a rate below 30% of the African average. Africa’s average is 617kwh, Nigeria’s is 144 kWh. This means that Nigerians consume least electricity than other Africans.
In a glaring display of disregard for promises and a lack of trust, President Tinubu, during a brief airport stopover to visit grieving families of the Jos attack on Thursday, April 2, 2026, stated that one of the reasons for his 10-minute stay was that the airport had no electricity. “You have no light here I fly out in ten minutes” At a time when Nigerians are enduring days without power, our leaders cannot even stay a few minutes without it.
Now is the time to stop incompetent leaders—those lacking the capacity and compassion—who prioritise their own comfort over the well-being of the people and make empty promises.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
Public resources should be sacred.
The same way it’s an abomination to steal in a church or mosque.
Nobody who steals public resources ends well. And even when they die their children sell them off or devour them.
This should be taught every morning in all our schools.
Corruption can be fixed in classrooms for the coming generations.
Watch the fantastic interview Chinedu gave after his Arnold Classic win. 👏🏾
“$750k is not a lot of money. The biggest prize in life is waking up healthy and sound, thanking God. […] I’m still an electrical engineer, bodybuilding is just my passion.”
🎥: IG/official_rxmuscle
This is the maths teacher from Evergreen schools Enugu. His name is Master Chisom Unachukwu.
His students took 1st, 2nd and 3rd positions for Junior Category for South East Maths Olympiad Grand Finale.
These boys are hooot!!!!
Reuben Abati asked Peter Obi: “What kind of business allows you to keep $15 million in an offshore account?
This question has sparked debate about transparency, wealth accumulation, and public trust.
Nigerians are paying close attention to how leaders earn and manage their resources.
This is the best time to be a competent and knowledgeable software engineer.
While everyone else is vibe coding, study the fundamentals and read books.
1. Designing Data Intensive Applications
2. Operating Systems: Three Easy Pieces
3. A Philosophy of Software Design
4. System Design Interview: An Insider‘s Guide
“If I do not provide steady electricity in four years, do not vote for me for 2nd Tenure,” -BAT
Thirty-two months after being incharge and instead of living by his powerful words, he now dumps National Grid that has been performing abysmally under his watch.
Those were the powerful words then that inspired hope among Nigerians who longed for light in their homes, stability for their businesses, and growth for their nation. Yet, while Nigerians are still grappling with that unfulfilled, categorical electoral promise - and without clear communication on the obstacles, if any, we read of provision in 2025 budget about the ₦10 billion for solar power at Aso Rock, and in 2026 budget another humongous amount for upgrade and maintenance and now we are being scarcitically told that Presidential Villa has planned to be disconnected from the national grid to rely entirely on solar.
It is a gross neglect and deeply worrisome when the seat of power abandons the national grid. One would expect government institutions to lead efforts to strengthen and expand the grid so that other establishments, and ultimately, citizens can benefit. If those in authority disconnect themselves from the system, who then will connect the ordinary Nigerian to reliable power?
Promoting renewable energy, as solar systems do, is commendable and necessary for the future. However, this situation reflects a deeper concern: governance lacking compassion and commitment to the governed. You cannot tell the people to fast while feasting yourself, securing yourself while Nigerians remain unsecured.
Nigerians do not expect 100% fulfilment of promises, but they do expect 100% effort, accompanied by measurable improvements and clear explanations when gaps exist. Leadership must serve the people, not isolate itself from their daily struggles. -PO