Psalms 117:1-2 HCSB
[1] Praise the Lord, all nations! Glorify Him, all peoples!
[2] For His faithful love to us is great; the Lord’s faithfulness endures forever.
Hallelujah!
https://t.co/VxhrCVhryg
This fight has not been easy. It has come with pain, pressure, and sacrifice. But your courage has remained firm. Your service is acknowledged. Your sacrifice is honoured. Your country does not take you for granted.
To every officer and soldier of our Armed Forces, to the Police, DSS, Civil Defence, intelligence services, local security formations, and all who work day and night to keep Nigeria safe, I say thank you.
Many of us have trained ourselves to treat every differing opinion or feedback as a personal assault that must be fiercely defended or countered. But do we get to pause to think that not every critic is an enemy. Not all criticisms and attacks come from a bad place. Some speak from genuine concern, lived experience, or a desire to see you grow. Others simply hold a different lens.
The mature response isn’t always defence or agitation. Sometimes it’s quiet reflection. Good faith criticism is a gift if you’re secure enough to receive it. And even poorly delivered ones can contain seeds of truth worth introspecting on.
Protect your peace, yes. But don’t build walls so high that wisdom can’t reach you, no matter how highly educated or rated you think you are.
Good morning my yard people.
“Perfect Promise Land Biafra is an illusion and unreal. Igbo marginalization in Nigeria is distortion of reality. We equally played a part in where we are today. Igbos were not forced to be a part of Nigeria.” - Igbo Priest says at an Igbo Conference.
This is the fact. The dynamic has shifted.
The k!dn@pp£rs are exhausted. Not just physically, but strategically. Every video they release shows the same forest background, the same makeshift covers, the same desperate tone. They are not threatening they are pleading. That is not the posture of people in control.
They want out. They are in a cul‑de‑sac, and they know it. Security forces have sealed escape routes. Resupply lines are cut or compromised. They cannot move the hostages without risking detection. They cannot stay without running out of food and patience.
Their negotiation backend is weak. The videos are inconsistent. The demands are unclear. They have no credible intermediary. They are not dictating terms they are begging for an exit. That is not strength. That is survival mode.
The government holds the long part of the stick. Not because it has all the answers, but because time is now on its side. Every day that passes without a ransom payment, without a prisoner exchange increases pressure on the k!dn@pp£rs. Every day that the cordon holds, their options shrink.
The government does not need to negotiate. It needs to wait, watch, and strike when the moment is right.
The hostages are suffering. That is the tragedy. But the k!dn@pp£rs are not winning by you Hun youthey are simply not yet defeated.
Fatigue is visible. Desperation is audible. The trap is closing.
It is only a matter of time.
THIS IS THE BIGGEST WIN 🇳🇬❤️
Even Al Jazeera is reporting it — Nigerian security forces record a major breakthrough, rescuing 360 abductees from Boko Haram captivity in Borno State.
A significant victory in the ongoing fight against terr0rism.
As a lover of demography, I have always argued about Nigeria's population composition and how, in my view, it doesn't align with some of the conventional parameters we were taught, that populations tend to cluster around water bodies, economic hubs, and so on.
I carried this argument for years... until last month.
During a discussion, one fellow simply asked me..
"Omo, Melo ni iwo bi ?"
Then he went round the table asking the same question. The average answer was two.
He then asked:
"Which state governments in the South are sponsoring mass weddings?"
At that point, I knew the debate had taken a dangerous turn.
Na so we quietly ended the discussion and faced our ram suya jejely.
It seems I am no longer a Muslim for asking for empowerment of our fellow Muslim Brothers and Sisters according to Him below. Alhamdulillah you have no capacity to make such a declaration and I make bold to say you are no Better Muslim than I am, So go and sleep . Take a break, we all won't be silly together. Islam does not promote poverty, no it does not promote Almajiri either, so please sit this one out. There are Muslims all over the world doing so well, let our Brothers and Sisters in the North enjoy such privilege before selling them into abject poverty in the name of marriage. The Northern girls are struggling with Vesicovaginal fistulas, we see them, we read about them, poverty is responsible, Fix that before any ridiculous mass weddings , Fix education, Fix health care, Fix illiteracy, empower them, give them skill, teach them finance, give them opportunity and dignity to earn so they can feed themselves, fix it all then marriage can follow.
NB- if you insult me again, I will take you to the cleaners, mi o ran Ogun nisr rara ni. Woju Ko to koja express o
Here’s what paragraph 14(c) should have taught all of us:
→ Every word in a contract has a price.
→ Trust is not a legal substitute for reading.
→ “Standard agreement” is the most dangerous phrase in Nigerian business.
→ The clause that will destroy you is never on the first page.
→ A lawyer who doesn’t read their own contract is a doctor who doesn’t take their own prescription.
Read. Everything. Always.
At Legalnaija, we exist because Damilola’s story shouldn’t be anyone’s story.
Access to legal knowledge shouldn’t be a privilege.
It should be infrastructure.
If you don’t have a lawyer you trust — find one.
If you don’t know your rights — learn them.
If you’re about to sign something — pause.
The law will not protect what you didn’t read.
— https://t.co/gPFcVYXvU9
Retweet if you almost signed something without reading it.
#LegalNaija | #ContractLaw | #KnowYourRights | #AccessToJustice
@Ade_Nurayn If it been discussed among themselves, no problem.
Once a Southern talk about it, wahala don come be dat as if the issue is not affecting everyone of us together in Nigeria.
The matter long, insincere set of people.
Yesterday in church, a woman who’s almost 80 came out to testify. She said that last week, someone gifted her ₦20k. That was the first time in her entire life she ever had ₦20k in her account that wasn’t for medication or food.
The pastor asked if she was serious, and she said yes.
The pastor then gifted her ₦150k. Her account number was read out, and before the end of the service, her account already had more than ₦500k.
A lot of Nigerians are waiting for a "stable economy" before they start investing.
But here is the truth: every generation of investors in Nigeria faced instability, from oil price crashes, naira devaluations, elections, and recessions.
The ones who built wealth did not wait for stability. They invested through the instability, with discipline and a long enough timeline to outlast the noise.
I commend all our patriotic front-line soldiers in the fight against terrorism in all forms.
You stand as a shield between innocent citizens and those who seek to destroy the peace, safety, and dignity of our communities.
In the forests, on the roads, at forward operating bases, in the air, creeks, and across difficult terrains, you carry the burden of national protection so that millions of Nigerians can sleep, work, worship, farm, trade, and raise their children in hope.
This fight has not been easy. It has come with pain, pressure, and sacrifice. But your courage has remained firm. Your service is acknowledged. Your sacrifice is honoured. Your country does not take you for granted.
To every officer and soldier of our Armed Forces, to the Police, DSS, Civil Defence, intelligence services, local security formations, and all who work day and night to keep Nigeria safe, I say thank you.
I also acknowledge the families behind the uniform. Many of you have endured long absences, anxious nights, and the emotional cost of duty. Nigeria remembers that sacrifice, too.
We honour those who have paid the supreme price in defence of our country. Their names may not always trend, but their courage lives on in rescued communities, protected families, and the survival of the nation they served.
The fight against terror is not only a military operation. It is a national duty. Citizens must support our security forces by providing timely, useful information. When you see something, say something. When you know something, report it.
Nigeria will not surrender to fear. We will not allow terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, or violent extremists to define who we are as a people. Their violence is not our identity. Their hatred does not represent Nigerians of any faith, creed, or community.
To our troops and all front-line patriots, thank you for your courage. Thank you for your vigilance. Thank you for your service.
May the Almighty protect you as you protect our country.
Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces
Federal Republic of Nigeria
Egi Nupe can be annoying plenty of the time, especially to two set of people; Obidients and pro Arewa people, but I can hardly fault him most of the times, even if I perceive some sense of pride in his takes.
He is also Arewa through and through, so anyone can hardly say he hates the north.
We don’t just like our faults being pointed out in our faces.
What does that make us? Hypocrites?
Because I need someone to tell me what the other brother coming for him said that actually makes any sense as a defence?
“I was born in the early 80s,” then went on to indict himself and the north with the confidence of a 7 years old. Talk about PhD in cognitive dissonance!