@StatiSense People think borrowing na bad thing as a country, if I dey see people dey make am as discussion topic I go just dey laugh , America dey give monetary aid to country, yet na them borrow pass . You no go hear am for news sef
@dammiedammie35 Then again
She says she’s in the informal economy that is people selling bread , kuli kuli , groundnut, coke and Akara, it’s a 1 trillion dollars industry
That’s gotta be money laundering or does the First Lady of Nigeria have a point
@YemiiOjo80@osazenoo Once some of you can get scrump from politicians you run you stinky mouth anyhow.
You are seeing 1000km, 400km, 250km and here you are comparing Akure-Ado Ekiti of 40km road.
For your ignorance mind, Lagos-Ibadan is 120km,it means we are talking about Lagos-Ibadan 3times. Think.
@akolawole11@osazenoo I have many of them connecting Ogun to Oyo to Òsùn-Ekiti.
If you have traveled around northern states where you see very long stretch of long good roads, you will understand what I'm saying.
@osazenoo 15 roads and I can't see anyone run across Southwest states, a lot of time SW is being marginalized but people see it as normal thing.
Where is road connecting Oyo-Ogun-Ekiti-Osun-Ondo? SW doesn't end in Lagos.
@ChomsHarry@osazenoo Kuli Kuli na gold ooo. A pack of Kuli Kuli is N3500 with different flavors.
And there's nothing bad in frying Akara.
Create employment too.
@Doctor_Chichi Are you really seeking people’s opinion? Or you want to tell us your privileges? The experience is yours, so also is the decision. And the supposed individual is here, reading your tweets and its response.
Here we go again with the same stupid, tired propaganda.
Mount Zion and others need to understand that the era of demonizing Yoruba culture and spirituality is over. People are educating themselves now, and these old narratives will no longer go unchallenged.
Respect your faith, but stop turning Yoruba culture into the villain of every story.
For over three decades, films like this have profited from portraying Yoruba spirituality as evil while presenting foreign religious worldviews as inherently good. Yet many of the social problems facing society today clearly weren’t solved by that propaganda.
Mike Bamiloye built a successful career from this formula, moved his family abroad, and now returns to sell the same story again. The difference is that people are now asking questions, and many are no longer willing to accept these portrayals without scrutiny.