🚨 THE MASK HAS COMPLETELY SLIPPED.
Keir Starmer is banning social media for teenagers, but guess which app is magically exempt?
Bluesky. 🤡
They are blocking every platform that allows independent free speech, while leaving the ultimate left wing echo chamber wide open.
This was never about child safety. It is a highly coordinated plot to trap your kids in a digital bubble and brainwash them with pure establishment propaganda.
They want total control over what the next generation is allowed to think.
RT if you refuse to let the Labour elite indoctrinate our children! 🇬🇧🔥
Dear Nigerians,
Leave everything & watch the 1993 presidential debate between Abiola & Alhaji Bashir Tofa.
MKO was fiercely against the IMF & the World Bank. He was against Naira Devaluation & IMF loans. He kicked against wasteful spending.
He stood for FREE education, not student loan.
In fact, Chief MKO won the 1993 presidential election after defeating Tofa in that debate. Nigerians saw his exceptionalism that day & voted overwhelmingly for Kashimawo. It was a Muslim-Muslim ticket that offered REAL hope.
Chief Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola was firmly against the International Monetary Fund (IMF) & the World Bank. He viewed these Bretton Woods institutions & their structural adjustment programs (SAP) as exploitative & designed to ensnare developing nations into debt traps & neo-colonial reliance.
In fact, he criticized the Structural Adjustment Program (SAP), a program of the IMF harshly. MKO was a Capitalist with Socialist ideals.
Key aspects of his economic vision were:
Farewell to Poverty: His manifesto proposed an economic framework that rejected the World Bank & IMF loans & structural adjustments.
Alternative Funding: Instead of devaluing the currency or taking conditional loans, Chief MKO planned to fund a nationwide free health & free education by cutting government waste & securing more profits from oil companies.
National Sovereignty: MKO was against neo-colonialism. As an international businessman, he argued that Nigeria had no business letting young IMF officials dictate its internal policies.
Today, JUNE 12 People are implementing SAP 2.0. They are running away from debates. They have gone against everything MKO stood for.
His HOPE '93 "Farewell to Poverty" was largely a ‘people-centric’ manifesto, anchored on democracy, social justice, agric revolution, poverty eradication, & anti-imperialism.
He promised to write off 10 years of taxes for private businesses that went into farming. He was ready to mechanize the whole value chain.
1993 was the fairest & freest election in Nigeria. The irony is, it was the military that conducted that election, before it was ultimately annulled.
Today, June 12 People cannot conduct a free election. The beneficiaries of JUNE 12 declare Oro on Election Day, & snatch ballot boxes.
They mutilate result sheets, compromise the IREV, & tell you to go to court. They plant their surrogates in opposition parties & call it a Master Strategy. June 12 People are no democrats, they are worse than Abacha.
They work against everything that MKO stood for. Under JUNE 12 People, Nigerians have no human rights. They use the police & the DSS to kidnap the critics of their government. They borrowed Nigeria to stupor. They plan to more, & they will squander it. And when the IMF or World Bank says “jump!” They ask, “how high?”
Recall that Muhammadu Buhari participated in the 2011 presidential debate, where he debated Nuhu Ribadu & Ibrahim Shekarau. However, he did not attend the 2007, 2015, & 2019 debates.
JUNE 12 People have never participated in any presidential debates. They will run away from the 2027 debates. They hate accountability.
MKO always quoted statistics like the man they attack in Nigeria today. The candidate they call “Obi China.” MKO articulated his thoughts. He was no bulaba. He stood for the poor. JUNE 12 People are there for themselves & the rich only.
They are asking you to renew their mandate—so they could do the things they promised you before. They will remain a fraud in my book.
I finally understand what Machiavelli meant when he said, “Never play fair in a game where others cheat.” It doesn’t mean become evil. It means stop being naive. Stop bringing honesty to people who study manipulation, stop giving access to people who weaponize closeness, and stop expecting clean hands from people who already showed you they’ll throw dirt. Sometimes wisdom is not revenge. Sometimes wisdom is learning the rules of the room before the room uses your goodness against you.
Today, we concluded another partnership with Sterling Bank to launch the Sterling Bank National Mathematics Quiz. A nationwide competition designed to discover, reward, and celebrate Nigeria’s brightest young minds.
Starting Saturday, June 20, 2026, students from Primary 1 to SS3 across Nigeria will compete online every two weeks for the prizes.
1st Prize – ₦500,000
2nd Prize – ₦300,000
3rd Prize – ₦200,000
That’s ₦1,000,000 every two weeks and ₦24,000,000 every year dedicated solely to rewarding academic excellence among Nigerian children.
But this is not just about winning money.
It is about building a culture where intelligence is celebrated.
It is about giving every child, whether in Lagos, Enugu, Kano, Bayelsa, Maiduguri, Aba, or a remote village, an opportunity to compete on a national stage.
Competition Schedule
• Every two weeks
• Saturdays
• 6:00 PM – 6:20 PM
• Online nationwide
The top performers will then advance to a live championship session streamed online next day same time, where Nigerians can watch some of the country’s brightest students solve challenging mathematical problems in real time.
To ensure fairness and give more students the opportunity to benefit, every student can only win once.
And here’s what makes it even better:
Every participant will be able to review their questions after the competition, identify their weaknesses, learn from their mistakes, and prepare for the next challenge.
This means that even students who don’t win become better mathematicians.
Parents, teachers, school owners, and students should begin preparing immediately.
The questions will be tough and the competition will be fierce.
Registration is now open:
https://t.co/5dGxuzgLU1
Please share this with every child, parent, teacher, school owner, principal, and education stakeholder you know.
Let’s make academic excellence prestigious again.
@executivo_boss@AbdulMahmud01 "...But if every disagreement makes you happy, then your politics is not patriotism.... Its your resentment wearing the cloth of neutrality..."🎯
Atheists ask “Can you prove God exists?”
But the real question they need to ask is “Why can’t I see, hear, or know God when others can?”
Atheists must ask themselves “Is it possible my worldview is blinding me? Am I actually a stumbling block to myself?”
I’ve told you a story.
Now let me tell you what it cost.
Not the legal fees. Not the bail money.
The real cost.
Kelechi had a lawyer who knew Section 35 of the Constitution by heart.
Most Nigerians don’t know Section 35 exists.
Here is what it guarantees you — right now, today — if you are ever arrested:
→ The right to be told why you are being arrested. Immediately.
→ The right to a lawyer. From the moment of arrest.
→ The right to remain silent. Use it.
→ The right to be charged or released within 24–48 hours.
→ The right to humane treatment. Always.
These are not favours.
These are not negotiable.
They are constitutional. They are yours.
The question is — do you know them well enough to demand them?
One thing I discovered in my visits to South East is that if you as an Igbo man maltreats a stranger, you will be severely dealt with.
If on the other hand a stranger offends you, they will beg you to pardon him or her, that he/she is a stranger.
This phenomenon is captured by many proverbs. I will share three:
1. 'Ojemba enweghi iro' it means a traveller doesn't have enemies, Ndi igbo are born travellers so how can they be hostile with people in their region knowing those people will avenge in their own region.
2. 'ogbu onye biara na be ya adighi ike' meaning he who kills his visitor is a coward.
3. 'Obialu bee mu abiagbula mu, mgbe oga ala mkpumkpu apukwala na azu'. - May my visitor not kill me and on his departure, may he not have hunch back!
Travelling indeed broadens the mind!
As an igbo man born of a woman,
You see this man picture, always make sure you use any of your social media to post, share,they must see him on daily basis, his face wont be forgotten here, don't get tired, or disencouraged, this is our only hope. Not Peter obi.
The BBC has just released a biased documentary aimed at whitewashing the atrocities committed by Britain and its colony, Nigeria.
Setting the record straight once again, for posterity's sake.
First off.
A coup happened in January 1966, involving military officers from all three major ethnic groups.
The BBC then took to its station and branded it an "Igbo coup."
That narrative widened existing divisions within the military, and before long, a counter coup followed. Major General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi was murdered, alongside several other officers.
The situation was spiralling out of control, so a solution was sought.
THE ABURI ACCORD.
Yakubu Gowon and Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu signed the agreement.
Its primary aim was to protect civilians who had nothing to do with the rift within the military and to create a regional structure that would encourage development and healthy competition.
Gowon signed because the agreement made sense to any thinking human being.
But upon returning to Nigeria, Gowon's handlers reminded him that the dream was never a better Nigeria, but a dwindling one. Gowon, being slow, failed to realise he was setting his own people up.
At that point, the only way Gowon and his British masters could deflect from the agreement was through violence.
Then came the pogrom against the Igbos, an automatic breach of the Aburi Accord.
The killings began at Kano Airport. Innocent blood was spilled. Thousands were slaughtered across Northern Nigeria while countless others fled home with nothing but the clothes on their backs.
Ojukwu was cornered. He could no longer guarantee the safety of his people in other parts of Nigeria as the country turned against the Igbos, many without even understanding the situation.
He consulted with his people in the South on the best response to the massacre of innocent civilians.
The verdict was unanimous.
A sovereign state.
BIAFRA was declared.
Weeks later, the Nigerian military launched what many regard as a genocidal campaign. Nigerian Federal troops crossed into Biafra through the Gakem Ogoja axis, firing the opening shots of the war.
When the British government realised the Biafrans were far more determined and resilient than expected, and that a war predicted to last weeks had dragged on for years, they changed tactics.
They introduced the starvation policy backed by Awolowo, (a war crime by any standard) aimed at wiping the Igbo race from the face of the earth.
When Ojukwu realised the objective was extermination, he laid down his office, departed for exile, and transferred authority to his second in command, Major General Philip Effiong, who formally announced Biafra's surrender.
But even surrender did not end the tragedy.
Asaba happened.
Men, women and children were instructed to gather for what they believed would be talks. They came dressed in white, waving peace and singing with trembling hearts.
The Nigerian military separated the men from the women.
Then they opened fire.
Over five hundred men were murdered in cold blood.
Similar atrocities were reported in other communities around the same period.
Post war, came the infamous £20 policy, designed to economically cripple a people already devastated by war and starvation.
The BBC documentary is simply Britain attempting to soften the horrors inflicted upon the innocent people of Biafra.
We remember.
Never to forget.