@SirJarus I gained so much from your mentorship and that first-hand experience. I’ve been closely following your impactful journey everywhere ever since. Thank you for lifting others as you climb, sir! 🙏🏾
@SirJarus I still vividly remember you sharing your inspiring journey with me from your secondary school and university days, straight to the corporate world. Hearing how you are consistently number one in every phase left a huge mark on me.
@SirJarus But it wasn't just the book. You graciously invited me to a seminar on the Island in Lagos featuring top industry leaders. Sitting in that room as a uni student gave me rare insights my mates didn't have at the time. It completely shifted my mentality.
@SirJarus Yes, and thank you so much sir. Our paths crossed back in my university days when I emerged as the overall best in a Nairaland debate competition. That win changed everything, it led to me meeting you and getting a free copy of your very first book.
@RhemaEmmanuel8 @TamiloreAdewuyi There is no such thing as a global price.
A mid-level software engineer at the exact same company:
US: $150k
Germany: $80k
Portugal: $40k
You have to factor in cost of living, taxes, and local minimum wage. The location dictates the
market.
The best decision I ever made was marrying you, @MichelleObama. For 33 years, I’ve admired your strength, grace, and determination — and the fact that you look so good doing it all. Happy anniversary!
@SatisfiedLoner_@Adeekoemmanayo@seunosewa@nairaland Nairaland shows a stark reflection of the deep-seated tribalism prevailing in Nigeria. Around 80% of Nigerians exhibit default tribalistic tendencies, where prejudice and stereotyping have profoundly permeated our societal fabric. Nairaland merely brings this reality to light
Prejudice.
Prejudice is a function of the environment in which one is socialised and the level of exposure that one has. These stereotypes are of course, by the very nature of stereotypes, wild generalisations that are unlikely to hold up if empirical tests are conducted.