MUHAMMED M. BELGORE: "What is certain, like the relentless march of the Sahara sands, is that IGP Disu’s honeymoon will not endure eternally—Nigerians, impatient as the thunderclap, demand deeds over dalliance. Yet his antecedents whisper like ancient griots: he is the man for this Nigerian hour. May IGP Disu succeed, his legacy a ballad of bravery and benevolence. God bless the Nigerian Police Force, and God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria."
https://t.co/V1XBNl5ZUU
MUHAMMED M. BELGORE: "In Grey’s Anatomy, he embodied the dashing Dr. Mark Sloan—“McSteamy” in whispers of admiration—strutting with suave confidence, while in Euphoria as the tormented Cal Jacobs, he fretted with raw, emotional truth. Yet his ultimate scene, a heroic duel with ALS, transcended the scripted realm, crafting his existence into a heartrending ballad that seems whispered by the Bard himself, etched eternally for Dane alone."
https://t.co/x5nvVNDk3Y
[MUHAMMED M. BELGORE] Electoral Act amendment: Protesting Nigerians have put the cart before the horse
Nigerians, with the fire of eagles in their eyes, have begun to overestimate the stature of their nation. We forget, in the rush of righteous anger and digital dreams, that we remain a third-world colossus—mighty in spirit, yet tethered by the chains of uneven earth. We have placed the cart before the horse, demanding laws that sprint ahead of the legs that must carry them.
We cried out for the Senate to birth an electoral law that hinges on stable electricity and reliable internet, as though these twin lifelines already coursed like sacred rivers through every corner of the land. We envisioned results transmitted in real time from polling units to the great viewing portals, pristine and incorruptible, floating on waves of light. But the land itself protests in silence. In the remote reaches—those forgotten hamlets where baobabs stand sentinel over dirt tracks, where generators cough like old men and network signals flicker like dying fireflies—the infrastructure is but a rumour. Polling booths nestled in underdeveloped states cannot boast the development such a law presupposes. There, the horse is still a foal, and the cart a heavy dream.
https://t.co/EPlY7d6Lqu
"It is one thing to be a bona fide son of the soil, representing the values of your origin as if you are the prime natural resource of that very ground. It is another to be a son of the soil like a resilient plant that defies all odds, thriving in any weather, irrespective of loamy, sandy, or clay conditions. Sheikh Sholagberu embodies a tree that has blossomed with beautiful fruits, rooted in a seed of Islamic knowledge nurtured by consistent service to the people of Kwara State and beyond." — MUHAMMED M. BELGORE
https://t.co/FPcyMdc3TR
Ofcourse you know it’s a scratch my back, I scratch your bag thing. Endorsing PBAT is saying “please carry me along Mr President.” Cause he doesn’t even need their endorsement.
@aykay_umr
Arsenal never fell down to this level, so I have to ask. Are you okay?
Please check on Man Utd fans around you, even the male ones might need tampons.
😰😭