This was sang and produced by a Nigerian who happens to be family to me. Song tittle:Back to the start. Artiste: Martin's Okeleke. No vulgar words, just pure love song. Out on all streaming platforms.
Something very funny happened today.
One APC stakeholder known as Akin Alabi (farmer), went on twitter to explain how frying akara is a most lucrative business ever in the world.
After preaching, one guy started praying for him.
The guy prayed that all his children would all end up selling akara, none of them will prosper in anything if not akara. They will akara before they eat, buy clothes or pay rent.
After praying, they asked the APC guy to say Amen.
Naso my guy take run. It's been over 6 hours, he never reply.
We still dey wait for him sha.
I found a hidden security camera pointing directly at my desk in the office and assumed management was spying on my productivity. To test my theory, I spent three days doing absolutely zero work, staring directly into the lens, and eating snacks continuously. The IT guy walked over on Friday and asked why I was blocking the motion sensor for the air conditioning.
If you fry akara in a good location, after all cost, you make N20/akara and you sell 500 pieces per day. That is N10k/day, N60k/6 day week and N240k/month. Better than bank job.
Please if your neighbourhood is flooded, make videos and post here to update us so we know where to avoid that particular day.
Thank you for your service to humanity.
Abeg Abeg
Christians trade and co-exist with people of different cultures and faith everyday. This thing is about power and power only. Again, an offshoot of culture.
The employer only did that to exert power over an employee. Your ancestors forced their slaves to follow their culture and religion - even the one that required them to be buried alive against their wishes, with a late king.
@Wizarab10 I don't know what this was all about but "buried alive" caught my attention. My great grand father was a slaver and according to history, I heard during his burial, he was buried with 12 able bodied men alive. The imagination still hunts me till date.
Three major things that the Nigerian government did to the Igbos after the Civil War.
1. The £20 policy.
This completely eroded their wealth and made them poorer, at the time.
2. The indigenization decree.
The Nigerian enterprise promotion decree forced foreign owned companies to sell shares to Nigerians. Hence, the Igbos could not participate in buying shares because they had become poorer due to the £20 policy.
3. The abandoned property Act.
Properties that were owned by Igbos pre-civil war that were abandoned, especially in places like Port Harcourt and Lagos, were confiscated and declared abandoned. This deprived the Igbos of real estate wealth.
56 years later, despite all that happened, the Igbos have risen to enviable heights, and the country cannot survive without them.
End.