🔥 Strength. Loyalty. Protection. 🔥
Welcome to THE DOG HOUSE DEN — home of elite bloodlines and powerful companions.
We specialize in fierce, intelligent, and well-socialized dogs built for protection, loyalty, and legacy. 🐾
✔️ Healthy & Active
✔️ Strong Bloodlines
✔️ Well Raised & Socialized
✔️ Nationwide Delivery Available
📍 Delta State, Nigeria
📞 07037744238
🎵 TikTok: @thedoghouseden5
“Where Strength Meets Legacy.
@dogman_dave85@markgoldbridge I’m not making any excuses for any body allow the board do thier job judge them after the window all this moaning won’t help either
@abanikanda_levi@razorblade300 Bro allow him do what he wants if it get to your turn do what you like is his decision all this clout chasing doesn’t make sense
@Owiggy_@guzu_p “When family loyalty outweighs fairness, relationships suffer.”
* “A wise man chooses truth over favoritism, even with those he loves most
@Owiggy_@guzu_p “A man who cannot correct his mother when she’s wrong cannot truly protect his marriage.”
* “Love your mother, honor your wife, but defend the truth.”
* “Loyalty should never blind you to what’s right.”
* “Respect for a mother is noble; fairness to a wife is necessary.”
Brighton bought a teenager for about £4m and sold him to Chelsea for £115m. The man running the club is a professional gambler. This week he did it again, paying £21.5m for an 18-year-old from the Swedish league.
The gambler is Tony Bloom. Before football, he made his money at the poker table and in sports betting, where the whole skill is spotting something priced too low and betting big on it. He bought Brighton and ran it the same way.
Caicedo is the one everyone remembers. Brighton signed Moisés Caicedo from a club in Ecuador for about £4m and sold him to Chelsea two seasons later for £115m, the most a British club had ever paid for a player at the time. Marc Cucurella cost £15m and left for Chelsea at £62m. Liverpool paid £35m for Alexis Mac Allister, a £7m buy from Argentina. João Pedro went the same way last summer, £30m in and up to £60m out, also to Chelsea. Same move every time. Buy a kid cheap, give him a season or two to get good, then sell him to a giant at the peak of his price.
The trick is that Brighton barely guesses. Bloom owns a sports-betting company, and the club runs a private piece of software that scans players across the planet and flags the ones going for less than they are worth, usually teenagers in leagues the big clubs cannot be bothered to watch, in places like Ecuador, Argentina, Japan and now Sweden. They look for the position they need anywhere on earth, plan a year or two ahead, and have a cheap replacement ready before the star is even sold. In late 2024 they let go of most of their human scouts and leaned on the computer instead.
And it works. Brighton made the biggest profit any club has ever posted in the Premier League, around £123m in a single year, and the Caicedo money had not even come in yet. They pulled it off with the 13th-biggest wage bill in the league and one of the cheapest squads in it.
Chelsea alone have now handed Brighton about £237m for Caicedo, Cucurella and João Pedro. They are paying for the very machine that keeps beating them. And two of the four clubs Brighton held off to sign that Swedish kid this week were Chelsea and Newcastle.
So an 18-year-old from Stockholm, bought for £21.5m, is just the next chip on the gambler's table. If the pattern holds, some giant pays over £100m for him in a few years, and Brighton starts the whole thing again with the winnings.
“Nigeria deserves leadership that brings security, stable electricity, jobs, lower inflation, and real hope for the youth. If a government keeps repeating the same promises without improving the lives of the people, voters have every right to demand change at the ballot box.”
Our Coca-Cola Golden Award winners...
🅰️ Playmaker: Bruno Fernandes (21 assists)
⚽️ Golden Boot: Erling Haaland (27 goals)
🧤 Golden Glove: David Raya (19 clean sheets)
1. Avoiding Responsibility
Many cheating wives play the victim to shift attention away from their actions. Instead of admitting wrongdoing, they focus on excuses like feeling lonely, ignored, or unappreciated. This helps them avoid full accountability for the betrayal.
2. Seeking Sympathy
By acting hurt or emotionally broken, they may try to gain sympathy from friends, family, or even their partner. The goal is often to make people feel sorry for them instead of focusing on the cheating itself.
3. Protecting Their Image
Most people do not want to be seen as the “bad person.” Playing the victim helps protect their reputation and self-image. They may convince themselves that their actions were caused by circumstances rather than personal choices.
4. Fear of Consequences
Admitting guilt openly can lead to serious consequences such as divorce, separation, loss of trust, or public embarrassment. Acting like the victim can sometimes reduce the anger directed at them and soften the outcome.
5. Emotional Manipulation
In some situations, playing the victim becomes a form of manipulation. It can confuse the partner, redirect blame, and make the betrayed person question themselves instead of addressing the real issue — the cheating.
🔥 Strength. Loyalty. Protection. 🔥
Welcome to THE DOG HOUSE DEN — home of elite bloodlines and powerful companions.
We specialize in fierce, intelligent, and well-socialized dogs built for protection, loyalty, and legacy. 🐾
✔️ Healthy & Active
✔️ Strong Bloodlines
✔️ Well Raised & Socialized
✔️ Nationwide Delivery Available
📍 Delta State, Nigeria
📞 07037744238
🎵 TikTok: @thedoghouseden5
“Where Strength Meets Legacy.
The silence surrounding the kidnapping and abduction of teachers and students in Oyo State is deeply disturbing. Education is supposed to be a safe place where children learn and teachers shape the future of society, yet innocent students and educators are now living in fear. The recent attacks and abductions in schools across Oyo State have raised serious concerns about security, but many Nigerians are questioning why the nation has remained relatively quiet.
One major reason for this silence is that insecurity has sadly become normalized in Nigeria. Over the years, repeated cases of kidnappings and violence across different states have caused many people to become emotionally tired and less responsive. What should normally provoke nationwide outrage is now treated like another daily headline. This normalization is dangerous because it weakens public pressure on authorities to act urgently.
Another reason is the uneven attention given to insecurity depending on the region involved. When attacks happen in some parts of the country, they receive massive national conversations and media coverage, while incidents in other regions are quickly forgotten. The abduction of teachers and students in Oyo State deserves the same level of concern, sympathy, and urgency as any other tragedy affecting Nigerians anywhere else.
The fear of insecurity is also affecting education itself. Parents are becoming afraid to send their children to school, while teachers now work under dangerous conditions. If schools are no longer safe, the future of education and national development is threatened. A society that cannot protect its children and teachers is risking its own future.
The government, security agencies, traditional leaders, civil society groups, and citizens must all speak up and demand stronger action. Silence only encourages criminals to continue their activities. Nigerians must refuse to accept kidnapping and abduction as normal. The lives of teachers and students matter, and every child deserves to learn in safety without fear of violence or abduction.
The nation must not stay quiet while innocent lives are being destroyed. Speaking out, demanding accountability, and supporting stronger security measures are necessary steps toward ending this growing crisis in Oyo State and across Nigeria.