@novieverest To hell with their sympathy!!! Whether or not the NDC celebrates, they want you crushed,crumbled and annihilated just to prove a point and mock PO for leaving them.
@emmaikumeh For someone who claims to have no interest in the 2027 presidential elections,you have made more than 5 tweets wishing, explaining and defending the ADC. Saanu neutral
Lol😂
@Wizarab10 Dickson rest ooo! Whether the principles or laws of economics are followed or defied. LAGOS, NIGERIA DOES NOT HAVE 1 million people with $1m. Rest!!!
“We used to have ghost workers, because we didn’t do anything now we have ghost agencies. Soon we will have ghost ministries, ghost governors & ghost president.”
- Peter Obi
@sxdiqcarter_@manlikefola_ To God who made me!! At 90+8 I swear say I no trust that team until I hear final whistle. People useless I never see. Better my super eagles make I kuku no get high expectations, anywhere them stop we abuse them move on. No be this clowns suppose take my joy.
What Truly Should Be Our Priority Now as Leaders of a Nation?
This question has become necessary, given where we are today as a nation and where we are supposed to be.
While completing my INEC nomination form yesterday, Section E, Question 1 caught my attention. It asks: “Have you ever been adjudged a lunatic or been declared a person of unsound mind?” The answer is either Yes or No. That question got me thinking: Can we, as the political leaders of today’s Nigeria, truly say we are exhibiting the characteristics of a sound mind?
When Nigerians, including children and security personnel, are being abducted into the bushes, citizens cannot travel safely on our highways, several million Nigerians are uncertain where their next meal will come from, and several billions are being siphoned frivolously through non-existent agencies and projects, should politics really be our primary preoccupation?
A sound-minded leadership would have declared these existential challenges a national emergency and immediately mobilised all relevant institutions, security agencies, experts, community leaders, and other critical stakeholders to confront them with urgency and resolve. At a moment like this, the survival, security, and stability of Nigeria must take precedence over every other consideration. This is a time for decisive action, not political calculation or the pursuit of partisan advantage.
Further in the same Section E, Question 6, was: “Have you ever presented a forged certificate to INEC?” Again, the answer is either Yes or No. This raises another important question: Why shouldn’t INEC, in the interest of ensuring that our leaders are exemplary in following the rules and to strengthen public confidence in our electoral process, publish the academic certificates and credentials submitted by every candidate seeking elective office?
Transparency strengthens democracy and builds public trust. Nigeria’s problems are too serious for politics as usual. It is time for leadership defined by competence, character, capacity, compassion, and commitment to service.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
@prinxe_B Stupidity will not let you see the problem that a charcoal and fufu seller is earning more than someone who works in finance and the academia. Of course you are an APC supporter not much is expected from the septic tank you have for a brain.