Hello @LCFC
I’m Olaogun, a winger also played as a striker from Nigeria. I’ve spent the last 3 years training daily to get one shot at professional football.
I’m not asking for a contract. I’m asking for 7 days on trial to show you what I can do. If I’m not good enough, I’ll walk away with no hard feelings.
I’m fast, direct, and I work harder than anyone on the pitch.
My highlights are here: https://t.co/nD68FCLsMn
Thanks,
Olaogun
|
After four years full of challenges and hard work, it's time to move on.
I leave with the feeling that the mission is complete. 4 seasons, 3 championships.
I will never forget the love I received from the fans from my very first days.
Catalonia is my place on earth.
Thank you to everyone I met along the way during these beautiful four years.
A special thank you to President Laporta for giving me the chance to live the most incredible chapter of my career.
Barça is back where it belongs.
Visca el Barça. Visca Catalunya 💙❤️
@fcbarcelona
Been seeing a lot of NFT mints lately but haven’t heard enough about The Beaks @thebeaksart by @DKashtalyan.
This one deserves way more attention. Let me tell you why 🧵
Good Friday reminds us of Jesus Christ’s sacrifice. May this day further deepen the values of harmony, compassion and forgiveness. May brotherhood and hope guide us all.
A quick reality check.
This is KPMG
Not Twitter analysts,
Not activists.
KPMG is saying that Nigeria’s new tax laws contain
“errors, inconsistencies, gaps, omissions and lacunae” and need urgent review.
Key issues they flagged:
• Sections that define who can be taxed BUT forget to clearly include or exclude communities
• Rules that could double tax foreign profits at 30%
• FX expense deductions tied to CBN rates that ignore market reality
• Withholding tax rules that discourage foreign business
• Capital loss provisions that are unclear
• Rent relief so low it’s economically meaningless
• Multiple schedules and sections that contradict each other
Let this sink in:
A global Big 4 firm is warning that parts of the law are ambiguous, contradictory, and commercially risky after implementation.
So when people say:
“Don’t worry, it’s all clear” or
“It only affects big companies”
Ask them this:
If professionals who helped design tax systems worldwide are asking for urgent fixes…
what chance does the average Nigerian have without preparation?
This is no longer about panic.
It’s about documentation, structure, and survival under a law even experts say needs correction.
Ignore that at your own risk.
Or come to the comment and start foaming at the mouth as usual.
BREAKING NEWS: Abia State government has announced plans to revive the Aba textile Mills and other moribund key industries to create more employment opportunities in the state.