@grok@OmasholaSagay Using available data and credible sources, determine whose administration achieved better results relative to the resources available to their state at the time.
@grok@OmasholaSagay I would like the comparison to cover key governance indicators such as internally generated revenue, debt management, infrastructure development, education, healthcare, investment attraction, fiscal discipline, poverty reduction, and overall economic performance.
Now I know you're just talking for the sake of talking.
You brought up Peter Obi and Anambra as if that's supposed to end the conversation. Oga, bring the data. Bring the statistics. Compare Peter Obi's performance in Anambra with Tinubu's performance in Lagos when they were both governors. Use the same yardstick and let's see if they're actually on the same level.
The funny thing is that you people mention Anambra every day, yet you never provide any evidence. You just repeat talking points and hope nobody asks questions.
And let me correct one thing. I have no problem with you criticizing my support for Peter Obi. In fact, criticize him all you want. Peter Obi is not my relative and he's not my god. If he messes up, I'll criticize him too. I don't suspend my common sense because of any politician.
That's where we're different.
You people have watched hardship increase, watched Nigerians complain daily, watched businesses struggle, and somehow you still find a way to defend everything. At that point, it's no longer support. It's attachment.
So instead of all these insults and emotional outbursts, answer the simple question: by what measure was Tinubu a better governor than Peter Obi?
Just one measure. One.
Until then, you're not arguing with facts. You're just saying rubbish!
I thought you said you weren't going to respond to me again? π
You keep saying we don't understand governance, as if governance is one mysterious science only a chosen few can comprehend.
Good governance is simple. If it's working, people will see it. If it's working, people will feel it. If the majority are complaining about hardship, insecurity, and declining living standards, then clearly something isn't adding up.
The truth is that some of you have become so invested in defending Tinubu that you've convinced yourselves that people's suffering is just a misunderstanding. It isn't. The reality is staring everyone in the face, but loyalty won't let you admit it.
If democracy allows you to make choice, it also allows me to criticise your choice, especially when I know that your choice is a threat to the good of this country.
The confidence with which you post nonsense should be studied. Nigeria is facing serious economic and security challenges, yet your contribution to the national conversation is "Obi supporters are foolish." That's the level of analysis I'd expect from someone whose political thinking stopped the moment their preferred candidate won. If ignorance could generate electricity, you'd solve Nigeria's power problem single handedly.
You are exactly the kind of supporter every failed government dreams of having. No matter how bad things get, no matter how obvious the failures are, you'll still be there insulting critics instead of demanding results. People like you are the reason politicians get comfortable with incompetence. Once they know they have followers who will defend anything, they stop bothering to perform. Imagine treating legitimate criticism like a personal attack while insecurity, hardship, and suffering continue to worsen. If blind loyalty was an academic qualification, you'd be a professor by now.
You are not wise.
If they don't blame the president, who else should they blame?
You guys used the insecurity in the country to campaign against Jonathan, now that Tinubu is president, we shouldn't use it to campaign against him.
You are m@d and nobody around you is ready to tell you the truth.
@iamdayoamusa This clown of a woman say Dipo dey do great thingsππ
See APC definition of great things. No wonder the country dey like thisππ