My disappointment is getting lesser and lesser these days because I've come to terms with the fact that I don't belong to this nonsense and vain generation. I probably missed my original flight from Heaven 😁😁
@instablog9ja This particular Homo-Nonsense sapien would gladly be an ambassador for lucifer himself and commit mutiny against his very Creator if the pay is right.
@OurFavOnlineDoc When 1diots with cheap destinies like this are many in any society, their collective destructive capabilities can be more dangerous than we realise.
I saw a post about where the landwey man says that Nigeria is a land of opportunities.
He buttressed his point by saying that Americans fund lives with loans and are stuck in a rat race, unlike Nigerians.
I found that very funny to be honest.
People abroad are trapped by credit.
Many Nigerians are trapped without it.
The American buys a house on a 30-year mortgage.
The Nigerian spends 20 years paying rent that is constantly increased without property maintenance. If he dares upgrade the house to his taste, he gets evicted so the next tenant can pay more.
The American finances a car.
The Nigerian spends 5 years saving for one, only to get to year 5 to find the amount saved can't buy the car thanks to inflation.
In other words Americans owe the bank while Nigerians owe inflation.
Both are in a rat race.
The difference is that one is running with access to capital.
The other is running with rising prices, stagnant wages, unreliable infrastructure, and little access to affordable credit.
In many developed countries, debt is often used to acquire productive assets.
In Nigeria, many people cannot even access credit to buy a home, start a business, or expand one.
Instead, they face rising food prices, transport costs, school fees, and rent while dealing with a weakening purchasing power.
A young professional earning ₦300k today may be working harder than ever and still be poorer in real terms than someone who earned ₦300k a few years ago.
That is also a rat race.
Just a different one.
Nigeria is indeed a land of opportunities.
But we should not confuse opportunity with prosperity.
A country where millions work full time yet remain financially vulnerable is not free from the rat race.
It is simply running a different version of it.
Don't get me started with our multi dimensional poverty.
Omo! Do you people know how insane it is for terrorists to kidnap a retired general, kill him and then return his body in a handover ceremony where they took pictures knowing they'd leave unchallenged?
Do you people know what kind of trouble we are in?
@DavidJHarrisJr Their lives and religion are all about sex and other mundane nonsense. Even in their afterlife, they still won't have sense.
I want to believe the virgins will also be selling aphrodisiac then, because I don't know how one miserable pen1s will be servicing 72 women.
Let me tell you how the IMF works in Africa.
They give you a loan. Attach conditions.
The conditions make you poorer. You need another loan. Repeat forever.
IMF want Nigerians to suffer
That’s not aid. That’s architecture
The Nigerian government has done something impressive.
They have convinced millions of people that struggling to eat, struggling to pay rent and struggling to survive is a personal failure instead of an economic one.
That's genius.
We want to urge the MILITARY not to panic as we the bloody CIVILIANS are doing our best to ensure that everything is under control. We seriously condemn this act and would ensure the perpetrators are brought to book.
May the soul of our General rest in perfect peace.