@Dr_ValID@dammiedammie35 That’s one way to look at it. Then again, the match had only ended some few hours before this video was made, so he may genuinely not have known they were already out of the tournament.
@jameslikejc_@miss_ezeani Lol, you think you know her better than the people who birthed her, raised her, educated her, and watched her grow into the person she is today.
You think your love for her is enough to dismiss whatever concerns they have?
Your in-laws are just as important as your spouse.
@harremgee@whitenigerian “Isn’t mentally stable,”
yet almost everything he said, including the timeline checked out, even according to the very people he mentioned.
@tophz_@Symply_rhoda1 Big risk, bro. What do you mean the parents who birthed you don’t like me for whatever reason, and I’m supposed to take that for granted?
Your in-laws are a huge part of the package. Thinking your love supersedes whatever reason their biological parents don’t like you is risky
@FlakesMmt@lukasA08181@imran_services@maduako10 You agreed to this reply, but you kept disagreeing with the earlier person’s response to the same question you asked, even though both answers were the same.
You go choose wetin you wan believe at the end of the day. All of una dey do am for clicks and likes.
@IamZotikos@snreben01@UnveiledInsight@guzu_p Lol, see as you quickly stereotype am as Yoruba man. The moment dem correct you say na Edo, all of a sudden your opinion changed immediately about am. If dem call am Anambra man now, you go still find way coin am towards the tribe. Abeg na. 🤲🙂↔️🙂↔️
@DanielBarratts1@instablog9ja Let’s not get emotional. It’s the stereotype that’s driving those reactions. Years of romance scams involving Nigerians have made relationships like this look suspicious.
Are you aware the fbi produces materials that use Nigerian romance scams, among others, as case studies?
@Row_Haastrup@afrisagacity Lol, he didn’t just find his way to the UK bro.
The information has been out there for years.
Foursquare gospel church sent him to the UK as a missionary to establish their London branch. Years later, he left and went on to found his own ministry.
@dubemagbo@UnkleAyo lol, nothing is amiss bro.
It’s mostly historical. Early christian missionaries established churches, seminaries and schools in the region as far back as 19th century. It obviously gave them a long head start in church leadership, pentecostal movements and christian education.
@Debolous@onyekanwelue@sencomforter You can’t blame people for trying to make money however they can, as long as it’s not illegal. If one thing that scares me, it’s the “poverty” you mentioned. I’d hustle shamelessly too if that’s what survival demanded.
Blame the system that rewards mediocrity and no standards
@Mr_Shakur13@YusufAsunmogejo She was never his lover. There wasn’t a single ounce of love in that home. Sadly, a lot of couples are living like this, and it’s really appalling. It’s hard to understand how people end up having children with someone they resent so much that they eventually wish them dead
@Skill1ssueFT@KaiUzama A thief is a thief, but I’d still feel sympathy for someone trying to steal garri, fgs. Maybe there’s more to the story, maybe there isn’t and I’m not the one to judge that.
But publicly humiliating someone over garri? Naa. Especially not by wasting the same garri in the process
@Real_Akinkunmi@Jakes1092205@PoliceNG Okay, let’s leave the insults aside and return to his question. Do you honestly believe a hunter in Nigeria would have access to, or be authorized to carry the weapon in that screenshot? That’s a weapon I doubt even the Nigerian police are authorized to use.