President Tinubu is already defeated,Tinubu is demographically,economically, politically defeated, what he is hoping on is a truncated transition program where one party and it’s candidate will be in court and INEC , they will be distracting you—-Adewole Adebayo
Under Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu (BAT), more commissioned officers have been slaughtered.
We lost:
1. Brigadier General Musa Uba.
2. Major General Abubakar Rabe (rtd).
3. Brig. Gen. Oseni Omoh (O.O.) Braimah.
4. Lt. Col. S.I. Iliyasu (March 2026).
5. Lt. Col. Umar Farouq (March 9, 2026).
6. Col. Aliyu Saidu Paiko. (October 2025).
7. Lt. Col. Umar Ibrahim Mairiga, (Mar 1, 2026).
Nigeria lost more “commissioned” army officers under Tinubu than under Buhari & Jonathan combined. The calamity that befell the Nigerian Army in 3 years is unimaginable.
We lost multiple camp commanders (including a Major in Damasak & others in Monguno). They fell to attacks, others fell to IEDs.
These are twenty, twenty-five, thirty & thirty-five years of active service wasted. They died so that politicians can soirée & party hard.
THE HEROES OF NIGERIA ARE NO MORE! 💔🇳🇬
Yesterday, I had the honour of hosting my brother and partner, His Excellency Peter Obi, at my residence in Abuja.
I warmly welcomed him back from his highly productive international trip, and we engaged in frank and productive discussions on key partisan and national issues.
Our party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), remains united. As leaders, we must continue to demonstrate maturity by making the necessary sacrifices and tolerating our differences in pursuit of our shared goal.
We are resolute in this mission, and together, we shall ensure that Nigeria is OK. - RMK
The owner of the mandate was shocked here that some zombies don't know when to stop standing on the mandate...🤣😂🤣😂 Is like una they see country dey collapse for my hands like this una still dey stand on the mandates? 🤣😂🤣😂 Which kind mumu God dash me like this?🤣😂🤣😂
As the World Cup Begins Without Nigeria
As the World Cup begins today across three nations, I identify with our teeming football followers and urge them not to be despondent that Nigeria is not participating, despite the abundant talent in our land.
Our failure to participate on the global stage is not due to a deficit of talent; it is a direct consequence of a deficit in leadership, planning, and institutional support.
The task of building a better Nigeria rests primarily on the shoulders of the younger generation. Do not watch the World Cup with despair; rather, see it as a reminder of where Nigeria ought to be. We must move our country from being a nation of mere consumers of global entertainment to a nation of proud producers and competitors.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
In continuation of my quest to deepen knowledge and impact positively on our society, yesterday June 10th, in London, I held a series of important engagements, including a fruitful meeting with Alex Vines, Director of the Africa Programme at the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR).
Our discussions focused on strengthening strategic relationships and fostering a deeper understanding of Africa’s evolving role in global affairs. It was emphasized that Africa must no longer be viewed merely through the prism of statistics or humanitarian concern, but as a serious and equal partner in shaping the future global order, much like India, Indonesia, and other emerging centres of influence.
During our engagement, it became increasingly clear that Africa, and Nigeria in particular, must be placed at the centre of international conversations on partnership, trade, governance, innovation, and sustainable development.
Constructive dialogue and mutual respect remain essential to building meaningful cooperation between Africa and the international community.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
The Fall of DSTV
DSTV raised its subscription prices three times in two years.
Then it lost 1.4 million Nigerian subscribers in those same two years.
Then it slashed its decoder price by 50% to beg those subscribers to come back.
Some people will call it business strategy but this is a company eating itself alive and wondering why it is hungry.
The numbers are brutal.
MultiChoice lost 2.8 million active subscribers across Africa over two financial years. 1.2 million in 2025 alone. An 8% year on year decline. 
Nigeria accounted for 77% of subscriber losses across all of MultiChoice’s African operations outside South Africa. The Rest of Africa base collapsed from 9.3 million in 2023 to 7.5 million in 2025. 
Nigeria did not just leave DSTV, they buried it and the content is leaving with the subscribers.
BET Africa and MTV Base shut down January 2026. CBS Reality and CBS Justice went December 2025. CNN International, Discovery Channel, Cartoon Network, TNT Africa, Food Network and several others were all at risk of removal. 
A platform charging premium prices while removing the channels people subscribed for is not a product anymore but a subscription to disappointment.
DSTV built its Nigerian dominance on a monopoly with no serious competition for decades. So it did what every monopoly does when it feels untouchable. It raised prices whenever it wanted, reduced value whenever it could, and treated Nigerian subscribers like they had no alternative.
Then Netflix arrived. Then YouTube got faster. Then data became more accessible. Then the naira collapsed and Nigerians had to choose between DSTV and eating.
Omo we chose eating.
MultiChoice responded by cutting decoder prices from N20,000 to N10,000 and launching a promotional campaign called “We Got You”.
“We Got You” from the same company that raised your subscription three times in 24 months, removed your favourite channels, and treated your complaints like background noise.
They did not get you, they lost you and now they are running after you with a discount like an ex who only calls when they realise you moved on.
DSTV is not falling because of Netflix or the economy.
It is falling because it spent twenty years treating Nigerian consumers with contempt and assumed loyalty was the same thing as having no choice.
Nigerians finally got a choice but not MultiChoice
They say the devil is a liar… but look at this: Nigeria made a law against paying ransom to terrorists. Now ask yourself, what’s actually going on behind the scenes?
“INEC, we came here to warn you. If you know you are prepared to be used to rig the 2027 election, it’s better you write your will now.”
— Concerned Nigerians have spoken.
“Some of us, the Yoruba, voted for Tinubu in 2023 but he brought misery on us. Make sure you do not vote for him again in 2027.”
-A Yoruba man tells indigenes in Oyo, as he leads an anti-Tinubu campaign using a banner that contains the (Yoruba) victims of kidnappings.✍️
“TINUBU KNOWS ABOUT NIGERIA’S INSECURITY, EVEN ALL THE GOVERNORS ARE COMPLICIT..”
A man claiming to be a CAPTAIN in the Military sparked widespread reactions during a TikTok livestream after making a series of allegations against President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and other prominent figures in Nigeria. During the broadcast, he alleged that certain influential individuals are connected to or benefiting from the insecurity, kidnappings, and banditry affecting parts of the country.