The story of the day isn’t how Paraguay played dirty against France. The bigger story is that the FIFA referee didn’t show a single yellow card to any Paraguay player despite everything we all saw tonight. Astonishing.
#PARFRA
Dear @SenRemiTinubu, I have started roasted agbado business as instructed by you. I used my certificates to lit up the fire.
Do well to ensure bandits do not attack me on my way to farm, do well to ensure price of transportation doesn’t run me out of business. Lastly, while you and governor’s wives cruise in the exotic cars you shared, please stop by and buy my corn.
in the eastern part of Nigeria I grew up watching kids with Down syndrome getting called “mbe”. They get laughed at, isolated, mocked by their school peers.
Their parents are constantly overwhelmed. The child and parents have to suffer emotionally, financially, mentally. But you, especially you in Nigeria is telling me terminating a pregnancy when the fetus has been detected to have DS is evil, Mtchew.
You lot irritate me pls
The wickedness of Nigerian Leaders.
Cross River Leaders owe us answers!
This is Boki LGA of Cross River State
These are farmers trying to get their produce to the market!
It’s repulsive
MTN wants to pay me #500,00 to take down this post💔💔‼️
Yesterday I called out MTN and how they steal data from their users
The post made serious waves and a lot of small accounts and influencers with millions of followers joined me to call out MTN
I just checked my DM now and saw MTN wants me to take down the post.
I’m tempted to accept the money but something came to my mind
If i accept this #500,000 wouldn’t I spend more that this if MTN don’t stop stealing data from Nigerians?
If I accept this money I’ll be saving only myself and leaving other Nigerians to be victims of MTN’S theft
@MTNNG I WILL NOT ACCEPT YOUR #500,000
STOP STEALING FROM NIGERIANS
THAT IS ALL WE WANT!!!
Hi @SuellaBraverman ,
48 hours ago I asked you to substantiate or withdraw your claim that “250,000 foreign students took £4bn in UK loans.” That time has now passed. You have provided no evidence, no clarification, and no correction.
I have taken the time to examine the data myself.
I have reviewed materials from the Student Loans Company, the Department for Education, the House of Commons Library, the UK Statistics Authority, and reporting from Times Higher Education. Across these sources, one thing is clear. Your statement is presented in a way that gives the public a deeply misleading impression.
Let’s deal with this carefully.
The £4bn figure you reference relates to the total value of student loans issued to non UK nationals. It is not a direct cost to the taxpayer. These are loans. They are repaid over time based on income. Presenting that figure as if it were money handed out or lost is not an accurate reflection of how the system works.
Then there is your use of the phrase “foreign students.”
This is where the distortion becomes more serious.
The fact (which you know quite well) is those eligible for UK student finance are not newly arrived international students. They are people with settled status, indefinite leave to remain, refugee status, or long term lawful residence in the UK. They live here. They work here. They pay into the system. And under the law, they are entitled to access student finance.
Standard international students on student visas are generally not eligible for these loans.
By leaving out that distinction, you create a very different picture in the minds of the public. One where large numbers of people are arriving from abroad and immediately accessing public funds. That is not what the data shows.
You also cited a figure of 250,000 without pointing to a clearly published dataset or transparent methodology. Numbers like this carry weight. They should be used with care, not as loose estimates in politically charged statements.
I am not interested in party politics. But I am concerned about what this kind of messaging is doing to the country.
When lending is presented as spending, and long term residents are presented as outsiders, it fuels resentment. It deepens division. It creates tension where clarity is needed. And ordinary people end up carrying the consequences of that confusion. Like I was being racially attacked and profiled in my initial response to you in X by supporters of your party who were obviously misled and triggered by your misinformation.
I did consider legal action. But the reality is that the law is not designed to deal easily with this kind of broad public misrepresentation. You know that, which is why ignoring a challenge like mine carries little immediate consequence.
That does not make it acceptable.
I will be submitting a formal complaint to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards regarding your use of misleading statistical claims in public communication.
The public deserves accuracy. Not selective framing. Not distortion. And certainly not narratives that risk turning people against each other on the basis of incomplete facts.
Stephen Dada.
And a bunch of oloriburuku white people are discussing this because?
This is exactly how they started pushing the narrative that black people don’t feel pain which they used to justify slavery and using black people as literal lab rats and the bloody psychopathic Nigerians, an entire nation of cluster B personalities who have literally morphed into soulless ghouls because of repeated traumatic events are celebrating it like it’s some positive thing.
Such a reckless and stupid thing to be saying about a nation where barely anybody is sane and lots of people are dealing with cptsd. Very soon they will use it as justification for further mistreatment.
Air Peace, what is going on?
Since 7AM at London Gatwick Airport and it’s almost 4PM no bags, no hotel, no proper updates.Passengers are stranded. People are tired and hungry.
Release the luggage and take care of your passengers NOW.
#AirPeace@flyairpeace