@woye1 I remember watching Hon. Leke Abejide who happened to be the only nass member before the hijack threatening that he'll never leave the party for them. Dino is from same constituency as him ooooo. They tried bullying the guy out of the party he's been funding for years
@NigeriaStories And who told you 50k was small money in 1979? That's equivalent to almost 100,000 dollars at that time. Oya convert and tell me what you see. 😥
Almost everyone that “matters” showed up At Mallam Nasir El-Rufai Mother's Burial.
From Nasir El-Rufai receiving guests, to Nuhu Ribadu paying respects, even the Governor of kaduna state Uba Sani was present… you’ll find allies, rivals, and critics all standing side by side.
You’ll see Bola Tinubu in the same space where Atiku Abubakar and Peter Obi can comfortably exchange pleasantries.
No insults.
No online wars.
No us vs them.
No APC vs ADC
Just calm conversations, quiet laughter, mutual respect.
Now pause.
These are the same people their supporters are tearing each other apart for online.
The same names that turn timelines into battlefields.
But look closely these men understand something many Nigerians don’t:
Politics is interest, not emotion.
There are no permanent enemies. No permanent friends. Just alignment when it suits, and separation when it doesn’t.
Today they disagree.
Tomorrow they collaborate.
Next tomorrow they attend each other’s family events.
Life goes on.
Meanwhile, somewhere in Ajah or Aba, two young Nigerians who have never met any of these men are insulting each other with full chest losing friendships, destroying relationships, even fighting physically… over politicians who can sit together, eat together, and laugh together the next day.
So who is really the enemy?
Because it clearly isn’t them.
They understand the game.
You’re the one playing it emotionally.
Maybe it’s time to wake up.
Support whoever you want but don’t lose your sense, your relationships, or your peace over people who don’t even hate each other.
In Nigerian politics, the real divide is not between leaders.
It’s between those who understand… and those who don’t.
@renoomokri You can't really blame most of these social media mobs. A whole lot of them are products of failed parents and they've been taught over time that successful people are their problem. Reason you see even in extended families. All the poor ones see the rich one as an enemy
@Aladecho5@jeffphilips1 Criminals needs to blend in. It's very easy for a Fulani bandit to blend in Katsina, Sokoto, Zamfara thàn to blend in in Kano or Jigawa