Generations in 2026:
Gen X — Seasoned pros.
Millennials — Peak hustle.
Gen Z — Fresh energy.
Every era brings its own power. Which one do you think will dominate the next decade? ⚡
#Generations#Future
Nigeria's minimum wage is ₦70,000 a MONTH.
The UK's minimum wage is £12.71 an HOUR.
A British worker on minimum wage earns about £2,200 a month working full-time. That's roughly ₦4.7 million at current exchange rates. Meanwhile, a Nigerian worker earns ₦70,000 for the entire month.
What's even more insulting is that some groceries are cheaper in the UK than in Nigeria. Milk, apples, potatoes and other basics often cost less there despite their workers earning hundreds of times more.
We earn like ants and spend like elephants.
The cruelty isn't just the poverty. It's that our leaders watch millions struggle to survive and act as if this is normal. Remi Tinubu thinks her husband is doing us a favour by building “coastal road” because “flight is expensive”
I hate it here.
@JustTayo_@The_Chidimma@MayorZ_Junior Sir I have lived in both worlds, and I am currently in. Nigeria. Please let’s be objective, Nigeria currently is in shambles, it is bad my brother.
@tee_tobs@The_Chidimma@outchealiving Truth is you need to visit or stay for a month. Then you will curse this people out. The basic things are right now more expensive in Nigeria now.
@renoomokri What is amazing about this post is how many people shave for £40? The average cost of hair cut is £25. And imagine you comparing both Nigeria and UK. Instead tell Nigerians what £100 pounds can buy for groceries and the equivalent in Naira.
@OurFavOnlineDoc Another day, another “judgment” that conveniently aligns with power. When the courts start reading like press releases for those in charge, you know the system isn’t just shaky—it’s rotting from the top down.
@ruffydfire Another day, another “judgment” that conveniently aligns with power. When the courts start reading like press releases for those in charge, you know the system isn’t just shaky—it’s rotting from the top down.
@OurFavOnlineDoc Sachet detergent as “empowerment”? Then staging photos of people carrying it like trophies?
This isn’t governance — it’s humiliation packaged as charity.
Nigerians deserve dignity, not photo ops and insults.