My Gen Z brother visited his dad on the hospital bed. Rather than asking about his health, this guy looked around and asked, "Where's the wheel?"
His dad forgot he was sick for a second and delivered a premium slap. 😭😂
Consistency > Intensity.
You don’t need heavy workouts.
You need precision + the right support.
This is how you give your spine stability, desensitize the nerve, and finally change the environment causing your pain.
Do this daily.
Your spine needs movement, not stiffness.
A few minutes of mobility work can help loosen the back, open the hips, and reset your posture after long hours of sitting. 🧘♂️💪
Things you should know about kissing.
While we are happy that South Africa will go bek home, there are some important things you should know about kissing before you go kiss that Southy girl.
Meanwhile I'm still very happy with the result from the #RSACAN
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Dates are often called one of nature’s most nutrient dense foods.
They provide natural carbohydrates for energy along with important vitamins and minerals that support overall health.
Isaac Fayose: Nigeria Has 2 ‘Governments’ That Make Life Difficult for Citizens
Nigerian social commentator Isaac Fayose recently had a few pointed words to say about the disastrous security and governance situation in his country.
Do you agree with Fayose's characterisation of the situation in Nigeria? Let us know in the comments. Don't forget to follow @Spearhead_Af
SILICON VALLEY MOVES INTO AFRICA’S SHADOW WAR
The Palantir Network’s $34 Million Bet on a Nigerian Drone Startup — and What It Means for a Continent on the Edge
By Kio Amachree | Worldview International | Stockholm
In a 15,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Abuja, young engineers are assembling autonomous killing machines. The company behind them is less than two years old. Its CEO is 22.
What happened next tells you everything about how Silicon Valley now views Africa — not as a charity case, but as the next theater of autonomous war.
Terra Industries — also known as Terrahaptix Inc. — was founded in 2024 by Nathan Nwachuku, 22, and Maxwell Maduka, 24.  Their product line reads like a Pentagon procurement catalogue: long-range drones, autonomous sentry towers, and unmanned ground vehicles, unified by a proprietary software platform called ArtemisOS that enables real-time threat detection and coordinated autonomous responses across land, air, and maritime environments. 
The investors behind them are not philanthropists.
The $11.75 million seed round was led by 8VC, founded by Palantir Technologies co-founder Joe Lonsdale. Other participants included Valor Equity Partners, Lux Capital, SV Angel, Leblon Capital, Silent Ventures, Nova Global, and angel investors including Alex Moore, who sits on the board of Palantir, and Ribbit Capital managing partner Meyer Malka. 
That is not a passive investment portfolio. That is a network — the same network that built Palantir’s surveillance empire for the U.S. intelligence community, that backed Anduril, SpaceX, and the Pentagon’s next-generation autonomous weapons architecture. Alex Moore, who focuses on defense investments at 8VC and serves as a non-executive director at Palantir, has joined Terra Industries’ board.  Read that sentence again slowly.
By February 2026, the story had grown considerably larger. Terra Industries finalised a $22 million strategic funding extension led by Lux Capital, bringing total capital raised in this seed round to $34 million — a round that closed in less than two weeks, a timeline that reflects the current investor appetite for indigenous defense solutions within the African market. 
In under sixty days, a Nigerian startup founded by two men under the age of 25 had raised $34 million from some of the most strategically connected defense-technology investors in the United States. Terra now carries a valuation in the nine-figure range — hundreds of millions of dollars. 
What They Are Building — and Why It Should Frighten You
CTO Maxwell Maduka, a former Nigerian Navy drone engineer, emphasizes that the technology is built by African engineers specifically for African terrain, with intellectual property deliberately kept on the continent.  The company positions itself as the “Anduril of Africa.” About 40 percent of Terra’s engineers previously served in the Nigerian military, and Nigeria’s Vice Air Marshal Ayo Jolasinmi serves as an adviser. 
The company says its systems secure infrastructure assets valued at approximately $11 billion across Africa, including hydropower plants in Nigeria and gold and lithium mining operations in Ghana. 
Lithium. Gold. Oil. Hydropower. The assets that determine Africa’s economic future — and the assets that Western and Chinese capital most urgently want to control.
Nwachuku argues that the core challenge facing African nations is not a lack of weapons, but a deficit of sovereign intelligence: much of the intelligence used by African states still comes from external powers in the West, China, and Russia.  Terra’s stated mission is to end that dependence. But one must ask: does replacing Western state intelligence with Western venture capital intelligence represent genuine sovereignty?
The Geopolitical Subtext
The U.S. investors have been, in the CEO’s own words, “instrumental in helping us think through complex geopolitics, how to build a robust and flexible supply chain that is sanction-proof, and how to attract the best talent.”  The phrase “sanction-proof supply chain,” spoken by a 22-year-old Nigerian CEO parroting the strategic language of his Palantir-connected board, deserves to be read with the lights on.
Terra initially stated it had decided to stop building systems for the Nigerian military due to complex geopolitical issues. However, since its fundraising, the company has reversed course, now declaring: “We need to protect Africa’s critical infrastructure from terrorist attacks. We have been a bit wary of calling ourselves a defence company, but now we’re doing it fully.” 
Terra recently secured its first federal government contract, though details were not disclosed. 
That silence is itself a data point.
The Larger Picture
This is not simply a startup story. This is the architecture of a new colonial operating system — one running not on gunboats or flags, but on autonomous sentry towers, ArtemisOS algorithms, and board seats held by men who built the surveillance infrastructure of the post-9/11 American security state.
The global defense drone market is projected to reach $13.73 billion in 2026 and an estimated $17.74 billion by 2030, driven by accelerating demand for stealth and multi-mission autonomous capabilities.  Africa is being positioned as both the testing ground and the growth market.
Joe Lonsdale’s 8VC did not invest $34 million in Terra Industries because it cares about hydropower plants in Kogi State. It invested because Africa is industrialising rapidly, its resources are immense, its security architecture is fragile, and whoever controls the intelligence layer controls the continent.
Two brilliant young Nigerians have built something genuinely impressive. But the question Nigeria and Africa must ask — loudly, now, before the architecture is locked in — is this: whose intelligence platform is ArtemisOS, really? Who holds the data from $11 billion in monitored infrastructure? Who sits on the board? Who designed the “sanction-proof supply chain”?
The drones are Nigerian. The money, the board, and the strategic intent are not.
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