@AhmadGanga@egi_nupe Sir with all due respect, are you children involved in this practice? Would you in all honesty allow your children to roam these streets?
I ask that I may know please ππΏ
They can lie to everybody but Iβd always tell to be True βTo thine own Selfβ
The Almajiranci has outlived his usefulness and has become a breeding ground for non state actors to prey on.
This is the stark reality
Products of mass wedding, unregulated child birth, illiteracy, poverty, Almajiri system and above all, bad governance.
If you want to argue otherwise, you may have to present a more concrete evidence.
Products of mass wedding, unregulated child birth, illiteracy, poverty, Almajiri system and above all, bad governance.
If you want to argue otherwise, you may have to present a more concrete evidence.
When you get to that stage where insults no longer move you and attacks no longer bother you, just smile, scroll, and catch cruise. π
I used to engage everything, every shade, every troll, every emotional reply that came with building in public. Whether it was opinions on my path, family choices, legal takes, or random attacks online, the old me would jump in, defend, or feel it.
Growth and intentional work on emotional control changed that. Now I see it for what it is: noise, projection, or people fighting their own battles. I engage where it adds value, clear legal analysis, national issues that matter, or real wisdom-sharing.
The rest? I laugh sometimes, ignore mostly, and keep moving with my peace intact.
@alouibrahim92 Oga Sir your a Noble Man, if they donβt value your presence and contributions, be still in the face of it all, your not the cause and if proffering solutions would turn out this way, then maybe it wasnβt worth it all, I have been here long enough to know who cares βπΏππΏππΏ
βThe best decision I ever made in my life was to stay silent. I no longer need to prove anything, nor to convince anyone that I'm a good person. I won't fix what I didn't break, nor will I fight for anyone to recognize my worth. What others do reflects on them, not on me. I only hope they don't regret it later.
As for me, I keep going on my path... free, calm, and whole on the inside.β
@Pressman2040 I was a Member of the Nigerian Army Intelligence Corp, I know these sacrifices and I know how under appreciated these Men go ππΏ
May God Almighty continue to bless and protect Members of the Armed Forces of FRN and her allied Forces βπΏ
Lord, tonight we lift up the silent watchmen of our intelligence cells those who keep their eyes glued to dark screens, cross-referencing maps and monitoring radio waves while the country sleeps. Grant them absolute clarity of mind and swift instincts to spot the enemy's hidden movements. Keep the night patrols safe as they step out guided by this data, and shield our homeland from harm. Amen.
@Rise_Forge These are my boys in echo company ππππ
Members of 07, I canβt recall the first but the middle is John Chia and Abdulrahman
May God Bless the Nigerian Military School ππΏ
This is not even about a grandmaβs love for her grandkids. In African culture, when you are chasing a child and he or she runs to an elderly person for refuge, it is automatically assumed that the child is safe and you should respect the elderly person. The grandma, being an elder at that point, will ask what the child did. She will either caution the child there or hand the child back to you for punishment, depending on the offence. But in order to maintain that elderly status and respect, she will most likely plead on behalf of the child and ask for pardon.
The lady was very disrespectful to even attempt to flog the child after he had already run to the grandma. At that point, she should have just turned back, and if she still needed to discipline the child, it should have been done later and without the knowledge of the grandma, who would likely find it even more disrespectful that after granting pardon, the punishment was still carried out.
We all witnessed this growing up. I know our culture is gradually being eroded, but we canβt allow it to disappear. Despite how some elders have turned out in present times, we still have to accord morally upright ones the respect they deserve. We will all be elders someday too.
Baba, Your comment is a blend of selective memory, historical revisionism, and ethnic grievance dressed as analysis. Let me correct the record with facts not emotions.
Firstly, your claim about Obasanjo's retirements. You said he "compulsorily retired 100s of officers, most of them Northerners." The truth is that when Obasanjo became Head of State, he retired 93 military officers who were holding political appointments or had been deeply involved in the Abacha regime. These retirements were not ethnically targeted they were politically necessary. Many Northern officers retained their positions. If you have evidence that "most" of them were Northerners, present it. Otherwise, you are spreading a lie.
Secondly, your claim about NDA admissions. You said that under Jonathan, a "heist" started in NDA admissions. This is baseless. The Nigerian Defence Academy admits cadets based on merit blend in a quota system that reflects the federal character principle enshrined in the constitution. This system has been in place since the creation of the NDA and has not changed. Cadets are admitted from all 36 states based on academic merit and state quotas, not ethnicity or religion. If you believe there was a "heist," provide evidence not anecdotes.
Thirdly, your claim about the retirement of your friend. You said a friend was retired in 2002 as a Flying Lieutenant for being ADC to the CAS during the Abdulsalami's government. Military retirements are governed by service regulations, not personal vendettas. If your friend was retired, it was either due to age, medical grounds, or structural reorganisation not because he "obeyed a military deployment." If he believes otherwise, he would have appeal through military channels. Spreading unverified stories on social media does not help his case.
Finally, your claim that the military is being "southernised" is a conspiracy theory without substance and fact.
The Nigerian military is one of the most ethnically diverse institutions in the country.
If you are truly concerned about Northern representation, ask yourself: why are Northern youths not enlisting in large numbers? Why do some Northern elites discourage their children from joining the military while encouraging them to pursue politics or business? The problem is not the military. The problem is a region that has stopped seeing the military as a viable career path.
You are not a patriot. You are a conspiracy theorist. And your conspiracy theories are not just wrong they are dangerous. They undermine national unity and demoralise the troops who risk their lives to protect this country.
Stop spreading falsehoods. Start demanding accountability from your own leaders.
@optama@mobilisingniger This is very true, I know of a few soldiers that were trained on this, sad it wasnβt upscaled. Presently they are working aggressively on it I can confirm ππΏ