🚨An eye witness at Afronation Portugal last night declared BurnaBoy as the best performer in Africa ever after his electrifying stage performance last night 🇵🇹 🧡
This video is exactly why Burna Boy is in a league of his own. He effortlessly ran through 10 different hits on one instrumental without missing a step🤯🔥❤️🦍.
Compare all you want. Just don't forget to attach the video proof.
Check it out for yourself on Google Maps. If the right thing is not done we will keep experiencing the same thing every year.
For those of you who keep saying the drainage is blocked because of trash, I hope you learn now. Those sand-filled blockages are everywhere.
That’s a major reason why there are floods on this side of the peninsula. 🆘🆘🆘 @hctokunbowahab @drobafemihamzat@lagosstategovt
You know what shook me when I was Muslim?
The story of Hosea. God tells a prophet to marry a woman He knows will betray him.
She does. She runs to other men. She ends up enslaved, sold, used up, worthless to the world.
And God tells Hosea to go BUY HER BACK.
To pay money for his own wife who cheated on him, and love her again. Hosea 3.
I thought it was the most humiliating command in the Bible. Why would any man do that?
Then I realized I was the wife.
I gave my heart to everything but God. I chased other masters. I sold myself cheap. I made myself worthless.
And God looked at me, the betrayer, and didn’t say “you’re not worth it.”
He said, “Name the price. I’m buying her back.”
That’s the Gospel. God doesn’t wait for the unfaithful to come crawling back clean.
He pays to redeem them while they’re still dirty.
Islam told me to make myself worthy of God.
Hosea showed me a God who pays to redeem the unworthy.
The cross was Him naming the price.
Praise the Lord.
Guy: Oga, I am getting married in Enugu and sending you an invitation.
Me: Congratulations! The only thing is that I won't make it as I hardly travel to Nigeria.
Guy: Oga, I know but you can send your transport fare.
I am still wondering how to respond. We are acquaintances and not close friends. He did something for me once and I was grateful. I am in his debt but this is unexpected.
If I was not going to be there, why should I send transport fare? I would prefer to help in another way and in kind. Wedding registries need to become more popular.
This brings another issue of the obligations friends and family impose without considering that you may have not included them in your plans and budgets. Any contingency budgeting I do is for medical emergencies and not needless events.
I have a policy of not doing any funeral contributions anymore. They have also stopped adding me on WhatsApp groups for those things.
One friend made me the Chairman of his Catholic church’s harvest twice. I have never been to the church. I warned him the third time he tried it and stopped giving.
I prefer to give with joy rather than to give with a grudge. I have far too many family obligations already to do charity. My closest friends know and understand this. Some even sent me money recently when they heard that I had surgery and was at home. I didn't ask them for it but I was very grateful. They know I would do much more for them when I can.
“Nothing impoverishes a man faster than unbridled generosity” - Prof Osuide.
Ndiomu, an appointee of former President Buhari almost collapsed on hearing his sack, according to insiders. He has decided to stay away from the public and politics.
Gbaja on his part has been reduced to nothing in Aso Rock following confirmation he had traded with positions
Gbaja had promised Ndiomu a tenure extension as the PAP Coordinator and demanded N500million monthly. A desperate Ndiomu agreed and was making the payment on a monthly basis. After 8 months, Ndiomu got the shocker when he was sacked and replaced by Dennis Otuaro.
WITH N4BILLION BRIBE TO GBAJA, NDIOMU STILL LOST HIS JOB
Despite paying N500million for 8 months to the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, Major Gen Barry Ndiomu (retd.) could not keep his job as Interim Administrator of the Amnesty Programme, despite promises.
The remote job world is sadly unfair to Nigerians.
It feels like the entire system is rigged against us.
PayPal, Stripe, and Google Voice are unavailable. TikTok monetization, Google AdSense, Facebook, X and Instagram payouts are either blocked or nearly impossible to get meaningful payments.
On Fiverr, getting gigs is a serious struggle. Most surveys exclude us, and even advertising agencies and clients don’t want to pay Nigerian publishers because of low local purchasing power.
Everything just seems stacked against Nigerians.😔
The problem is that we all know the answer.
You that wrote the post that I am quoting, me that is writing this, and you that is reading it.
We all know the answer.
But we will not do it.
If you doubt that you know the answer, I have a queston for you.
What will the citizens of France do if the price of bread rises 300% in less than a year?
Or what will the citizens of Nepal do if their leader comes online and says they should all start "local snack businesses"....
Or if their children are flounting bales of dollars in social media.
You know the answer.
That's all I'll say
I am not a dirty person, so do not add me to this collective.
I have lived in Lagos and on the Island for the better part of my life.
The Island never used to flood when we were kids.
No matter how heavy the rain was, flooding started when Lekki developed and people built without proper town planning.
Whose fault is that? The government.
Now they have added the coastal road and it is worse.
Places that were natural swamps and reservoirs have all been sold and sand filled.
When are we, as a collective, going to demand that the government does its fucking job for once?
Having 10,000 respondent isn’t enough to get a decision in a country where about 400,000 people go for NYSC every year
Aside that we have about 2.5m people who are in school and are prospective corp members
The data collected isn’t enough to make a reasonable conclusion to me
I am faulting how this data is gathered, and it doesn’t even represent a true size of the population you are making the decision for.
Some of the reforms are great while some are far from reality
You might disagree
But, from all indications, there is absolutely nothing you are teaching graduates in a 6-week camp that they cannot learn from JSS 1 to final year.
Ladies and gentlemen;
FEC has approved 1.7 TRILLION naira for the Sokoto-Badagry high way.
The company in charge of the contract is owned by the same man that was convicted of money laundering tied to Sani Abacha's stolen funds. 😭 😆 😭 😆