finding onchain data is hard.
you'd have to plough through thousands of tools and dashboards to get what you want.
that was me last week.
spent the remaining part of the week (when i wasn't frustrated) building a solana dashboard that contains numbers like:
> new wallets
> active wallets
but also, things like
> average ltv per user on solana (spoiler: $300k+)
> average fee spent
wanted something marketer-friendly, too, so dig in!
would LOVE to know what you think/what needs to be added.
https://t.co/QwVuHdDLRU
Three weeks ago, my 23-year-old neighbor was kidnapped on her way to Kontagora in Niger State.
While in captivity, the bandits repeatedly raped her taking turns sleeping with her night after night. Still, they kept bargaining with her father over the phone, demanding ransom even as they violated her.
Her father fought with everything he had. He hustled day and night, borrowed from everyone, took loans, sold whatever he could determined to bring his daughter home.
When he finally gathered the full amount, he called the bandits and begged them, โPlease, give the phone to my daughter. Let me speak to her. I want her to know Iโm coming for her.โ
They gave her the phone.
In a broken, traumatized voice, she told her father: โDad, do not suffer yourself looking for the money. They have been sleeping with me. Iโm traumatized. I canโt forgive myself. Even if Iโm released, Iโll kill myself. Donโt bother paying the ransom.โ
Those were the last words she ever spoke to him.
While her father was still holding the phone, he heard the gunshot. He heard his daughter being killed. Moments later, the bandits sent pictures of her remains to him, a final act of cruelty.
A 23-year-old girl. My neighbor. Someoneโs daughter, someoneโs sister, someoneโs friend gone in the most horrific way possible.
This is not just one story. This is the nightmare too many families are living in Niger State and across Nigeria. Young women snatched on the roads, violated, used as bargaining chips, and discarded like nothing.
Living in Nigeria has become truly scary. You wake up, you step out, and you donโt know if you or your loved ones will return home. The fear is constant. The pain is constant. And too often, justice never comes.
Rest in peace to my neighbor.
The Holy Spirit didn't fall quietly. They were in the Upper Room and people downstairs could hear them clearly.
Acts 2:2 TPT
[2] Suddenly they heard the sound of a violent blast of wind rushing into the house from out of the heavenly realm. The roar of the wind was so overpowering it was all anyone could bear!
Doesn't sound quiet to me at all.
CONTINUOUS ABDUCTION OF NIGERIAN SCHOOLCHILDREN AND THE COLLAPSE OF SCHOOL SAFETY
After congratulating Nigerian children as they celebrate their day today, my heart remains heavy and troubled, knowing that some Nigerian children have remained in captivity for years. It is a shame that days, weeks, months, and even years have passed while our children continue to languish in kidnappersโ dens, with their heartbreaking images still circulating on social media.
A nation that cannot protect its children from criminals has little but shame to present to the global community. No parent can bear the shame of being unable to protect his or her children, yet here we are as a nation, moving on while our children continue to suffer in forests and captivity for years. -PO
@OCblack127@OneJoblessBoy Look at how Solomon ended up.
With all the wisdom, all the money, all the women.
Genuinely read his end, then go to Ecclesiastes and see how he spoke on the futility of it all.
ct is the place where narratives are born, but also where narratives die.
remember when having a blue chip nft as a pfp was such a big deal?
now, no one cares.