@adenike_szn We had a landlady in Dubai around 2022, she owned a lot of rental apartments, she always dressed full cover, when she rented fake apartments to people and government came to chase out the tenants nobody could identify her not even her staffs
@udemeAkpan01 I know someone who turned 60 this year...now wife, no child, no house, no job...nothing to his name. When he needs money he just share is among his nieces and nephews and go back to relax mood
@writewithkess@uglygrm I dont support his actions, but let's not back dumb things with bible...the law of moses also says an eye for an eye and it's in the bible. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you is also in the bible. Just don't start trouble expecting the other person not to react.
Nobody is saying loans are bad.
Nigerians are asking:
Where are the results?
People are borrowing to survive, not to build businesses.
Fuel prices are crushing families.
Electricity is still unstable.
Food prices are insane.
The naira keeps struggling.
Unemployment remains high.
You canβt compare Nigeria to Egypt or South Africa without also comparing infrastructure, industrial output, electricity supply, transport systems and living standards.
Debt is not the problem.
Borrowing without visible improvement in citizensβ daily lives is the problem.
If the loans are truly βproductive,β ordinary Nigerians should feel the productivity by now.