@mummmylusty@EmmyPromise71 As for the debt, great countries worldwide ply that route for developments, especially infrastructure-wise.
So, you people should learn how to appreciate good leadership.
@mummmylusty@EmmyPromise71 He's not complaining, he even told you not to pity him... you are only being reminded of the past and the reason you should not complain yourself.
@anyinsea@EmmyPromise71@realDonaldTrump Well, Dangote is not in isolation when it comes to oil business....
Many of you people will learn the reality in time soon.
An Assistant Superintendent of Police, Aondoaver Asom, attached to Ops Zenda Joint Task Force (JTF), was traveling to resume duties with Operations Zenda JTF when armed robbers ambushed the passenger vehicle he was in.
He gallantly foiled the vicious attack, shooting three robbers dead in Benue.
This man’s sacrifices must not be forgotten.
The family he left behind must be taken care of.
I am making a passionate appeal to the Ag. IGP, @TunjiDisu1, and the NSA, @NuhuRibadu, to not only honor his memory but also take care of his immediate family.
I am also calling on Nigerians to please help his family.
@Yorubaness Something wey we use dey pack dabinu for Arab land. We use the iron types ( big and small) dey pack grains like bird food, cashew nuts, and groundnuts too..
Oga, na packer jare.
@Joshrobocop01@ybolaji87@DeeOneAyekooto Kanu is in jail
Igboho is free
Yorubas are extremely diplomatic, but the dot nation, biafra is zombie-like.
Results aren't rigged!
Even the so called ‘non living things�� are not dead. Òyígíyigì ọta omi! See how much depth derived from a simple etymological breakdown of just two words! Yorùbá dùn!
#waasere
Chief Okon ate three times a day.
Rice, yam, meat.
He was never hungry, yet he was shrinking.
His children said, “But Papa is eating well.”
No, he wasn’t. He was swallowing, not absorbing.
After 60, stomach acid reduces.
Without enough acid, you can’t digest protein or absorb B12, iron, or zinc.
So food passes through, leaving the body starving silently.
That’s why elders lose weight, feel cold, forget things, and become weak even when eating.
We gave him small meals;
— Eggs
— Liver
— Nutritious soups
— No cold pap.
— No bread.
In two weeks, his appetite came alive again.
I told his family:
Don’t feed elders volume. Feed them bioavailability.
They don’t need more food, they need food they can use.
Aging doesn’t cause weakness.
Malabsorption does.
Don’t forget to reach out for a well-structured meal plan. Share and tag your friends.
I don't think you fully grasp what happens if $1 = ₦20,000 so I will explain it in simple terms:
Imagine $1 = ₦1,500 today
Then suddenly, $1 = ₦20,000.
That would mean the naira has become extremely weak.
Let me explain like you’re 10.
1. Everything from outside Nigeria becomes crazy expensive
Nigeria buys many things from other countries:
Fuel (refined petrol)
Medicines
Phones and laptops
Cars
Spare parts
Wheat (for bread)
School materials
If $1 = ₦20,000, it means:
If something costs $10 abroad:
Before → ₦15,000
Now → ₦200,000
So bread, fuel, drugs, phones would all become VERY expensive.
2. Fuel price would explode
Nigeria still imports a lot of refined fuel.
If fuel costs $1 per litre internationally:
Before → ₦1,500
Now → ₦20,000
Transport fares would rise.
Food prices would rise.
Everything would rise.
3. Food prices would jump
Even local food would increase because:
Farmers use imported fertilizer
Transport uses fuel
Packaging materials are imported
So even garri and rice could become much more expensive.
4. Hospitals would struggle
Many medicines and medical equipment are imported.
That means:
Treatment becomes expensive.
Some medicines might disappear from shelves.
5. Salaries would feel useless
Imagine you earn ₦200,000 per month.
Right now, that might be okay.
But if $1 = ₦20,000:
₦200,000 would only equal $10.
That means:
Your salary buys very little.
Savings become almost worthless.
People would feel poorer overnight.
6. Banks and businesses could collapse
Companies that borrowed in dollars would owe MUCH more.
Many businesses might shut down.
Unemployment would rise.
7. Investors would run away
Foreign investors would panic.
They would:
Pull their money out.
Stop investing in Nigeria.
That makes things even worse.
When a country’s currency becomes that weak, it usually means:
Government has lost control of the economy.
Inflation is out of control.
There is serious economic crisis.
It could look like what happened in:
Zimbabwe (hyperinflation crisis)
Venezuela (currency collapse)
In those countries, people needed bags of money to buy simple things.
Is there ANY good side?
Very small ones:
Nigerians earning in dollars (freelancers, oil exporters) would benefit.
Exporters might make more naira.
But 90% of Nigerians would suffer badly.
As a freelancer earning in dollars, it might favor you in the short term, but in the long run:
Everyone around you would depend on you to survive
You may become a target for all the poor people around you
Your money could disappear when your bank collapses.
Be careful what you wish.