@elonmusk@elonmusk Even at that the list is incomplete. Nigeria requires voter ID as well to vote. On the flip side, Nigeria has estimated 140m eligible to vote (18+ years & older) out of which about 95 million are registered voters. Out of this, 25% voted during last general elections!
@Gen_Buhar You guys actually believe he will read those without a prompter. I was there at the Summit and there was a teleprompter there. If you also look well at the video, you will see the prompted. It's a clear style teleprompter.
@IzikTim@Gen_Buhar I was there at the Summit and there was a teleprompter there. If you also look well at the video, you will see the prompted. It's a clear style teleprompter.
@DeFiTerrace@Gen_Buhar I was there at the Summit and there was a teleprompter there. If you also look well at the video, you will see the prompted. It's a clear style teleprompter.
@VigilantFox If we care about truth and justice, we should push for open-source casualty databases, transparent NGO methodologies, and multi-sector collaboration. Let’s debate the real issues—governance, security, accountability—not recycle hyperbole dressed as revelation
@VigilantFox Uncorroborated figures:
Oversimplify complex dynamics (ecology, governance, economics) and funnel attention into religious identity over root causes.
Risk fueling polarization and geopolitical posturing, especially when media amplifies them without critical fact-checking.
@VigilantFox Bill Maher recently claimed “100,000+ Christians have been killed in Nigeria.” That’s a striking statement—but one that doesn’t hold up under scrutiny
@VigilantFox The danger of amplifying unvetted numbers is that we distort reality and encourage sectarian division. Let’s demand data transparency, actor accountability, and methodological rigor before repeating sensational claims
@VigilantFox Contrast that with ACLED or Nigeria-focused conflict research, which show that violence is often religiously indiscriminate, rooted in land, governance, and insurgency issues
@VigilantFox The number apparently stems from NGO Intersociety, which published a tally. But their methods are not publicly vetted—no known peer review, no open data.