@De_socerer@NigeriaStories Stephen Keshi’s contribution and legacy are certainly not mediocre. He helped many of our players ‘crack’ Europe and earn a decent living, changing countless lives. He was ‘the’ leader of an iconic Super Eagles team. He won 1 AFCON as a player and another as coach. Etc. etc.
@__abskn__@engrICO2015 Just an observation that you skipped a part of his point, which describes Singapore. Lee Kwan Yew’s authoritarian methods specifically ‘tied’ their ‘necks’ together for decades, specifically to get the ‘pulling in one direction’ mention in the video.
@DavidHundeyin Yep. Especially that ‘unbearable know it all’ part. I think they simply like to be the ones talking, whether or not they know what the heck they’re on about. All that talk about context etc means you’ve been talking too long when it’s their turn!😆
@chekgeri Did this guy just say electricity is a basic human right? Unless it is, somewhere in the SA constitution, this screams great ignorance, and it explains a lot.
@Musa38491289@Mayoveli Not a claim. The stats speak. It’s an extremely gifted people. And u sound envious. As for the insult, it’s noted. A dumb caricature, by the way. Nigerians build countless things, a toilet is nothing. I however understand your obsession with toilets. It’s where your brain is at .
@abdullahayofel@Omojuwa Omojuwa is just splitting hairs, perhaps to be controversial. He knows, as we all do, that Peter Obi simply meant we need to produce and export more than we import. Peter Obi is not the most articulate man, but we all know what he meant here.
@GjcRomano@Footballtweet Messi was good, yet there’ll be better players than Messi, maybe including Lamine. He has time. He’s only 18. And Messi didn’t dazzle in Europe, outside Barcelona, remember? Makes me wonder if he would have been’found out’ in a different league and system.
@Danjay_P7@DavidHundeyin One day, I hope you look back on all this labour and say it somehow ended up being worth it. For me, personally, you’re an African hero. God bless, always.
@lightpulxe@vanakkamch83@venom1s If your skin is a bit too dark, there’s a way you’re constrained to speak in India?😄. These things genuinely tickle me. So weird.
@DavidHundeyin Good point. But my main takeaway is how badly Nigeria daily leaks money. Value is almost never recycled within. It’s a very foolish people that do not realise this and put their differences aside to fix it. As it’s mainly oil money, I hurt for the Niger Delta
@DavidLynch68033@Ngamola_Recce@Reuters Got nothing to do with that😆. There was too much immigration, so they fled in the direction of some of the immigrants?🤦♂️.
They simply saw real life. Nothing was handed to them. And they couldn’t just shoot people & take their stuff. But the train’s left in SA, too. Poor sods.
@EziokwuNwamuo91@fynelink@DavymartinCE0@DavidHundeyin Considering how many cerebral and conscious Yoruba people there are, you really shouldn’t be posting this. It is extremely unhelpful and plays right into the hands of those who wish us ill. Face the person wey talk rubbish. Leave Yoruba people alone. Thanks.
@Joel66997797046@DavidHundeyin If you need someone to explain to you Nigeria and its automatic geopolitical significance, then you shouldn’t be here. Summary: you didn’t sufficiently think your question through.
@daddy_bigwood@fredrickdaphey@DavidHundeyin@Spearhead_Af But Obama was President at d time. He was in d room when d decision was made. A decision costing the lives of possibly
millions of West African people, apart from d Libya chaos. They knew so many so-called Black People would die. But they didn’t care. Obama ALSO did it. Shame.
@esetwits@DavidHundeyin People like u who do not know dat revolution doesn’t start at slash & burn, should not be in this conversation. Yet u’re already ‘rallying the troops’😊. Truly successful revolutions have coherent intellectual bases. Random arsons from fed up people won’t do. History is replete
@esetwits@DavidHundeyin I have no point to prove re intelligence. My question is a valid one. U dismiss it & d history books will record d flaws dat truncated Nigeria’s ‘revolution’. It is this not thinking things through dat made 1st Republic politicians not even know what their task truly was. 2 hasty
@esetwits@DavidHundeyin Revolution by whom, for whom? Recall 1917 in Russia? Conditions were promising for its prospects. Yet it struggled. Let alone a Nigeria that’s not even a real thing yet. What would be the agreed intellectual basis for such a move? U think Revolution starts at ‘slash and burn’?
@DavidHundeyin I saw all this coming. And e neva even properly start sef. If the children are left to confront questions that elders should have answered in those days, insults will surely flow. Simple as that. Every generation must know and answer its questions. If not …
@Shogunnwa@DavidHundeyin If Murtala Mohammed is in the running for best ever Nigerian leader, that tells me all I need to know per how the Nigerian project, with its immense potential at the start, has all but come to nothing.