Most non-religious people wouldn’t have a problem with religion if it was something benign & privately practiced, instead of something weaponized to oppress people, justify harmful beliefs & rituals, proselytize & convert, and infiltrate government.
@emmaikumeh You're just stupid.
You're hard on Obi who's an opposition, just like yourself instead of going hard on the man who's brought untold hardship on this country.
Again, you're stupid!
"...if you know I have done anything criminal in the past this is the time to bring it out..."
~ Peter Obi on Rufai's Podcast.
".... Releasing those academic.records will do me irreparable damage...."
~Tinubu to a US Federal Court.
One is a man of Character the other is career crímínal
AFRICA IN CHAINS: HOW WESTERN INTELLIGENCE NETWORKS KEEP A CONTINENT ON ITS KNEES
From Cairo to Lagos, from Pretoria to Kinshasa — the architecture of manufactured African failure
#AfricaInChains#TinubuFiles#ElectoralFraud#WesternDestabilization#NigeriaDecides2027 #FreePalestine #CIAinAfrica #WorldviewInternational
There is a pattern so consistent, so methodical, so perfectly executed across the African continent that it can no longer be explained by coincidence, incompetence, or the familiar retreat to the tired cliché of “African corruption.” What we are witnessing — from the banks of the Nile to the shores of Lagos, from the ruins of Harare to the killing fields of eastern Congo — is a coordinated, multigenerational western intelligence project to ensure that Africa never rises.
Egypt is the clearest exhibit. When Washington decided that Hosni Mubarak had outlived his usefulness, it encouraged his removal. The man who replaced him now sits in Cairo’s presidential palace, commands the largest army on the African continent and in the Arab world, and watched in silence — not merely silence but calculated, obedient silence — as Gaza was obliterated in full view of history. Not one Egyptian soldier fired a bullet. Not one Egyptian fighter jet rose in solidarity. Sisi cannot bite the hand that installed him. He is a CIA president in the most literal sense of the term: a creature of Langley, maintained in power precisely because he will do as he is told and look the other way when his Arab brothers are being massacred.
Compare that posture to Iran. One may condemn the mullahs, critique the theocracy, mourn the brave Iranians who have paid with their freedom and their lives for daring to dissent within Iran’s borders. All of that is legitimate. But history will record that when the bombs fell on Lebanon, when Hezbollah bled and the Lebanese people cowered in rubble, it was Iran that stood. Thousands of Iranians living abroad — including those in neighbouring countries — returned to fight. Mullah or no mullah, it was Iran first. That quality, that civilizational solidarity, is what has been systematically destroyed in Africa and the Arab world by the same western architects of controlled chaos.
Nigeria is their masterwork.
President Bola Tinubu is not merely an incompetent leader who stumbled into office. He is, by all available evidence, a managed asset — built up, protected, and ultimately installed by western intelligence handlers who knew exactly what they were getting. For thirty years, his legal vulnerabilities were well documented in American court records and DEA intelligence files. For thirty years, those files were protected. When a federal court before Judge Beryl Howell ordered the FBI and DEA to release their records on June 1, 2026, nothing was released. The arguments continue behind closed doors. Two hundred and twenty million Nigerians are being held hostage to a classified arrangement between a foreign intelligence service and the man occupying Aso Rock.
The Electoral Act 2026 was signed into law less than twenty-four hours after the National Assembly passed it amid chaos, with opposition lawmakers staging walkouts and fifteen senators standing in formal opposition.  The central controversy was the removal of mandatory real-time electronic transmission of results — the single technological safeguard standing between Nigerian voters and industrial-scale fraud. The APC’s preferred model allows presiding officers to resort to manual paper collation when — conveniently — electronic networks “fail.”  Every Nigerian who has ever witnessed an election knows what that provision means. It is not a technical workaround. It is a pre-written alibi.
When politicians visited Aso Rock to appeal for reconsideration, the President’s response — as reported by those present — was chilling in its honesty. He said it was not his job to make life easier for the opposition. He had suffered in opposition, and they could suffer too. If they wanted to vote, let them vote; if not, let them stay home. One witness in that room — Prince Adewole Adebayo — reportedly said the room fell silent with shock. Adebayo has since called the Tinubu administration a historic disaster and said Nigeria needs a clean political break.  He has warned that “the real danger is not one-party rule but one-man rule — because that is where they are taking us.” 
A president who openly declares that his job is not to serve all Nigerians has ceased, in that moment, to be a president. He has become something else entirely.
South Africa remains a country in the grip of economic apartheid — the legal architecture dismantled, the structural architecture of white ownership and control left entirely intact, and now reinforced by networks that see in anti-migrant xenophobia a useful tool for fragmenting African solidarity and distracting the black working class from asking why the mines, the banks, and the land still belong to the same people they belonged to in 1993.
Zimbabwe was deliberately ruined. Robert Mugabe made the unforgivable demand that Zimbabweans own their own land. Tony Blair’s government responded with sanctions. Washington ensured the country stayed impoverished. A difficult black man who would not comply was made an international pariah, and his people were made to pay the price.
The Congo. Every few years, a new outbreak of Ebola surfaces in one of the world’s most resource-rich nations. Questions that cannot yet be answered in full — but that cannot be dismissed — surround the philanthropic interventions on the continent of individuals whose publicly stated goal is population reduction and who have appeared, by documented record, in contexts of profound moral scandal. Africa has been a laboratory. That much is not conspiracy. That is history.
Sixty-four African leaders have been assassinated by the CIA and French intelligence since independence. The Captain in Burkina Faso has survived twenty-one known assassination attempts. If you are a black African leader who will not kneel, your life is measured in borrowed time. Unless, perhaps, you are fortunate enough to have married a French police officer, as the current ruler of Guinea has done — a kind of insurance policy written in the language of the former coloniser.
We did not need the Tinubu files to tell us what Tinubu is. A man who awards his country’s highest national honours to a white money launderer — a man whose Swiss criminal conviction, American deferred prosecution agreement, and FBI terrorism database placement are matters of public record — and who then delivers to that same man thirteen billion dollars in no-bid government contracts, has already told us everything we need to know about whose president he is.
The question that now faces Nigeria — that faces Africa — is the question Iran answered for itself: at what point does a people decide that it is better to stand and be counted than to be administered into permanent submission?
We are not calling for violence. We are calling for consciousness. The Iranians who returned from Armenia to fight did not do so because they loved their government. They did so because they understood that their survival as a civilisation depended on resistance. Nigeria’s 220 million people — the most educated, the most entrepreneurial, the most culturally dynamic black nation on earth — are being managed by a foreign intelligence apparatus into the ground. That is the reality.
The answer is not despair. The answer is not to divide into ethnic fiefdoms and negotiate our own irrelevance. The answer is to organise, document, expose, publish, litigate, petition, protest, and refuse — loudly, consistently, across every available platform, in every international forum — until the machinery of manufactured African failure is dismantled piece by piece, file by file, contract by contract.
The Kio Solution / Worldview International
Stockholm, June 2026