@renoomokri The message is for you @davido and co. Most of you celebrities are nothing but enemies of this โBlessed God-Lovingโ Nation called โNIGERIAโ ๐ณ๐ฌ. Posterity will judge you ALL!
โOnce you are deployed, do not wait for any order from anybody to shoot any bandit or any terrorist. Anybody who refuses to shoot or kill any bandit or terrorist in the name of waiting for an order, we will treat you like a bandit.โ
- Minister of Defence, Christopher Musa has directed security personnel today in Sokoto
@iyaboawokoya@ishakaa lost the APC presidential primary to Bola Ahmed Tinubu (PBAT), you suddenly turned against the same administration you once defended.
Yoruba Ronu!!!
@iyaboawokoya@ishakaa Hypocrite! The last administration was one of the biggest mistakes this country has ever made. We stood by Buhari wholeheartedly, through thick and thin. Many of us were insulted, ridiculed, and abused for supporting him.
Yet, the moment your so-called messiah, Pro. Osinbajo.
Why do Nigerians think abroad is heaven?
Being born and raised in the US, than traveling to Nigeria, gives me a greater perspective on how delusional Nigerians are.
When I go back home for vacation and business, my family think America is heaven.
They be like "everything in America is clean and works"
In my mind, I'm like, not the same "US where the subway is dirty and piss be on the trains." LOL
In Africa we have a alot of delusional people, but Nigeria leads the way.
In America politicians are just as corrupt, people still struggle, poverty is just as visible and people still complain about lack of governance.
Whether its in Oakland, Nevada or New York, your problems in Nigeria is not different than the problems in America.
Next people will say "but the government helps the poor".
Do they though?
Go ask Americans about Healthcare cost, living cost(i.e light, food)..ect
And the social saftey programs they do get, is not enough to live on. And it only keeps people in poverty.
Nigerians will remain delusional. No place on earth is perfect and is like heaven.
HOW TO KNOW FAKE MILO AND OTHER BEVERAGES.
BEWARE OF FAKE BEVERAGES!
SAY NO TO FAKE PRODUCTS!
I HAVE JOINED @OgbeniDipo and @Riddwane in the campaign against fake products!
#SayNoToFakeProducts
This baby toothpaste is fake ๐ฏ. I bought it in a posh store owned by ๐ซข for my then 2-year-old sonโฆ Days later, someone made a Twitter post about Lagos markets being flooded with imitations of the product formerly manufactured by GSK. Seeing the post, I rushed to check what I bought days earlier at the store.
Lo and behold, itโs the fake. And you know kids ingest toothpaste. Since then, I donโt visit the store again. I started buying this same product in bulk each time I travel to UK.
Frame 1 โ Fake
Frame 2 โ Original
A business owner in the oil and gas sector approached us that he would like to buy two units of the @nordmotion Max pickup for his company. Apparently, he was impressed with the vehicle after some rides with his peers in the sector.
To my shock, yesterday, my team told me that the bank, a bank operating in Nigeria told him that they do not finance Made-in-Nigeria vehicles, and they even suggested to our customer that he should go for foreign brands instead.
The most provocative part of this is that all of the brands they suggested to him identified as Made-in-Nigeria brands in their filings with the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP).
Which means they decide who they want to be whenever it suits them.
This is yet another example of the needless sabotage and institutional bias against Nigerian manufacturers and assemblers that we experience in this sector.
The President aims to grow us into a $1 trillion economy. Nigerians want to buy Made-in-Nigeria products, we are working very hard to produce world-class vehicles, but some banks, who should play the role of credit facilitators, are displaying open prejudice against locally made vehicles.
What sort of economic sabotage is this?
Many of us who continue to assemble and manufacture vehicles here do so not just for profit, but out of patriotism and belief in the long game. We see this as a marathon, not a sprint.
We cannot continue using Nigerian resources to strengthen foreign factories while starving our own indigenous companies of opportunities.
If we truly want this country to be better, then we must support goods and services made in Nigeria, especially those of us who have shown we can deliver world-class standards. The support has to be real, not just in words, but in policy, in finance, and in action.
Every time we deny support for local production, we export jobs, skills, and economic growth that should belong here.