My 2025 To Do/ Archive
1: learn cyber security and Data science in the first 3 months
2: Start up 2 or more business
3: Buy atleast 2 plots of land
4: Get a new apartment
5: make 7 zeros in $
6: Get married
So help me God
PUTTING DELTA FIRST
Following my public statement after the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) adopted Dcn. Chris Iyovwaye (@dchrisiyovwaye) - @NigeriaNDCHQ as its consensus Governorship Candidate for the 2027 Delta State Governorship Election, I stated that while the outcome was personally disappointing, my commitment to the larger objective of building a Better Delta remained unchanged.
Today, a delegation of the Vision Better Delta Movement (VBDM) - @VBDMofficial met with the Governorship Candidate to formally present copies of the Vision Better Delta 2039 Abridged Master Plan and the Vision Better Delta Job Creation Manual.
These documents represent several years of research, policy development and practical thinking on governance, job creation and economic transformation. They were prepared not merely as campaign documents, but as practical frameworks that we hope will contribute, in however small a measure, to the realization of a Better Delta.
As I have always maintained:
"Development is not a collection of projects. It is the disciplined execution of a coherent strategy."
Our political journeys may differ, but our collective responsibility to the people of Delta State remains the same.
- KKP
26th June 2026
#VisionBetterDelta
#DeltaWillBeOK
There is absolutely nothing wrong with selling akara, roasting corn, making kuli-kuli, or running any honest enterprise. Every legitimate business deserves dignity and respect.
The real question is this:
Should that be the limit of our national ambition for Nigerian women and our young people in 2026?
Leadership is not about helping people survive. It is about creating the conditions for them to thrive.
A nation blessed with over 200 million people, abundant natural resources and immense entrepreneurial talent should be speaking about industrial clusters, agro-processing, technology, manufacturing, creative industries, affordable finance, exports and millions of sustainable jobs—not merely subsistence enterprises.
Empowerment is not measured by how many grants we distribute. It is measured by how many citizens no longer need them.
That is the difference between poverty management and prosperity creation.
— KKP
26 June 2026
Without commenting on the legal merits of today's ruling, one truth must never be overlooked:
The ultimate guardians of democracy are not political parties. They are the people.
History leaves us in little doubt.
In India, a government once thought untouchable was peacefully voted out after the Emergency because citizens chose freedom over fear.
In Liberia, a nation scarred by conflict placed its trust in principled leadership and the promise of national reconciliation.
In Ghana, despite economic hardship and political fatigue, the people voted decisively for change, reaffirming that democracy belongs to citizens, not to those who attempt to control its outcomes.
From New Delhi to Monrovia to Accra, history speaks with clarity: no system is beyond redemption when citizens refuse to surrender their democratic rights.
That is why any development that appears to shrink the democratic space should concern us all, regardless of party affiliation. Our duty is not simply to defend one political platform or another, but to uphold the right of Nigerians to freely choose among genuine alternatives.
In the end, governments are elected by the people, and governments are changed by the people. The ballot box remains the most powerful instrument of democratic change.
In 2027, the sovereign will of the Nigerian people must be allowed to prevail.
— KKP
26 June 2026
See how people are condemning profitable small scale businesses that could change lives of humans around them just because it was suggested or sponsored by the APC government.
Social media isn't real life!
Those who will gain from it will enlist and see the real changes in their lives before December. Then vote APC to retain their seat in January.
Inside a small mud house, seventeen-year-old Ada sat beside her sick mother, gently wiping the sweat from her forehead.
"Mama, you'll be fine," she whispered, forcing a smile even though her own eyes were filled with tears.
Her mother managed a weak smile.
BROKEN PROMISES
Episode 1: The Night Everything Changed
Rain poured heavily over the quiet village as thunder cracked across the dark sky. It was the kind of night that made people lock their doors early and whisper prayers before sleeping.
BROKEN PROMISES
Episode 1: The Night Everything Changed
Rain poured heavily over the quiet village as thunder cracked across the dark sky. It was the kind of night that made people lock their doors early and whisper prayers before sleeping.
Every enduring idea can often be reduced to a simple principle.
Today's reflection distilled.
KKP Principles
Timeless Principles
#KKPPrinciples#Governance#PublicPolicy
One of the most important lessons I have learned over the years is that while people may disappoint us, principles endure.
Our faith must never become so attached to personalities that it cannot survive their imperfections.
For me, the possibility of a better Nigeria remains bigger than any individual, any movement, or any moment of disappointment.
Excerpt from:
"The KKP Brief #6: Fathers, Leadership and the Burden of Discouragement"
https://t.co/DBUr4vV7Dn
#LeadershipAndValues
#Legacy
#KKPBrief
#Nigeria
This recent post by @PeterObi on leadership accountability sparked a reflection on an observation I shared during the Grace Trybe (@houseofgraceNG) Men's Convention panel discussion on Mentorship, as reflected in the attached clip and quoted here:
"One of the greatest dangers of leadership is that the higher you rise, the fewer people there are who can tell you the truth. The question is not whether we have weaknesses. The question is whether we have trusted people who can confront us before those weaknesses become our failures. We must always strive to have such people around us."
As I observed in my recent reflections on leadership and reconciliation, leadership is never diminished by listening. More often, it is diminished when leaders stop listening.
One of the recurring failures of leadership is the tendency to view criticism as hostility and opposition as an enemy rather than a source of insight.
Yet history repeatedly teaches that leaders often learn the most from those who disagree with them. When leaders surround themselves only with admirers and like-minded voices, blind spots multiply, mistakes go unchallenged, and weaknesses that could have been corrected eventually become failures visible to all.
The wisest leaders are not those who never face criticism. They are those who have the humility to listen to it, the discernment to evaluate it, and the courage to act on it when necessary.
Many failures that eventually become public were visible privately long before they became crises.
The real question is whether anyone was willing—or even allowed—to speak the truth.
In my recent reflection on leadership, listening, and reconciliation, I expand further on this theme. For those interested, here is the link:
https://t.co/DBUr4vV7Dn
#Leadership
#Mentorship
#Accountability
Comment section just dey amuse me.....
At the end of it, the lawful wife will do it and nothing any of you on twitter can do about it...
Most of you here will be glad to do it .
I just got off the phone with my mum, and I’m still trying to process what she told me.
According to her, my uncle got another woman pregnant. So she recently gave birth, and he has given his wife an ultimatum to go and do OMUGWO for the woman and take care of her because she has nobody. He said if she doesn’t, she should pack her things and leave his house.
Yes, you read that correctly.
He’s asking his lawful wife to nurse the woman he cheated with after she had his baby.
I had to ask my mum to repeat the story because it sounded too outrageous to be real.
Wonders shall never end 😩😩😩