A 'best friend' who NEVER congratulated you when Arsenal won the league nor when they reached UCL final ,week in and out....but was the first to heavily mock you with serious insults after defeat to PSG..
Watch out.... 👀
We all love a bit of football banter and a good rivalry. But let’s be honest: some people just use 'banter' as a cover of their true character.
Beware of snakes...... 👀
You see this life, when people hates you, It's as if God takes away common sense from them as punishment. If not, how can people with football sense feel that Arsenal cannot beat Burnley at home but at the same time feel Manchester City.can easily beat Bournemouth away who has, a team that has not lost at home all season, and are on a fourteen game unbeaten run at home? Make it make sense. It's arsenal season my people.
I watched the full Mic’d up with Micheal Owen and Howard Webb and all situations were properly analyzed.
- Clear foul on Raya. Spotted immediately by VAR.
- The Trossard incident was canceled because contacts were minimal.
- Rice and Mavropanus incident wasn’t even considered because the holding on Raya happened first.
This is not for you to be satisfied. Still keep complaining. Mumu!
My One-Term, Four-Year Vow Is Sacrosanct
One of the greatest American Presidents, Abraham Lincoln, served only four years, yet his legacy endures as a model of principled leadership. Another iconic figure, John F. Kennedy, did not even complete a full term, yet his vision and ideals continue to inspire generations. In Africa, Nelson Mandela, revered globally as a symbol of justice and reconciliation, chose to serve only one term as President of South Africa, despite immense public pressure to stay longer. His decision was a deliberate act of leadership, a statement that power must serve the people, not the self. Indeed, history shows that the longer many African leaders remain in power, the more likely they are to be corrupted by it. Longevity in office is not a mark of success; rather, it is purposeful, accountable service - however brief - that defines true statesmanship.
It is within this context that I reiterate my vow: I will serve only one term of four years if elected President. And that vow is sacrosanct.
I am fully aware that the decay in our society has made trust one of the scarcest and most sceptically viewed commodities. Many Nigerians, understandably, no longer take politicians at their word. But even in this climate of cynicism, there are still a few whose actions have matched their words - whose integrity is built on verifiable precedent.
Recently, I became aware of two statements aimed, albeit indirectly, at my vow to serve only a single four-year term. One person remarked that even if I swore by a shrine, I still wouldn’t be believed. Another suggested that anyone talking about doing only one term should undergo psychiatric evaluation.
I understand the basis of their scepticism. They are judging me by their own standards - where political promises are made to be broken. But they forget, or perhaps choose to ignore, that Peter Obi is not cut from that cloth. I have a verifiable track record that speaks louder than speculation.
In my political life, my word is my bond. When I entered politics in Anambra State, I made clear and measurable promises to the people: to improve education and healthcare, to open up rural areas through road construction, and to manage public funds with prudence. I fulfilled each of those promises without deviation. I did not swear by a shrine, nor have I been certified mentally unstable as a result of honouring my word.
My vow to serve only one term of four years is a solemn commitment, rooted in my conviction that purposeful, transparent leadership does not require an eternity.
If making such a promise qualifies me for psychiatric evaluation, then we may as well question the mental fitness of those who framed our Constitution, which clearly stipulates a four-year renewable tenure.
I maintain without equivocation: if elected, I will not spend a day longer than four years in office. In fact, I believe that service should be impactful, not eternal.
We must rebuild trust in our country. I have dedicated my public life to demonstrating that leadership with integrity is not a myth. I have done it before, and I do not intend to betray that trust under any circumstances.
Forty-eight months is enough for any leader who is focused and prepared to make a meaningful difference. In that time, I intend not merely to make an impression, but to deliver on concrete promises to:
sanitise our governance system;
tackle insecurity through effective and accountable use of national resources; prioritise education, healthcare, and poverty alleviation;
catalyse small businesses as engines of growth ; and combat corruption with unflinching resolve.
Above all, I will dedicate myself to transforming Nigeria from a consuming nation into a productive one, where agriculture, technology, and manufacturing replace rent-seeking and waste as our national anchors.
These are not utopian dreams. They are realistic, actionable goals that are achievable within four years.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
The reality that terrifies and horrifies most people is that Arsenal are one game away from the UCL finals, and it will be played at the Emirates Stadium.
What make them scared is that Arsenal did not lose as they wished. Instead, the Gunners played with control at Wanda Metropolitano.
Another tormenting scenario is that if the Gunners reach the finals, they could actually win. That reality, these people cannot take.
Let me scare you some more. Arsenal will win the UEFA Champions League.
Hey Chief, we’d like to clarify something as supporters of Peter Obi.
We don’t support Obi in a blind or personal way.
What we truly support are his principles. That’s what draws us to him.
If Obi doesn’t get the mandate, we will not support Atiku. At least, I won’t.
We are not political loyalists; we are national pragmatists.
We evaluate political choices based on their outcomes for the nation.
We don’t engage in politics for its own sake. To us, politics is a means, not an end.
So, we have no obligation to support Atiku.
If he emerges as the flagbearer, it is highly likely Obi will leave.
With that, our affiliation with the party ends as well.
I can already see APC supporters retweeting this, which suggests your tweet may have come from a questionable place.
But that’s beside the point. You’re entitled to your opinion.
However, let us make one thing clear. We are the majority. Peter Obi is currently the most consequential politician in Nigeria.
He has momentum, the trust of the people, and national goodwill.
These aren’t just my words. They were echoed by Ayo Fayose in a recent interview with Ruben Abati.
Obi is the political lifeblood of any party he joins. He did it with LP, and now we are seeing similar dynamics with ADC.
Fayose even stated that ADC would be unwise not to give him the ticket.
All of this is to say that Peter Obi’s supporters will not back any candidate other than Peter Gregory Obi.
Any attempt to impose a different choice on us is unrealistic. We determine our political direction, not APC spokespeople, like you.
Fighting corruption is not an economic policy. You cannot close down your shop and start chasing after criminals.
~Peter Obi 2019
If you are not stealing, your wife is not stealing, your family is not stealing, you would've successfully cut down corruption by over 50%
~Peter Obi 2023.
Peter Obi is too clear abeg
Even the Opposition knows that Peter Obi is HIM
If you have a better candidate bring them.
Until then, nobody comes close
In the last election, Peter Obi got more than 6 million votes.
Sowore got 14,606.
I am highlighting this not to shade anyone, but to call all of us to a moment of reflection.
I don’t want us, as Nigerians, to devolve into the kind of mindless politics we see in the US, where the goal becomes supporting a candidate rather than serving the nation.
If your goal is to see Nigeria free from its current state, then Sowore should not be part of your consideration.
Why?
The reality on the ground. He amassed approximately 15,000 votes.
I made a tweet last Sunday that had more likes than that.
So it means your candidate, no matter how good his intentions or character may be, does not have a realistic chance.
If your goal is Nigeria, then you support a political leader who can at least challenge Tinubu.
In my estimation, two of those are Peter Obi or Atiku Abubakar.
Again, if your goal is to stop a Nigeria where bandits flaunt ransom money confidently on TikTok, and where 700 Boko Haram terrorists are reintegrated into society, then one of these would be your pragmatic choice.
Now, either of these two is going against Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
I detest Tinubu. I think he is godforsaken, completely morally depraved, and dark.
But he is powerful, and he is no small politician. He is a behemoth.
A leviathan.
A titan.
I use all these weighty and apocalyptic terms because that is what he represents in Nigerian politics.
He recently admitted that he practically installed Muhammadu Buhari as president.
He has been doing this for decades, and he eventually became president with little substance.
Now, he has governors who threaten their citizens with punishment if they do not vote for him.
Now, he has wealthy socialites forming a ground army for him.
Now, business leaders are cozying up to him, people like Tony Elumelu and others.
I have not even talked about money. 41% of the 81 trillion naira federal revenue is unaccounted for.
That is enough to fund at least five presidential elections.
That kind of war chest will buy 100 Supreme Court justices.
Then we have the violence. This is a political party that can get away with sheer violence while security agencies look the other way.
This government has budgeted huge sums for legal battles.
I am telling you that Tinubu is not a politician you can confront with just fine ideals and smooth philosophies on Twitter.
He is dangerous. He is a superstructure.
And it will take equally formidable forces to challenge him. Even then, one person alone cannot face him.
Rauf Aregbesola is formidable, but not a behemoth.
Nasir El-Rufai is formidable, but not a behemoth.
Rabiu Kwankwaso is formidable, but not a behemoth.
Atiku Abubakar is formidable, and a behemoth.
But their combined weight forms a super Behemoth that can truly challenge the leviathan that Tinubu is.
And that is why the government did everything it could to prevent the African Democratic Congress from securing a venue for its convention.
That is a sign of fear.
And that kind of structure, one that can strike fear in someone like Tinubu, is the only thing that can get Peter Gregory Obi into Aso Rock.
This is the pragmatism driving some of us at this moment.
Yes, some of those people are deeply flawed and evil. But Peter Obi is widely verified as a principled moral hardliner.
And it is that uncompromising nature that we are relying on.
Peter can be trusted. That is why this alliance does not trouble us. And should not you.
Let us get Peter in first, please.
For the sake of Nigeria.
Amen.
I do not speak for myself alone.
Our political position is sacrosanct.
Any scenario that gives Atiku the ticket, Tinubu should finish what he started. He should kill of us.
The way Labour Party died a natural death, ADC will die a natural death.
Obi moves, we move.
There’s no opinion you want to have on Peter Obi that will be deemed worthy of consideration or being taken seriously by me.
You lot said he won’t win even in Anambra, He did.
You said he won’t win more than 1 state, he won 12 (even after all the mago mago)
You said we were 4 people tweeting in a room? He pulled over 6m votes (INEC numbers)
You said he didn’t have structure, he beat your structure man even in the Lagos he claimed to build like an iPhone thief caught in Computer village (over 1million votes per irev reduced to less than 600k)
Worry about your Lapite, leave Peter Obi and his supporters alone.