I am a bit sceptical about what we call blessings. I believe the ultimate source of blessings is within us. A good motivation and honesty bring self-confidence, which attracts the trust and respect of others. Therefore the real source of blessings is in your own mind.
Mr @ruffydfire, one of the provisions made by the bill is to increase the statutory funding for the existing Police Trust Fund from current 0.5% to 1%. This money will be used to supplement federal and state budgets for their police force.
The bill also introduces a new dual funding model to prevent financial strangulation of state police which means when the law is eventually passed;
The new Federal Police Service will be funded from the CRF of the Federation while the new State Police Service will be funded from the CRF of the state.
States are also going to have FULL autonomy over the budgets. Each state will determine the number of personnels to be recruited based on their own capacity and security needs.
No carpet level requirement or mandatory minimum number of personnels.
I think you should do yourself a great favor by copping a copy of the bill before you make more opinions going forward.
You do not have to be permanently angry about every new reform.
Thierry Henry on why Arsenal divides opinion in football:
🗣️ “People keep asking why Arsenal get so much attention, so much criticism, so much reaction… It’s actually very simple.
Arsenal are not a club people can ignore.
When they win, it becomes a global conversation. When they lose, it becomes a global celebration. That doesn’t happen to small clubs.
That happens to clubs that matter.
And Arsenal matters.
That’s why every decision, every mistake, every defeat gets amplified beyond normal football discussion.
Look at what happens after a night like the Champions League final against PSG. It’s not just PSG fans celebrating; you see rival fans, neutral fans, even people who don’t watch Arsenal regularly suddenly very interested.
That tells you everything.
Nobody spends that much energy reacting to a club they don’t care about.
And yes, part of the noise comes from the size of the fanbase. Arsenal supporters are everywhere, and when a fanbase is that big, opinions become louder, arguments become bigger, and rivalries become more personal online.
But let’s be honest… every top club in the world behaves the same way when they’re successful.
People say they don’t like Arsenal fans, but what they really don’t like is the visibility that comes with success and expectation.
Because Arsenal are back in conversations for the biggest trophies, every result now carries weight.
That’s not hatred. That’s relevance.
And the truth is, simple clubs that nobody talks about don’t get loved or hated.
Arsenal get both.
And that alone tells you exactly where they are in football.”
This is the second time my Family luggage was broken into @flyairpeace Staff.
Stole my Mom’s property while she was returning back from London. They even stole the evaporated milk she bought from Lidl
Same way they broken into my Friend’s Bag and stole all his perfumes when we flew from Lagos to Abuja in April.
Please retweet to lend a voice before another person lose his luggages to this thieves
Dear Amadioha, please visit anybody that mentions the word “bottle” following this match. This was a match between the two best teams in Europe. One had to win. It wasn’t Arsenal this time. Proud of the boys still. North London Forever! #PSGARS
SENEGAL - PROPER CONTEXT
For those seeking context to the Senegal comparison I made here. Now, follow me attentively:
Shall I Begin?
Senegal's government delayed full fuel subsidy reforms because of fears of social unrest and political backlash. You see, Nature is generous - perhaps too generous - for she has evenly distributed, across every society on earth, a proportionate measure of the headless mob.
An unrepentantly ignorant and vacuously loud population of empty irritants - people who rise like rabid dogs the moment reform knocks on the door, who violently insist the status quo be maintained regardless of the damage it does to them, who will bark at the surgeon and defend the tumour.
We have the Obidients in Nigeria. Senegal has its own chapter of the same miserable franchise.
The young President of Senegal feared their rage. Worse, he grew addicted to their cheap applause. He enjoyed walking on the streets, playing table tennis by the roadside, bathing in their deafening chorus - all while his weak populist policies quietly kept fuel prices low and long-term development on the altar as a permanent sacrifice.
The man who eats without planting - his abundance has an expiry date.
He postponed full fuel subsidy reforms expected in early 2023 all the way to late 2028. Even partial reductions in diesel subsidies triggered earthquakes of political tension. The Senegalese equivalents of Atiku and Peter Obi - the opposition figure Ousmane Sonko - riled up the public to resist even the mildest reform.
They found the young President weak, addicted to cheap popularity and political correctness, and they exploited every crack in his resolve.
Where has the populist agenda taken Senegal today?
Senegal is currently facing perhaps the worst fiscal and debt crises in modern West African history. The numbers are severe enough that analysts now openly compare aspects of it to the Greek debt crisis.
● The Debt: A Nation Living Inside Its Own Grave
Senegal’s public debt is now estimated at about 132% of GDP in 2026. Nigeria is roughly 50% or far less. WAEMU regional ceiling: 70%. Senegal is almost DOUBLE the regional limit. But, the President is young, strong and healthy.
● The Hidden Debt Scandal: Borrowing in the Dark
Audits uncovered roughly:
$13 billion in previously undisclosed debt. Senegal is in so much economic crisis that it had to be borrowing secretly.
That single revelation shattered investor confidence, shocked international lenders, triggered an IMF intervention, and froze Senegal's entire IMF support programme.
The IMF suspended a $1.8 billion lending programme because the country's fiscal numbers were found to be - and I use the technical economic term here - shameful.
● The Growth Collapse: Africa's Former Star, Now Flickering
Senegal was once among Africa’s fastest-growing economies.
Growth figures:
2025: about 6.7%
2026 projection: just 2%
Far below the Sub-Saharan African average of 4.3%. Nigeria is 4.4% by the way.
Every sector in Senegal now bears the bruises of that years-long performance of false kindness. The very people who craved cheap fuel - who chorused for it, who marched for it, who cursed reformers over it - are today the worst casualties of their own demand.
They are at the receiving end of the underdevelopment that subsidy addiction constructed, brick by painful brick.
The road paved with cheap populism has a very expensive destination.
I hope this explanation helps your confusion.
Good Morning Severally...
@felixherbt What are the tangible alternative policies being proposed by the various opposition leaders. Talk is cheap to blame is easy. All I hear is APC is devilish!! jagaban a druggy. Curses to build nations.
KAN U believe it??? Arsenal Forever. The Gunners worked so hard for this. Difficult but they fought.
Very well deserved. Come on you gunners #congratulations@arsenal#arsenal
While Nigerian troops continue to achieve remarkable progress in the fight against terrorism, it is also necessary for us to praise and salute the bravery of those who fought hard but were injured in the process.