Guys this is serious ! It means that a group of persons are actually educated in a style to always be our masters !
This video has a serious revelation that will shock you .
Watch ๐
Submitting Job Applications!
1995:
* Candidate expects 80K salary
* Company offers 120K salary
* Good fit, no wasting time
2002:
* Attach CV, submit
* 1 round of interview
* Offer letter in 3 days
2026:
* Attach CV, Motivation letter
* Manually retype your entire CV into 50 boxes.
* Take online test
* Interview with recruiter
* Do a project exam
* Interview with HR manager
* Interview with CEO
* "We regret to inform you..."
Was on a job with this international client last year. We'd been working together for 3 months. Everything was smooth.
Then one day, during a Teams call, he asks .. "So where did you go to school?"
I told him.
He paused. Then said, "Oh. In Nigeria?"
"Yes."
Another pause.
Then... "Interesting. And you learned all this... there?"
I knew exactly what he was doing.
He wasn't asking about my education. He was asking if I was really qualified. If a Nigerian would be really this good at something.
Three months. Three months of delivering work on time, solving problems he couldn't figure out, managing his entire Team.
But one mention of Nigeria, and suddenly my competence was a question mark.
I wanted to ask him: "Did my work change in the last 5 minutes? Did the campaigns I ran stop performing because you now know where I'm from?"
But I didn't. I just smiled and said, "Yes, I learned it there."
We finished the call. The work continued.
But something shifted in me that day.
I realized I'd been working twice as hard not just to prove I could do the job - but to prove I was allowed to do the job.
Every email, perfectly worded. Every deliverable, sent early. Every call, over-prepared.
Not because I wasn't confident. But because I knew one slip, one delay, one "Nigerian internet" joke, and I'd become the story he tells about "why remote work is risky."
In that moment I felt like I am not just doing the work, but constantly defending my right to do it...
He refuses to work because he says he was born without his consent and the internet cannot decide if he is a genius or delusional.
A 21 year old man has sparked a massive online debate after publicly stating that he refuses to work because he was born without his consent. His argument is straightforward: since he never asked to be brought into the world, his parents are obligated to support him financially for as long as he needs. He claims that forcing someone to work for a life they did not choose is fundamentally unfair and that the responsibility lies entirely with the people who made the decision to have him. The statement has drawn millions of reactions across social media, with people sharply divided over whether his reasoning is absurd or uncomfortably logical.
Critics have called him immature, entitled, and a symbol of everything wrong with younger generations. They argue that personal responsibility begins at adulthood regardless of the circumstances of birth. Supporters, however, see his words as a philosophical critique of modern work culture and the expectations placed on people who had no say in their own existence. Some have connected his stance to antinatalism, a philosophical position that questions whether bringing new life into the world is morally justifiable.
One sentence from a 21 year old just forced the entire internet to debate the meaning of responsibility, choice, and what we actually owe each other.