From campus politics at 20 to national office at 50. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi is the youngest and most competent to lead Nigeria in 2027 and am here to prove this fact to you going forward because everything I say here can be verified 💯.
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A 12-POINT LETTER TO NDIGBO, BY VALENTINE OZIGBO
My beloved Ndigbo,
I write to you today with a sober heart and a renewed conviction. In the last few weeks, the Lord has taken me on a deep journey, a journey of reflection, rediscovery, and spiritual awakening.
Three profound moments have stirred my spirit and compelled me to speak now.
1. My visit to our brother, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the thoughtful and far-reaching conversations we held, some of which I hope to share in due course, and the reactions that followed the court's pronouncements concerning him.
2. The deepening insecurity across our nation, which has placed Nigeria in international headlines for reasons that trouble every conscientious citizen.
3. A series of deep engagements with respected leaders, one of which prompted me to pick up and begin reading the remarkable book, “The Interesting Narrative” by Olaudah Equiano. The opening chapters alone shook me in a way I did not expect.
All these encounters, along with the deep stirrings within my spirit, have made it clear to me that we have entered a very consequential season in our collective story.
Before I go further, let me state clearly:
I do not come to you as one who claims perfect knowledge, nor as a man seeking to speak from a lofty place. I speak as your brother — an Igbo man, a Nigerian, and a citizen who longs to see our story redeemed in our own lifetime because I believe, unshakably, in the possibility of our collective renewal. I write because the burden within me has grown too heavy to keep unspoken, and if these words strengthen even one soul or awaken one conscience, then they have served their purpose.
My people, these are not ordinary days. We have stepped into a prophetic hour, a sacred season in which heaven begins to reorder the destiny of a people who have carried pain with dignity, endured hardship with courage, and yet, by the mercy of God, remained standing when many expected them to fall.
1. Understanding God’s Seasons
The Holy Scriptures remind us that God moves with purpose through times and seasons. When Israel wandered in the wilderness for forty years, even the intercession of Moses could not shorten that appointed journey. God may comfort us within a process, but He never acts outside His own timing.
This is why Jeremiah 29 speaks with unusual relevance in this moment.
Jeremiah addressed a nation living in exile, a people wounded and confused, surrounded by voices that promised instant deliverance. Yet God’s message through him was unmistakable: Their season had a divinely established duration of seventy years.
No rebellion, no emotion, and no impatience could alter what heaven had ordained.
But restoration was assured. Their pain was not abandonment. It was preparation.
Jeremiah 29 teaches us a profound truth: Nations also move on divine calendars, and when the appointed hour arrives, no empire and no opposition can stand in the way of God’s redemption.
2. Who Are God’s People in This Hour?
God’s covenant people are all who believe in Him and choose to walk in His truth. They include both the natural heirs and those adopted into grace, united not by ancestry alone but by faith, obedience, and alignment with His will.
Yet when one studies our history with spiritual clarity, a pattern becomes unmistakable. Through years of migration, resilience, hardship, and remarkable preservation, the Igbo story carries the imprint of a people with a distinct covenant identity.
A people scattered but never shattered.
A people wounded but never defeated.
A people misunderstood but continually preserved.
Our journey echoes that of ancient Israel in ways too profound to ignore. We resemble the prodigal son, still heirs, still loved, still destined, finding our way back to identity, responsibility, and purpose. Every renaissance begins with such rediscovery.
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You go to a state & throw N50m to a group of Almajiris but you can't host your support groups in that state & support them with the least N2m to keep things going on the ground. They'll wake up the next morning to see pictures of you in their state. How do you want them to feel?
Even those people he keeps giving those money see some of us as lier's how can you say your principal doesn't give shi-shi is that not wickedness but the who are doing the work on his behalf are not know when is time for election you will tell us story
Omo I tired for this H E
You go to a state & throw N50m to a group of Almajiris but you can't host your support groups in that state & support them with the least N2m to keep things going on the ground. They'll wake up the next morning to see pictures of you in their state. How do you want them to feel?
@PivotOladimeji@AlilatAdemola Don't know why and how people will just like and drew problem to themselves with there mouth let anything happen to any Hausas or the igbo people now that your brain wey no the function well them put am for your body