The work that keeps giving 😂🔥, happy to share that once again my work with my bro @adediran_fawaz has been accepted into the Journal of Corporate by the Society for Corporate governance, it really just started from a random convo at Carwash in Bwari with my guys but getting……
Kudos to our gallant men. But there is something we are still failing to address about insecurity in Nigeria. No amount of arrest and killings will stop it if two things are not tackled decisively:
1. The funding
2. The recruitments
As long as their funders are still out there, insecurity will persist. These terrorists have both local and international sponsors. You can’t tell me this hungry looking man has any means to afford a gun or bomb and other tools they use. Some people must be funding them. So the government at all levels must have collaborative strategy to cut off funding and go all out against their sponsors.
These terrorists are not from heaven. They are from our societies. They are products of mass weddings, illiteracy, poverty and uncontrolled births. They are lacking in basic needs of life and they become ready tools in the hands of their recruiters. When you lack the basic needs of life, you can easily be brainwashed and recruited into any terror group.
I dare say that the fight against terrorism and banditry will never end if we don’t look at the cause and source. Ending insecurity has far gone beyond bomb and gun battles. It has also gone beyond using it to score cheap political points. Governments at all levels alongside the people must see this as a concern for all and must be decisively addressed.
There is also a conversation we need to have with Christian men.
Because some of you speak about women with an underhanded disdain that is deeply un-Christlike, then hide behind “biblical order” to justify it.
You cannot simply look at every Christian woman who resonates with feminism and dismiss her as rebellious. History has shown women have had reasons to fight. The Church is not entirely innocent in the abuse and silencing of women. We have sometimes weaponized Scripture instead of rightly dividing it.
Some women did not become angry because they hate God. They became angry because people used God against them.
There are women who have been talked down to, ignored, diminished, spiritually manipulated, and emotionally controlled in church spaces while men quoted “submission” at them like a threat.
And when women begin to push back against that, you cannot automatically label them rebellious without enough humility to ask:
“What exactly are they reacting to?”
Because even in Scripture, God did not condemn women who challenged systems.
The daughters of Zelophehad fought.
They contended.
They challenged a structure that disadvantaged them.
And God said:
“The daughters of Zelophehad speak right.” (Numbers 27:7)
Not rebellious.
Not dishonorable.
Not with the spirit of Jezebel…
Right.
Some of you need to realize that being male does not automatically make your interpretation superior.
Statements like:
“Woman was created later, therefore she is lesser,”
“Eve was deceived, therefore women are inferior,”
“Men are naturally superior because Adam came first,”
do not make you sound spiritually mature. They make you sound biblically unintelligent.
Genesis 1 says:
“Male and female created he them.”
God did not create woman as an afterthought. He had both genders in mind from the beginning.
And Genesis 2 is not about superiority.
It is about order.
Order does not mean value.
Christ and the Church have order.
The Father and the Son have order.
Order is not inferiority.
In fact, biblical leadership is not domination.
Christ never used His position to belittle the Church, He died for her.
So how did some Christian men become more arrogant than Christ?
You brandish submission like a weapon.
You speak about masculinity like it is superiority.
You talk about women as though leadership means lordship.
News flash, you are not a biblical male. You are carnally minded and we all know what that means.
To lead in our Kingdom is to serve. Where is your service?!
And if creation order is your argument for superiority, then goats should be greater than men because animals were created before Adam.
The logic collapses immediately.
The truth is many women are angry because they encountered distortion disguised as doctrine.
Male ego preached as theology.
Misogyny defended with proof texts.
And instead of constantly rushing to call women rebellious, maybe Christian men need enough self-awareness to ask:
“Have we represented Christ properly?”
Because many women are not rejecting Christ.
They are reacting to men who looked nothing like Him.
Love and Light… with a sprinkle of Holy Ghost Fire.
Happy to share that my work with my bro @adediran_fawaz has been published by Pension Policy International, a research centre focused on highlighting research papers and works that address regulatory reforms on pension administration.
To doing what I love, driving policy……
I didn’t start in a top tier firm, never worked in one, had no back up family fund, no fall back funds and no trust fund. Was the daughter of a public primary school teacher who spent afterschool in Isheri frying Garri, fetching water and watching our mum use our unpainted wall as blackboard for our school work revision.
While I’m still on my breakthrough journey, here are few things I’ve learnt so far:
1. Use your early years for learning. Yes, you may or may not be well paid but ensure you are learning. In my early years, If I’m not getting it from the firm, I ensured I was getting it from the news, law reports and friends in more active practice than I was.
2. Keep showing up: Some days will be good, some days, tough and other days outrightly bad. One thing you can’t stop doing however is showing up.
3. Never be comfortable doing nothing. Take on more tasks, more work and ensure you challenge yourself always. In my early years, I recall walking to my supervisor to ask for work once I see that I had nothing to do. I didn’t dress up, leave Iyana Ipaja for Lekki at 5am just to come do nothing.
4. Seek value adding opportunities. This is life. Where you arrived with a wobbly wooden ladder, someone else got there by an elevator. Don’t despise your wobbly ladder. Appreciate that it’s helping you move ahead in a place where some are still on the ground. Do not, however, be filled with unnecessary admiration of your wobbly ladder, focus on how you can make it better, how you can get an iron ladder, how you can build a staircase, how you can own your own elevator and finally how you can fly, outpacing even the elevator.
The goal is to keep moving.
5. Imagination and innovation should be your companion. Books, movies and the internet has helped us a lot in promoting equal access and opportunities. Take full advantage of this. Keep the vision of where you want to be in mind at all times. Make sure everything you do is taking you a step closer to where you want to be. It’s okay if outsiders do not understand you and how you are moving. You alone know your goal, your map and your journey. Every single time you look at your vision, ensure you improve on it. Do it better.
Also, that you have not worked in a top tier firm does not mean that you cannot admire them from afar, watch what they are doing, listen to the interviews of their visioneers, and aim to build something similar if not better than what they have built.
6. Whether one naira or one million naira in fees, so long as your name will be on it, ensure excellence. What this means is that you must maintain a general standard of excellence and never be one to have adjustable level excellence based on fees paid per client. Be clear in your expressions, sound in your reasoning and knowledgeable in the advisory you offer clients.
Again, as I am still on this journey myself, I hope to continue to learn more and share as I encounter them. 🙏🏽
PUBLIC APPEAL.
EVERY MOMENT MATTERS, HELP FIND EUNICE AMEH.
I deeply express my concern over the unfortunate disappearance of Miss Eunice Ameh, who was reportedly last seen on the 6th of May, 2026, at about 5:40 PM, shortly after the close of work around Lake Chad Crescent, Maitama, Abuja, while heading towards Life Camp.
This development is both painful and deeply troubling, not only to her family and loved ones, but to all members of society who value human life, safety, and dignity. Incidents such as this remind us of the urgent need for vigilance, compassion, and collective responsibility within our communities.
I hereby appeal to residents of Abuja and the general public to assist with any useful information that may aid efforts to locate Miss Eunice Ameh. No information is insignificant. Anyone who may have seen her, interacted with her, or observed anything unusual around the stated location and time is kindly urged to promptly contact the nearest security agency or reach out to her family.
I also respectfully call on the relevant security authorities to intensify efforts towards ensuring her safe and immediate return. In situations like this, every passing moment matters.
May we all stand together in humanity, empathy, and solidarity until Eunice Ameh is found safe and reunited with her family.
Aare Olumuyiwa Akinboro, SAN, FCIArb (UK), Life Bencher
Past General Secretary, Nigerian Bar Association.
I know we’re all growing, busy, and everything feels so fast-paced, but please, check in on your friends and the people you care about.
Clothes? They can hide so much.
Smiles? Not all of them are real, if you can, try to see beyond them. People are going through a lot more than they show.
May God help us all.💡❤️
Dear Nigerians 🇳🇬,
Before a thing is said, they will say come out plain and tell us the party you are supporting….
I am a servant of God!
I don’t care about any party or tribe, I care less!!
What I care about is
A nation that works!
A nation where the people are safe!
A nation where we have a leader that is in touch with the feelings of its citizens!
A nation where the hospitals work!
A nation that is so blessed and her people her blessed not a nation that is so blessed and her people are poor!
A nation where the justice system works!
A nation where the schools work!
A nation that is not known for corruption!
A nation that her citizens are not stigmatised!
A nation where tribalism is relegated! And I can go on!
That is what I care about and stand for, not a party and certainly not a tribe!
As a Christian, I believe strongly this scripture!
Proverbs 29:2 - When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice; but when the wicked rule, the people groan
Nigerians are groaning! That is what God cares about and that is what I care about!!!
I have been speaking the heart of God which is the truth for a long time now!And I will not stop now or after because that’s what Christianity stands for!
One thing the Lord has said and it’s for sure, only God delivers out of the hands of Pharaoh and Nigeria 🇳🇬 will be delivered!
We are not JUST relying on our pvc and votes because we know that can be bought!
God will propel a movement in each of us that will also propel a movement in the physical to our promised land as a nation!
We are a junction away from enough is enough bus stop!
My look for the @cerave_africa CerAwards!!
Styled by @zackstyling_luxury_
Dress by @tojufoyeh
Make up by @peaceibadin_mua
Hair by @tinusplace
hair styled by @adefunkeee
Photographed by @ayo.makinwa
#CeramoVE#CerAwards
Let me just put my story out there, because some people wonder why I celebrate my "Pass", why I'm not fazed by dropping from First Class in Uni to Pass in Law School.
Grab a seat
Stay seated
It's a Thread...
1/11
It’s okay to feel disappointed about poor academic performance, especially in a country like Nigeria where many competitive graduate trainee programmes, multinationals, and corporations still use a minimum 2.1 (Second Class Upper) as an initial screening filter. Pretending otherwise does no one any favours, particularly the younger ones still in school. Low grades can make the formal job hunt tougher from the start.
But let’s be clear: graduating with a strong CGPA does not guarantee success in life, just as finishing with a 2.2, Third Class, or Pass does not condemn you to failure. Many who started with lower grades have gone on to build impressive careers through resilience, further education, networking, or alternative paths. The real danger lies in settling for bare minimum effort and expecting comfort or excuses to carry you forward.
If you are still in school, treat your studies with seriousness and aim for really good grades. Put in consistent, focused effort as if your future depends on it; because in many ways, it shapes your options early on. Aim high, manage your time well, and seek help when you need it. Disappointment can serve as fuel, but don’t let shame paralyse you.
At the same time, don’t stop at academics. Nigeria’s job market is evolving rapidly. Employers increasingly complain that many graduates are not job-ready, and skills often matter more than paper qualifications alone, especially in tech, fintech, digital marketing, data analysis, UI/UX design, software development, content creation, sales, and entrepreneurship.
While chasing good grades, dedicate time to learning practical, high-income skills. Build a portfolio, earn relevant certifications, intern, freelance, or start small projects. These can open doors that a transcript alone might not either through corporate roles, remote international work, or building your own venture.
Success is rarely linear. Combine strong academics with real-world skills, emotional intelligence, networking, and adaptability. Hold yourself accountable, but also show yourself compassion. Your worth is not defined by one CGPA. Start building value today both on paper and in practice and keep moving forward with purpose.
Be like say na me be DDG LAW SCHOOL, X Campus.
The way these children have turned me into a therapist Ehn, I wish I had someone to do this for me.
If you had conditional pass in the last bar exams, reach out to me in my dm and rant, then I’ll send you a very simplified revision material for you to study.
Kindly repost so that the right audience can get this X.
E joor
To everyone who didn’t pass the bar exam this time, this week is going to be heavy, and that’s okay. Feel it. But please know, one result does not define how far you will go. Rest, reset, and rise. You will not die here. Your call is still coming.