Oga Musa seems they are civilian JTF OOO
THE GUY BEHIND THIS UNIFORM MAN IS TRYING TO TEASE THEM, THAT IS WHY NACIKIN MOTAN YAKE WARNING DINSA. "ME YASA KAKE HAKANE AMINU" THAT IS MY EXPLANATION TO THIS.
BUT U SHOULD CORRECT THIS UR LOGIC OGA MUSA IT IS REALLY MISLEADING.
After four IDF soldiers were ambushed by 60 Hezbollah terrorists, here you have Ana Kasparian wishing for more of them to get killed.
This woman is a sick, sick person.
@myklazonline@HormuzLetter is that why the USA lost the war and signed the worst agreement ever? because they lost? is that why the little hats are crying about the deal? beacuse they won? interesting take
@cool_spider_09@xagreat How I wish Americans are the ones being terrorised to this extent, we would have seen if they would have moved on. In fact go tell a Jew to move on from the Holocaust
Allegedly, a Yourba Pastor arrested for supplying guns, weapons, vehicles, drugs to the kidnappers of the Oyo children. But everywhere is quite, even Sunday Igboho & his X Foot soldiers are quiet. Bunch of demonic hypocrites.
This ADC youth leader, park cars in garage that can transform the life of people in his LGA, aside politics what is the source of his riches.
@_dinomelaye you are a major contributor to the poverty rate in Nigeria...
I am continuing experiments to connect the human brain with a machine using neurons
However I have realized that this work is not easy Nevertheless I have used an EEG sensor that captures brain signals, which will enable a person to turn on a light or a fan through thought
At the moment, this is an experiment I am conducting with a small microcontroller But I have the ambition to acquire bigger equipment so I can continue the experiments until I achieve success
What do you think about this project? Do you think it is possible, or can it reach the level like that of Elon Musk?
#international
#pushtotheworld
Bro I can testify to these case
Wallahi i experience two scenarios myself. Not a story. Nigeria needs to set things right, but where do we start that is the Big Question
When people explain why Nigeria is poor, they mention corruption, colonialism, bad leadership, insecurity, oil, tribalism, religion, bad roads, and bad electricity.
But almost nobody talks about the role of the Nigerian judiciary.
In my opinion, the Nigerian judiciary is one of the leading causes of poverty and underdevelopment in Nigeria.
Not because judges wake up and decide to make people poor.
But because a country cannot build wealth where contracts are weak, property is insecure, fraud is difficult to punish, and getting justice can take longer than the life of the business you are trying to save.
People talk about Silicon Valley as if America just has smarter people.
No.
America has smart people. India has smart people. Nigeria has smart people. China has smart people. Russia has smart people. There are brilliant people in Kano, Aba, Jos, Ibadan, Maiduguri, Enugu, Kaduna and Lagos who will never touch the kind of opportunity an average Silicon Valley founder can access.
The difference is not intelligence.
The difference is that Silicon Valley built a culture where somebody can look at an idea and say: โI will put money into this.โ
In 1998, Larry Page and Sergey Brin had a search-engine idea growing out of Stanford. Andy Bechtolsheim wrote them a $100,000 cheque.
That cheque helped become Google.
Today, Alphabet is worth over $4 trillion.
Apple is worth over $4 trillion.
Nvidia is worth over $4 trillion.
Three companies. Roughly $13 trillion in value.
That is more wealth than most countries will ever see.
And none of them started as oil wells. None of them started as government ministries. They began as people with ideas meeting people with capital.
That is how wealth is created.
An engineer has an idea.
An investor gives him money.
A lawyer writes the agreement.
The law protects the shares.
The court can enforce the agreement.
The company grows.
More people invest.
More people work.
More products are built.
More wealth is created.
That is Silicon Valley.
It is not magic. It is an ecosystem where ideas can meet capital without both sides fearing that they will be cheated and abandoned.
Now let us come back to Nigeria.
It is not that Nigerians do not have money.
Chainalysis estimated that Nigeria received about $59 billion worth of cryptocurrency between July 2023 and June 2024.
A 2026 stablecoin report found that Nigeria had the highest ownership rate of USDT and USDC worldwide. 59% of Nigerian crypto users held USDT, while 48% held USDC.
Think about that.
Nigerians are holding dollar stablecoins in huge numbers.
Why?
The obvious answer is the naira.
People have watched their savings lose value too many times. They make money in naira, sleep in naira, wake up in naira, and discover that the value of what they worked for has quietly reduced.
So they buy USDT.
They buy USDC.
They convert their naira into digital dollars and hold it.
That is already a problem.
But it is not the full problem.
Because even if the naira was volatile, Nigerians would still invest more of their dollars into Nigerian businesses if they believed the system could protect them when something went wrong.
That is where the judiciary enters.
Money does not just need returns.
Money needs protection.
Before somebody invests โฆ5 million, โฆ20 million, $50,000, or $200,000 into your business, they are asking one question:
โIf this goes wrong, what protects me?โ
In America, Britain, Singapore, Dubai, Canada and serious economies, there are answers.
A contract.
A court.
A regulator.
A title registry.
A bankruptcy process.
An arbitration system.
A police force that understands commercial crime.
A legal system that can make a dishonest person pay.
In Nigeria, the answer is often: โLet us pray it does not go wrong.โ
Anybody who has worked in real estate understands this.
A diaspora Nigerian wants to buy land in Abuja.
Maybe he lives in Houston, London, Toronto or Dubai.
He sees a plot in Idu, Karsana, Guzape, Lugbe, Jahi, Kuje or Katampe Extension.
He likes it. He has the money. He wants to invest back home.
But watch the amount of caution he brings.
He will ask for the allocation letter.
He will ask for the C of O.
He will ask for the deed of assignment.
He will ask for the survey plan.
He will ask for AGIS verification.
He will send a lawyer.
He will send a brother.
He will send his Pastor/Imam.
He will ask for videos.
He will ask for drone shots.
He will ask somebody to physically stand on the land and send his live location.
He will threatens you with Juju.
Then after all that, he is still afraid.
People say diaspora clients are too difficult.
No.
They are acting like people who know that if their money disappears, they may have nowhere to run.
They know that if the developer sells the same plot to three people, they may spend years in court.
They know that if the seller disappears after collecting their money, police may call it a civil matter.
They know that if a business partner diverts company money, a shareholder agreement may become decoration.
They know that even if they win a case, enforcing the judgment can become another war.
So they do not trust.
And where there is no trust, money does not move.
It hides.
It sits in dollars.
It sits in USDT and USDC.
It sits in Dubai, London or American bank accounts.
It sits in foreign property.
You will see in a country like Nigeria people running to VeryDarkMan or Brekete Family to get justice.
They run to social media.
They beg influencers to repost their stories.
They use public shame as an enforcement mechanism.
Think about how insane that is.
A country of over 200 million people has reached a point where somebody believes a video by VeryDarkMan may be more useful than a written agreement, a police report, a lawyer, and a court process.
People do not believe the state can protect ordinary transactions. Public embarrassment has become a parallel judiciary.
And once people lose faith in contracts, they stop making long-term bets.
They stop funding strangers.
They stop funding startups.
They stop lending to businesses.
They stop buying shares.
They stop financing factories.
They stop partnering outside family and tribe.
They stop sending diaspora money into productive ventures.
They put their money in the safest place they can find and wait.
Former Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said last year that a commercial dispute in Nigeria could take nearly 13 years from filing to a final Supreme Court judgment.
Thirteen years.
In thirteen years, a startup can die.
A factory can close.
A founder can relocate.
A company can become irrelevant.
Inflation can destroy the value of the claim.
The person who owed you money can move assets, hide assets, transfer assets or simply wait for you to get tired.
Then we wonder why people prefer USDT to investing in Nigerian businesses.
The problem is not that Nigerians lack ideas.
Nigeria has ideas everywhere.
A young person in Kano can build a leather-export company.
Someone in Jos can build a cold-chain business for potatoes, vegetables and flowers.
Someone in Kaduna can build an agricultural-processing company.
Someone in Aba can build a manufacturing business.
Someone in Yaba can build a billion-dollar technology company.
Someone in Bauchi can build a logistics network around livestock, grains and trade.
Someone in Benue can build a serious tomato-processing chain.
Someone in Taraba can build a tea, dairy and tourism business.
But ideas need capital.
And capital does not move where the system cannot protect it.
Imagine a Nigeria where a diaspora doctor in London can invest $100,000 into a tomato-processing business in Benue without fearing that the promoter will disappear with the money.
Imagine a Nigeria where a young engineer in Kaduna can raise money from ten Nigerian investors, sign clear agreements, and know that fraud or breach will be dealt with quickly.
Imagine a Nigeria where a Kano leather manufacturer can borrow money against receivables because banks trust that commercial disputes and collateral can be resolved.
Imagine a Nigeria where a person can buy land, search the title online, see the ownership history, see existing court cases, and know exactly what he is buying.
Imagine a Nigeria where commercial cases are concluded in months, not generations.
That is how you unlock wealth.
Not by waiting for a foreign investor to come and save us.
Not by shouting โyouth are the future.โ
Not by telling people to believe in Nigeria while the system gives them no reason to trust Nigeria.
Fix the judiciary.
Make contracts enforceable.
Make land registries transparent.
Create fast commercial courts.
Publish case timelines.
Punish fraudulent developers.
Make judgment enforcement real.
Make it impossible for somebody to owe you money, lose in court, and still use delay as a business strategy.
Because the judiciary is not some boring lawyer issue.
It shapes whether money flows into factories or sits in USDT, whether diaspora funds return home or remain abroad, whether people back ideas or only trust relationships, and whether Nigerians build companies or simply preserve savings.
Nigeria does not only have a naira problem.
Nigeria has a trust problem.
And the judiciary is at the center of it.
Until a Nigerian believes that the law can protect his money, he will keep protecting it from Nigeria.
But the father of this girl and her likes are the irresponsible politicians that loot the government pockets to send their kids to the USA, UK, CANADA AND CHINA. and she opens her dirty mouth to insult Arewa. Go and lecture Ur father about integrity and accountability
This region bears some of the world's most troubling labels: poverty capital, the highest number of out-of-school children, and a terrcrism hub.
Fortunately, a large percentage of these negative headlines comes from just one region.
@justchinonye You are very stupid,, this is a movie scene face,,,on top Christianity is like a movie script,, Jesus the hero, Satan the villain but Jesus created Satan,, Why did he even create Satan and sin,,bull shit religions
We are waking up,,the west have to change their game
@KarounwiAdini Owk let's say it's a problem for Kano government, does Ur government in Ogun made sure all children over there received standard education. That is the question. And how does the VAT/IGR positively affect the lifes of these public schools.
@KarounwiAdini I don't agree with you, masses suffer all around the country. Don't lie. I have been to Ogun (ogere) to be precise I know how struggles were over there. The common man doesn't feel the impact of any VAT/IGR. man let's collectively condemned those that loot our resources, if U