A democracy should be judged not only by speeches but by results. When citizens struggle with rising costs, persistent insecurity, and declining trust in public institutions, it is fair to question whether democratic governance is truly working for the people.
Democracy Day should be a moment for honest reflection, not self-congratulation. Nigerians deserve accountability, not just another address from the podium.
"Sound the call to come together and united we shall stand"!
South Africans came out to watch the first game of the #FifaWorldCup.
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Foreign reserves going up is fine, but Nigerians judge a government by what they feel in their daily lives. People are still struggling with high food prices, inflation, insecurity, and a rising cost of living.
The issue isn’t Obi or any opposition figure. The real issue is accountability. Nigerians deserve to know how borrowed funds are being used and what tangible benefits they are getting in return.
Asking questions about government spending isn’t ignorance, it’s a citizen’s right. Instead of attacking critics, the government should focus on being transparent and delivering results that ordinary Nigerians can actually see and feel.
The problem is that the messenger lacks credibility. Daniel Bwala has repeatedly changed positions and made contradictory political arguments depending on his current alliance. When someone constantly shifts narratives to fit the moment, it’s difficult to take accusations against others as anything more than political propaganda.
While many Nigerians are dealing with insecurity, rising hunger, unemployment, and economic hardship, it often feels like President Tinubu is paying more attention to celebrating foreign leaders than tackling the urgent challenges facing people at home. Diplomatic relationships and goodwill certainly have their place, but what Nigerians are really looking for is meaningful action, accountability, and leadership that responds to their everyday struggles. More than public praise or congratulatory messages, citizens want to see real progress, a safer country, better opportunities, and an economy that works for everyone.
Throwing around words like “criminality” may make headlines, but Nigerians need facts, not accusations. If there is evidence of wrongdoing, let it be presented and proven. Political disagreements shouldn’t be turned into baseless labels. The real issues facing Nigerians are insecurity, poverty, unemployment, and corruption, not political name-calling.
@aonanuga1956 New ministers, same promises. Nigerians are no longer impressed by résumés and swearing-in ceremonies. We’ve seen different faces come and go while the same problems remain. What matters now is results, not appointments.
With all due respect, expensive flights in America have nothing to do with the cost of the Coastal Road project in Nigeria. Nigerians are not asking why roads are being built; they are asking for accountability. When billions of public funds are involved, people have every right to ask questions about the cost, the contract process, and whether taxpayers are getting value for their money. Accountability should not be seen as an attack, it is the responsibility of every government that spends public funds.