I am not in the diaspora; I am in Nigeria, and we are in this together. If you fail to see the good works of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, that’s your own problem. As for me and my family, he is the greatest president Nigeria has ever had.
You’re not speaking any truth, please. What is the point of our population if its primary use is during elections?
Seven of the ten poorest states in Nigeria are in the North. The only reason politicians do not address this unchecked and largely unproductive population growth is because it serves their interests. It is shameful that we brag about our population simply because it gives politicians an electoral advantage.
Look at countries with larger populations than Nigeria. In those countries, people do not point to elections when discussing the value of their population.
Pakistan’s GDP per capita is roughly twice Nigeria’s. Indonesia’s is about six times higher, and India’s is around three times higher.
But yes, let’s boast to Southerners that we have a larger population and therefore decide who becomes Nigeria’s president, while remaining the poorest region in the country.
@Magixlamy_ Awon ELERIBU dede!
They’re willing to starve their parents for supporting Tinubu!
They’re ready to cancel any1 who supports Tinubu!
They’re ready to cancel any coy that has anything to do with Tinubu!
Elumelu is a strong supporter of Tinubu,oya cancel SEPLAT!!
AWON OMO
OFO!!
Dear Nigerians,
The only way to get out of this hardship is to vote for President Tinubu again.
Yes, vote for him again.
Because, without his economic reforms, Nigeria would have gone bankrupt by now.
1. This would mean:
Nigeria would struggle to pay salaries.
2. State governors would have to approach banks for loans to pay salaries.
3. Citizens would struggle to feed themselves and their families.
If President Tinubu is re-elected in 2027, we will begin to witness the full results of his reforms.
This would mean:
1. Improved education from primary to tertiary level.
2. An end to insecurity.
3. Affordable healthcare services for all.
4. A world-class road network.
5. Millions of job opportunities.
6. Constant electricity supply.
7. A stronger Naira, leading to lower food and fuel prices.
In fact, with President Tinubu serving from 2027 to 2031, the Nigeria of our dreams will become a reality.
Your mates are everywhere doing great things…Tunde of Chess in the slum, Iyin Aboyeji, Dr Dipo Awojide, Tosin Eniolorunda, Bunmi Ojo, Suleiman Halilu and many more others who have achieved great things in life and are still doing things to change the society..
The only thing on your profile is being an attack dog for a politician..This isn’t the kind of father your children will be proud to have..
“Daddy where were you when fathers were giving soft landing to their kids?”
PBAT lovers, make we camp here! ⛺️
They said we’re not up to 10. 😂😂 Even if we’re just 10, let’s pack ourselves together and follow one another for maximum support!
Drop your handles, retweet, and let’s connect! 👇💅
@Dee_9889 See 1 of d officially gazetted werey with registratn number!
That somebody’s party she’s talking about,despite being a very small party could not even conduct a successful party pry election,infact their election results were yet out,and they want online realtime results!
ENKR!
@Dee_9889 Thank God Oyinbo don build dem country b4 una carry una dull head enter.
Na why e dey do una like magic say dem country fine!
If their leaders av selfishly put state’s money in d bank like Werey Agulu Pinocchio & only produce Heineken beer for dem pple,u 4 no see wia to run to!!
😁😀😁😁😁😁😁
“If u like come my comment section come cry,rubber dey there,bucket dey,container dey there,come donate your tears,I need am to mop the floor”
That one got me 😀😁😁😁
You speak as if war is a math problem. It is not.
Let me educate you.
First, you cannot simply "issue an international tender for 500 helicopters." Who pays? Nigeria's defence budget is about $2 billion annually . A single attack helicopter costs $20–$50 million. 500 helicopters would cost tens of billions more than the entire Nigerian budget for years. Mercenary pilots? Even more expensive. And where do you base them? Who maintains them? Who secures the fuel supply?
Second, "close the borders with support from Chad, Niger, Cameroon, and Benin." Those countries have their own internal crises. Chad just lost soldiers fighting ISWAP. Niger is unstable. Cameroon is fighting its own insurgency. You cannot "close" a border that is thousands of kilometres long, with villagers who have crossed back and forth for generations, with no wall, no fence, and no political will to displace entire communities.
Third, "10,000 men" sounds impressive until you realise they have to be moved, fed, housed, paid, and equipped. The Nigerian military is already overstretched across multiple theatres. You cannot simply pull 10,000 soldiers from one operation and drop them into another without creating a vacuum somewhere else.
Fourth, "international satellite imagery", we already have it. The US shares intelligence. France shares data. The problem is not knowing where the t£rr0r!sts are. The problem is getting to them before they move, and holding the ground after they are gone.
Fifth, you assume that "unleashing chaos with an air mobile force" will end the insurgency. It will not. Air power cannot hold ground. It cannot win hearts and minds. It cannot stop the next generation of recruits from emerging from poverty, illiteracy, and grievance.
Your plan reads like a video game strategy, not a real-world counter-insurgency doctrine.
War is not about numbers. It is about logistics, politics, economics, and human endurance.
You have a division of ideas. You need a battalion of reality.