It hurts to reach the age where you want to help your family but you're not financially stable, May God open all financial/ success doors for you this year (2026). Claim it🙏
If this is true, I don’t see the outrage. Property someone bought before marriage shouldn’t automatically become marital property simply because they got married. Marriage is about building a life together, not claiming everything the other person worked years to acquire. That said, the law should also recognize genuine contributions made during the marriage whether financial, raising children, or supporting a spouse’s career. Fairness isn’t about making one side win; it’s about protecting what was built before the marriage while ensuring what was built together is shared justly. That’s what a balanced divorce system should aim for.
Just a little appreciation post for the best timeline ever. 🕊️✨ 1,400 mutuals and friends! Thank you all so much for always interacting, liking, and reposting my content. Your engagement never goes unnoticed. Love you guys! 🤎 DM/Comment let’s connect if you're new here!.
@Wizarab10 Hope should never become a substitute for accountability. A healthy society needs both, a faith that comforts the broken and citizens who refuse to normalize corruption. Prayer and civic responsibility are not opposites; they should strengthen each other.
This is a nuanced take. I agree with the point that freedom of religion also includes the freedom not to practice a religion, and no one should be compelled to lead a prayer to keep their job. That’s a principle worth protecting.
At the same time, saying “actions have consequences” shouldn’t become a justification for discrimination.
There are consequences in life, but employers also have responsibilities to respect employees’ legal rights and personal beliefs.
As for the “sexual market demand” argument, it explains why some people receive preferential treatment, but it doesn’t make that treatment fair or something society should simply accept. Describing reality is different from defending it.
Overall, the post raises valid points about culture, rights, and incentives, but it also blurs the line between explaining why something happens and whether it ought to happen.
Those are two different conversations.
Four things.
1. It is not a Christian problem. It is a cultural problem.
We are not a godly people, we are a religious people. Our ancestors usually pay homage to the gods every morning before going about their activities. They offered drink to the gods and ancestors before drinking theirs. It is who we are. We just brought it into Christianity. Christian countries do not demand you to pray before work. Your faith is personal.
2. Right to freedom of Religion
Right to freedom of religion does not just mean freedom to choose whatever religion you like. It also includes freedom to break away from any religion and freedom to be irreligious. If your organization refuses to accept your lack of Christian faith and insists you pray like a Christian, they have violated your fundamental human right and you can sue on that ground. If they sack you for your faith, you have another ground to sue.
3. Actions have consequences
Actions have consequences, even the right ones. Choosing not to pray has consequences- even though youncan sue on that ground. That is why people do anything - even dress like Muslims to get ahead. It is just a way of playing the game if you don't want to or can't fight the system. Choosing to come on social media to tell a religious people that you were fired for refusing to pray, and expecting them to help you is an ironic entitlement. Your choices reflect your own values, not societal acceptance. Crying on social media will not always get you help, but you can keep putting yourself out there regardless.
4. Sexual Market Demand
You said if you were a woman with breasts and ass, you would have gotten help. That is plausible, but let us discuss the market demand and the buyer's market.
I've seen men complain about women getting favours because of their sexual attraction. I've seen women complain about other women getting all the attention and favours because of their body - some have even asked "what does she have that I do not have?"
It is a buyer's market. Some people help because they want to - there are many people that need their help, so you getting that opportunity is grace or luck because your case is not special. Some others want value exchange. You need help, they need your body. You decide if the trade is worth it. As a guy, do you want to be your yansh for help? You may even want to, but the helper is not gay. The helper may be gay but not find you attractive. For the women, it is not like you don't have breasts and ass like the other woman, the helper is saying it is that other one that attracts them. When you go shopping for fruits, they all all pineapples, but you still vet and pick the ones that is more appealing to your eyes. It is how the buyer's market work.
If his account is accurate, this isn’t just about refusing to say a prayer, it’s about whether employees have the freedom to follow their own beliefs without fear of losing their livelihood. A workplace should respect religious freedom, which includes both the right to practice a religion and the right not to. No one should have to pretend to believe something just to keep a job. Respect goes both ways.
"I was sacked today because I refused to lead the opening prayer," he claimed. "As the newest staff member, I was asked to lead the opening prayer, but I declined because I had already deconstructed from Christianity."
"According to him, he was dismissed from his job the following day after refusing to lead the prayer."
@vslkemo@fiinnovate If this happened exactly as described, firing someone because they declined to lead a religious prayer raises serious questions about freedom of belief. No one should be forced to participate in religious practices as a condition of keeping their job.
Ronaldo fans keep talking about his legacy because there’s not much to talk about from this World Cup. If any other player dropped these performances, they’d be getting cooked every single day. The standards somehow change when it’s Ronaldo. Great career? Absolutely. Great World Cup? Not even close.
Some moments remind you that love isn’t always spoken, sometimes it’s sacrificed. Imagine finding out your younger brother quietly gave up a part of himself just so you could have another chance at life. That’s the kind of selflessness money can’t buy. Family isn’t just about sharing the same blood; it’s about being willing to bleed for each other. Wishing them both a healthy future.