🚨🔴 Andrey Santos to Manchester United, here we go! Deal in place with medical now booked in next 24h for Brazilian midfielder.
#MUFC to pay £50m matching price asked by Chelsea plus 10% sell-on clause.
Contract until June 2031 to be signed tomorrow — follows @David_Ornstein.
The only men who have come to this court and those who have cried on podcasts are monogamous men.
Not one polygamous man has been on National TV crying over or complaining about a woman.
That's the power of options.
Some of you won’t like this, but the truth is the truth. Your wife is not your financial backup plan. Your children are your responsibility, and expecting your wife to shoulder that burden while blaming her for refusing is simply unfair. If you’re not financially ready to raise children, don’t have them yet. Accountability matters.
Where does Islam stand in all of this?
Last night, I asked for the backstory to this ruling from the appellate court. And now, I understand the story better.
The Court of Appeal judgment to ban hijab at International School Ibadan, has restarted a heated debate. On one side, we want to defend our sisters' right to wear the hijab. On the other side, people argue that when you enroll, you signed a contract to follow the school rules. It feels like a trap really.
Do we stand up for our faith or respect institutional rules?
To get the full picture, we have to look at how Islam views agreements. Islam strictly commands us to honor our words. If you sign a code of conduct, you should keep it.
But an agreement must be built on honest terms. This is where the hypocrisy of the school lies. ISI sits on federal land and is owned by the University of Ibadan, which is a public university funded by taxpayers.
Yet, they claim a private status just to enforce a hijab ban. You cannot use public assets to deny a constitutional right.
This is why taking this case to the Supreme Court is the right move because we need a clear answer. An institution cannot be public when receiving funding but turn private when it wants to discriminate.
Win or lose, the bigger lesson for the Muslim community is about dignity. We cannot keep begging for acceptance in spaces that resent our identity.
If the law says private spaces can dictate their own terms, then our response should be to build and fund our own top-tier schools that celebrate our values.
True intelligence is fighting for accountability under the law while refusing to allow our religious well-being depend on their validation.
Allah knows best.
This unnecessary act of Muslim parents taking their kids to environments they are not welcomed, just to create tension needs to stop—there are enough schools that permit the use of hijab in the country, don’t be unfortunate please.