Our aim is to unite Nigerian and African youth to create a society/continent where everyone can live hapily, safely, and with a sense of fulfillment. SUPPORT US
The reason Igbos are in Lagos is because there are no ports in the South East, hence most Igbos are importers and businessmen. Not having a port in the SE was by design by the Powers that be. This concentration of sea port in Lagos is a major reason for its congestion.#Hopealive
This Chinese Hukou household registration system is exactly what Nigeria urgently needs, and it will serve as the ultimate economic catalyst to drive this country from being a third-world heap of dust into a highly disciplined, industrial superpower hub in Africa.
We need to stop the romanticized lies of unregulated internal migration and face the brutal reality of our collapsing infrastructure. Everybody needs to urgently return home, put their hands in the mud, and develop their individual states of origin. Cities like Lagos, Onitsha, Kano, Port Harcourt, Aba, Asaba, and Abuja are already dangerously overwhelmed, severely overpopulated, and stretched far beyond their elastic limits, while our rich rural communities are left to rot like abandoned ghost towns.
According to the National Bureau of Statistics, over 80% of the population living in Bauchi State, Nigeria, are trapped in absolute, multidimensional poverty. Yet, Alhaji Yakubu A. Maishanu, the billionaire founder and CEO of A.Y.M. Shafa Holdings, is from this exact same Bauchi State. He successfully built one of the largest, most profitable, and highly influential indigenous downstream oil and gas companies in Nigeria, with over 150 filling stations, LPG plants, and massive petroleum depots spread across 26 states. But the number of Shafa filling stations in his own home state of Bauchi is not even up to five. This means that over 90% of his massive wealth, fixed assets, and physical investments are spread entirely outside his state, with the vast majority of them operating in the South.
Imagine the structural transformation if, instead of building filing stations in Edo and Lagos, which forces him to pay corporate taxes, land permits, municipal development levies, and expensive licensing fees that only benefit southern states, he took all of this capital back to Bauchi. Imagine if he ordered heavy-duty tractors, automated harvesters, mechanized irrigation systems, and modern processing silos directly from China. This massive investment would not only cultivate the vast, untapped, and highly fertile arable land in Bauchi State to provide food security, sustainable job opportunities, industrial raw materials, and massive local revenue for his own impoverished people, but he would also use his corporate influence and logistics network to secure trade corridors, allowing Bauchi to export premium agricultural products to neighboring African states and even overseas markets.
But this economic betrayal is a national trend. Aliko Dangote, despite being worth over 36 billion dollars and sitting as the richest man in Africa, has almost 100% of his productive industrial wealth concentrated outside his hometown of Kano, choosing instead to build massive refineries, fertilizer plants, and petrochemical complexes in the South. Mike Adenuga, despite being worth over 6.7 billion dollars, has over 95% of his wealth concentrated in the Niger Delta oil fields and the high-rise corporate offices of Lagos, while his own ancestral home of Ijebu-Ode receives virtually none of his commercial capital. Arthur Eze is from Ukpo in Anambra State, and despite possessing a net worth estimated between 2 billion and 5 billion dollars, practically 100% of his liquid and fixed wealth is concentrated completely outside Anambra State.
If you think this demographic and capital flight data is not significant, permit me to remind you that Lagos State alone generates more Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) than all of the 19 Northern States combined. Yet, multi-billion-dollar conglomerates like the Dangote Group and the BUA Group are some of the biggest taxpayers in Lagos, and they are owned by Northerners. Even the vast majority of the Southern billionaires from Igbo and Yoruba ethnicities operating in Lagos are not indigenous to the state.
This is a massive, systemic problem in Nigeria, and this is why I propose a strict Hukou-style system that legally forces people to remain in their various states of origin to contribute the human and financial capital needed to develop those regions.
If an Igbo businessman from Anambra intends to set up a massive commercial enterprise in Lagos, the Lagos State government must treat him as just another foreign investor moving in from Tokyo or London. Let him pay the double corporate taxation, the foreign commercial licensing fees, and the hefty expatriate employment levies required of any foreigner operating a business in the state. If he is not comfortable with these strict financial barriers, let him pack up his capital and take his business back to his own community in Anambra where none of these punitive requirements exist.
This strict protocol must apply to human migration as well. If you intend to relocate from Kano to Edo, you should be legally required to formally apply for an internal visa from the Edo State government. You must state your exact reason for entry, register with local biometric databases, provide proof of financial self-sufficiency, and obtain temporary work permits.
Furthermore, this strict internal immigration protocol will make it much more difficult for terrorists, bandits, and criminal syndicates to seamlessly infiltrate southern forests, smuggle heavy weaponry across state lines, and establish covert operational cells in municipal slums.
When I traveled to Jalingo, Taraba State, in early January, I went around the local towns for sightseeing, and what I witnessed really broke my heart. I visited Tella and Mutum Biyu, and the people living in these communities looked like they had been completely abandoned by their own government. In Tella, for example, there are vast, highly fertile, uncultivated lands spreading across thousands of square kilometers. Yet, right next to these goldmines of soil, you see citizens living in squalid mud houses. Their schools are few and far between, mostly owned by foreign Western churches or Islamic missions, while the few schools owned by the government are a sad sight, looking more like a mockery of human dignity than actual development projects.
The towns are so sparsely populated you would think the youth had been kidnapped en masse from their communities. The small youth population that remains is mostly uneducated, keeping the literacy rate in the entire North below 40%. The tiny fraction of educated youths eventually flee to the South to look for white-collar jobs in banks, corporate offices, technology hubs, and manufacturing plants that are disproportionately concentrated in the South.
Limiting internal migration will also help Nigeria fight its structural war against terrorism. These vast, abandoned, uncultivated farmlands are currently the active training grounds for bandits and insurgent groups. The absolute lack of basic educational and state infrastructure in these communities creates a vacuum that allows hostile foreign agents to easily radicalize our own people, reducing our youth to disposable terrorists and bandits whose sole purpose is to clear the field for the illegal extraction of our rich solid minerals, such as gold in Zamfara, lithium in Nasarawa, and bitumen in Ondo.
The bitter truth we must face is that Nigeria's current free-for-all internal migration is a parasitic system that actively rewards political failure. It allows corrupt state governors in the North and East to systematically loot their federal allocations, secure in the lazy knowledge that their angry, unemployed youth will simply migrate to Lagos or Port Harcourt to drive motorcycles and sleep in urban slums. By forcing citizens and capital to remain tied to their states of origin, we will finally force these local governments to perform, we will force billionaires to build where they were born, and we will finally transform Nigeria into a collection of highly competitive, self-sufficient industrial states rather than a single, collapsing heap of dust.
@shavnyuy Most of his works are copied from Nikola Tesla models, therefore he's just a figure head used in place to represent the effort of a man who died suddenly. His wealth is mostly inflated 2 make US cling 2 her unipolar hegemony against the proposed China-BRICS multipolar world order
Aaron Tucker had been out of prison for seven days. He had less than $2 in his pocket and one shot at turning his life around, a job interview that morning. Then he saw a car flip over and catch fire from his bus window.
He asked the bus driver if he was going to help. "No, but if you get out I'm going to leave," the driver replied. Tucker got out anyway.
He sprinted toward the upside-down, smoke-filled car and found the 61-year-old driver covered in blood.
He unbuckled the man's seatbelt and dragged him clear as the car started to catch fire.
He pulled off his own dress shirt and used it to stop the man's head wound from bleeding, telling him: "You're going to be all right. Your family wants to see you. Keep your eyes open."
The bus left. Tucker missed his interview.
When the story got out, strangers set up a GoFundMe that raised over $50,000 in three days. He also received multiple job offers in construction.
"I feel like a job can come and go, but a life is a one-time thing," Tucker said. "The job just wasn't in my mind at that time."
🇮🇷They tried to change the flag.
🇮🇷They tried to move the games.
🇮🇷They tried to keep them out.
Last night the Iranian flag flew proudly in the middle of Los Angeles.
America bombed their homeland and then forced them to camp at Tijuana and travel 5 hours just to get to their match.
This is discrimination. THIS IS DISCRIMINATION!!!!!!!!!
A weapon designed to specifically maim and kill children.
Illegal under the Geneva Conventions for numerous reasons, including being disguised as an ordinary object, and being specifically targeted against civilians.
A War Crime of the highest order.
How the fuck do we have $300 billion to rebuild Iran after we spent $80 billion bombing it, when we don’t “have the money” for pediatric cancer research?
By tweeting about Niger/Chinese relations I’ve accidentally discovered an African focused propaganda bot farm. All pretend in to be Ghanaian but all sending identical tweets painting Chinese businesses as exploiters of Africa, especially Ghana & not interacting.
The first woman in space wasn’t a billionaire.
She was a Soviet textile worker.
The Soviet Union looked at a factory worker and saw a future cosmonaut.
The world got Valentina Tereshkova.
This reply is actually useful, because it reveals a very American assumption:
If a society helps the poor, it must look like America.
Food banks.
Charities.
Veteran shelters.
Nonprofits.
Emergency aid.
A whole misery-management industry built around state failure.
China does not operate that way.
China does not rely on food-bank culture because poverty relief is not supposed to be outsourced to charity.
It is handled through administration:
local governments,
village committees,
neighborhood committees,
household registration,
rural support programs,
micro-credit,
basic medical coverage,
employment assistance,
poverty monitoring,
and targeted help for vulnerable households.
That 82-year-old man in the video was not “abandoned.”
He had lived alone in that rural home for decades.
People came to check on him, talk to him, bring supplies, ask what he needed, and help with daily necessities.
That is precisely the difference.
In America, poverty often becomes a charity case.
In China, poverty is treated as a governance responsibility.
No, China is not perfect.
But pretending an old rural man receiving local assistance is the same as American-style street homelessness is dishonest.
So the real question is not whether China has “food banks.”
The real question is why the richest country on earth needs food banks as a permanent survival mechanism.
Charity is not proof of compassion.
It is just proof that the state has walked away.
They spent $75 billion fighting Iran, then another $300 billion rebuilding Iran, just to reopen the Strait of Hormuz that was already open before the war started.
USA the superpower 🤡🤡😂😂
As a Muslim, there's something that genuinely bothers me.
Millions of Muslims live in Christian majority countries, build mosques, preach Islam publicly, distribute Qur'ans, open halal businesses, and demand religious freedom,and rightly so.
Some even call for aspects of Shariah to be accommodated in the societies they've moved to.
Yet in some Muslim majority countries, Christians cannot openly preach the Gospel, build churches freely, or practice their faith without restrictions.
Why?
If we demand religious freedom for ourselves, we should be willing to grant it to others.
Truth does not need censorship.
If Islam is the truth, it has nothing to fear from a church, a Bible, or a Christian preacher.
You can't demand tolerance and freedom for Muslims abroad while denying the same freedoms to others at home.
The double standard needs to be called out.