mac! 🌚

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mac! 🌚

mac! 🌚

@macdreezy_

African 🖤🤎 | Musical Soul 🎶 | Cule

Lagos, Nigeria Beigetreten Temmuz 2013
5.9K Folgt1.8K Follower
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BeksFCB
BeksFCB@Joshua__Ubeku·
People might not know how important Luis Enrique is to PSG’s project. He kept his job after this interaction with Herod.
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AgricQueen
AgricQueen@ChimdiIbeawuchi·
I am looking for 10 young Girls who just finished school and need mentorship in business. I am offering 1. I will have a phone call with you for 30 minutes 2. 100,000 Naira Grant Please I need only Graduates, I am hoping this won’t be too complicated
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Gbotemi
Gbotemi@confindence24·
This boy is only 6 years old. His kidney has failed, and he can no longer urinate or breathe well. The dialysis line also burst this morning. He could die if not rushed to the hospital today. Please support them if you have grace. Ire oo.
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smv
smv@slimvnsn·
My father never came to a single thing I invited him to. Not my primary school graduation. Not my secondary school prize giving where I collected 3 awards and kept looking at the gate. Not my university matriculation. Not the ceremony when I got called to bar in 2012. I'd send him the date weeks in advance and he'd say I'll try and that was always the full sentence. I'll try. No follow up. No explanation after. My mother would sit in his place and clap loud enough for 2 people. I stopped inviting him after the bar call. Not from anger. Some people love you completely and still cannot show up and after a while you stop making them feel guilty about it. He was not a bad man. I want to be clear about that. He was a mechanic in Mushin for 35 years. Worked 6 days a week. Sent every one of us to school. Never raised his hand. Never left. The lights stayed on and the rent was paid and there was always food and he did all of it quietly without asking to be celebrated. He just could not sit in a plastic chair and watch something. I accepted that and moved on. Last year I bought my first property. A flat in Ojodu. Took 9 years of saving and 2 years of paperwork and a lawyer who nearly finished me. When the keys finally came I sat in the empty flat on the floor for an hour just breathing. I called my mother first. She screamed. My sister cried. I didn't call my father. 3 days later he called me. Said he heard about the flat from my mother. Said he wanted to come and see it. I didn't know what to do with that so I just said okay. Gave him the address. Figured he'd say I'll try and we'd never speak of it again. He showed up on Saturday at 9am. Stood at the door in his good agbada. The one he only wears for serious things. Holding a small nylon bag. I let him in and he walked through every room without speaking. Not quickly. Slowly. Like he was counting something. He checked the pipes under the kitchen sink. Knocked on the walls. Opened and closed the windows twice each. Looked at the ceiling in every room the way only a man who has fixed things his whole life looks at ceilings. Then he came and stood in the sitting room and looked at me. Said the pipework is good. Said the windows seal properly. Said whoever built this knew what they were doing. I nodded. Long silence. Then he opened the nylon bag. Inside was a small framed photo. Me at maybe 7 years old sitting on the bonnet of an old car in his workshop. Grinning. Both legs swinging. He's standing beside me with his hand on my shoulder looking at something outside the frame. I remember that day. I had gone to the workshop after school and he let me sit there while he worked and gave me a Fanta and put a Michael Jackson cassette on the small radio. I didn't know anyone had taken a photo. He said he kept it on his workshop table for 22 years. Said he wanted me to have something for the new place. I held that frame and stood very still. He said he knew he missed things. Said he was not good at the sitting and watching. That crowds made something in him go wrong in a way he never knew how to explain. Then he said the flat was good and he was proud and he asked if there was anything in the kitchen because he hadn't eaten. I laughed. Made him eggs and bread while he sat at my kitchen table in his good agbada like he owned the place. We ate and he told me about a car he was working on. I told him about a case that was giving me trouble. Normal conversation. The kind we should have been having for years. He left at 1pm. At the door he gripped my shoulder the same way he did in that photo. Didn't say anything. Didn't need to. The photo is on my sitting room wall now. First thing I hung in the whole flat. Some fathers cannot sit in the plastic chair. But mine drove to Ojodu in his good agbada on a Saturday morning with a 22 year old photograph in a nylon bag. That was his standing ovation. I just didn't know to look for it in that shape.
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CentreGoals.
CentreGoals.@centregoals·
🚨🚨| FIFA Peace Prize winner, Donald Trump, warns that a “whole civilization will die tonight”.
CentreGoals. tweet mediaCentreGoals. tweet media
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SuBoy
SuBoy@RudeBoi_S·
If Trump is not removed from office tonight and his orders defied by the Americans who claim they stand by their Constitution, then the whole 300million Americans are brainwashed COWARDS. You started a war based on lies and false assertions, You discovered that You can not defeat Iran, Now You threaten their civilization with what is most likely a Nuclear Weapon, Shame! The United Nation should be disbanded as that is the Most Useless Organization know to Man.
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AgricQueen
AgricQueen@ChimdiIbeawuchi·
One of my greatest mistake in Life as a Farmer is being a FARMER. I shouldn’t have invested in a sector that is dependent on Government policies and bottlenecks. In my line of business,there’s no escaping Government inefficiencies. Nigerian Government will do everything in agriculture except solving problems. For more than 20 years farmers have been saying that we suffer seasonal Glut because we simply cannot individually afford Machinery for Egg Pasteurization. Government will listen to our complaints, lie that they are coming up with a NEGPRO scheme and go ahead to simply do the opposite of what was agreed. With high Electricity and Gas prices, investors are guaranteed not make their money back as Egg powder produced in Nigeria will fail to compete with Global market. Companies will rather import than buy made in Nigeria raw materials. State Governors are worse, they simply have no clue of what to do outside of using fertilizer as a political tool. They have refused to build or sustain any critical infrastructure (Dams, Health and safety of animals, meaningful collaborations or Training) The CBN under Emefiele refused to allow the Bank of Agriculture to do its job. With the growing insecurity and policy missteps farmers in Nigeria have little to no incentive to continue to run or grow their businesses. Don’t go into Agriculture, it’s simply not worth it.
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The Spearhead
The Spearhead@Spearhead_Af·
EU’s Double Game Exposed: Silence on Venezuela, Pressure on Niger While the European Union appeared to accept, or at least not oppose, the forceful removal of Venezuela’s leader, it has taken a firm stance in Niger, demanding the immediate and unconditional release of ousted President Mohamed Bazoum. This clear contrast and double standard raises deeper questions about consistency in its foreign policy. For many African observers, this shows that Western powers are not guided by democratic principles as they claim. Rather, their responses are entirely shaped by strategic interests, particularly when valuable resources and geopolitical influence are at stake.
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The Spearhead
The Spearhead@Spearhead_Af·
Western Media Manufacturing Consent For Regime Change In Burkina Faso… Again Since its formation in 2024, the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) – comprising Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso – has faced relentless attacks by Western-backed terrorists, economic isolation and sovereignty violations by Western-aligned African states, and endless slander from Western and Western-aligned media. Despite these externally-imposed challenges, its member states have continued to record economic and political wins, and the West is clearly not happy about this. On April 2nd, 2026, US-based Western propaganda outlet @hrw published a report alleging that the Burkina Faso military had killed over 1,200 Burkinabé civilians since 2023. This report presents its “data” – which HRW claims is based on hundreds of interviews with (conveniently) anonymous sources across West Africa – with zero context, and purposefully frames this data to paint the popular government of Burkina Faso President Ibrahim Traoré in a negative light. And of course, the usual band of Western imperialist parrots were conspicuously quick to amplify this report, in as many formats as they could manage. The motive behind this report is clear: to manufacture consent for regime change in Burkina Faso and its fellow AES member states, so that Africa may put back in its assigned place in the West’s global order. All 3 AES members have pointed to France as the primary sponsor of terror in the Sahel – a claim which has been corroborated by AES ally Russia – and France itself has made no bones about its intentions to revive its dwindling influence in Africa. But a narrative is only effective if it is believed by enough people, and if the general response – especially across the Global South – to this latest propaganda campaign proves anything, it is that the old imperialist tricks are not as effective as they used to be. Try harder, “Human Rights Watch”, and we at the Spearhead eagerly await your report on the thousands of children abused and murdered by powerful Western leaders and figures, whose names remain redacted in the Epstein files. We can’t find a single related report on your website from the last 3 years, and we really looked.
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Onyeka ☭
Onyeka ☭@R_eq_uin·
Jesus is not the solution to Nigeria's problems. Neither is Allah. The solution to Nigeria's problems is violence.
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Onyeka ☭
Onyeka ☭@R_eq_uin·
And just so you know, the Oyibo people controlling Aso Rock couldn't give two shits about your asinine tribal dick measuring contests. They don't care that Alex Otti is making your non-Igbo governors look like the airheads they are. On your best day all of you...from Jibiya to Seme are all oooga-booga primitives who just happen to live atop a land crammed full of critical resources that will define this century and the next. What they actually care about is that some goody-two-shoes governor (Alex Otti) is starting to look a bit too much like an industrialist. This guy got there as a fluke, and has been commiting one unforgivable sin after another. He's been building roads. He's been building a stable power grid to power homes and his local economy. He's been investing in factories that churn out everything from leather bags to soft drinks. This is making the neocons in Tel Aviv, Paris, and Washington uncomfortable. Because what if he actually succeds? You never know...One thing could lead to another and before you know it you've got a revolution on your hands with young people outrightly demanding change. Nope. Oyibo cannot let that to happen. Not in Africa's largest nation. So they're giving instructing to their puppets in Abuja to put a stop to it. Now this isn't me absolving the warrant chiefs like Tinubu, Akpabio etc of any wrongdoing. I just recognize that at best they're willing and conscientious collaborators. But more likely they are simply puppets. Think of them like rats placed on a wheel and made to run and spin the wheel in exchange for small blocks of cheese. That wheel is your life as a Nigerian, and they are running it in reverse at full turbo. In fact the wheel don dey comot smoke. While the cheese is the tiny fraction of our commwealth that Oyibo give to them for being warrant chiefs. So listen to me dear Nigerian: If you are truly serious about changing things, by all means eliminate the rats (you actually need to), but don't forget to burn the hands of the person putting the rats on the wheel to run your life backwards. Or else nothing will change because the man who owns the hand has infinite rats. Whenver you wake up is your morning.
Onyeka ☭@R_eq_uin

That's because the orders didn't actually come from the Federal Government of Nigeria. It's an order from Washington DC or Tel Aviv. No government that serves Nigerian interests would ever be as irresponsible as the one we have now. But of course most of our countrymen cannot think in systems and would rather call me loony. After all, "Na CIA talk say make Woke dey rig election?" Whenever we wake up is our morning.

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Onyeka ☭
Onyeka ☭@R_eq_uin·
That's because the orders didn't actually come from the Federal Government of Nigeria. It's an order from Washington DC or Tel Aviv. No government that serves Nigerian interests would ever be as irresponsible as the one we have now. But of course most of our countrymen cannot think in systems and would rather call me loony. After all, "Na CIA talk say make Woke dey rig election?" Whenever we wake up is our morning.
𝕯𝖎𝖛𝖎𝖓𝖊 𓆩♡𓆪@Hey_Onyinye

Military aggression in the safest region of the country, while the North & S'West continue to drown in insecurity from Fulani, bandits, BH, & ISWAP. Why bring such aggression to a peaceful S'East that never invited it, while ignoring the regions that desperately need it the most?

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Onyeka ☭
Onyeka ☭@R_eq_uin·
It's not any Jihad kankan Our country is being actively suppressed by white men in dark suits, and the tattered terrorists ravaging our people are simply their useful idiots who genuinely believe they're carrying out their interpretation of their holy book after being brainwashed by Saudi-funded extremist wahabist ideology. Reason am. You think barely literate cattle herders suddenly woke up one morning with military training, coordination, logistics and weaponry that can give the NA a run for its money? No. The Fulani herdsmen, ISWAP, Boko Haram, Lakurawa, JNIM, Ndi IPOB and Mahmuda were directly or indirectly created, funded, protected and maintained by white people in lands far far away from you. These white people want to plunder your resources. But since you won't do the convenient thing and drop dead, they have to find a way. Hence the senseless, heartwrenching killings that have become part of our daily lives. But they're happy to do it. Because they also understand that if they leave the world's largest black nation to its own devices for 25 years, we will go the way of Japan but double that. You will become THE African heavyweight that they would have to negotiate with rather than dictate to. We will become a thorn in their side, and we will make them pay for top naira for every kilo of cocoa and every drop of crude oil. It really is that simple. You have to suffer poverty and insecurity so that white people can keep having nice things. Whenever we wake up is our morning.
@Rendaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa🖤🦋👸@Renda___

One day, we’ll stop giving it names and collectively call this what it is. THIS IS JIHAD!!!!

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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
We all thought this too. None of us is above being fooled and mentally conditioned by oyibo propaganda. The true test of intelligence is being able to change our minds in the face of superior evidence, logic, and pattern recognition.
LIONKING@kwality_music

@DavidHundeyin then I used to think that the Islamic extremist are fighting for caliphate not knowing is the western world homosapiens in suit causing chaos among ourselves in Africa.

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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
When the African Cultural Revolution arrives, this will be among the top 5 cultural practises that will be outlawed on the pain of prison time with hard labour. Lobola, bride price, dowry, whatever you call it - this is a thing that belongs to a world that no longer exists. In an industrial world beset by capitalism, this cultural practise inevitably devolves into a form of human trafficking. It encourages young women to treat themselves as commodities, and it encourages young men to go to extremes including committing crime just to be able to have a societally recognised partner - this resulting in a society that is made up of scammers, thieves and prostitutes. More importantly, it destroys wealth creation for Africa's young working classes by effectively forcing young people who are just starting out in life to pay a bribe to older people so that they can get married. Older people are supposed to invest their wealth into younger people, not extort wealth from them and act as yet another tax on the demographic that is already Africa's most stressed out. Culture is not static and when the revolution comes, anyone - no matter how old or sickly - who is caught trying to maintain this anachronism will spend a minimum of 5 years repaying their debt to society by digging trenches, harvesting yams, painting road dividers and sweeping streets at gunpoint.
Khodani💞@Khodanipri

Lobola negotiations day😩😩 Ladies come this side

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WithoutHistory
WithoutHistory@WithoutHistory·
Hey America, next time there is a protest, is it OK if Iran smuggles in military grade weapons and gives it to the protestors?
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