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@teeteescar
Dreamcatcher/Babdaughs projects Inc .Director . Manchester United. 53 Hotel and Bar. wuse 2
Abj city Beigetreten Haziran 2011
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@jollynony Please google PIA petroleum industry Act. You will get your answer to why buhari didn’t budget for it and why Tinubu can’t reinstate subsidy.
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Since when has the budget stopped Tinubu from doing anything? Your guy treats budgets like a vague suggestion.
Are you unaware that Tinubu awarded the largest amount of money in Nigeria’s history (₦15trn) to Abacha’s money launderer, without tender and outside the budget?
O si m budget. Mtcheeew!
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Peter Obi is no longer putting his ideas out in public.
I think I know why.
Grab a coffee it’s another long one.
Come with me to 2022 when Peter Obi made the racket of the subsidy regime mainstream. He said it was a criminal enterprise and he would tackle the criminality, and if it continued to be unsustainable he would remove it.
He compared Nigeria to Pakistan who have a similar population, as many cars, but consume 20million ltrs/day, while operators in Nigeria claimed subsidy money for 60 million ltrs/day.
He asked, “Who is drinking the rest?”
He made it easy for us to understand.
Stay with me here. He importantly made a commitment that the money saved would be visibly channelled into critical areas of development, “… and people will see it!”
Now here’s the rub. Because he has been open about his plans, and people trust him, he had inadvertently softened the ground for the heartless variant of subsidy removal that Tinubu did.
I submit that the lack of resistance that people showed was because the idea was popularised by a trustworthy person.
Tinubu seized the idea and warped it. He removed its human face so that it was the already rich, who had originally benefited from the corruption in the subsidy regime, that still landed on their feet. The rest of us were left holding the bag like suckers!
Then came May 29, 2023, inauguration day, when we heard, “Subsidy is gone!”
A thoughtless, soulless pronouncement of a king who forced himself on the people exerting revenge for not showing him love.
That’s how I see it — a power move against the people.
“You refused to vote for me, yet I am president and your life is like clay in my hands. Who’s crying now?”
How else could I make sense of it? Was it rank stupidity? You and I know that no one is that stupid.
Maybe it was pure conscienceless greed, where the only thing that mattered was the money that will not be paid as subsidies but can go to buying patronage and extending power.
Do you see how good ideas can be thoroughly corrupted in the hands of someone whose character and motivations are at odds with the people they’re meant to serve?
Now when we complain, his supporters will say, “Did your Messiah not say subsidy was bad and had to go?”
So yeah, I think Peter Obi has stopped softening the ground for their callousness to land without resistance.
Let them generate policies entirely on their own so people will judge them on execution and the impact on people’s lives.
No more heartless spins on good ideas that have been “marketed” by a trustworthy person.
PO now insists that we must vote on the merits of the character of the person making the promise.
Consider this. When Dangote declared that he would build Africa’s largest refinery, even people who were doubtful knew one thing — fail or succeed he would give it a good go.
It wasn’t the same kind of farting in the wind as, “If I don’t give you power after 4 years, don’t vote for me.”
Once people knew the site of the proposed refinery, they rushed to buy adjoining lands on the strength of the character and antecedents of the man Dangote.
So guys, Peter Obi is no longer popularising ideas. None of these ideas are rocket science, as he puts it, anyway. If you say you’re going to build a house, build it. It’s as simple as that.
Sure there are issues that will arise. Things that people don’t anticipate, problems are a constant in every project. But building a house is a known craft. The engineering is not esoteric.
Neither is large scale electricity which has been around for a century.
In recent times, similar countries as Nigeria have ramped up theirs — Egypt 28k MW, Indonesia 60k MW. Peter Obi had to visit them to see if they were using juju — they weren’t.
So when the man who conquered greed says I will generate and distribute 10k MW — I’d sooner believe and trust his commitment than the guys who have never seen a ₦1m they could steal and left it alone.
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@official_esclub Nah she probably lives in Nigeria, not that it’s my business
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@dammiedammie35 Are you saying he just waltzed into Nigeria and found his way to dangote office and interviewed him without prior permission? Omo please don’t use this brain to birth o.
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@NigeriaStories Tinubu didn’t remove subsidy buhari did . He did not budget for it in his last national budget year
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Spurs - finished 17th
They have signed Robertson , Senesi , Van Hecke , talking to both Tonali and savinho
Manchester United qualified for the champions league for the first time since the new format was introduced
Ederson
Summerville
Mateus Fernandes
How can you have no pull after securing champions league
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Hi, my name is Amara.
Age : 36y/o
Status : Single
Genotype : AA
Blood group : O+
Choice of partner ;
-Must be a Christian
-Not older than 28
-Must be 6ft tall, not below 5’11
-Must be FINANCIALLY stable
-Must have a US passport
-Must be dark skinned
Willing to settle down in 4 months
Note : I don’t like SHORT men.

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@Indie5051 If you dig deep it’s always the woman’s influence on the kids
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Brad Pitt tiene 6 hijos. De los cuales 5 ya han eliminado el apellido "Pitt" de sus nombres.
El más reciente fue Knox. Con 17 años, se graduó de la secundaria en Los Ángeles a principios de junio y usó solo el nombre "Knox Jolie" en el diploma. La ceremonia contó con la presencia de Angelina Jolie y de sus hermanos. Brad Pitt no estuvo allí.


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@yabaleftonline If your papa no get money, nobody go wan meet am including you
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@ABUJAPLUG Well if you talk to your in-law you will get another 7m ole
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Reflecting on the Prison Exchange with Ethiopia
The news of the conclusion of the prisoners exchange between Nigeria and Ethiopia is refreshing.
Every life is precious, and ensuring the constitutional right to human dignity for all Nigerians - regardless of where they are or the circumstances they find themselves in - must remain a cornerstone of our national foreign policy.
I must therefore appreciate the efforts of our Foreign Affairs Minister, Amb. Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, Attorney General Lateef Fagbemi (SAN), and their Ethiopian counterparts for finally concluding these protracted negotiations.
However, we must reflect deeply on this development. It is heartbreaking to learn that at least four Nigerian citizens lost their lives in custody while this diplomatic and administrative process dragged on over the past few years. My heart goes out to their families, who had to endure the ultimate pain of losing loved ones in a foreign land.
While we commend this humanitarian intervention, it serves as a reminder of a larger systemic crisis. The overwhelming majority of these citizens are young Nigerians. A significant number were arrested while transiting through Addis Ababa’s Bole International Airport in search of green pastures. While we must continuously urge our citizens to remain law-abiding and respect the laws of host nations wherever they travel or reside, we must also ask ourselves a hard question: What drives our young and productive population into desperate circumstances across the globe?
Until we build a New Nigeria that offers genuine economic opportunities, a functional educational framework, and an environment where hard work is rewarded, we will continue to grapple with the tragic consequences of mass emigration and its associated vulnerabilities.
As these citizens are brought home to serve out their terms, our correctional facilities must be properly managed with a focus on genuine rehabilitation and societal reintegration. Let us use this moment not just for short-term relief, but as an urgent call to build a nation that protects, values, and empowers its citizens here at home.
With the right policies and leadership, a New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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