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@zephyr_zig

Get rich or die richer

Abeokuta, Nigeria Se unió Ocak 2021
241 Siguiendo285 Seguidores
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,@zephyr_zig·
@Ugochukwu96_ You still found a way to bring tribalism into this, walahi aiye eh ti baje
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P.haraoh 👑
P.haraoh 👑@Ugochukwu96_·
Almost every Redeem pastor who is not Yoruba has similar stories of the corruption in Redeem. If you are a non-Yoruba pastor, there are certain churches they will never send you to. Those are reserved for Yoruba pastors. All the good churches with a lot of members are for only Yoruba pastors, while the churches in remote areas — the “suffering churches” — are for non-Yoruba pastors. There are also certain levels of promotion as a pastor that non-Yoruba pastors can never reach. Before you come to argue, I was in Redeem for over 15 years. So I know the church very well.
PO’s MainChic😎@D_goodybag

RCCG stayed in my dad’s property for free, for good 15 years. Time to make him pastor, they realized his family are not members of the church & forgot the free property & equipments. One midnight, my younger brother & I brought out all their things.

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,@zephyr_zig·
@CorneliaLake "That wants to kill them" how please ?
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Lake Cornelia Research Management
Yes every country in Asia that matters (ie Japan, S Korea, Australia, Singapore and Taiwan) didn’t plan for this / lack an SPR and are now going to lean into the energy poor regional power that wants to kill them. Brilliant analysis;)
David Frum@davidfrum

Every country in Asia is thinking right now: "Well we don't love China, but unlike Trump's USA it has never cut off our energy supply. Maybe they're a more reliable and responsible partner for our future security. At least they're predictable."

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,@zephyr_zig·
"I dont like clubs" abi them no dey allow you comot for house 🤡😭
Blacqstard@MadaraDGOAT

@Doyinpepperr They disappeared for a while then raves came... That club era in between was hell for me cuz I don't like clubs and the music and hypemen were mid

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,@zephyr_zig·
@MadaraDGOAT At least im faster than you
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,@zephyr_zig·
@MadaraDGOAT Yeahh you were in secondary school, validates my point bozo
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,@zephyr_zig·
@the_man_cj Lagos the biggest trade zone in the country Ogun the biggest industrial hub in the country Ondo has large natural gas reserve 3 out of 6 southwestern states, i think we would do pretty good. So please, tell me how lagos is the only good one and how others are shit??
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The Man CJ
The Man CJ@the_man_cj·
@zephyr_zig I don’t want to say this but other south west states are sh!t.
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The Man CJ
The Man CJ@the_man_cj·
I don’t even need to finish reading the rubbish you just wrote. But let me remind today that the north will flourish more than the south west which has nothing. Take Igbos from Lagos and you won’t recognize it again, it will be an old glory.
your boy Armani 🫂@armanifeante

look at it this way, Nigeria has six geopolitical zones, North(East, west, central) South (East, west, south) In the event of a split, the entire north would become one, South would split into 3 countries the uncomfortable truth about a Nigerian split is that it wouldn't produce 4 equal nations. It would produce two or three viable states and one or two that would struggle for survival from day one. the South-south has oil that currently flow from Niger delta to Abuja, if we split, it becomes theirs alone and many people agree that Niger delta could become Kuwait in few years south East has always been very resourceful that even though it’s technically landlocked, they will surely find a way to access the ocean and engage in international trade. But it would still struggle a bit because they would not have comparative advantage over china in manufacturing and they would need relationship with other countries to sell imported products. there is a claim that south west already functions almost independently because of lagos, but it would require that they take over the gap that the Igbo fills in lagos for that to be valid after split. however, with access to ocean, the country would easily get on its feet. where it gets complicated is the North. They are totally landlocked with little or no mineral resources. It would be an economy built almost entirely on subsistence farming and livestock. by this logic, we will have a 2 struggling nations- North and south east and rich South south and neither rich nor poor South west and struggling nations don't stay peaceful, they pressure their wealthier neighbours and they destabilise an entire region. like what Chad, Niger and Cameroon are currently doing to us. Some could say this is why the topic of separation is almost like a blasphemy to the northern elites and a self sabotage to the south easterners.

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,@zephyr_zig·
If the south south you say would be like kuwait because of their oil would eventually be like kuwait, we would have been seeing signs of that right now
your boy Armani 🫂@armanifeante

look at it this way, Nigeria has six geopolitical zones, North(East, west, central) South (East, west, south) In the event of a split, the entire north would become one, South would split into 3 countries the uncomfortable truth about a Nigerian split is that it wouldn't produce 4 equal nations. It would produce two or three viable states and one or two that would struggle for survival from day one. the South-south has oil that currently flow from Niger delta to Abuja, if we split, it becomes theirs alone and many people agree that Niger delta could become Kuwait in few years south East has always been very resourceful that even though it’s technically landlocked, they will surely find a way to access the ocean and engage in international trade. But it would still struggle a bit because they would not have comparative advantage over china in manufacturing and they would need relationship with other countries to sell imported products. there is a claim that south west already functions almost independently because of lagos, but it would require that they take over the gap that the Igbo fills in lagos for that to be valid after split. however, with access to ocean, the country would easily get on its feet. where it gets complicated is the North. They are totally landlocked with little or no mineral resources. It would be an economy built almost entirely on subsistence farming and livestock. by this logic, we will have a 2 struggling nations- North and south east and rich South south and neither rich nor poor South west and struggling nations don't stay peaceful, they pressure their wealthier neighbours and they destabilise an entire region. like what Chad, Niger and Cameroon are currently doing to us. Some could say this is why the topic of separation is almost like a blasphemy to the northern elites and a self sabotage to the south easterners.

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,@zephyr_zig·
Naive of you to think the southwest would rely solely on trades in lagos. Ever heard of industrialization??? What happened to agric too, ondo has large gas too oh. You underrate the human quality too
your boy Armani 🫂@armanifeante

look at it this way, Nigeria has six geopolitical zones, North(East, west, central) South (East, west, south) In the event of a split, the entire north would become one, South would split into 3 countries the uncomfortable truth about a Nigerian split is that it wouldn't produce 4 equal nations. It would produce two or three viable states and one or two that would struggle for survival from day one. the South-south has oil that currently flow from Niger delta to Abuja, if we split, it becomes theirs alone and many people agree that Niger delta could become Kuwait in few years south East has always been very resourceful that even though it’s technically landlocked, they will surely find a way to access the ocean and engage in international trade. But it would still struggle a bit because they would not have comparative advantage over china in manufacturing and they would need relationship with other countries to sell imported products. there is a claim that south west already functions almost independently because of lagos, but it would require that they take over the gap that the Igbo fills in lagos for that to be valid after split. however, with access to ocean, the country would easily get on its feet. where it gets complicated is the North. They are totally landlocked with little or no mineral resources. It would be an economy built almost entirely on subsistence farming and livestock. by this logic, we will have a 2 struggling nations- North and south east and rich South south and neither rich nor poor South west and struggling nations don't stay peaceful, they pressure their wealthier neighbours and they destabilise an entire region. like what Chad, Niger and Cameroon are currently doing to us. Some could say this is why the topic of separation is almost like a blasphemy to the northern elites and a self sabotage to the south easterners.

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,@zephyr_zig·
@Pahpah_J You people dont calm down and understand things. There was never a sentence in his tweet that showed he supports tinubu over obi. Two truths can co exist but you obi supporters that cant think for yourselves always want to make it about Tinubu VS Obi
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NORTH POLE
NORTH POLE@Pahpah_J·
Lol And Tinubu you people voted for is objectively a presidential material? This thing is simple (common sense), really. You guys are just displaying pseudo intelligence. From the realistic options available, who is the best for 'this Nigeria'? As simple as that.
Averroes@d_Advocate1

I can’t vilify anyone for supporting a candidate. That’s your right, and I’ve always maintained that I will never be found infringing on it. However, there is simply no way to objectively analyse and evaluate Peter Obi’s candidacy and conclude that he is anywhere near presidential material. He has not demonstrated any solid or informed grasp of the economic, financial, or energy policies required at the highest level. He is best known for regurgitating statistics from Bangladesh and India without proper context or comparative analysis. In terms of pedigree, he is not even better than some Chairmanship candidates in Lagos State. We have the benefit of assessing his record over eight years as a State Governor, yet there is no far-reaching institutional policy or defining legacy he can point to. He did the basics at best. He even fell short in some of these basics. There are records of criticisms from that period, including allegations of substandard road construction, as well as the prolonged doctors’ strike that lasted over nine months under his administration. His leadership range is equally unimpressive. This is someone who once boasted about personally supervising his drivers while they fueled vehicles. Does he expect to have the time for such trivialities as President? Effective governance requires the ability to delegate and build systems that function independently, not micromanaging routine tasks. To cap it all, he comes across as hypocritical and deceptive. It doesn’t take much to see through that if you open your eyes. Ironically, it is the supporters of such a sub-par Man that have the most to say about competence. Good riddance to bad rubbish!

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,@zephyr_zig·
@RajiORidwan That was the thing during that 2023 election, his amswers t most technical questions did not even make any sense
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Big Raj
Big Raj@RajiORidwan·
Interestingly, this echoes my sentiments 100%. I listened to Peter Obi extensively during the 2023 presidential election campaigns, and all I saw was a populist who hardly impressed me. During his engagement with NESG, he showed a very barebones understanding of the technical aspects of many of Nigeria's challenges. He can hold his own when speaking to an average, uninformed audience, but put him in a room with intellectuals and he instantly falls apart.
Averroes@d_Advocate1

I can’t vilify anyone for supporting a candidate. That’s your right, and I’ve always maintained that I will never be found infringing on it. However, there is simply no way to objectively analyse and evaluate Peter Obi’s candidacy and conclude that he is anywhere near presidential material. He has not demonstrated any solid or informed grasp of the economic, financial, or energy policies required at the highest level. He is best known for regurgitating statistics from Bangladesh and India without proper context or comparative analysis. In terms of pedigree, he is not even better than some Chairmanship candidates in Lagos State. We have the benefit of assessing his record over eight years as a State Governor, yet there is no far-reaching institutional policy or defining legacy he can point to. He did the basics at best. He even fell short in some of these basics. There are records of criticisms from that period, including allegations of substandard road construction, as well as the prolonged doctors’ strike that lasted over nine months under his administration. His leadership range is equally unimpressive. This is someone who once boasted about personally supervising his drivers while they fueled vehicles. Does he expect to have the time for such trivialities as President? Effective governance requires the ability to delegate and build systems that function independently, not micromanaging routine tasks. To cap it all, he comes across as hypocritical and deceptive. It doesn’t take much to see through that if you open your eyes. Ironically, it is the supporters of such a sub-par Man that have the most to say about competence. Good riddance to bad rubbish!

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