Fred Ese
13K posts

Fred Ese
@freddo_eth
crypto is freedom. 🎨 Graphic Designer | web3 Logos • Flyers • Banners • Business Cards 📩 DM to start your design

As a man, if you're not built like this you're a lizard.


@ChuksEricE Cameraman no try Sha. He make us miss this Smackdown🤧

Frank Edoho Dey explain give us say Dem dey pay am 160k for 2yrs when he started the job of who wants to be a millionaire.🙂 MY ANALYSIS:-🤔 hmmm, around 2004 & 2005, you know wetin 160k mean?🤔 money that can feed family of 8 (3square meal) for complete 2months.


@freddo_eth Web3 don’t know how it work

A lot of people are not humble by principle, they are humble because life has kept them in negotiation with survival. When survival disappears, the real operating system appears. Money don't change people, it only removes the excuse of limitation.



Many Nigerians abroad are not afraid of investing in Nigeria because they hate the country. They are afraid because too many people before them have lost everything trying. A lot of people dream of coming home to build businesses, create jobs, buy properties, open factories, farms, anything meaningful. But after years of working abroad and saving in dollars or pounds, a lot of things start getting to them and suddenly they begin to think if bringing that money home may expose it to an economy where value disappears faster than opportunity is created. And even when the courage is there, reality on ground can break it. No reliable electricity; infrastructure is abandoned for years, while small businesses carry the burden alone. Policies change without consistency. There is little protection for honest local investors. Sometimes it feels like the environment fights productivity more than it supports it. Then comes the bigger fear: people. Too many Nigerians have sent money home to trusted relatives, friends, or business partners only to hear stories, excuses, and lies later. Projects abandoned. Funds diverted. Costs inflated. Businesses turned into personal family ATM. This is Nigeria’s biggest hidden tragedy. The amount of money Nigerians abroad send home every year is enough to transform communities, create massive jobs, and spark serious innovation if properly invested. But trust has been damaged too many times. Even worse, some fraudulent Nigerians now travel abroad specifically to target fellow Nigerians with fake investment promises, collect millions, and disappear knowing fully well that chasing justice back home can become another frustrating battle on its own. Nigeria is not lacking money. Nigeria is lacking trust, and until that changes, a lot of capital will continue living outside the country. #TheLogicBehindTheChaos Solomon O.



Best advice to a man getting a loan to impress a woman?




