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CYBORG ☻

CYBORG ☻

@Apholerbee

Human | Left Handed

Lagos, Nigeria Bergabung Ağustos 2010
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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
Not Suicidal and No Regret, but nobody should give birth to me in the next Life.
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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
@tokunbo_wahab @GRVlagos You really think GRV no know the truth? The guy just dey perform for Obidients to start dragging Everything from APC government is always bad to him, but I bet, he go contest pass Atiku with the way he's going?
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Tokunbo Wahab
Tokunbo Wahab@tokunbo_wahab·
@GRVlagos let me respectfully disagree. Shutting down a city of over 20 million people is not what we are doing. We are asking residents to dedicate one hundred and twenty minutes, once every thirty days, to clean their immediate surroundings. That is not a shutdown. That is called taking responsibility. I agree completely that waste management logistics, from collection to disposal to recycling, are critical. That is why we have spent the past year strengthening those very systems. We have banned single use plastics, we are converting Olusosun landfill to energy, we are deploying biogas facilities in our markets, we are partnering with Lafarge to turn waste into valuable resources, and we are empowering young innovators with technology to improve sanitation access. These are not cosmetic actions. They are structural changes to how Lagos manages waste. But here is what I also know. No system of waste management, no matter how sophisticated, will succeed if citizens refuse to take basic responsibility for their environment. You cannot complain about flooding while dumping refuse in drains. You cannot demand a cleaner city while sweeping waste into the road. You cannot blame government for a dirty environment when you are unwilling to clean the front of your own house. The monthly sanitation exercise is not a substitute for systemic reform. It is a complement to it. It is about rebuilding a culture of environmental stewardship that has been lost over time. Technology and infrastructure alone cannot save a city whose people have abandoned personal responsibility. We welcome objective criticism that offers solutions. But dismissing a civic exercise as unimaginative, while offering no alternative path to citizen participation, does not move us forward. #LagosSanitationExercise
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Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour
Shutting down a city of 20 million people to clean their immediate environment is parochial and lacks imagination. For emphasis: the issue is not so much about cleaning your environment (which is great) but the logistics of waste management - starting from the collection, to disposal and recycling. Anything short of rethinking this system is cosmetic and unimaginative.
Tokunbo Wahab@tokunbo_wahab

Tomorrow morning between 6:30am and 8:30am, we begin a new chapter in our collective journey toward a cleaner Lagos. The monthly environmental sanitation exercise returns, and I am calling on every resident to come out and participate actively. Let me address the confusion some have tried to create. No court pronouncement has invalidated this exercise. The State proceeded to the Court of Appeal, and judgment was delivered in our favour. The Court affirmed that the laws used for the implementation and enforcement of environmental sanitation are legitimate and constitutional. So disregard those who choose to mislead the public. We have planned this for over a year. We have thought it through. We cannot keep complaining about dirty surroundings and blaming government while shirking our own responsibilities. The care of our environment is a collaborative project between government and citizens. Major transport unions controlling about 90% of vehicles on our roads have pledged not to deploy their vehicles from major parks during the sanitation window. If government vehicles are staying put, what will it cost us to stay home for just two hours to clean our environment? We are not unreasonable. Exceptions exist for emergencies, scheduled flights, and students writing JAMB exams. LAWMA has been fully mobilized to evacuate waste generated. Environmental health officers will monitor properties, and defaulters will be served abatement notices. Tomorrow, let us show Lagos and the world that we are ready to take ownership of our environment. Two hours. One Saturday each month. A cleaner, healthier, flood-free Lagos for all of us. #LagosSanitationExercise #CleanerLagos

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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
You think the elderly Obidients don't know the truth, they just enjoy leading the dumb younger ones astray. To them, Politics is all about doing it the Salako way.
Teresematt@teresematt

Receipts don't lie. Back in 2022, we had to crowdfund ₦60k to save a classmate’s education. He was a final-year student with nowhere else to turn, and no one from his family was able or willing to support him. It’s easy to talk down on @NELFUND when you’ve never had to beg your secondary school mates just to finish your degree. President Tinubu @officialABAT has created a system that solves a problem which has humiliated Nigerian students for decades. Stop the selective amnesia. Some of you mocking this have siblings and friends quietly benefiting from it. For many, this isn’t politics; it’s a lifeline.

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OLADEPO Caleb Olugbenga
OLADEPO Caleb Olugbenga@YhungProf0·
Amid the flood of felicitations following my convocation as Overall Best Graduating Student of LAUTECH, I find it necessary to address the stir around my NELFUND appreciation post. I accept the praise, life changing offers and the backlash, in good faith. Still, it is only fair to set the record straight. I hail from a village in Osun State, raised in a modest family of five. I attended public primary and secondary schools, not by choice, but because even the most inexpensive private schools were beyond our means. Even then, survival itself; food and clothing was a daily struggle. I walked miles to school each morning, while my parents laboured as jacks-of-all-trades to make ends meet. For nine defining years before I entered university, we lived within sight of basic amenities yet beyond our reach, no electricity, no television; just lanterns and candles. Against these odds, I earned a scholarship and now this distinction. In my third year, a coursemate’s father, someone I had once tutored academically, gifted me my first smartphone which I am still using till now. On several occasions, lecturers, moved by quiet compassion, provided me with clothing. There are many other instances, too numerous to recount. So, I say this plainly, not all of us are born with a silver spoon. Some of us climbed the ladder by holding on to every rung of legitimate support we could find. As an engineering student aspiring to make academic history, should I resort myself to blaming my family’s financial situation for my inability to afford fees and essentials like a reliable smartphone or laptop needed for skills and certifications? For me personally, NELFUND was not incidental; it was instrumental and to acknowledge what helped one’s journey is neither propaganda nor misplaced allegiance. It is simply an act of appreciation. Thank you @NELFUND and everyone that contributed to this success! Greatness awaits all of Us.
OLADEPO Caleb Olugbenga@YhungProf0

@NELFUND I'm honored to let you know that I am the Best Graduating Student of @lautechofficial ✨✨ Your loans made it possible • OLADEPO, CALEB OLUGBENGA • B. Tech (First Class: 4.89/5.0) #LAUConvo18th #nelfund

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U.S. Mission Nigeria
U.S. Mission Nigeria@USinNigeria·
#ThisWeekInUSNigeriaHistory in 2025, Nigerian chess master Tunde Onakoya made history by breaking the Guinness World Record for the longest chess marathon alongside American chess master Shawn Martinez in Times Square, New York. #DYK Tunde is a U.S. Government Exchange Program alumnus. He’s one of 14,000+ exchange alumni in Nigeria driving impact across U.S.–Nigeria life, culture, and collaboration. #Freedom250 Photo credit: Chess in Slums Africa
U.S. Mission Nigeria tweet media
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Mr. Láyí
Mr. Láyí@layiwasabi·
with bias, you will always find the narrative you’re looking for
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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
@KAYBN_0 You that is getting is right, ori ìwọ àti Salako daru
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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
Obidients narratives brazy mehn 😅
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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
You know it takes one very courageous person to start & others will follow Instead of ranting on Twitter, take the protest to the street & see others join you, or are you a coward?
SizZzle. 😎🇳🇬@n6oflife6

Kenya has 42 established Tribes but today Kenyan Youths have United as One to Protest against Rising Fuel Prices & High Cost of Living. Nigerian Youths are going tru Hell yet Proudly engaging in Bigotry & defending an Incompetent President bcos He is from their Tribe. SMH. 🤡🇳🇬

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AJE
AJE@Riddwane·
This development is true, but the man who made the video seems to be misinformed about the Lagos State Government’s guidelines for installing solar energy systems in social housing estates. He is likely to be a tenant in one of these social housing estates owned by the Lagos State Government. Otherwise, he wouldn’t have raised concerns about something that was clearly outlined in the indemnity document he signed before the Government handed over the apartment to him after purchase. Now, to the issue: the Lagos State Government DOES NOT charge all residents living in the State for a permit to install solar power systems for domestic use in their homes, as the video suggested. ONLY residents living in the government-owned social housing estates are charged administrative fees for Alterations, such as installation of solar power system, before any additional development can be permitted. The reason for this is that, the State Government is responsible for maintaining facilities in its social housing estates. There is public electricity supply system already installed in the Estates. Installation of additional power system is taken as an alteration to the original design and functionality of an Estate building. Any alteration must be run through the Physical Planning and Survey departments of the Ministry of Housing for approval, material compliance and post-inspection checks. Those solar power systems are usually installed by occupants in shared areas; so this alteration must be approved by the facility manager (Government) before any occupant can proceed. The man in the video obviously did not apply for an approval before embarking on such alteration. The uniformed men seen in the video are from the Monitoring and Compliance Unit of the Ministry. The Government has had to deal with liability from unpermitted alterations by estate residents, including leaking roofs and severe damage caused by fire. So, the simple rule for any estate occupant is to contact the State Government (facility manager) for an approval for any external alteration they want to undertake in their building. If an unpermitted alteration affects the entire property, other occupants will hold the government responsible.
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories

Lagos state resident cries out over alleged fee for solar power permit in his apartment.

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Oguntoye Opeyemi
Oguntoye Opeyemi@Equityoyo·
This guy childhood no easy. Nothing person feel tell me 😰😰😰
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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
When Obi loses again in 2027, what will remain of Obidients, they disappear into oblivion or lure their Messiah to go agian in 2031?
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CYBORG ☻
CYBORG ☻@Apholerbee·
Then @GRVlagos is an igbó. So, we're right all along to call him Igbo agenda. Y'all want to use him to capture Lagos? It won't happen.
Sugabelly 🌕@sugabelly

@IgboHistoFacts Every time someone with only an Igbo mother comes out, this braindead argument starts all over. Children of Igbo women are automatically Igbo because we are Igbo first through the mother, not father. The mother’s lineage is primary, father’s secondary. Igbo mother, Igbo baby.

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