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The Beardless esq
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The Beardless esq
@Don_ugob
Building Tech | LL.B (in view) | Building Jurismemo | @SoundRigMusic Ambassador | Jack of all trades, Master of some | Host @street__saga | Made in Owerri
Nigeria Bergabung Mart 2021
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Yahoo is a crime, condemnable 1000%, but saying that "6 out of 10" uni students are into fraud is a s'lly statement; This is generalization which is dangerous, cos by this statement he's saying that both Msc and PhD students, are into yahoo. If this is a serious country where accountability isn't overlooked, the EFCC chairman should have resigned by now after failing to get Yahaya Bello imprisoned.
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories
6 Out Of 10 University Students Are Into ‘Yahoo Yahoo. ~ EFCC Chairman, Olanipekun Olukoyede says
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@the_Lawrenz How is the police recruiting these bandits as officers?
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On top Titus wey be 8k per kilo??
Na my portion in Jesus name.
toshine🇨🇦@toshine4u
This food will never be your portion.
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He lost everything, bro… everything.

Kalshi Culture@Kalshi_Culture
Name TV show or movie ending that is forever scarred into your brain
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EFCC's Troubling Revelation on Our Students.
The worrisome statement by the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) that 6 out of every 10 Nigerian university students are involved in “419” is deeply troubling and must not be taken lightly.
Nigeria already has a very limited number of students in higher institutions, estimated at 2 to 2.5 million. If indeed about 60% of them, roughly 1.4 million young people, are involved in fraud, then we are not just facing a crime issue; we are confronting a serious moral and systemic failure.
The question we must ask ourselves is: what has brought us to this level? Who are the role models these students are looking up to?. What values are they learning from society?
We must understand that young people become what they consistently see. When a system appears to reward wrongdoing, when integrity is not upheld, and when those in leadership are associated with allegations of forgery and dishonesty without consequence, it sends a dangerous message.
It suggests that hard work does not matter, and that results, by any means, are acceptable. These points clearly point to a collapse of moral values.
As Socrates rightly said, “An unexamined life is not worth living.” Nigeria must now examine itself.
This is not about condemning our young people. It is about accepting that leadership sets the tone. If we do not demonstrate integrity at the top, we cannot expect it at the bottom.
We must urgently rebuild our value system, enforce accountability without bias, and create an environment where honesty, hard work, and discipline are rewarded. That is the only sustainable path to securing the future of our nation.
A new Nigeria is POssible! -PO
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