Sabitlenmiş Tweet
BOSS
121.8K posts

BOSS
@BasheerAugie
Do not let your mind be like a doorknob, turning with every hand that grasp it. Web3 | Artificial Intelligence.
Illela Rafi, Nigeria. 🇳🇬 Katılım Ocak 2012
2.8K Takip Edilen2.8K Takipçiler
BOSS retweetledi

World Bank told Nigeria to reopen fuel imports because Dangote’s fuel was 12% more expensive than imports. Dangote called it flawed. World Bank quietly deleted the whole report from their website.
Meanwhile Europe is buying refined fuel from the same Dangote refinery because Middle East supply got disrupted. The same Europe that used to sell Nigeria its own crude back as petrol. You can’t make this up.
An African refinery finally works at scale and the first recommendation is not invest more, not expand capacity. It’s bring back imports.
When Africa consumes nobody says a word. When Africa refines and competes suddenly it’s a problem.
English

Uncle Ruckus suffered from a similar deformity, from being White to Black.😌
Jaia@Jaiathalien
Micheal Jackson wasn’t lying😪
English
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi

For the sake of the History:
When Thomas Sankara was asked by a French journalist why he changed his country's name from UPPER VOLTA (a colonial name), to BURKINA FASO (which means Land of Upright people),
His reply was: "Upper Volta didn't mean anything to us as a people (we are not French). But Burkina Faso comes from the SOIL, our SOIL. Burkina is the MOSSI word the predominant ethnic group for "HONESTY, INTEGRITY, UPRIGHTNESS" While Faso is the Dioula/Mandinka word for the "Land of our Fathers".
The name Burkina Faso and the term “Burkinabè” both come from a deliberate effort to reflect the country’s identity and culture. In 1984, the former president Thomas Sankara changed the country’s name from Upper Volta (a colonial name) to Burkina Faso.
The new name combines words from different local languages:
“Burkina” (from the Mooré language) means upright, honest, or incorruptible.
“Faso” (from the Dioula language) means fatherland or homeland.
So “Burkina Faso” means “the land of upright (honest) people.”
Now, the word used to describe a person from the country “Burkinabè” also has a special origin:
The ending “-bè” comes from the Fulfulde language and means “people of”.
When you put it all together, “Burkinabè” literally means “people of Burkina Faso” or “people of the land of upright people.”
Unlike English words like “man” or “woman,” “Burkinabè” does not change for gender. It is the same word whether you are talking about one person or many people, male or female.
Duke Of Nigeria.@xagreat
If a man from Egypt is called an Egyptian, a man from Nigeria is Nigerian. Then a man from Burkina faso will be called?
English
BOSS retweetledi

The best thing you can do for yourself as a Nigerian is to use that internet connection of yours while you still can, and follow/read/watch information from a wide variety of sources from all over the world.
Your Nigerian media is a Europe-US information cage. When I say "Nigerian media", I'm not just talking about news platforms. I mean your popular social media bloggers. Your big content aggregators. Your online discussion and image boards. Everything is bought and paid for, and the money is always European or American.
Do yourself a favour and unplug.
Look for news, web content, TV series, movies and discussion forums from Asia, Latin America and other parts of Africa. Watch Brazilian TV shows. Watch Chinese documentaries. Watch Vietnamese movies. Follow social media content creators from Indonesia and Russia. Lurk on Pakistani message boards. Gain a wider picture of the world while you still have access to a relatively open internet that allows you to do so.
It's the best thing you can do for yourself.
English
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi

This man is a stain on us, both as a people and a nation. He is a stain on our identity and legacy.
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja
“If we have to borrow money, we will, because borrowing is not leprosy; we just have to work hard to be able to repay it” — President Tinubu
English
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi

“During your first four years in office, you did nothing, and now you want Nigerians to vote for you again for a second term? Don’t vote for them. Performance is the best form of campaign. You achieved nothing, and that is why you are busy destroying opposition parties. Nigerians are really suffering. We are not asking for too much, all we need are basic amenities, affordable food items, security, and steady electricity. Thousands of people are leaving for abroad, not because they want too much wealth, but because they want safety.”
—Apostle Johnson Suleman speaks on Nigeria’s current situation and leadership.
English
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi

@Ibn_aaminu Allah ya jikan shi da rahama da gafara.
Amin Ya-Hayyu Ya-Qayyum
Indonesia
BOSS retweetledi

Every single thing Obasanjo did wrong, this admin has repeated it. Every single thing Obasanjo did right, This admin doesn’t have the capacity to dream of it not to talk of repeating it.
Ridwan Oke@RidwanuLlah
Obasanjo talks big cos he’s aware most Nigerians don’t read and those who do have forgotten much about his 8 years in office.
English
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi
BOSS retweetledi














