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@Bnickss

me

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Haziran 2010
347 Takip Edilen377 Takipçiler
tOBI
tOBI@Bnickss·
@70_74_20 Didn't watch the show or farming engagements or slow.....
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Perry
Perry@70_74_20·
One thing I don’t understand about Aang is why he was scared of Ozai when he knew he could just go into the Avatar State and kick his ass. What do you guys think why was he scared at first?
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tOBI
tOBI@Bnickss·
@DeleFarotimi Yup, they know exactly what they are doing. Everything is going according to plan!
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tOBI
tOBI@Bnickss·
Nobody likes Arsenal, and rightly so.....
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tOBI
tOBI@Bnickss·
@Darleeton3 Them go soon start de hit una with "inauthentic tweets" Haha
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DARL COMMENT
DARL COMMENT@Darleeton3·
I just saw a guy won 145k today, He was happy and shouting when hoffenheim scored that second goal against Dortmund He played it o.v 2.5 and have already lost hope, but hoffenheim did it in . He was sharing money for everyone in the bet shop . After like 1 hour I saw him been taking away in a police van 😲. I thought police was escorting him , maybe he have won more money , But the way they were dragging him like a criminal, I knew there was trouble . I asked someone in the shop what happened And they said……………..
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Odawaii
Odawaii@Odawaii·
@Bnickss @InibeheEffiong I dn''t think he ist down playing external influence but the point is you cannot down play leaders who bastardise their own countries. Those externals will continue to exert influence and our 'experts' in geo politics can please provide us with a quick solution.
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Inibehe Effiong
Inibehe Effiong@InibeheEffiong·
I will like the “Pan-Africanists” on X to tell us where they stand on human rights and democracy? Is Pan-Africanism anti-human rights and anti-democracy? I see their obsession with dictators. They condemn civil societies/NGOs and appear ready to crush any form of dissent. When a governor in Nigeria diverts billions meant for education and healthcare, and uses the money to acquire properties, are we supposed to blame the ‘almighty’ and omnipresent America and the all powerful CIA? Should we stop talking about human right violations by the criminal dictators in the African continent? Since it is only Pan-Africanists that know what “geopolitics” means, they should tell us what they think about human rights and democracy in Africa.
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Kat (Cybernyantic)
Kat (Cybernyantic)@GhostWriter113·
@Bnickss @Kachidey4you It’s also a rare sub skill of fire bending! Meaning that Bolin has a little fire bender in him which makes sense considering his brother is a fire bender.
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KACHI 🎎
KACHI 🎎@Kachidey4you·
Bolin lava bending made his character even better
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tOBI
tOBI@Bnickss·
Lawyers are the problem of this country......
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tOBI
tOBI@Bnickss·
Some might even argue that this kind of oversimplification isn’t accidental. Over time, powerful external actors shape narratives through media and policy influence in ways that make their role less visible. So the focus stays internal, while they operate in plain sight.
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tOBI
tOBI@Bnickss·
Yes, internal collaborators play a role. External interests—often with more money, stronger intelligence networks, and global influence—help shape the environment those actors thrive in. Ignoring that doesn’t clarify the issue; it oversimplifies it.
Inibehe Effiong@InibeheEffiong

Foreign interests cannot do sabotage the growth of Africa without the connivance of internal collaborators. Africans are the ones primarily responsible for the decay in the continent. We should focus more on the thieving political actors in Africa who have ruined their countries.

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DiscussingFilm
DiscussingFilm@DiscussingFilm·
The new trailer for ‘STREET FIGHTER’ has been released. In theaters on October 16.
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tOBI retweetledi
Chetuya Math Chinagolum
Chetuya Math Chinagolum@Chetuyachinago·
Mr. David Hundeyin: While I understand your position here, you are entirely too harsh on the poor masses in Nigeria in whose name you are supposedly fighting for. Yes, it is undeniably true that many Nigerians do not see the bigger picture. They do not see how foreign corporations are funding the insecurity currently ravaging the North, how the IMF and World Bank are basically boardroom terror organizations destroying the economy of the Global South, or how the Nigerian government only serves the vile interests of a select few elites and their puppet masters in Western capitals. All of this is true, but what is equally true is this: it is not this poor majority that will change this country. This may seem counterintuitive, as the poor are the ones feeling the crushing weight of a dwindling economy, hyperinflation, and an epileptic power grid. But as Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels outlined in lovely book "The Communist Manifesto", a true change in government can only happen when the classes of society hold hands and unite under a common umbrella. The poor and uneducated form the overwhelming majority of society and obviously possess the brute muscle to pressure the system. However, they cannot articulate a well-structured plan, they cannot write manifestos, and they cannot understand the complex logistics required to sustain a massive protest. They lack the financial war chest to fund a prolonged struggle, the legal expertise to bail out captured comrades, the media expertise to combat vicious state propaganda, and the strategic foresight to negotiate terms when the ruling class is finally brought to its knees. The Hollywood theater of poor people carrying pitchforks to overthrow their government is pure, delusional fantasy. An oppressive regime will always have a police force and a military that are heavily armed, well-trained, and eager to shoot live ammunition at protesters. Drawing again from the works of Marx and Engels and their studies on class struggle, the fundamental catalyst that brings to light any true revolutionary movement must start with the Middle Class (the Bourgeoisie/Intelligentsia). The middle class is educated; they possess the knowledge to decode complex geopolitics and translate it into simpler terms for the average farmer to understand, just as Thomas Sankara did in Burkina Faso. The middle class has the resources and the time on their hands to properly coordinate protests and build formidable intelligence networks. They can outsource the technology to bypass government censorship, they have the international connections to expose human rights abuses to the global stage, and they possess the ideological backbone required to turn disorganized public anger into a lethal, targeted political weapon. The most famous revolutionary movements in history like the French Revolution, the Russian Revolution, and the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, were all ruthlessly and carefully planned and organized by educated, wealthy, middle-class citizens. Even Fidel Castro of Cuba came from a wealthy family, and his father owned a robust sugar business. Yet, even when the lower and middle classes unite, the upper class and the military still hold all the cards. Even the celebrated 1979 Iranian Revolution was only successful because factions within the military and the government decided to commit mutiny and flat-out refused to protect the Shah. If impoverished Nigerians were to relinquish their daily survival hustle and storm the streets en masse to protest against the government, what do you think will happen? Just like ENDSARS, the state will wait for the cover of night, turn off the lights, and gun down unarmed protesters in cold blood. Then, their puppet masters in the Global North will instantly provide them with diplomatic cover, and the rest of humanity will simply move on. Therefore, the struggling masses do not need to understand your complex geopolitics for a revolution to happen. If the comfortable, educated elite(who claim to know it all) do not get off their high horses and join forces to mobilize the streets, absolutely nothing will change. A revolution does not happen in a vacuum; it requires a spark forged by intellectuals, fueled by the fury of the poor, and executed with ruthless, unwavering precision. Until the educated middle class is willing to sacrifice its comfort, weaponize its privileges, and bleed alongside the common man they so eagerly criticize, you're basically tweeting into oblivion.
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin

Knowledge is not just a burden, but a lonely place. The ability to clearly see things that others cannot see if their lives depnded on it is not a gift. It's a social impediment. If I say that there is a direct and obvious link stringing together the "Christian Genocide" fairytale with the Dangote Refinery, the Benue Trough, the Itakpe Hill Ridge, the Bama Beach ridge and the wider geological belt stretching from Plateau to Yobe, 99% of my audience will respond "What are those?" And that's why we lose. How can they possibly fight and win a war when they don't even realise there's a war going on? Just one lonely guy speaking turenchi to himself on Twitter. People that drank FFMP instead of milk as children couldn't possibly grasp this information. It's not their fault. They never had a chance.

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