Chief Daddy
117 posts

Chief Daddy retweetledi
Chief Daddy retweetledi
Chief Daddy retweetledi

ADC Reviewed Nomination fees downward.
In view of the passionate appeal by well-meaning members, the National headquarters of our great party has reviewed the nomination fees as follows;
1. Presidential = N90million
2. Gubernotorial = N30million
3. Senate = N10million
4. Reps= N5million
5. State House = N2million
Note: 25% discount for youth, women and PWDs.

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@NigeriaStories Must u people bring your private life to social media mtcheeewww
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Someone said Peter Obi is losing the appeal he enjoyed in 2023, many Obidents argued.
Over the weekend we saw some persons decline shaking his hand. Now over 300,000 persons have unfollowed him.
More people are beginning to know Mr. Obi for the snake that he is. The political space is shifting, and scrutiny will only get tougher.


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Chief Daddy retweetledi

@yabaleftonline Una go just come online Dey lie 300k dolls for one clothe
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Corpers who are teachers, how are you people coping? And who exactly is paying you to be writing all these motivational posts online?
NYSC posted me to one school in Edo State where the proprietor boldly told me I’d be teaching six subjects. Six! I left my PPA letter in his house when he refused to release it, thinking he had connections at the Zonal Office. What he didn’t realize is that I, too, have long leg.
When I went to his house to submit my letter, he gave me ₦500 for transport after trying to convince me to settle for ₦10,000 salary. Of course, I collected it after all, it was my own money I used to go there in the first place. Edo people are very nice, but some of them? Hmm… wickedness with PhD.
Imagine asking me to teach six subjects from JSS1 to SSS3 for ₦10,000. Is that not spiritual work?
I left that place sharp-sharp and used my long leg to secure a new PPA at a school of my choice. Little did I know that I had jumped from frying pan into deep freezer.
I resumed on a Wednesday. Thursday was CDS, so I didn’t go. On Friday, I showed up and they started complaining about my dressing. They said I looked like a rockstar because I wore a vintage shirt, jean trousers, Nike sneakers, and headwear. They made sure I removed the headwear that day.
Later, they informed me they had a weekly uniform schedule for teachers. I didn’t argue, but I told them clearly: you either pay my salary upfront or let me receive my first salary before enforcing any uniform policy. The way they looked at me, you could tell they were thinking, “This corper get madness pass us.” And honestly, they were not wrong.
By afternoon, after closing, they came with another story that I resumed late into the session and students were about to start third-term exams. So, they had decided to allow me go on holiday until the next term.
I already knew it was tactics. That month had too many holidays; I wouldn’t even go to school up to six days. If they didn’t release me early, they would have to pay me for that month.
As they gave me the good news, I disappeared straight to Lagos to enjoy my break and wait for my next clearance.
While I was flexing in Lagos, they started calling me to resume for summer coaching lessons say their English teacher is not available.
Summer coaching lessons ke? Na winter coaching lesson you go see me for o.
Anyway, one or two things happened during that period. I eventually went back to resume for first semester, they started adding more conditions, and that was when I officially resigned from that teaching job.
Honestly, I respect every corper out there who is teaching. How do you people even manage lesson notes? That thing alone is enough to make someone quit.
Yet, one funny principal or proprietor will think they’re doing you a favor by offering ₦10,000 just because you’re a corper.
Abeg, make una tell me the secret, how una dey cope?
- Yushab Abolore Ayomide

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Chief Daddy retweetledi
Chief Daddy retweetledi

Perilous Era of Political Thuggery
Nigeria is descending into a perilous era of political thuggery under the current administration, where violence and intimidation are increasingly weaponized to suppress democracy and stifle political participation.
The recent attack on H.E. Rotimi Amaechi, a prominent opposition figure, and the brutal assault on his supporters during a political event starkly illustrate the deteriorating state of our democracy. The attack on Amaechi's convoy in Rivers State, the orchestrated burning of African Democratic Congress (ADC) offices, and the rampant disruption of political meetings nationwide are alarming developments that cannot be ignored.
The failure to arrest and prosecute those responsible for these heinous acts signals a grave danger—the steady erosion of the very foundation of democracy and the entrenchment of lawlessness by those entrusted to enforce the law.
If we do not confront this troubling trend with unwavering resolve, citizens will feel compelled to take matters into their own hands simply to exercise their democratic rights.
Nigeria cannot claim to be a democracy while political actors are endangered simply for expressing themselves, organizing, or attending meetings. A nation where thugs dictate who can gather, speak, or campaign is not practicing democracy; it is careening toward a brutal regime of political thuggery, aided and abetted by those in power.
We must unequivocally reject this descent into a democracy of thuggery. Nigerians deserve a political environment organized through competency, capacity, compassion,and commitment to the good of society, not one controlled by incompetence and thuggery. Democracy must be defined by the rule of law, accountability, competence, and the unrestricted participation of citizens in shaping their nation's future through political actions.
A New Nigeria is not just POssible; it is imperative, urgent, and achievable. -PO
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