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Dozie
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Dozie
@Dozieben2
Christian: Husband: Father:
Seated with Christ Katılım Mart 2010
1.7K Takip Edilen975 Takipçiler
Dozie retweetledi

@Dr_Pharouk The Original content you stole!!!
x.com/drclare_okafor…
Clarethedentist@drClare_Okafor
Which one of these is your best option when you have a toothache? A. Take pain reliever (paracetamol/ibuprofen) B. Warm salt water rinse. C. Visit your dentist ASAP. D. Herbal remedies (clove oil, etc.) E. Apply toothpaste directly on the tooth. Don’t air me please 🙏🏽
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I just got a call while attending to a patient in church about a fellow dentist accusing me of stealing her tweets.
It’s quite surprising because this same person doesn’t even follow me here on X, yet she sends me DMs asking me to engage her posts.
The first time you reached out about growing your page, my advice was simple: stay consistent and keep posting, because that’s what I’ve been doing here for years and I drop tweets because I have passion for what I do.
Now, the same person I advised is calling me out publicly.
Let’s be realistic for a moment. I’m not the only dentist in Nigeria that’s talks about oral health, and I’m definitely not the only one who says “brush your teeth twice daily.” If another dentist says the same thing, does that mean I should come online and accuse them of stealing my content? Of course not.
The same applies to conversations around dental floss or any other oral health advice. These are general principles in dentistry, not personal inventions. I can post something now and tomorrow another dentist posts the same thing on their platform and might even decide to rearrange it. It’s a basic thing we know already, so why would I come online to accuse the person of stealing my tweet?
For the record, I didn’t see your DM.
If you genuinely feel I copied your tweet, that’s your opinion.
For the record, I didn’t see your DM.
If you genuinely feel I copied your tweet, that’s your opinion. But if this is about getting reactions and traction, then I understand why this approach was taken.
You’ve sent me your tweets before, yet you don’t follow me. It’s a bit ironic to expect engagement under those circumstances.
My honest advice: this isn’t the best way to grow your platform. Yes, X can be tox!~c, but you don’t have to contribute to that t0~x!~city.
People who know me know that I support others. I may not spoon-feed, but I will always put people on and support them without expecting anything in return.
I’ve always had a feeling that a moment like this might come, which is why I chose not to give you the kind of audience you were looking for.
That said, I have absolutely nothing against you, even now.
Let’s also be honest, if I wasn’t a bigger account, this probably wouldn’t be happening. You know that mentioning my name brings attention.
Congratulations, you’ve got the attention you wanted. 👏 👏 Proud of you 👍🏽
In all, everyone should ensure they brush their teeth twice daily with a toothpaste that contains fluoride.
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@gib_smoke And the poor brag about these rich people as if having very few rich people means anything.
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@DailyMail Then become a regular. Its not the time to be queit about your faith. Be bold and courageous about it
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I'm not a church regular but I do believe, says William as he defends his 'quiet faith' trib.al/0Orfe47
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@EmirSirdam Share rice to people in lagos, £500 to people in UK. Even corruption dey respect location lol
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@PeterROCK_ He doesn't see any struggle of the people. He only sees what his father's ambitions can fetch him.
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@Ella_Edit10 Ella, see if anything happens to you, Nigerians won't hold anybody. I know it sounds harsh but its the reality. A lot of us sadly love our chains and oppressors. Stay safe
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@AskMichaelTaiwo EB3 is not current sir. You might want to double check. Eb1 and eb2 yes but not eb3

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For those who asked and for those who don’t know what this tweet means, let me explain:
Every year, the U.S. government sets a cap on how many employment-based green cards it issues. When applications flood in and exceed that cap, a backlog forms. People wait. Sometimes for years.
The Visa Bulletin is what tells you where the line is. When a category shows as "current", it means the line is gone.
No backlog. No waiting behind people who applied before you. If your paperwork is solid and your category is current, USCIS can move on your case now.
EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 all being current at the same time is rare.
For nurses under EB-3 especially, this is a big deal. That category has had brutal wait times historically.
This is a great time to file your petition.
Michael Taiwo@AskMichaelTaiwo
The April 2026 Visa Bulletin has just been released and even EB-3 (for nurses) is now current! EB-1 is current. EB-2 is current. EB-3 is also current. Interesting times.
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@FinPlanKaluAja1 Buy a car, at 65 I would live in the moment. One health issue could mean he wont be able to drive again.
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Met a man, he is 65, still working. His last surviving parent just passed away, and he is receiving about £90,000 life insurance.
He owes a mortgage and other debts of approximately £112,000.
He told me, “I have never owned a new car in my life. I want to buy a new car.”
He was seeking advice.
The rational advice: pay off debt, as this cash is a one-off windfall.
The emotional advice: buy the car, tick the bucket list, live fulfilled.
What do you think he should do? Please consider his age.
For me, there is no wrong answer.
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Dozie retweetledi

Muslims worldwide often face institutional discrimination, socio-economic exclusion, biased immigration policies & unwarranted surveillance & profiling.
This International Day to Combat Islamophobia, let’s re-commit to the equality, human rights & dignity of every person, no matter their faith.
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Are you guys not even tired of these rinse and repeat conversations, ehn?
Dr. Ose Etiobhio@osemagnum
4 million naira monthly salary in Lagos 🇳🇬 or £4000 monthly in London 🇬🇧? which are you going for?... let's have it.
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@25tobiloba They should continue. When they finish on X they'd face their real life.
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@osemagnum Very useless debates.. people arguing imaginary situations that has no bearing on their real lives.
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@d_osinaike £50 is a lot though from what I'm seeing in your trolley. Nice post
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Today I decided to show how much it costs me to buy my weekly fruits. I love eating fruit and trying to live healthy… but that’s by the way. The real story is the cost.
My fruit shopping came to £50.87. If you convert that to naira, that’s roughly ₦94,000.
Now, if I wanted to gaslight Nigerians, I could easily say something like: “Nigerians don’t appreciate what they have. This same fruit would cost less than ₦20k in Nigeria.” That would give the impression that food is cheaper in Nigeria than in the UK.
But that would be a half truth, or what some people like to call being smart by half.
Here’s the part people conveniently leave out.
The minimum wage in the UK is about £12.44 per hour. That means someone earning minimum wage needs less than 5 hours of work to afford that £50 fruit basket.
And before someone says it, yes, if you’re on minimum wage here you’re probably shopping in Lidl or Aldi, not casually loading £50 worth of fruit into your trolley like a wellness influencer. But that’s beside the point.
Now let’s look at Nigeria.
Let’s assume that same fruit basket really costs ₦20,000. Sounds cheap, right?
Nigeria’s minimum wage is ₦70,000 per month. That translates to roughly ₦337 per hour.
So to buy that same ₦20k fruit basket, a minimum wage worker would need to work almost 60 hours. That’s about 6½ full working days.
Think about that for a moment.
Someone in the UK doing the same type of low income job works about 5 hours to buy it. Someone in Nigeria may need almost a full week of work.
So when people start comparing prices to gaslight you and say petrol is $4 in the US or fuel is £1.80 in the UK, ask them one simple question.
How does that compare to people’s income?
Because price without income context is just propaganda with numbers.
Now let’s take it one step further.
In the UK, the minimum wage is about £12.44 per hour and the Prime Minister earns around £83 per hour. That is roughly a £70 difference per hour.
In Nigeria, the minimum wage is about ₦337 per hour and the President earns about ₦6,770 per hour before allowances.
That is a difference of about ₦6,433 per hour.
In percentage terms, the UK Prime Minister earns about 577% more per hour than minimum wage.
Nigeria’s President earns about 1,570% more per hour than minimum wage.
And that is before we even talk about the endless allowances, benefits, convoys, security votes, and other mysterious expenses that seem to multiply like rabbits.
So the question is not whether things are cheap or expensive.
The real question is how long the average citizen has to work to afford them.
Because when people must work days for what others can buy in hours, something deeper is wrong.
I’ll leave you with this.
“Until all are free, all are enslaved.”




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@Waspapping_ Going forward, I guess you'd be more circumspect with your utterances.
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Following my interaction with the relevant security agencies, I have reflected on some of my past tweets and recognize that the tone may have come across stronger than intended. My comments were made in the context of online political commentary, not out of hostility toward any country or its people.
I deeply respect the longstanding relationship between Nigeria and the United States @USinNigeria , as well as other friendly nations, and the many Nigerians who live, work, and thrive in those countries.
Where my words were misunderstood or caused offence, I sincerely regret that. As a patriot, I remain committed to promoting peace, mutual respect, and the security of our dear country while continuing to advocate for a better future for all.
I appreciate all the well-meaning Nigerians and friends who have stood by me during this phase of my first encounter with the security authorities, and I commend the professionalism shown, as well as the respect accorded to me by the personnel throughout the process. I do not take this support for granted.
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