
Chukwuemeka Chukwu
3.8K posts

Chukwuemeka Chukwu
@EJ_mpa
Mechanical(Project) Engineer👷| Machine learning Engineer | AI enthusiast. Software Engineer.
EMEA Katılım Eylül 2020
1.3K Takip Edilen856 Takipçiler
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View my verified achievement from @worldquantu.
Special thanks goes to Dr. Nicholas Cifuentes-Goodbody, Sir Ricky, & @worldquantu credly.com/badges/5244fa7…
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He made lots of sense in this video clip.
Aji Bussu Onye Mpiawa azụ 🇨🇮@AfamDeluxo
If you’re Igbo, I urge you to watch this video fully and share it. Please don’t ignore or skip it. It’s too important.
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Chukwuemeka Chukwu retweetledi

“In 2018, the Central Bank Of China sat with the Representatives of Central Bank Of Nigeria and said Nigeria, you are buying alot of good from China. Why can’t you pay in Naira while we pay for your goods in Chinese Yuan! They call it currency swap. The total deal value came to about $2.5bn. The US called the former CBN Governor, Emefiele and warned him never to allow the policy succeed”. - Femi Falana
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@XiaomiNigeria Hello @XiaomiNigeria @XiaomiSupport @Xiaomi ,
Like I have I bought Redmi Note 15 Pro+ 5G but there is screen guard to protect the phone and I'm yet to receive the promised gift.
Also I want to track my recently lost Redmi 13C.
I need your assistance and support. Thanks.
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REDMI Note 15 Pro+ 5G 👀🎁
Looks good.
Feels better.
Performs best.
#TitanDurability #XiaomiNigeria #redminote15series #TitanTough



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@XiaomiSupport I have sent a private message, waiting for your response.
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@EJ_mpa Hey there. Thanks for bringing this to our attention. We’d like to look into this further. Please meet us in DM and let us know more about what’s going on. We’ll go from there. twitter.com/messages/compo…
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Chukwuemeka Chukwu retweetledi

Prosperity cannot come by taxing Poverty
As I travel the world and meet leaders who have transformed their nations, one lesson is clear: lasting economic and social progress begins with national consensus. Transformative leaders—those who successfully unite their people around a shared vision—share a defining quality: honesty. Government must be transparent and truthful because citizens deserve nothing less from those who lead them. True leaders do not exploit their people to enrich themselves and a few cronies; they build trust, unity, and shared purpose - the foundation of sustainable progress.
It is against this standard of honest leadership that Nigeria’s current approach to taxation must be measured. If taxation is to function as a genuine social contract, it must be rooted in sincerity, fairness, and concern for the welfare of the people. Every tax policy should be clearly explained, including its impact on incomes and its expected contribution to national development. Without this transparency, taxation becomes a tool of confusion and burden rather than a mechanism for growth and development.
Nigeria must rethink taxation if it is serious about economic growth, national unity, and shared prosperity. The purpose of sound fiscal policy is not merely to raise revenue; it is to make the people wealthier so that the nation itself becomes stronger. Yet today, Nigerians are asked to pay taxes without clarity, explanation, or visible benefit.
The solution begins with empowering small and medium-sized enterprises in every community. When small businesses thrive, jobs are created, incomes rise, and the tax base expands naturally. You cannot tax your way out of poverty - you must produce your way out of it.
This makes the ongoing tax fraud saga particularly alarming. For the first time in Nigeria’s history, a tax law has reportedly been forged. The National Assembly itself has admitted that the version gazetted is not what was passed into law. Yet citizens are being asked to pay higher taxes under this manipulated framework—without transparency, without explanation, and without corresponding benefits.
There is no virtue in celebrating increased government revenue while the people grow poorer. Taxing poverty does not create wealth; it deepens hardship. Any tax system that makes citizens poorer violates the fundamental principles of good governance and sound fiscal policy.
Nigeria needs a fair, lawful, and people-centred tax system—one that supports production, rewards enterprise, protects the vulnerable, and restores trust between government and citizens. Only then can taxation become a true tool for unity, growth, and shared prosperity. -PO
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Chukwuemeka Chukwu retweetledi

As an aside, one cultural feature I would like to delete from Nigerian society is men paying their female friends for sex.
Stop. Paying. For. Sex.
If you're going to pay, find an actual sex worker, do your transaction, have your experience, and keep it pushing.
Don't let that transactional stuff thing seep into your real life. Stop making it socially acceptable for people to have sex with each other in exchange for money without the psychological acknowledgment that this is prostitution (which to be clear, I have nothing against).
Sex is not a precious or rare commodity. It is not a capitalist invention. It is a human experience which must either be freely experienced or traded in an acknowledged transaction. While I am a proud advocate for prostitution (I think it serves a very important societal role), I think it is very important to keep prostitution and regular human relationships firewalled away from each other.
Because this lack of firewall is taking human relationships in Nigeria into this weird, hyper-financialised space where even in committed relationships and marriages, people are trading sex for money. Even in schools now, kids are normalising trading money for sexual favours. So instead of going through the normal, awkward, personality-building teenage development phase that a boy must pass through to become a man, boys are now learning that money is this magic shortcut/hack for getting everything including the girl you like without actually putting in effort or improving yourself in any way - that money in and of itself is what gives you value.
Part of the manifestation of the externally-driven modification of our society that I keep warning about is that 15 years ago, a 14 year-old boy in Igbosere who wanted to date the cute girl in his class would have had to make an effort to learn to hold a conversation, dress and smell good, maybe play a sport or 2 and learn to speak confidently so that Tinuke would notice him. Nowadays, his immediate visual reference for what "man near me who gets all the girls" looks like is one dirty loser on Twitter called Ezra who looks like he has a permanent smell, or one Yahoo Boy down the street with colour riot clothes and trousers hanging below his butt - simply because they wield money.
Someone is trying to morph Nigerian men into a group of disgusting, pathetic losers who try to fill the void in their souls by paying for everything under the sun including love, and we must resist it. There are only so many rich perverts and liquid social deviants. If enough Nigerian men collectively stop normalising the hyper-monetisation of sex, the equilibrium will be restored.
Both the Yahoo Boy with the blue tongue and mouth odour inside his Mercedes GLK, and the sociopath nerd waving his American VC dollars inside his Tesla are signs of the same loser disease that someone wants to become our norm, and we mustn't be afraid to tell losers that they are losers. A loser does not cease to be a loser simply on account of wielding money - money itself is a construct.
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The namings are perfect!
Chief Njoku@NemeremNjoku
She launched first ever Igbo branded perfumes, the names are so awesome
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Chukwuemeka Chukwu retweetledi

@SeplatEnergy I kindly request to know if successful candidates have been shortlisted?
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We’re hiring! Join a team where your skills make an impact.
Click here to apply now
bit.ly/4578Brb
#SeplatEnergy #TransformingLives

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Chukwuemeka Chukwu retweetledi





