Munzeel

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Munzeel

Munzeel

@Geomunzil

Alhamdulillah || Geology || Energy || COYG❤️

Nigeria Katılım Mart 2020
382 Takip Edilen134 Takipçiler
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Global Statistics
Global Statistics@Globalstats11·
50 YouTube Channels Schools Don’t Want You To Know 🤯🎓🚫 1. 📐 Khan Academy – Math, Science, Economics 2. 💡 TED-Ed – Animated lessons on every subject 3. 🔬 CrashCourse – Academic subjects, history, science 4. 💻 freeCodeCamp. org – Coding, tech, software 5. 📊 Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell – Science, philosophy 6. 🔍 Veritasium – Science & experiments 7. 📜 SmarterEveryDay – Curiosity-driven science 8. 🧪 AsapSCIENCE – Science concepts 9. 🔨 Mark Rober – Engineering & experiments 10. 🌍 National Geographic – Nature, science, culture 11. 🌎 Wendover Productions – Geography, economics, logistics 12. 📚 CGP Grey – Society, systems, geography 13. ✍️ MinutePhysics – Simplified physics 14. 🌌 PBS Space Time – Astronomy & deep physics 15. 🧬 SciShow – Science topics 16. 🧱 3Blue1Brown – Advanced math visualized 17. 🎭 The School of Life – Psychology, relationships, philosophy 18. 🧩 MindYourDecisions – Math puzzles, logical thinking 19. 🛠️ DIY Creators – Practical DIY skills 20. 🌱 Epic Gardening – Gardening science & skills 21. 🧠 Vsauce – Curiosity, science, deep explanations 22. 🧬 ColdFusion – Technology, innovation, history 23. 🛰️ Isaac Arthur – Futurism, advanced science 24. 🤖 Two Minute Papers – AI, research explained 25. 🚀 Everyday Astronaut – Space & rocket science 26. 💻 Fireship – Tech explained fast 27. 🧠 Ali Abdaal – Productivity & learning 28. 📘 How Money Works – Finance basics 29. 💸 Patrick Boyle – Economics, finance, markets 30. 🎓 Thomas Frank – Productivity & study systems 31. 🗺️ RealLifeLore – Geography, world systems 32. 🧪 Physics Girl – Science experiments explained 33. 🌍 It’s Okay To Be Smart – Science education 34. 🧬 SciShow Psych – Psychology 35. 🛠️ Practical Engineering – Engineering explained 36. 👨‍🔬 Steve Mould – Science & quirky phenomena 37. 🎥 Vox – Global issues explained visually 38. 📊 Economics Explained – Economics simplified 39. 🔍 Aperture – Deep investigations & analysis 40. 📜 Ancient Architects – Archeology & lost history 41. 📚 History Matters – Bite-sized history 42. 🌿 Nature on PBS – Wildlife & environment 43. 🚀 Real Science – Scientific discoveries 44. 🎒 CrashCourse Kids – Learning basics 45. 🎨 Proko – Drawing fundamentals 46. 📝 EDX – University-level online courses 47. 🎓 MIT OpenCourseWare – Full academic courses 48. 🧪 Periodic Videos – Chemistry explained 49. 🔭 Fraser Cain / Universe Today – Space & astronomy 50. 🧠 Big Think – Ideas, science, expert talks
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Munzeel
Munzeel@Geomunzil·
@IdrisAOni1 Alhamdulillah that we get to learn so much through their ignorance. Jazakallahukhair Dr🙏
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𝑰𝒅𝒓𝒊𝒔 𝑨. 𝑶𝒏𝒊 PhD
Your claim contains several inaccuracies based on historical accounts from both Islamic traditions and scholarly sources. Uthman ibn Affan (the third Rashidun caliph, r. 644–656 CE) did not "rewrite" the Qur'ān. He commissioned a committee (led by Zayd ibn Thabit, a scribe of the Prophet Muhammad) to produce standardized copies based on the existing compilation from Abu Bakr's time (kept by Hafsa, a wife of the Prophet). This was to resolve disputes over regional variations in recitation and dialect among expanding Muslim communities. He then ordered other personal or variant manuscripts burned to enforce uniformity and prevent confusion, not because they were "wrong," but to establish one official text in the Quraysh dialect (the dialect of revelation). This is documented in primary Islamic sources like Sahih al-Bukhari (vol. 6, book 61, hadith 510) and widely accepted across Sunni and most Shia scholarship as a preservation effort. Burning was a respectful disposal method for sacred texts in that era. Modern manuscripts (e.g., early copies like the Topkapi and Sana'a) align closely with this Uthmanic recension, supporting textual stability. The First Fitna (656–661 CE) was triggered by Uthman's assassination in 656 CE by rebels dissatisfied with his governance (accusations of nepotism and centralization of power). His killers were not broadly "the Prophet's followers" in a unified sense, but a group of dissidents from provinces like Egypt and Iraq. After his death, Ali ibn Abi Talib became caliph, but factions (including Aisha, Talha, Zubayr, and later Muawiya, Uthman's relative and governor of Syria) demanded justice for the killers, leading to battles like the Battle of the Camel (656 CE) and Battle of Siffin (657 CE). This was a political power struggle, not directly caused by the Quran standardization (which occurred earlier, around 650–652 CE). - Prophet Muhammad's death: 632 CE - Uthman's standardization of Quran: ~650–652 CE - Uthman's assassination: 656 CE - Start of First Fitna: Immediately after, 656 CE - First Crusades: 1095–1099 CE (over 400 years later) These events occurred in the 7th century CE, centuries before the Crusades. The Qur'ān issue and civil war were separate (though both under Uthman's caliphate), with the war rooted in political grievances post-assassination. Islamic scholarship (Sunni and Twelver Shia) affirms the Uthmanic text's authenticity, though some early Shia sources debated details before consensus on its completeness emerged. If you're drawing from specific claims suggesting corruption, that is due mainly to your own ignorance and sentiment.
Ucandoit!588@Crazyhorse588

@IdrisAOni1 Uthman the third caliph rewrote quran, ordered earlier copies burned which started first muslim civil war hundreds of years before the crusades. The Prophets followers killed uthman and were killed. So it had to be earlier than that.

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Unjoerated Joe
Unjoerated Joe@Unjoerated·
@Big_Mck Were they expecting the man to perform magic in 2 years?
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Biggest Mack
Biggest Mack@Big_Mck·
While the number plate format matches Burkina Faso, there’s however no actual confirmation that this is the capital or this video recent. Meanwhile, there are places like this in Abuja. In fact, there’s a road behind Gwarimpa’s War College settlement that you will pass and get exactly this. I’m talking Gwarimpa o, not even Bwari or Kuje, since you are mad for comparing a country that freed itself from imperialism 2 years ago.
PATRIOTIC SOJA ($TSIR-MUNCHAN)@Pressman2040

This is Ouagadougou the capital city of your Africa Liberator Ibrahim Traore. The same country some of you are comparing with NIGERIA 🇳🇬. #NigeriaWillSucceed

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Abba
Abba@Abbaaoji·
@wahalaMann @DejiAdesogan Relax man, you've got Army War college, National Defense college, Police staff College, Police training College, Custom command and staff College etc
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UNCLE DEJI™️
UNCLE DEJI™️@DejiAdesogan·
BREAKING 🔥 President approves establishment of NEW additional Nigerian Army Depot in Abakaliki Now we have 3 diff training locations Depot NA Osogbo - Southern Region Depot NA Zaria - Northern Region Depot NA Abakaliki - Eastern Region
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David Abdulrazak Atta
David Abdulrazak Atta@the_davidatta·
The problem with this MiddleBelt that you're all trying to build is the foundation.. Its built on anger, hate and fear. Not vision, not hope, not optimism. Count me out, and I'm sure many others from Kogi, Kwara, Nasarawa and Niger state also won't be a part of what you're building. I pray you don't become the IPOB of the region because they're your loudest cheerleaders.
Plateau Asian girl🌟@CatiaKyen

I remember when Middle Belt patriots started pushing the “we identify as Middle Belt, not North” agenda. Many of you, especially from the Jos community, hated it. We were called clout chasers trying to cause division and received endless insults. Some would will wake up and say, “I’m from North Central, not Middle Belt, what is even Middle Belt?” Now that it’s gaining mainstream attention and recognition, the same people who mocked it are claiming the glory. Smfh😂

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Ahmad Salkida
Ahmad Salkida@A_Salkida·
The Rwanda genocide didn’t begin with machetes — it began with dangerous stereotypes that dehumanised an entire group. Nigeria must take note. Yes, there are hundreds of violent criminals who happen to be Fulani, just as there are Muslim extremists. But they represent a tiny fraction of their communities. And are Christians or any group immune to crime or violence? Absolutely not. Every community has its share of offenders and millions of law-abiding citizens. One of those law-abiding Fulani is the Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations. When the government fails to protect its citizens, fear fills the vacuum, and that fear can be mischaracterised, then escalate into hate, and ultimately become something far worse. We must confront insecurity head-on, without criminalising entire ethnic or religious groups.
Imakunblog@imakun122

I’m on my way to Ogun Waterside, and I just entered a car from Ijebu-Ode. To my surprise, everyone inside is Fulani, and they look scary to me…….🤦‍♂️

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Munzeel
Munzeel@Geomunzil·
@BashirAhmaad Go and watch the movie first Malam Bashir. There's more in the movie you need to see than there is in the trailer.
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Bashir Ahmad, OON
Bashir Ahmad, OON@BashirAhmaad·
The reason why some Arewa people are angry about The Herd movie is not because we are denying the reality of banditry, far from it. It is about the dangerous consequences of profiling an entire ethnic group and region that has already suffered immensely from years of insecurity. I watched the teaser on @NetflixNaija, and even though I haven’t watched the full movie yet, the one clear problem that stands out is stereotyping. In the teaser, Fulani herders are shown crossing the road with their cattle, while a newlywed couple inside a car and other travellers drive by, then suddenly the herdsmen pull out guns, start shooting indiscriminately and kidnap everyone. This single scene paints a picture that is actually facile as it is dangerously inaccurate. The truth is this, it is true and verifiable that some of the bandits terrorizing innocent people and our communities are Fulani. We have consistently and openly acknowledged that, called them out, condemned their atrocities and demanded that authorities deal with them mercilessly. Yet the overwhelming majority of Fulani herders are innocent and also among the very victims that have suffered the most from these terrorists. Many have lost their cattle, their livelihoods and their families. So producing a movie to profile them all as armed kidnappers only reinforces a harmful stereotype that fuels suspicion, resentment and even violence against innocent people. Film and media carry immense influence, they shape global perceptions and frame narratives, especially about communities that are poorly understood outside their regions. Instead of the producers of The Herd helping the world understand the complexity of Nigeria’s insecurity, the movie falls into the trap of blanket judgment. When such an international movie, portrays a one-dimensional story, millions of viewers around the world walk away believing that every Fulani herder is a terrorist and that is how stigma is created. That is how innocent people become targets of discrimination and harassment. Before producing a film that touches on such a sensitive and complex national issue, the producers should have done intensive field work by engaging stakeholders, security experts, victims, researchers and even representatives of pastoralist groups to help them capture the full picture of the situation. I believe @AliNuhu’s Nigerian Film Corporation should have given proper guidance to prevent such damaging portrayals. In the end, all we are saying is simple, tell the story. Condemn the criminals. Call out the terrorists. But do not cast a shadow of suspicion over millions of innocent herders who have nothing to do with these atrocities. Our country is dealing with a complex security challenge and the last thing we need is media content that deepens stereotypes and fuels more division. The producers should have known better.
Bashir Ahmad, OON tweet mediaBashir Ahmad, OON tweet media
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Dr Juliet Turner
Dr Juliet Turner@juliet_turner6·
🎊 I passed my viva exam! After ~4 years of research, I successfully defended my thesis. You can call me Doctor 😎
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Nabiyla Risfa Izzati
Nabiyla Risfa Izzati@nabiylarisfa·
Finally, officially, PhDone! I have so many things in mind but also so overwhelmed to even stated a single coherent sentence to illustrate what I am feeling right now. I’ll come back again tomorrow — but for now, it’s Dr. Izzati 👩‍🎓✨
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Munzeel retweetledi
𝐇𝐢𝐝𝐢𝐦𝐚, 𝐏𝐡.𝐃.
𝗬𝗼𝘂 𝘄𝗮𝗻𝘁 𝘁𝗼 𝗯𝗼𝗼𝘀𝘁 𝘆𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗢𝗶𝗹 & 𝗚𝗮𝘀 𝗰𝗮𝗿𝗲𝗲𝗿 𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲𝘀 𝗼𝗿 𝗴𝗿𝗼𝘄𝘁𝗵? 𝗛𝗲𝗿𝗲 𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝘀𝗼𝗺𝗲 𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗼𝗴𝗻𝗶𝘇𝗲𝗱 𝗰𝗲𝗿𝘁𝗶𝗳𝗶𝗰𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀. In today’s energy landscape, just having a degree is not enough. Companies now want skills, proof of competence, and globally recognized certifications. Whether you’re a student, fresh graduate, NYSC member, job seeker, or working professional, here are reputable platforms to get legit Oil & Gas certifications that employers respect: ✅ Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) – Petroleum Engineering Certification (PEC) spe.org/en/certificati… ✅ OPITO – Global Industry Training & Safety Certifications opito.com ✅ IADC (International Association of Drilling Contractors) – WellSharp (Well Control Training) iadc.org/wellsharp/ ✅ American Petroleum Institute (API) – Individual Certification Program (ICP) api.org/products-and-s… ✅ NEBOSH – International Technical Certificate in Oil & Gas Operational Safety nebosh.org.uk/qualifications… ✅ OPITO Training Standards Library – Safety & Technical Skill Courses opito.com/industry/our-s… ✅ IADC Drilling Industry Training (DIT) – Competency Courses & Accreditation iadc.org/training-accre… ✅ NEBOSH Oil & Gas Operational Safety – Course and Assessment Details nebosh.org.uk/our-qualificat… ✅ OPITO Open Learning & eLearning – Online Courses & Certificates learning.opito.com ✅ IADC Well Control Awareness / Role-Specific Training (Online) learn.wellsharp.org Quick Tip for Beginners: Start with NEBOSH or OPITO safety & operational training. These open doors in drilling, production, HSE, refinery operations, gas plants, FPSOs, and offshore work. Nigerian recruiters and multinational operators recognize these certificates; no stories, no “Google school” certificates. #OilAndGas #EnergyIndustry #CareerDevelopment #Engineering #HSE #PetroleumEngineering #Nigeria #FreshGraduates #SkillsForTheFuture #Certification #ProfessionalGrowth ~ For safety core courses (e.g., BOSIET, OPITO Rigger) you may budget ₦200,000-₦300,000+ for local delivery. ~ For well‐control, drilling or supervisory‐level global courses budget ₦2M+ (because USD cost) or seek group rates/offers.
𝐇𝐢𝐝𝐢𝐦𝐚, 𝐏𝐡.𝐃. tweet media
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Positivity King 👑 | Roland Nnamdi Gabriel
@KimIversenShow Fulani came to our village and killed seven people. When our youths rose to defend our people, the Nigerian army stepped in to protect the Fulani terrorists and in the process of defending them they killed many of our people. Go to the hospital they are there said Plateau man.
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Kim Iversen 🇺🇸
Kim Iversen 🇺🇸@KimIversenShow·
Why are we threatening war with Nigeria? Here’s why: Nigeria was the single largest recipient of Chinese construction financing in the first half of 2025, with $21 billion in construction deals, making it a focal point for China’s Belt and Road Initiative. In addition, in late October 2025, Nigeria and China signed a major $3.5 billion investment partnership. This agreement focuses on boosting Nigeria’s infrastructure, energy, and manufacturing sectors, including the construction of new solar power plants, modernization of rail lines connecting major cities and expansion of industrial parks. The partnership is seen as a transformative move for Nigeria’s economic strategy. ….But if the country is in ruin because of war in the name of “saving Christians” China can’t expand their belt and road. That’s the REAL reason we’re threatening Nigeria.
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Okpalachukwu Christian Chukwuebuka
@ronkecarew @BiluluCharles Hehehe south east kwa ?? Na your Nigeria government carry python dance come Abia and killed many before this incessant killings started in south east which turned to a full blown agitation for Biafra or possibly you've forgotten right ? Continue shooting yourself on the leg🤣😂
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Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri
Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri@ronkecarew·
These are the issues, welcome US involvement as what? Moral police? Many Nigerians are unpatriotic and its nauseating at this point, Nigeria is a sovereign nation, daily gunshots in US , who police them
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Jane Orumen
Jane Orumen@Ohijeme·
Your government used divide and conquer to separate us using that tactics to conquer them too is not a bad idea. We love to be recolonised at least they will build roads for us, chase away insecurity, we will have good schools in short we will have the basic things that pertains to living like human beings.
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The Elbildad 🇳🇬埃尔比
The US government has no shame!!! Country of particular concern my foot. The US that has an average of 79 gun suicides a day, more than 50 gun related homicides daily and roughly 5 deaths daily due to gun accident is not categorizing itself as a country of particular concern. Trump, you are voted in America, by Americans!!! You can not use the old tactics of turning people against each other in Nigeria, it won’t work that way. Divide and conquer? Take our resources? Turn us into refugees? I am sorry but you can go elsewhere. We know we have our problems, killings of innocent Nigerians is true and absolute, but we will solve it ourselves and we require nobody to interfere with our internal affairs. Nigerian, regardless of religion, ethnicity or any geographic characteristic must be protected by law and citizens alike.
The Elbildad 🇳🇬埃尔比 tweet media
Secretary Marco Rubio@SecRubio

The ongoing slaughter of thousands of Christians in Nigeria by radical Islamists and Fulani ethnic militias is both tragic and unacceptable. As @POTUS said, the United States stands ready, willing, and able to act.

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Gideon Chibuike
Gideon Chibuike@GideonChibuike5·
@osazenoo @UnlimitedChuks Yes!!! The same biafrans the past and current government is trying tooth and nail to eradicate, destroy, make homeless, so you dont know "God is a God of justice " what is our business with Dangote gains, don't we pay for his oils. Say something else bro.
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Osas
Osas@osazenoo·
Dangote just announced an expansion of his refinery capacity from 650,000 barrels per day to 1.4 million bpd and you think America and its allies will just fold their arms and watch Nigeria take over their oil market? Let’s be clear: this isn’t about democracy or diplomacy; it’s an economic battle for dominance. Whoever controls energy controls power. So, instead of echoing foreign narratives, stand with your country. Nigeria is finally building what others never wanted us to have; self-sufficiency. Stop thinking like a slave. Start thinking like a nation.
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OBINNA👑
OBINNA👑@EOIBE_Esq·
@sammyalfred7 Lol. The root cause is government failure and greed of one man. If you don’t remove the root cause it’s bound to repeat Save us this gaslighting because it’s aimed at protecting the ones in Nigeria who caused this kind of chaos in Sudan.
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Ayodeji. S. Akerele
Ayodeji. S. Akerele@sammyalfred7·
Nigerians who are politically naive need to learn an important lesson from the ongoing war in Sudan. Sudan is a muslim country. The UAE-backed RSF & Sudanese army are both muslims but they fight each other to control strategic resources Being a christain, muslim or even a yoruba country doesnt save you from the woes & expansion of imperialism. The only thing that will save you is knowledge, unity & organization against imperialist forces both home & abroad. #freesultannow
Abdul Quadir@MilitantTracker

🚨🇸🇩 Sudan: Massive Reinforcement: A historic national uprising surges toward Kordofan and Darfur — thousands of soldiers, hundreds of vehicles, one mission: to crush the UAE-backed Rapid Support Force militias and reclaim every inch of Sudan’s land and honor.

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POOJA!!!
POOJA!!!@PoojaMedia·
Need a fully funded scholarship to learn a tech skill? Follow @UnivadOnline and pick any number from 1–85 12 of those numbers unlock a 100% scholarship, covering both tuition and application fees. Closing tonight o Goodluck!
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NUPRC
NUPRC@NUPRCofficial·
WE DID IT !!!!! Commission Chief Executive, Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, Engineer Gbenga Komolafe (right), celebrates with his Sudanese Counterpart, Mr Alsadig Mahmoud Gabir, at the historic signing of the African Petroleum Regulators Forum (AFRIPERF) in Ghana
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Sgt Show
Sgt Show@SgtShow01·
What’s that? Let’s just pray harder! If we believe enough, maybe our politicians will find their hearts and stop grabbing our tax money like it’s their own piggy bank. Who knows? The God of Oyedepo might even fix their souls. The government can change our lives—we just gotta keep hoping! But come on, are Nigerians backing the government enough? Every time they raise taxes, we moan. When they pick their buddies for big jobs, we jump on them. When they stop a project halfway because the economy got tough and they had to dip into the project funds to “eat,” we hit the streets. How’s the government supposed to work like that? They can only choose people they trust, right? It’s not like they can make new leaders from scratch, can they? Running a country is tough! We need to give them a break—Rome wasn’t built in a day, you know. Sure, Nigeria’s been around almost as long as Rome, but as long as the sun keeps rising in the east, let’s not stress our poor president. He’s got a lot on his plate, and he’s worn out—hence those weekly international vacations. It is well.
Opeyemi Babalola@BOTAD01

Nigeria's deliverance is in the hands of Nigerians.

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