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@JasOutfits

trench boy

Katılım Nisan 2022
169 Takip Edilen125 Takipçiler
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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
Leave ADC in 2 minutes. Fill the form, and click send, it’ll customize the email in your name and drop it in your mail. Follow the steps. When you click “Post Publicly” it’ll share on X and include timestamp. None of your data is saved! 1000reasons.vote/adc-resignation
Adedayo Agarau tweet mediaAdedayo Agarau tweet mediaAdedayo Agarau tweet media
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau

I, A. A., have formally resigned my membership of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), effective 03 May 2026. Withdrawing any prior expression of membership. #ADCResignation #Obidients

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Om
Om@betterrcallom·
i always get the urge to watch a super depressing movie when i am already feeling low. something about seeing a character more miserable than me just hits different and idk its like weirdly comforting.
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🎰@JasOutfits·
This country has too many idiots in all the wrong places. You can’t avoid them.🤦‍♂️
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🎰@JasOutfits·
Always remember that this whole movement started from "4 people tweeting in a room".
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Yunie ૮ ․ ․ ྀིა
Can my parents stop getting older while I figure things out for the next 5 years it’s actually so unfair
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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
Now we have a real opportunity to track how our govt performs by personally documenting what they promised to fix. How to use RECEIPT: 1. Click the Link below 2. Take a live picture of what you want to report 3. Fill the short form. That's it 1000reasons.vote/receipt 1/2
Adedayo Agarau tweet mediaAdedayo Agarau tweet media
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau

I've built a functional UGC map of Nigeria that tracks bad infrastructures, roads, ghost projects to the ward level in Nigeria. One map, one repo! So when they come and ask you for vote, you'll show them receipt of what they didn't do. Testing! Let's go 1000reasons.vote

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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
I've built a functional UGC map of Nigeria that tracks bad infrastructures, roads, ghost projects to the ward level in Nigeria. One map, one repo! So when they come and ask you for vote, you'll show them receipt of what they didn't do. Testing! Let's go 1000reasons.vote
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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
Lmao this is so funny. Let me explain a few things so you understand in simple terms: 1. Let me quickly explain what we can do as citizens about Joash Amupitan’s denial: Fund a coalition of @SERAPNigeria, @EiENigeria, @BudgITng, a coalition of opposition’s legal team, or a group of constituents could realistically do four things to call this bluff: (a) File an FOI at INEC demanding proof of any impersonation report the institution has filed with X. (b) Demand receipts from Amupitan personally. As the alleged victim of impersonation, only HE can file a personal impersonation claim with the platform. Since he says cybercriminals used his data, did he file a claim with @X? Two weeks of press statements, did the @inecnigeria chairman file a report? (c) Petition the National Assembly’s committees on electoral matters to open a formal inquiry with subpoena power. (d) Fund a US-based John Doe suit in the Northern District of California — this is the strongest option that can unmask the account, since X is a US company and responds to US court process. The FOI and personal impersonation report cost almost nothing. The National Assembly petition costs nothing. The John Doe suithowever is a little expensive, but it’s within reach of a civil society coalition. Something else that's happening that you don't know about: 2. On the ALDRAP suit: On April 14, 2026, ALDRAP (Association of Legislative Drafting and Advocacy Practitioners) filed suit FHC/ABJ/CS/752/2026 at the Federal High Court Abuja. ALDRAP is the plaintiff. The Chairman of INEC is the defendant. The court is asked to rule that Section 156 of the Constitution only kicks in from the date of nomination — meaning prior political party affiliation cannot disqualify someone from being INEC chairman. See? There's a twist tho: ALDRAP is the same coalition that, in October 2025, wrote to the Senate demanding Amupitan be disqualified. Their letter, signed by Administrative Secretary Jesse Williams Amuga, called his APC counsel role a clear case of bias, conflict of interest, and violation of statutory codes of conduct, and urged the Senate to refuse confirmation. Six months later, the same ALDRAP is in court asking a judge to declare that prior political affiliation doesn’t disqualify him. This could mean they've been working together all along? Throw the case out so when others bring it, they reference the done deal! 3. But even if ALDRAP wins, Amupitan isn’t safe. A ruling in their favour would only close ONE removal route — disqualification based on pre-nomination APC membership. It doesn’t touch these: — Section 157 Senate removal for misconduct. The Constitution lets the Senate remove an INEC chairman by 2/3 address for misconduct or inability to discharge office. A proven false public denial about the X account is textbook misconduct. It goes to integrity, not prior affiliation. ALDRAP’s Section 156 declaration has nothing to do with this. Post-nomination partisan conduct. If forensics prove the X account is his AND was active after his October 23, 2025 swearing-in, that’s a current-state partisanship problem — not a pre-nomination one. Even ALDRAP’s preferred reading of Section 156 doesn’t shield ongoing partisan activity. Perjury during Senate confirmation: If he told the Senate under oath he had no political affiliation, and forensics eventually prove otherwise, that’s criminal exposure. 4. So the question isn’t the one ALDRAP is asking. “Was he APC before?” — that’s the question ALDRAP is rigging the court to answer definitively for him. The real question is: is he currently lying about the X account, and can the evidence prove it?
INEC Nigeria@inecnigeria

PUBLIC STATEMENT FABRICATED X (TWITTER) ACCOUNT OF PROF. JOASH AMUPITAN, SAN

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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
I created a new page where you can find videos of 2023 APC election violence. It’s important you listen, download and share the audio at the top of the page. Share it everywhere on WhatsApp. A govt that kills its people does not deserve to rule us: 1000reasons.vote/2023
Adedayo Agarau tweet media
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau

I put together 1000 Reasons Why You should not Vote for Tinubu in the next election. 1000-reasons.vercel.app Good morning Nigerians.

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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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gst
gst@wearegst·
Nigerians are being poisoned and NAFDAC is watching. Since 2017 after the court ruling, Coca Cola successfully lobbied against the introduction of health warning labels on Fanta and Sprite. Read this slowly and keep sharing.
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𝙘𝙝𝙞𝙗𝙪.
𝙘𝙝𝙞𝙗𝙪.@NOTCHXBU·
Where you can walk in to start your PVC registration in different states Please get your PVC before the end of the week
𝙘𝙝𝙞𝙗𝙪. tweet media𝙘𝙝𝙞𝙗𝙪. tweet media𝙘𝙝𝙞𝙗𝙪. tweet media𝙘𝙝𝙞𝙗𝙪. tweet media
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gst
gst@wearegst·
Say no more. Nigerian babies are fed sugar-packed Cerelac while European babies get the same brand with zero added sugar. The same culprit? Nestlé. Ultimately, NAFDAC is to be held responsible. Their mandate is to protect the health of Nigerians and they are failing at it.
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Fẹrànmi@pherado

If you want to live a life free of constant hospital visits & crushing hospital bills, avoid any product by Nestlé. Their entire company has always been built of profit before people. Do your research on their controversies in Africa, if you doubt me

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Toby
Toby@GudbadboiToby·
@_shwabade_ My save long sha .. buy them all on sales
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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
I put together 1000 Reasons Why You should not Vote for Tinubu in the next election. 1000-reasons.vercel.app Good morning Nigerians.
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🎰@JasOutfits·
@rafaismo Pes 2010, man🥺 Forever legendary in my books
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