NaijaTruthBomba
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@Minikothe3rd the coalition is the main threat to APC, if the coalition breaks the chances of winning the election breaks.
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@DurkioWiz E get as hand go touch you you go forget say no be cult ground you dey
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@official_Gegeh Hand touch am. He think say everything na cult or juju
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@uglybitcoiin If na portable win una go still saw it was staged. Una no just get sense for this country
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Hey guys let me just say the truth okay...this match was scripted. Portable was paid 70million naira to loose to carter efe this is why he didnt even put his all into the fight. if u watch it, it was at the ending he was trying to bring in more energy.. but this fight was scripted for Efe to win, they just want to Promote Carter efe more.. Carter efe paid over 100 million naira from his Subscription money he got from his fans just to win this match, and he bet over 50 million for him to win and getting all money spent back.. this is all scripted though... if u know, u know. we all know Carter efe cant just beat Portable like this lol... na for dream? all was scripted... i have prove. just ask
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Abeg make una help me thank @olamide Baba Abeg I wa kiss your ass for this beautiful verse wey you give me 🥰😘🌹🫂
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Ok i hear you and i will work on the muscle! For now pls go listen to 'Testimony Of Grace' Album Out Now and tell me your Fav record(s) IcePrince.lnk.to/testimonyofgra… 💪🏾😊
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2027: Don’t Pull Down the Roof
The political season is upon us again, and with it comes the familiar fever of democracy. Across our wards and local governments, across party offices and private homes, consultations have begun. Aspirants are making calls, elders are receiving visits, supporters are counting delegates, and the marketplace of ambition is alive once more.
This is proof that our democracy still breathes. It is evidence that power in our republic is still something to be negotiated, contested, persuaded, and earned. But every season of politics also comes with its temptations. It comes with the temptation to mistake disagreement for betrayal, competition for enmity, preference for exclusion, and media interpretation for truth.
This is why, at this delicate hour, we must speak to ourselves with candour, but also with restraint. We must remind ourselves that a political party is not a battlefield. It is a family. And even in the most spirited family, the roof must never be pulled down because one room appears warmer than another.
We are members of one political household. We may have different aspirations, different loyalists, different zones of influence, different calculations, and different preferred outcomes. That is normal. Democracy was never designed to abolish ambition. It was designed to civilise it. It was designed to teach us that we can compete without destroying one another, disagree without demonising one another, and lose without setting fire to the very platform that gave us a voice.
We must therefore refuse the temptation to be manipulated by the media, by mischief-makers, by vested interests, or by those who profit from division. There will always be those who whisper that one leader has been slighted, that one bloc has been excluded, or that one interest has been buried. These are familiar tricks in the theatre of politics. They are meant to provoke suspicion, inflame supporters, and turn comrades into adversaries before the real contest even begins.
But leadership demands that we rise above provocation. Leadership demands that we ask: who benefits when brothers fight? Who gains when a party weakens itself before facing the opposition? Who profits when those who should be building bridges begin to dig trenches?
The truth is simple. The real challenge before us does not end with the primaries. In fact, it begins after the primaries. The primaries will produce candidates, but the general election will test the strength of our unity. A fractured party may produce a candidate, but only a united party can produce victory. A ticket may be won in a hall, but an election is won in the streets, in the villages, in the markets, in the polling units, and in the hearts of the people.
This is why every party chieftain, every aspirant, every stakeholder, every delegate, and every supporter matters. Each of us is a raindrop, and each raindrop matters in the making of a flood. No raindrop is too small to be ignored. No stakeholder is too insignificant to be respected. No supporter is too ordinary to be heard. The strength of a party is not only in its most visible leaders; it is in the quiet loyalty of the people who stand by it when the applause has faded.
For this reason, moderation must be our watchword. Moderation is not weakness. It is wisdom in public conduct. It is the discipline to speak without poisoning the well. It is the maturity to pursue an interest without injuring the family. It is the grace to understand that today’s disappointment may become tomorrow’s opportunity, and that the bridge we burn in anger may be the road we need in another season.
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‘We Are Briefing Trump On Ongoing Attempts To Undermine And Rig 2027 Elections,’ US Lobbying Firm Blasts Tinubu After Vowing Not To Leave Office parallelfactsnews.com/trump-tinubu-a… via @ParallelFacts

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The Tinubu Administration is spending millions lobbying Congress while failing to adequately address the genocide Nigerian Christians face daily.
@HouseAppropsGOP just passed our annual State Department funding bill which takes serious steps to address this crisis. 🧵

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