OGHENERURO
451 posts

OGHENERURO
@OGHENERUROS
Vincere scis Victoria uti necsis
Abuja, Nigeria Katılım Aralık 2023
174 Takip Edilen19 Takipçiler

@MinEddie5 @DavidHundeyin Make hay while it still shines .2030 is around the corner
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@DavidHundeyin There will always be a NIGERIA worth discussing as long as there are people like you discussing it with the same passion to see it work for its citizens. There will always be a NIGERIA. Somehow, even in the darkest hour, there's still a ray of hope.
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One day in September 2001, when I was a tiny 11 year-old starting secondary school at Atlantic Hall, back when it was located at Maryland, Mrs Adepoju the class teacher announced a group exercise as an icebreaker. All of us were to write our dream holiday location on a piece of paper, and one by one we would read out what we had written.
She started from the other end of the class, so I got to hear multiple answers before it got to my turn. The answers were basically "London", "America", "London", "London", "London", "London", "London", "UK", "London", "London"...
Now for context, I was already reasonably well travelled at the time, and even though my family was not the kind to go off on a jaunt to London at every given opportunity like some of my new peers, I had been privileged to travel fairly extensively around Africa, and I was visually familiar enough with the places being mentioned to know that people from London generally looked forward to going on holiday to warmer parts of the world in Africa, Asia, Southern Europe and Latin America.
I also knew from personal experience that people from "America" and "London" could be found in their thousands enjoying holidays in Lomé, Zanzibar and Accra. You would often find me as the sole African kid surrounded by white kids playing together in the lobby or private beachfront of Lomé's Hotel Deux Fevrier or Hotel Sarakawa whenever my family was in town.
In addition, the travel sections in the Newsweek, TIME and Readers Digest magazines that my dad bought every week made it clear that safari tours in Kenya, Tanzania and South Africa were among the most highly rated holiday experiences on earth. These experiences were so exclusive that it would actually be easier for a Nigerian to take a trip to London than to go on safari in Kenya.
I'm providing all this context to explain why it seemed pretty obvious to me that writing "Kenya" as my dream holiday destination was a valid and reasonable choice. Instead, what happened when it got to my turn was that I read out "safari in Kenya" - and the rest of the class burst into laughter and giggles. I was utterly confused at first. Did they not hear me correctly?
They did.
As one of them helpfully explained in between subsequent chortles, "We're talking about places like London and New York, what is *Kenya*?" The inference of course, was that *Kenya*, located in Africa as it was, did not belong in the same conversation as "London" when discussing destinations.
What constituted a "dream holiday" for these children of Nigeria's elite was a Virgin Atlantic economy class ticket to Gatwick Airport, a 4-week stay with their NHS auxillary nurse aunty and her 2 kids in a cramped 2-bedroom council terrace in High Wycombe, and an Oxford Street shopping rampage yielding 50kg of excess baggage for the return trip, filled with WH Smith pencils and Primark clothes to show off to each other at the end of term party.
While the actual inhabitants of London used monthly payment plans to save up for their once in a lifetime Thomson package holiday tour in Kenya, these ghettofabulous sons and daughters of the Nigerian "elite" looked forward to a cold, uncomfortable experience on a miserable umbrella island as their "dream holiday". Not because it was a dream holiday, but because that was the social expectation they all enforced on each other.
And if you knew better, they *laughed* you.
That day was the first time I experienced something that I have gone on to experience many, many times over the intervening 25 years of my Nigerian life - the existential dread of being surrounded by people whose information level is so far below the one I operate with that we genuinely have almost nothing in common.
It's an experience I am so used to that I no longer bother to explain myself to Nigerians. The people who think that London is a dream holiday destination definitely think that "Iran is a terrorist regime that murdered 30,000 protesters."
Of course they do.

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@gabe_teee This one still Dey talk “electing good leaders “ just another talking heads
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Even Russia and China do not stay away from the USA the way these Pan Africans want African countries to do.
Putin himself is not an isolationist.
No nation can exist on it own without allies. Are Africans being cheated in the world stage?
Yes of course!
Our next solution should be electing good leaders who are better negotiators who can use our resources to get better leverage on the world stage.
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@AJEnglish @mohamedwashere There was a crucial meeting .the president was going to watch a UFC fight..Arrogance that will eventually destroy the empire is here
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Why did the US walk away from ceasefire talks with Iran? What does it mean for hopes to end the war?
Al Jazeera’s @mohamedwashere breaks down what you need to know.
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@badeniyiBas @Big_Mck US didn't stop the WW2 the Soviet Red Army did, I watched a YouTube stuff yesterday where an American historian said it was not the atomic weapon that made Japan to surrender, it's was the nature of the way the Red Army destroyed their elite army in Manchuria that frightened them
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“What’s happening in Iran is the end of America empire, but not the end of the American positive influence or its economy” - Tucker Carlson.
I have one question for everyone: name one positive influence of America on the rest of the world? Just one.
Also, it is indeed the end of the American economy, because the economy of the United States is built on the back of the empire’s imperial power (which it has now lost).
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
RT@RT_com
'THIS IS THE END OF THE AMERICAN EMPIRE AS WE KNOW IT' — Tucker Carlson
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Trump is doing business and you think he's losing the war.
The US has enough oil and as a matter of fact, the US daily oil production is the highest globally.
Trump went ahead and secured Venezuela's oil.
But France, China, India and other EU members are buying from the middle east.
Iran threatened world peace and Trump intervened.
Iran went ahead and closed the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump called on NATO and other middle east oil customers to assist with the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.
They ignored him.
Now Trump is thinking of ending the escalation with the Strait of Hormuz still closed.
Leaving two options on the table.
* Come and buy your oil from the US.
OR
* Go to the middle east and open the Strait of Hormuz by yourself.
A win-win situation for Donald Trump and the US.
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@Dir_Martinsz I this is true this woman is a whore & seeks justification for continuing as one
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Even The Dead Were Not Safe From Colonialism
On March 23, 2026, the remains of 63 members of South Africa’s indigenous Khoisan ethnic groups were reburied in their ancestral land, nearly 2 centuries after being stolen by Europeans under the country’s colonial regime and shipped to Scotland. The ceremony, which took place at Kinderlê Monument, Northern Cape, represented a moment of closure for the descendants of these 63 Khoisan, and another significant step in historical reparations for one of Africa’s longest and most directly colonized countries.
South Africa – as it is known today – was first colonized by Europeans in the mid 17th century. The Khoisan were the first to fight back, but Western support for the settler colonists eventually crushed the rebellion, and what followed was generations of institutionalized violence and dehumanization, perpetrated by these colonists and their descendants against South Africa’s rightful inhabitants. 1994 saw an official end to that reign of terror, with the election of Nelson Mandela as South Africa’s first democratically-elected President. The people of South Africa have been fighting for justice and reparations ever since, while a white minority continues to control nearly 90% of their country’s economy.
@okorieuche_ reports for the Spearhead.
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@helcaboyakh @DavidHundeyin @JoshuaV68954090 Religious zealots in Nigeria are obviously too shallow to think
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@DavidHundeyin @JoshuaV68954090 Ignoring the fact that the Bible never made mention of Israel that was created in 1948, please can a Christian tell me the verse where God said Israel won't loose any war in the Bible?
The ancient Israel lost numerous wars including the loss of the ark, battle of ai, & many more.
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@Emmanu2Edafiaga @aspakyon @Igbani27243 @DavidHundeyin So who come tell you say Iran not get weapon to match whatever they bring
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@aspakyon @Igbani27243 @DavidHundeyin When your papa tell you say make you go school you say no you wan be (area) , see the way area don discombobulate your brain now wey e be say you no fit understand ordinary sarcasm.
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Turns out The United States is all PR and Propaganda as soon as they faced a proper adversary with some Industrial Capacity, they are getting humbled.
What happens when all the brains they suck from the Global South begin to exit America
Narjes Rahmati 🟩☫🟥 نرجس رحمتی@Narjes_Rahmati
The IRGC have announced that it was a $20,000 Shahed-136 drone that destroyed the $700 million US E-3 aircraft.
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@Spearhead_Af @DavidHundeyin But I need something that can work uninterrupted like starlinks .Do you have any satellite internet from china or Russia
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Namibia Rejects Operation Request Of Elon Musk’s Starlink
On March 23, 2026, the government of Namibia made the wise decision to reject the request of Starlink, the satellite internet service of South African-born US tech billionaire Elon Musk, to operate within the country. This decision came 2 years after Starlink blatantly violated Namibia’s sovereignty by operating illegally in the country, and was swiftly sent packing.
Since beginning its African operations in 2023 with a launch in Nigeria, Starlink has expanded to at least 25 African countries, bringing internet connectivity to once disconnected communities for a fee, and routing all traffic from its customers’ devices, by design, through thousands of satellites built and maintained with funding from the US government.
The governments of these African countries are either somehow unaware of the obvious threat that this fact poses to the continent, or far more likely, just don’t care. It is left, then, to the people of Africa to take their long-term interests into their own hands, or submit to the whims of the US government and their own weak governments, for short-term convenience. The US has repeatedly proven itself to be Africa’s single greatest geopolitical enemy, and Elon Musk’s ties to both the US government and white supremacist groups within South Africa make him the last person on Earth that Africans should trust with their data.
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@StarboySAR The us will not win .the world is moving forward to multipolarity.The scriptures are sacrosanct .As the west fades .the east rises
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The Iran War Isn’t About Nuclear Weapons—It’s About Saving America’s Collapsing Empire
🐇The Rabbit Hole goes much deeper; the war with Iran isn’t about “terrorism” or “nukes.” It’s about securing a trade corridor — IMEC — that was designed to reroute global supply chains around China, choke China of energy, install India as the new workshop, and lock the Middle East into a US-Israel controlled infrastructure network
The article archive.is/2026.03.20-191… exposes the geopolitical plumbing, mapping the "Big Picture" that most Western analysts miss because they’re too busy counting missiles, troop deployments or chasing news cycles👇
The bombs falling on Iran are not about nuclear weapons. They are about a trade corridor called IMEC—the India‑Middle East‑Europe Economic Corridor—and the infrastructure that will determine who controls global energy, data, and supply chains for the next generation
IMEC as Imperial Infrastructure—and Why It Needs War
The India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor is not merely an alternative to China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). It is a replacement architecture designed to intercept the natural geography of Eurasian trade and force flows through Western-controlled chokepoints
Consider the geography: Iran sits at the intersection of the International North-South Transport Corridor (linking Russia to India), the Middle Corridor (China-Central Asia-Turkey-EU), and direct China-Iran rail and energy links. These routes threaten to bypass both the dollar system and American military oversight
IMEC solves this by creating a parallel network running through Israeli ports, UAE logistics hubs, and Indian manufacturing—each node controlled by US allies or dependent on American security guarantees. Jared Kushner's $4.6 billion Affinity Partners fund exemplifies the financialization of this strategy: Gulf capital flows through Israeli tech and Indian labor into European markets, generating returns while cementing political alignment
The "Abraham Accords" that enabled this were never peace deals; they were investment-grade risk instruments that transformed occupied territories into viable assets for international capital.
The "technocratic reconstruction" of Gaza fits this model. A genocidal war creates the vacancy; "development" fills it with investor-controlled zones where Palestinian sovereignty is replaced by special economic areas governed by technocratic mandates. This is not reconstruction—it is real estate colonialism with ESG branding
But IMEC has a fatal vulnerability: its eastern sea lane runs through the Strait of Hormuz, a 33‑km bottleneck that Iran can close at will. Without neutralizing Iran, the corridor cannot function
The Sequence: Abraham Accords → Iran War → Hormuz crisis → Gaza Reconstruction
Operation 'Epstein Fury', launched February 28, 2026, was not a spontaneous act of aggression. It was the military clearance phase of a pre‑designed infrastructure plan. The Abraham Accords (brokered by Jared Kushner in 2020) — between Israel and the Gulf states — created the political coalition. The war on Iran is an attempt to clear the military chokepoint. IMEC is the commercial payoff. These are not separate events. They are a sequenced strategy.
Kushner has already planned the reconstruction through Trump's "Board of Peace": his “technocratic administration” for Gaza—a Dubai‑like enclave with a new port and airport—turns that territory into a Mediterranean extension of IMEC. He designed the diplomatic framework, raised $3.5 billion from Gulf sovereign wealth funds for his own firm, and now oversees the governance of the corridor’s key node. Policy, finance, and war in one seamless loop.
India’s Role—and Its Trap
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's February 2026 address to the Israeli Knesset—where he termed Israel the "fatherland" and India the "motherland"—occurred mere days before coordinated strikes on Iran. The familial metaphor reveals the emerging hierarchy: Israel provides the security umbrella and Western-approved gateway; India provides the labor pool and low-cost manufacturing
India is IMEC’s eastern anchor. Adani Ports owns Haifa (Israel) and is developing Vadhavan on India’s west coast. New Delhi is being positioned as the low‑cost manufacturing hub to replace China in Western supply chains.
But the US has signaled it will not grant India the same trade and technology access it once gave China. Washington views its post‑Cold War engagement with Beijing as a mistake that created a rival. So India gets the geopolitical risk—alignment with Israel, proximity to a war zone—without the structural economic lift that built China’s middle class
What if the Israeli-U.S. led coalition wins its war of aggression?
From Washington’s viewpoint, “winning” the war against Iran and locking in IMEC would tick several boxes at once. It would weaken a key energy supplier to China, constrain a major BRICS‑aligned player, and reroute Gulf exports through U.S.-aligned infrastructure where financing, insurance, and standards are dollar‑denominated. That helps preserve the petrodollar, fragments rivals’ energy sovereignty, and deepens allied dependence by turning energy security into a corridor privilege the U.S. can price and police
In that world, BRICS+ finds it harder to build a parallel, yuan‑ or local‑currency energy system because the key pipes and ports are wired into Western banks and rules. Europe, already cut off from cheap Russian gas, becomes even more locked into U.S.-approved Middle Eastern routes—paying monopoly rents in an environment of engineered scarcity and permanent “security risk.” China faces higher energy costs, rising production costs, and more fragile Gulf supply lines just as it battles domestic economic headwinds and tries to fund its own tech and industrial upgrades
If that’s the “U.S. wins” scenario, the “U.S. loses” version looks very different
The obvious consequences of a US loss are immediate and transformative: First, IMEC dies overnight. A resilient Iran that keeps enough military and political capacity to threaten shipping or strike regional infrastructure turns IMEC from an instrument of control into an instrument of risk. Investors see a corridor sitting inside a permanent war zone. Insurance premiums spike, ships reroute, and the picture of a clean, secure alternative to China‑linked routes starts to look like another over‑militarized promise that never delivers, rendering the project uninvestable and commercially irrelevant.
Second, the petrodollar’s collapse will accelerate dramatically: a US military defeat will prove it can no longer guarantee security for Gulf states, which will double down on de-dollarization, trade oil in yuan and other non-dollar currencies, and deepen ties with BRICS+
For BRICS and the wider Global South, that outcome—costly in the short run—actually strengthens the long‑term case for multipolarity. It accelerates efforts to diversify away from U.S. chokepoints: more Russian pipelines and seaborne flows to Asia, deeper China–Iran and China–Gulf energy deals, more experimentation with non‑dollar settlements and payment systems. IMEC’s failure to become a stable empire‑corridor becomes exhibit A in why over‑reliance on U.S.-controlled infrastructure is a strategic risk, not an insurance policy
Europe, meanwhile, gets squeezed either way
A decisive U.S. victory binds it deeper into a U.S.-centric system where energy and sanctions policy are made in Washington—Europe pays the bill. A messy stalemate or visible U.S. failure forces European capitals to confront an awkward question: keep doubling down on U.S. corridor bets that can’t be secured, or cautiously reopen the door to diversified connectivity—including selective engagement with BRI and BRICS energy diplomacy
For China, a failed U.S. attempt to use Iran and IMEC as twin levers is painful but survivable. Beijing’s diversification—Russian oil and gas, African and Latin American supplies, strategic reserves, domestic renewables—was built precisely for this kind of shock. It would still face higher prices and tighter margins, but it would not be structurally cut off. And every barrel that ends up traded outside the dollar, every workaround built under pressure, chips away at the very monetary power Washington is trying to defend
Put simply: if Washington wins big, IMEC becomes the hardware of a renewed, harder U.S. empire—petrodollar cemented, BRICS fragmented, China squeezed. If it doesn’t, the war over Iran and the corridor won’t just expose U.S. limits; it will push the Global South faster toward a world where no single power can redraw the energy map alone
For the rest of us, the immediate question is whose infrastructure will survive it and whether Israel or the U.S. will escalate to the use of nuclear weapons

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@YusufSerunkuma Nationalisation for Uganda? Highly doubtful. We are plagued with ethnicity, the unfinished question of citizenship, corruption, historical ethnic grievances, nepotism etc. Nationalisation would simply fuel graver systemic corruption & subsequent ethnic economic wars.
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After 1979, IMF and World Bank relationship with Iran changed. About this time, same institutions were forcing – literally forcing – structural adjustment on (esp. black) Africa.
Iran was nationalizing. Africa was privatizing – plucking out doors for western capitalists. Southeast Asia, West Asia rejected this colonialism. Look at us who privatized, and look at them who nationalized.
Sanctioned, blockaded, experts assassinated. Look at Iran, Africa.
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@IgboTownCrier @ali_naka @richone090 But love the Jewish puppet masters curently behind the white man..😆
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“Nigeria is a perfect British colonial experiment. You can hardly find any anti-colonial thinking going on there. An average Nigerian loves the white man more than the white man loves himself.”
Genevieve Mbama 🕊 🇳🇬 🇻🇦@Gviev
Seeing BBC showing and covering President Tinubu's State visit to UK, makes me feel proud of Nigeria 🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬
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@_GhChronicles I'll go. Fr
Isreal in chaos is better than the said PEACEFUL Nigeria
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@_GhChronicles Looking for those to draw into the Israeli military reserves
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@HarmlessHQ Nigerians mostly can be very foolish when issues of geo politics are being discussed
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After losing their Supreme Leader and family members, Navy, Air Force, airspace, 17 war ships, missile sites and many missile launchers.
Iran is now offering to discuss terms for ending the war.
The problem now is how to convince Netayanhu, because that man has not even done 5% of what's on his mind.

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The world is about to witness something new.
Let's all keep watching.
This is the most defying speech ever made by president Trump.
Donald J. Trump@realDonaldTrump
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@DavidHundeyin 😆This was how we are supposed to wait during the battle of Armaggedon. Then after Jesus riding a white horse and holding a sword vanguishes the enemies, we come out to clean the mess. Sounds really stupid now. Yet I was literally walking around pointing at houses I will takeover
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This is a literal death cult.
As a former Jehovah Witness, I understand everything in this video completely. The concept and possibility that they could be wrong about anything simply doesn't even exist inside their heads because they're "chosen".
I recognise this!
Sizwe SikaMusi@SizweLo
Israelis hiding in bunkers as Iran prepares to send packages🚀💣🔥
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You need to remove that brain from your butthole and put it on your head and use it. The people of Iran are happy that the US has finally come to their help but you are here supporting their leader, Khamenei. Do you even know what they are passing through? If you don't know, Iran has the highest number of executions in the world. If you truly stand against what you mentioned, you would not see the US as the bully.
That being said, you no get sense.
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Standing with Iran doesn’t mean you stand with Islam.
It means you stand against US & Israeli aggression.
It means you stand against bullying.
It means you stand against imperial force.
It means you stand against pedophilia.
It means you stand against eating babies.
It means you stand with humanity.

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