OBI UBULU

179 posts

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OBI UBULU

OBI UBULU

@PBUY_H

King of all

Katılım Ağustos 2022
75 Takip Edilen9 Takipçiler
OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@instablog9ja Same "I better pass my neighbor" mentality, but still suffering heavily.
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Instablog9ja
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja·
“The fuel prices are biting hard, but look around, let’s thank God together that we are better off than those in Kenya and other African countries” — President Bola Tinubu
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@Wizardxfile @lorddrey Yes. They are responsible for the savior mentality of millions of Nigerians. Everything will go wrong, and they will be waiting for a savior or thinking it won't affect them because they are blessed.
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Wizard™
Wizard™@Wizardxfile·
@lorddrey Pastors are ur problems now, when terrorists are about to invade Nigeria...
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Instablog9ja
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja·
“Despite having zero naira in my account, I sent a church member to withdraw ₦500k, and when she got there I commanded ₦500k to enter my account and it did immediately” — Pastor shares testimony
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
Why this model of education won't work for us is because of the religious beliefs practiced here. A child in their formative years is not allowed to question their beliefs or ask basic critical questions that help develop the mind. Indoctrination of children starts with the family, moves to religious centers, and finally reaches schools. All available social bonds are basically big reprogramming structures where creativity, curiosity, innovation, and growth die; what remains is an adult incapable of critical thinking and nation-building.
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Biggest Mack
Biggest Mack@Big_Mck·
Africa does not need an educational system that produces bankers, business executives, marketers, politicians, brokers, or lawyers. These skills have no relevance to us, or to any society at all. They were invented to solve simulated problems. Think about it: as part of the earliest forms of society, you wouldn’t need all these soft skills and fancy professions. All you would need are people who can think, build, and correct (heal): engineers, doctors, craftsmen, who can then pass that knowledge on to others (teachers). If, as a developing nation, your education system prioritizes producing people who can read, follow instructions, and pass exams just to become business administrators, marketers, or lawyers, then you are not serious about development. This is why the current educational system (handed to us by the West) has to be ditched and replaced with one that is relevant to our present stage of industrialisation. Schools don't have to be formal, they just need to be practical about teaching children how to think and build. After all. The ‘formal’ in formal education only means ‘certified.’ You have to ask yourself, certified by whom? An English-speaking European? If you create your own system and certify it, it is still formal. Don't allow English language deceive you.
Biggest Mack tweet media
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
My own observation is that religion is the biggest obstacle for the African man. It is the major reason for his underdevelopment. The religions practiced are not his own and do not even resonate with his being and existence. No other race on earth is working with a borrowed religion while its economy is not a wreck. A religion that doesn't allow or accept criticism or questioning, a religion that sees its oppressors as friends. The African man has no business with those two religions, and until they are discarded, Africa will never truly grow.
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𝓛𝓸𝓻𝓭 𝓓𝓻𝓮𝔂 👑
You could give the African man a million dollars, a piece of land, and his environment cannot change. All that would change is they would be covered in jewellery & branded clothes, and drive Mercedes-Benz SUVs. And tweet on X every day about how they wish to destroy each other because they are divided into different tribes and 2 foreign ancient religions.
Mark Taylor@Mark___Taylor

Why didn’t blacks just make their neighborhood nice like Whites did? Do they need Whites to do it for them?

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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@Onihax I will keep saying it, the country isn't designed to work. It's meant to extract and serve the interest of others not you.
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Obidient Peter
Obidient Peter@Onihax·
Everybody likes to talk from the outside until you enter the road. I’m a keke rider myself, and with experience… no, it’s not that easy. This idea of “buy keke ₦5M, make ₦200k daily” sounds sweet online, but reality on ground is very different. I work interstate between Lagos and Ogun (can’t mention exact location for security reasons), so let me break it down small: In Lagos alone: Main ticket: ₦1,300 Money for markers, chairman, security, etc: about ₦1,000 Police/agency money (LASTMA, LNSC, etc): varies, but you must settle or risk paying ₦2k–₦10k for “offence” That’s already money gone before you even start breathing. Now Ogun side: Main ticket: ₦1,700 (₦1,300 weekends) “King of boys”: ₦200 Other random levies: ₦500 Then fuel: ₦12,000 daily at least Passengers? They’ll still price you like fuel is ₦200 per litre. We haven’t even talked about: Repairs (very frequent and expensive now) Feeding and daily survival Weekly hire purchase: ₦60k–₦70k for almost 2 years And let me add this: once a new keke hits 6 months, problems start coming one by one. So when everything is deducted… what exactly is left? This job is not “wake up and print money.” It’s survival, patience, and constant expenses. So no — if someone is still broke, it’s not always laziness or chasing job titles. Sometimes, it’s because the system itself is designed to drain you before you even grow. Respect people on the road. The hustle is deeper than it looks.
Victoria A@iamzioraa

This keke (tricycle) is ₦5M Go to a state where nobody knows you. Make ₦200k daily. In 6 months you’ve tripled your money. If you’re still broke, it’s not Nigeria, it’s you. You just want a comfortable job title.

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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@the_Lawrenz 100% it determines everything about your experience and existence in life.
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Kalu Aja
Kalu Aja@FinPlanKaluAja1·
Federal Republic of North Korea There is something deeply wrong
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
The reason why the separatist movement is very confusing to me is that they claim the people want it, but in every election cycle, the elected leaders never champion their ideals or reflect them. And you would think the most logical thing would be for the people to organize and elect leaders who would champion their movement. But year after year, nothing happens. I see all of them as noise and troublemakers.
Aji Bussu Onye Mpiawa azụ 🇨🇮@AfamDeluxo

The day Igbo people in the diaspora set aside the Biafran question and commit to long-term, strategic political engagement is the day Nigeria will begin to experience a true reset and all these insults will stop.

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Instablog9ja
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja·
Army foils d+adly IED att@ck plot in Abia forest, recovers expl%sives
Instablog9ja tweet media
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Jude Bela
Jude Bela@realJudebela·
1. Power 2. Healthcare 3. Education 4. Public transportation (trains) 5. Agriculture Until we get these, every other thing is a distraction.
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@realJudebela Spot on; stable, affordable power is the bedrock of industrialization. I doubt the owners of the country will ever allow it to happen.
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@_Jaredad I think you misunderstood the caption. The re-forms are for them not you.
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Jaredad.🐸®️
Jaredad.🐸®️@_Jaredad·
"We discussed the economy & how Nigerians can benefit from the reforms" Joke right? What have Nigerians ever benefitted from the reforms in the past since APC came in apart from ~SUFFERINGS & ~More Hardship
Femi Ote$@realFemiOtedola

Yesterday, I spent Easter Sunday with our dear President, Bola Tinubu, and my bestie Aliko Dangote. We discussed the economy and how Nigerians can benefit from the reforms. On a day of resurrection and renewal, Mr President was still working. That kind of commitment gives you hope for Nigeria 🇳🇬 … F.Ote💲

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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
The country's problems are not hard to see; a mere look at the systems shows that everything is fundamentally wrong. The system wasn't designed to work, but to extract maximum resources, happiness, and will from the citizens for the few at the top. A complete Ponzi scheme where you keep investing but get nothing.
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Actual definition of 'conspiracy theory' - "The belief that a covert, malevolent group secretly manipulates major events or situations, often disregarding mainstream evidence for alternative explanations." Nigerian definition of 'conspiracy theory' - "Anything that clashes with my narrow understanding of the world around me according to the tiny version of reality imparted to me by my education, my church, my job and my peer group, even if that thing is admitted and explained in great academic detail in declassified government documents, official reports, public records, and private memoirs, thus making it not a 'belief' at all but an evident and manifest reality, which my tiny brain nonetheless refuses to process." And that's why I don't do 'intellectual discourse' with Nigerians. I'd rather engage a door in conversation. At least the door would shut the fuck up and not constantly argue and try to 'correct' me with wrong, outdated or false information. Especially the talkative ones who consider themselves "smart" but still haven't figured out why everytime their country has a remotely decent president, he mysteriously dies in office or gets run out of town by a mysteriously well armed insurgent group that has better weapons than the Nigerian military. Ozuor² with big English.
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The married man
The married man@marriedmn·
Men if you want your marriage to work: - You must be older than your wife - You must be more educated than your wife - You must be richer than your wife - You must be bigger and stronger than your wife. - You must be more exposed than your wife - You must be more emotionally intelligent - You must be a good leader Anything less than this is doomed to fail.
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Only a Nigerian Christian can write with all seriousness on Olusegun Obasanjo's internet in the year 2026 AD that Israel - the country founded by literal religious terrorists who drove indignes off their land with a bombing campaign - has a "unique history of battling oppression". You people are not real.
Elikem@kiDontHEbLoK

@DavidHundeyin @Uncle_Thi Why is Israel voting against this? I thought they would resonate with anti-slavery motion, given their unique history of battling oppression.

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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@DavidHundeyin To the Nigerian people who think and see running away as the solution to the social and collective problems, you can easily see that the people over there don't even rate you in any form. You're only just a policy away from being sent back or jailed.But continue running away.
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
By the way, if you're African and you're new to geopolitical awareness, you can use this picture as a guide to know who is on your side and who is your enemy in this world. Notice how China and Russia voted? Then notice how your oyibo faves voted (or abstained, which is also a type of vote)? Shebi "not everything is about race"? You see how white people ALWAYS instinctively bunch together, from Andorra to Norway, whenever it's time to do some racist shit? That's called Pan-Europeanism. The antidote is Pan-Africanism.
David Hundeyin tweet media
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@Wizarab10 @iamayolawal The silent government is not the problem , the major Issue is the masses who are quiet. An oppressor has no incentive to do good it's the oppressed who should speak up and demand better.
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Sir Dickson
Sir Dickson@Wizarab10·
Again, as always, @iamayolawal speaks to the pain point of millions of Nigerians. How can fuel be nearing N1400 per liter and the government is silent? No reliefs, no plan, no palliatives. This is beyond being unacceptable. It is wickedness.
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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@DavidHundeyin In summary what does freedom mean to you personally and what does it mean to you as a group of people or as a race.
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Whenever I see Africans having all of the takes over countries like Eritrea, I just want to cover my face and go somewhere to have a lie down. Because the way some of you talk is a confirmation of every malicious racial stereotype that was ever created about African people. You have no original thoughts or independent opinions inside your head. Everything that comes out of your mouth is Garbage-In-Garbage-Out programmed nonsense that was dictated directly directly into your head by the BBC news anchor who talks like they have plums in their mouth. Kinikan "Eritrea is a dictatorship," "They don't have freedom," "Police state that citizens need permission to leave." First of all, let's be clear on something - no African country is fundamentally better off than Eritrea. You might not be under the same sanctions as they are, so you might have access to the cheapest cast-off consumer items from global trade that China gracefully lets you have, which creates the illusion of wealth and comfort, but the minute your weak and compromised governments ever try to exert actual sovereignty and independence, is the minute you will discover that global trade is a mafia operation controlled by US sanctions, and we are ALL at the same level as Eritrea. Just because you have cheap consumer items from Guangzhou and Shenzhen, and you have MTN or Safaricom 4G internet that you use to play Nairabet and watch porn does not make you better off than an Eritrean who doesn't have those things. Because the price your country is paying for having those things can be measured in all kinds of horrible ways, like how IMF structural adjustment has devalued your Nigerian currency 99.7% since 1986, or how British soldiers at their base in Kenya regularly rape and murder local women without being legally answerable to Kenyan law. That is the price Eritrea refused to pay, so think about that before you sneer at people who to a certain extent are actually better off than you. Second and more importantly, "freedom" is a concept that you should define for yourself as an adult human being with a fully functioning brain. If a group of white people and their NGO/media/civil society servants in Abuja and Nairobi have told you all your life that "freedom" means "multiparty universal suffrage elections", "free trade", "free press" and "individual liberty", that is fine and I love it for you. But as a grown-ass adult in a world that is clearly bigger than you, perhaps you also need to ask yourself what "freedom" means to Agnes Wanjiru, the Kenyan nursing mother in Nanyuki who was gang raped by British soldiers, stabbed in her lungs (so she drowned in her own blood), and dumped (alive) into a septic tank where her body was discovered 3 years later. What does "freedom" mean to the 3 million people who died in Nigeria's civil war, which was externally instigated by Charles de Gaulle, who wanted to punish Nigeria and set it up for long term instability because Nigeria dared to publicly oppose France's nuclear bomb tests in Algeria? What does "freedom" mean to the local Tuaregs in Algeria around those nuclear test sites whose descendants still suffer extremely high rates of cancer, birth defects, and genetic mutations 60 years later? What does "freedom" mean to 40 million black South Africans who were born into an economy whose structure has NOT changed since 1994, and who are statistically condemned through no fault of their own, to live tiny lives surviving off small government handouts, all because someone crossed the Atlantic, came to their country, stole all the means of production, and codified their theft into law? All these people I have mentioned have elections and smartphones and Google and porn and mobile money and some measure of gay rights, and whatever other thing that these NGO people have told you constitutes "freedom." What use are these things to them? As an African adult in 2026 with a functioning, non-colonised mind that can take in and process information independently - and not just mindlessly parrot whatever you have been told - you should be able to define what "freedom" means in your own personal, communal, national and civilisational context. Because the ability to trade memecoins, use Uber, make an online purchase with your Mastercard, subscribe to somebody's OnlyFans, express dissatisfaction with your government openly, be part of political opposition, or attend a Pride parade are definitely important freedoms to some people. But freedom from white people and their IMF, World Bank, CIA, MI6, Mossad, DGSE, International Bank of Settlements, New York Federal Reserve, foreign military bases, NGO industrial network, sponsored terrorism, contrived colour revolutions, and Epstein safari trips to hunt and eat your kids are even more important freedoms to other people. And since in the world that existed between 1945 and 2023, it was basically impossible to have both sets of freedoms at the same time, Eritrea chose the second set of freedoms over the first set, as is their sovereign right to. So if you come from a country that allowed Epstein islanders to hunt and eat your babies and drown your women in septic tanks in exchange for having Mastercard, Sportpesa and Pornhub, maybe focus on managing the faustian bargain your government made and quit rubbernecking at Eritrea. You actually have bigger problems than they do.
Wode Maya ®@wode_maya

Tonight YouTube video is about Africa’s Most Isolated Country! *No internet On Your Sim Card *No ATM machines *can’t leave the country without approval from government *can’t travel from one city to another without permit *No Independent Press *One President since the country gained its independence *No National Election *Visa is almost impossible to acquire in Africa *Mandatory and indefinite 18 months internship *Health Care Is Free *Education is Free *Safest Country In Africa *The longest war for Independence with Ethiopia *You can’t fly from Ethiopia to Eritrea even though they share a border See You at 4pm gmt

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OBI UBULU
OBI UBULU@PBUY_H·
@Mrbankstips They off portal 😭 they learnt learning from the best
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MrBanks💰
MrBanks💰@Mrbankstips·
That’s just the truth, what they did last night was unbelievable. I was also affected, couldn’t access my bets for the entirety of UCL games.
🅴🅷🅸🆉🅸🅱🆄🅴 🇳🇬🇬🇧@osundejohn

@Mrbankstips Nigerians are the ones killing Nigeria. Immediately after the sportybet issue last night, I deactivated my account and created a new one with Stake. Simple! I don’t have time for storytelling 😠 If sportybet losses 500k-1m naija players, their head suppose reset 📌

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