
Precious Oseiwe
261 posts

Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

Good insights here. But, as a racist myself, I feel obligated to point out that these answers, insightful as they are, are, or at least can be, downstream from the answers that many racists would give... "low IQ, lazy, etc".
Non-permissive policies and social customs don't spring into existence out of nowhere. Nor do they continue to exist merely because they existed at some point in time.
They exist because the people who benefit directly from them either don't know, or don't care, about the second-order harm they do.
They persist because the broader population, who are harmed by them, are either unable to understand how they lead to harm, or unwilling to take united action to oppose those who benefit from them.
Thus, this answer has its roots in both the capabilities and the default behaviors of the population we're talking about.
It's tempting to create a more uplifting picture of this by calling these things a "bad culture", which can be changed through example and social effort. But Africa is not a country or a culture. It's a continent, and has many cultures.
The only thing they all share is, well, a continent, and some genetics. Specifically those which lead to a low average IQ.
I don't say this gleefully. I'm not happy about it. It doesn't please me to be here discrediting someone else's proposed solutions, without the ability to offer any of my own.
Ultimately, the quality of any society is the average quality of its people. That's especially unfortunate for the people, like Magatte Wade, who are outliers. But I don't see a way around it.
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Precious Oseiwe retweetledi
Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

EXACTLY WHY I TELL BOYS, PAY FOR IT and GET IT OUTTA YOUR SYSTEM.
THE EQUIVALENT IS DUMBER and WASTES TOO MUCH RESOURCES.
Uncle Ruckus@Emarged
And there’s a huge probability that you might be pursuing the casual sex with someone that is also an escort.
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Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

Anyone interested in scholarships in South Korea?
Ugonna Okeke@Victorokeke_
Roads in Busan, South Korea
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@sylviewatikum Let us help you stand out from the crowd:
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Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

This is what a slum area in South Korea looks like. Old township areas with cramped roads and not enough car parking spaces. They're largely inhibited by old and poorer people.




CON@chrisoliver_T
@Victorokeke_ do me a favor and snap there shanties, like the ghetto part of South Korea and quote this. Let’s compare the least developed parts
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Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

Lagos Igbo girls + Yoruba corporate dudes = 5 & 6, and honestly, that’s where the whole tension between Lagos Igbo girls and Igbo men really started.
Here’s my submission.
Elite Igbo families in Lagos raised their sons for business empires. Commerce, trade, family enterprises that was their lane.
But for their daughters, they opened the gates of education to the highest level. Degrees, certifications, exposure no expense spared.
That single decision shifted the balance. Lagos Igbo girls ended up with a major advantage in Corporate Nigeria. Meanwhile, Igbo men who traditionally stayed closer to business and entrepreneurship were barely represented in that corporate playground. So naturally, Lagos Igbo girls dominated spaces where Igbo men were almost invisible.
And it was inside that same Nigerian corporate ecosystem, where Yoruba men were abundant and Igbo men were scarce, that the quiet disdain began to form.
Lagos Igbo girls moved in a world where Igbo men didn’t exist in large numbers, and over time they began to equate that absence with a lack of sophistication.
Corporate culture worldwide has its own air the polished confidence, the curated lifestyle, the subtle elitism.
Lagos Igbo girls soaked all of that in. And in the process, some developed this internal narrative that Igbo men who aren’t common in their “field of play” are somehow beneath their level of refinement.
You see traces of this mentality on this app every day, especially when Lagos Igbo girls jump into conversations. The superiority tone. The “I’m above you” energy.
The subtle internalized opinions, What they think of Igbos in general, our culture and values Even their naming patterns sometimes expose the ideology.
It’s a broad topic, and what I’ve touched here is barely chapter one. I’ll break it down deeper another day.
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Precious Oseiwe retweetledi
Precious Oseiwe retweetledi
Precious Oseiwe retweetledi
Precious Oseiwe retweetledi
Precious Oseiwe retweetledi
Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

@Oliseh_11 50m is a lot of money. Don’t listen to Twitter big names.
Speak with a fund manager or investment advisor; happy to connect you when needed.
Cheers
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Precious Oseiwe retweetledi
Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

I just opened TikTok and saw a 20yr old girl say, ‘Only me PCOS, fatty liver, kidney problems.’
I checked the comments and it was full of girls aged 17–20 saying the same thing.
Then I saw another: ‘Only me PCOS, ovarian cysts, enlarged ovaries, fatty liver, 2 years without menstruation… and I just turned 20.’
My goodness
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Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

Precious Oseiwe retweetledi

Game theory explains why expensive behavior is more credible than cheap behavior. A signal that costs absolutely nothing to produce can be produced by anyone, at any time. This includes people who are lying. Thus, the 'market' for cheap signals becomes overly saturated by liars. Naturally, intelligent observers and rational players discount them entirely. In contrast, a signal that is highly expensive to produce can only be produced by someone for whom the claim itself is true. This is exactly why actions are far more credible than mere words. Sacrifice is inherently persuasive. Costly signals are the only ones that cannot be faked.
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