Prince💫
24.5K posts

Prince💫
@Prince_of_X1
Social media growth expert, tech enthusiast | Am Here for memes, deep talks & random vibes | What's something you're obsessed with ? DM for promotion and ads.
Katılım Şubat 2022
6.9K Takip Edilen27.2K Takipçiler

Protocol V22 has completed its historic mission—clearing the clutter and building a solid foundation.
Now, it’s time to brace ourselves for the V23 storm coming this May. This is no longer just a test; it’s the final technical preparation before we head out to the open sea at Miami (Consensus 2026). Pioneers, fasten your seatbelts!"

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Prince💫 retweetledi

@leodey4u @Amaddream_ Hmm I was there before and I can tell you that it's not easy
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@FavorGrace90 I really believe in the power of positivity, to keep it short, I will use it to do my traditional marriage then open a small hair salon for my wife.
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@Prince_of_X1 Pi ruined me 😂
I never make financial mistakes reach wetin i do for Pi.
Confidence was too high 😂
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According to @Iamlyday1 , A pregnant woman was brought into the UK on a work visa to care for children.
By the time professionals understood what was really going on, her baby had been taken into care and placed for adoption.
She had been brought over from Nigeria by her brother and his wife to help care for their three children so they could work and reduce childcare costs. What they didn’t know, or at least said they didn’t know, was that she was already pregnant before she travelled. Apparently she did not share this information with them prior to leaving Nigeria.
When she arrived, the situation shifted quickly. The brother’s wife said she could not stay in their home, and she was moved to another city to live with an elderly “family member” in her 70s who had her own health needs. That arrangement broke down almost immediately. There were repeated verbal altercations, neighbours became concerned, and the police were called. The elderly woman reported that this woman was also aggressive and agitated.
Because of the pregnancy, police officers referred her to children social services. What initially looked like a dispute uncovered something far more serious. This was a pregnant woman on a COS visa who could not hold a basic conversation with professionals. As assessments progressed, it became clear she had significant cognitive difficulties and was diagnosed with learning disability and bipolar disorder. She disclosed that she had been on medication in Nigeria but stopped when she became pregnant.
At that point, the questions changed. How was she issued a ‘highly skilled work visa? Who assessed her capacity to work? What exactly had she been brought here to do? Those concerns triggered a modern slavery investigation, the brother and his wife were both questioned by police.
Care proceedings were initiated before the baby was even born. By the time the child arrived, the outcome had already been shaped by risk, vulnerability, and a system trying to protect a child in the absence of safe parenting capacity. The baby was removed and later placed for adoption.
As for the mother, she was one of the most vulnerable adults I have ever met. We supported her to attend Liverpool and applied for asylum, and she was placed in supported accommodation by the Home Office. I still think about her, because the reality is she could have ended up in a far more dangerous situation if professionals hadn’t intervened when they did.
Cases like this are not just about one decision or one mistake. They are about what happens when vulnerability, immigration, lack of understanding, and desperation intersect. And they force uncomfortable questions. At what point does “helping family” become exploitation?
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