MitÈproF#LetsSaveOurNation
7.5K posts

MitÈproF#LetsSaveOurNation
@ProfMite
Gradual but Surely🚀
Capital N Katılım Ocak 2013
122 Takip Edilen179 Takipçiler


@PO_GrassRootM baba calm down. u too dey jump. na so we jump enter adc...see where we dey. let us observe fess then we know what to do next.
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Obi joins the NDC. Let’s build the NDC. Let’s promote NDC. Let's go for NDC now. Register to be a member.
Use this link ndcregister.com


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@adamugarba and tinubu is your model of integrity abi? humour me jare.
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Someone was trying to copy President Tinubu’s 15 year plan to win the Presidency by jumping from one party to another in few months.
More lessons to be learned.
Politics doesn’t favor pride, crowd or illusion, it favors strategy, patience and integrity.
You invest emotional decisions in politics, you invest in serial disappointments.
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@DonAzag but seee ehhh na una i dey blame wey dey respond to any apc lap DOG. look they hate being ignored. hence make dem inconsequential by simply facing more important logical discourse with sensible folks. U dey engage dani olora! dadandindin bawala abi na bulala. such putrid name
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This is my problem with you, Mr. Bwala - always changing. It doesn’t speak well of you.
If you knew all these things about my classes, why were you desperately looking for my number through your PA when you couldn’t face your mate in London and wanted me to help with damage control?
You see why I refused to give him my number and opted for email instead - because I know you can easily deny a voice conversation.
Continue to mark attendance in my classes. One day, your eyes will open.
Thank you.
D. H Bwala@BwalaDaniel
@DonAzag The new thing the administration has achieved is exposing your master peter obi and his quadruple party alliance. You run a propaganda media class for Peter Obi and other masters that you only know. I hope this makes it to your propaganda class. Nomadic mentality.
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@Big_Sinudo so why cant they do same here na. dem dey direct primary? una start dey talk consensus or so it was reported. what would you do? logical answer pls.
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When the 2014 coalition was formed:
Atiku wanted to be president.
Buhari wanted to be president.
Rabiu Kwankwaso wanted to be president.
Rochas Okorocha wanted to be president.
Sam Nda-Isaiah wanted to be president.
In this coalition, no one asked the others to step up; northern and southern candidates threw their hat in the ring for the presidential primary in Lagos.
In the primary, Buhari (3,430) defeated Atiku (954), Kwankwaso (974), Rochas (624), and Nda-Isaiah (10). It was this result that took Buhari to contest against Jonathan.
In light of all these, Atiku did not leave the coalition despite being more educated and qualified than Buhari. He stayed in the coalition and supported the party to victory.
I don't know how you will join a coalition and try to bully everyone so that you are the most qualified and don't want a primary election.
If these were how the 2014 coalition was formed, it wouldn't be alive to become a ruling party of today.
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@FSYusuff ok u no taya again? das good. what you had was those me moments abi. when u just vex then in d moment u yap many opata! after eye don neat u go con reset. e dey happen jare. less go dia!
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@FSYusuff ok u no taya again? das good. what you had was those me moments abi. when u just vex then in d moment u yap many opata! after eye don neat u go con recaliberate. e dey happen jare. less go dia!
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@FSYusuff ok u no taya again? das good. what you had was those *N* moments abi. when u just vex then in d moment u yap many opata! after eye don neat u go con recaliberate. e dey happen jare. less go dia!
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@FSYusuff ok u no taya again? das good. what you had was those N moments abi. when u just vex then in d moment u yap many opata! after eye don neat u go con recaliberate. e dey happen jare. less go dia!
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@Ntob naso na! We know. nobody wan talk am but we gaz talk am!
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@_Nlechani @ADCNig just wait fess. make we hear from horse mouth. no too let daily 2kay blue ticks scatter your mind. most na empty shells just jabbering outta fear of the unknown. daily 2kay go stop if Obi move.
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I would like to cancel my membership with the ADC. What are the steps to deregister? @ADCNig
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heheheh...abiooo!! maybe i will try putin some names to this. those empty daily 2kay handles doing their masters work if not, poverty go comot whats left of their empty shells. didirins with blue tick
AMB. SERAH IBRAHIM@TheSerahIbrahim
They are always on good authority, meanwhile they can’t access even the gate.
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@charlesaniagolu u are correct sir. Just as youve said, too much skepticism about the make up of the ADC...maybe its time he sets up his new party and integrate all obidients in all states and create the ward and grassroot structure needed to morph into a force capable of a major political shift
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Obidients aren’t rushing into the ADC - and that’s not random.
The movement around Peter Obi was built on energy, not party structure. Now comes the hard part: converting passion into power.
No registration equals weak primary leverage. No structure equals others control the game.
Here's the breakdown:
It’s not that Obidients aren’t registering as a single, unified group. It’s more that the movement around Peter Obi was never built like a traditional party machine in the first place.
The Obidient base emerged as a loose, organic coalition - youth-driven, digitally mobilised, and not deeply tied to party structures. That creates a few friction points with a platform like the ADC.
Many Obidients identify more with Obi as a candidate than with any party. Moving en masse into ADC requires formal registration, local structures, ward politics - the very things the movement originally tried to bypass.
There’s skepticism about whether ADC is just another old-style political platform with internal power blocs, godfatherism, and elite bargaining. Some supporters worry Obi could lose control of his reform message inside that system.
ADC is crowded - names like Atiku Abubakar, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Nasir el-Rufai, Rotimi Amaechi, Aminu Tambuwal and others are in the mix. Until it’s clear Obi will actually secure the ticket, many supporters are hesitant to commit.
Winning primaries in Nigeria isn’t about online energy—it’s about delegates, structures, and ground organisation. Obidients haven’t fully transitioned into that kind of machinery yet.
So what does this mean for Peter Obi? It weakens his bargaining power inside the ADC if he can’t demonstrate a solid, registered base within the party. And it makes it harder to dominate primaries that depend on party structures.
So now he faces a strategic choice: institutionalise the movement by converting supporters into party members, or risk being outmanoeuvred by more traditional politicians.
If he succeeds in converting that organic support into a structure, he becomes extremely formidable. If not, he risks repeating 2023 - strong popular energy, but limited control over the political machinery needed to win.
This isn’t just about the ADC. It’s a deeper test of whether a movement-driven politics can evolve into a structure-driven victory in Nigeria.
If Obidients don’t make that transition, Obi’s biggest strength - his grassroots enthusiasm - could also become his biggest limitation.
And you can take that to the bank!
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