Jerry N
14.9K posts

Jerry N
@Real_JerryN
Christian | Family Man | Engineer & Investor | Nigerian Political Comentator | Advocate for good governance | Peter Obi Suppporter.

Watch The Complete Fight: Carter Efe Vs Portable

The chameleon is a unique animal. It is not deceptive; it adapts to survive danger, hostility, and changing environments. Its ability to adjust is not a sign of weakness, but of wisdom, awareness, and survival instinct. Those who mock adaptation often forget that rigidity has destroyed more people, institutions, and nations than flexibility ever did. In politics, there is a clear difference between opportunistic movement and principled transition. One is driven by personal gain; the other is driven by conviction, vision, and the search for a better platform to serve the people. Mr. @PeterObi’s political journey has never been about tribe, power, or personal survival. From APGA to PDP to LP to ADC, his values have remained remarkably consistent: prudence, accountability, competence, production, and compassion for ordinary Nigerians. The platform changed, but the message never changed. The environment changed, but the character remained intact. A man who left office without stealing public funds, who still flies economy when others squander state resources, who speaks more about schools, hospitals, security, and production than about opponents, cannot honestly be described as a political chameleon in the negative sense. If anything, he represents ideological consistency in a political environment filled with transactional alliances and convenient morality. Ironically, many of those attacking him today have crossed more political bridges than they can remember, defending one government today and condemning the same principles tomorrow. It is therefore difficult to take lectures on loyalty from individuals whose political history reads like a revolving door. People like Daniel Bwala especially should exercise restraint before attacking others over political association or movement, considering their own very public political transitions and recent outings, including Doha engagements that raised more questions than answers among Nigerians. The real issue before Nigerians is not who changed political parties. The real issue is who has changed Nigeria for the better. History will not remember those who shouted the loudest on television or social media. It will remember those who stood consistently for justice, competence, fiscal responsibility, and the dignity of the Nigerian people, regardless of the political platform they occupied. -DrMo




















