@aedcelectricity Please restore power supply to gaduwa district close to lokogoma junction please please 🙏🙏 every evening now we don't see light again 🙏
“Ogun K!ll Your Mama And Papa. Your Activism Is All About Money And Not From The Heart. You Don’t Know Anything About Activism. I Sent All Of You Money. You So-Called Activists Only Care About Money, Not The Nigerians You Claim To Be Fighting For.” ~ Businesswoman Tracy Ohiri Calls Out MamaPee 🤦🏾♂️🚶🏾♂️
Tinubu legit said:
“Fuel price is biting hard, but look around, let us thank God together, that you are better off than those in Kenya & other African countries”
He is comparing your suffering with others. That man na Lucifer, the devil himself
He said that in Bayelsa today 😭
Standing in Bayelsa today, what I saw was more than infrastructure.
The New Yenagoa City Road 1 is about access. The Angiama–Oporoma Bridge is about connection. The Bayelsa Independent Power Project is about opportunity.
At every level, government must stay focused on what works for people and our administration will continue to collaborate with states serious about putting people first.
When we do this, we are not just building projects. We are building confidence in our future as a people and as a nation.
I must commend Governor Duoye Diri for putting the people first. Thank you, Bayelsa.
Nigeria will surely succeed.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu
Today, I solemnly affirm my oath as Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission.
I pledge to uphold the Constitution of the Nigeria, to discharge my duties with integrity, impartiality, and courage, and to protect the sanctity of every vote cast by Nigerians.
“Yes I hear you from angles of the economy, 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 Africa countries”
— President Tinubu.
I said this 6 months ago and if you want to know why ADC is more confused than the mad man that used to advise Gregory, here are the facts;
1. A party where everybody wants to be president (selfish) cannot build a virile opposition
2. A party built on hostile take-over cannot survive the storm
3. A party where the members have double standards that they apply to people cannot see road
4. A party where the presidential aspirants have changed political parties like chameleon cannot have ideology
5. A party where their leaders see Nigerians as a means to an end cannot coordinate
6. A party where their leaders’s desperation is a do or die affair cannot govern Nigerians
Finally, have you not noticed that they are more confused now than they were when their journey started? I said it before, “give them six months and they would come crashing”; it is evident before our very eyes.
Say no to association of desperate congregation (ADC)
🇳🇬 JUST IN - “What We Have Now Is Failure’ ~ Obasanjo Delivers Brutal Assessment of Tinubu’s Government, Warns Nigerians Not to ‘Reinforce Failure’’
Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has delivered a scathing assessment of the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, describing it as ineffective, incompetent, and a failure affecting all Nigerians.
Speaking in a widely circulated video, Obasanjo stated that poor governance has made every citizen a victim, stressing that businesses and livelihoods would be significantly better under a competent and performing government.
“When you have an ineffective and incompetent government, we are all victims… Those of your business would be better today if they had a competent and effective and performing government.”
He acknowledged that every administration inherits challenges but criticized the current government for relying on those challenges as excuses rather than delivering results.
“You came in because you know that there are challenges… And giving us excuses. That is why you haven’t achieved results.”
Drawing from his military background, Obasanjo issued a stark warning against accepting failure in leadership.
“First lesson I learned in my military training is never enforce failure… What we have now is failure. Never you reinforce it.”
As of the time of filing this report, there has been no official response from the presidency.
Soja Boi has backed his claim with receipts:
Salary: ₦112,000.
Grumbling allowance: ₦20,000.
Operational allowance: ₦45,000.
You buy your own boots at ₦60,000.
You buy your own uniform for ₦55,000.
Then you buy your helmet & jacket as well.
How much was given to the City Boys?
Soldiers are sent to Maiduguri to die for 45K?
How much was spent on City Boy buses, iPhones, G-Wagon, bags of rice, sewing machines, grinding machines, & refrigerators?
Factional Noise, Ill-Advised Strategy: The ADC Protest.
Let us be clear: the right to protest is not a license for political opportunism, nor is it a tool for blackmailing institutions into surrender. Those now shouting the loudest under the banner of grievance are, in many cases, recent converts, political migrants who only just arrived, yet already demand to harvest where they neither sowed nor invested.
This is the contradiction at the heart of the current noise from elements within the African Democratic Congress (ADC). Having plied their trade across multiple parties, often with little regard for institutional stability, they now seek to strong-arm the system into granting them legitimacy that their own processes and in some cases, the courts have yet to validate.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is not a clearing house for political desperation. It is not obligated to bend to street pressure, media theatrics, or the manufactured outrage of actors attempting to bypass due process. Where party constitutions are in dispute and matters are before the courts, INEC has a duty to stand down not cave in.
What we are witnessing is not principled dissent; it is calculated pressure. A familiar cast of recycled politicians, long accustomed to gaming weak structures, now testing whether they can once again bend the system to their will. But this is precisely the behavior a serious democracy must reject.
No country with any regard for institutional integrity allows a handful of itinerant political actors however loud to destabilize its processes. You do not reward indiscipline with recognition. You do not resolve internal incoherence through external intimidation. And you certainly do not permit those who ignored the rules yesterday to dictate outcomes today.
If there are grievances, the path is clear: follow your party’s constitution, submit to the courts, and earn legitimacy through process not protest. Anything else is not democracy; it is opportunism dressed up as agitation.
The line must hold. Institutions must not blink. And those who seek shortcuts must be prepared to confront the consequences of their own choices.
Otunba Segun Showunmi
The Alternative.