Nwa Eze

3.3K posts

Nwa Eze banner
Nwa Eze

Nwa Eze

@Tallesty_

Introverted bibliophile who codes | Full-Stack Web Dev 👨‍💻 | Chelsea ⚽

Abuja, Nigeria Katılım Kasım 2025
459 Takip Edilen448 Takipçiler
Sir David Onyemaizu🦍
Sir David Onyemaizu🦍@SirDavidBent·
I can't count the number of people that I deliberately dashed bangers under that my post. You win, I win. 😂🤝
English
98
92
186
2.1K
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
You cannot be Nigerian and not understand why people stay in unhappy marriages. I mean, majority of us are here because we do not have the resources to japa.
English
0
0
0
10
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
@GloriousGod01 @AdageorgeA The only problem here is that you care about her reaction, you shouldn't care about how she feels. And trust me, she would have stomped out of the kitchen if you had said your kind of woman should pay bills.
English
0
0
0
5
Glorious God
Glorious God@GloriousGod01·
Last Friday was my Oga's birthday. He threw a small celebration at his house and invited all of us employees. He picked one female colleague and me to handle the cooking because he knows I cook well. As soon as we entered the kitchen, I told her straight: "Since you're the woman, you should take charge of the actual cooking. I'll support you; grind pepper, slice onions, wash plates, whatever you need." She lit up instantly and said, "This is the kind of man I want to marry. A man who will always be around me to help in the kitchen or with house chores." I replied calmly: "Nothing wrong with support, but personally I don't want a woman who expects me to always assist her in the kitchen. Cooking is mainly my wife's domain. I'll join her sometimes to gist, help with small things here and there, but not every single time." She switched up immediately. Cold attitude for the rest of the evening. Even now at work today she's still giving me the same silent treatment and bad energy. What exactly is the problem here? Did I say something wrong? Above all, love God.
English
48
67
110
4.5K
Nwa Eze retweetledi
Mmesoma Awele ☢️
Mmesoma Awele ☢️@UnegbuVivi27491·
Hiii Would appreciate more verified mutuals 👋. Good evening 🌆
Mmesoma Awele ☢️ tweet media
English
14
10
43
693
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
@oma22k According to Twitter people, there are 250M good people waiting out there for you once you leave your ex.
English
0
0
0
54
Oma
Oma@oma22k·
“Never take a man’s kindness for s7vpidity. My man and I had a disagreement, so I told him, let’s break up and he said okay. He didn’t even fight for our relationship. I was sure he’d come back to beg me later. Three weeks passed and he didn’t return. Through out the relationship he’ll do anything and everything to please me, even if I’m the one who vexes him, he’ll apologize, so I got so comfortable. I started dating other men and they are not like my ex.” — Lady says.
Oma tweet media
English
26
24
46
6.6K
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
I get your argument but it is completely unnecessary. First of all, if taking your husband's surname erases your identity then you honestly never had one. Strong women like Akunyili and Iweala kept their husband's surnames yet their identities stand unchallenged. Take the Otedolas for example, what surname could erase their identity? We chase frivolities and lose sight of the core issues. Let me even humour the argument. Assume you are married to Joseph and you are a doctor, a lawyer and a preacher. Will being called a pastor erase your identity as a lawyer? Will being called a lawyer erase your identity as a doctor? Why does identity automatically collapse the moment it is attached to marriage? The demon attacking marriage is using us all as willing tools. See how surnames actually work, they follow ownership of the structure, not gender. If you built the structure you would name it. That is not patriarchy, that is how ownership works in every context: businesses, buildings, families. The person who lays the foundation names the thing. If you go through what it takes to lay a foundation for marriage in Nigeria, please by all means insist he takes your surname.
English
1
0
2
76
Christy( mother of many Generations)
Dear men, your wife's name should come before yours and your SURNAME.. Her identity shouldn't disappear because she's married to you.. She had identity before getting married to you.. She had a name , she had a Brand, a business, She has certificates, she had a skill, before she meet you. Why must she be identified as "Nwunye Emma", "Mama favor" Nwunye John" that's irritating.. A man can be identified as " Mr Peter, Mr okoro, Mr Matthew and so on but when it comes to the woman, you will hear " Mr okoro 's wife, Mr Peter's wife and so on.. From today make that correction, tell them ; My wife have a name. My have have an assets, My wife is a graduate not just ordinary lady, My wife have a Brand, put some respect to my wife's name... She should be addressed as " Mrs Sylvia Okoro" Mrs Queeneth Peter" I believe you have heard how our powerful successful women we have today are being addressed? "Patient Ozokwor" Nogzi Ezeonu" Bishop funke Felix Adejumo, Pastor Mildred Okonkwo and so on. Her name should not wipe out because you're her husband.. Ladies build your legacy! Build your identity today! Build your brand! You have a name, build it!!!
English
65
24
62
3.2K
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
I get your argument but it is completely unnecessary. First of all, if taking your husband's surname erases your identity then you honestly never had one. Strong women like Akunyili and Iweala kept their husband's surnames yet their identities stand unchallenged. Take the Otedolas for example, what surname could erase their identity? We chase frivolities and lose sight of the core issues. Let me even humour the argument. Assume you are married to Joseph and you are a doctor, a lawyer and a preacher. Will being called a pastor erase your identity as a lawyer? Will being called a lawyer erase your identity as a doctor? Why does identity automatically collapse the moment it is attached to marriage? The demon attacking marriage is using us all as willing tools. See how surnames actually work, they follow ownership of the structure, not gender. If you built the structure you would name it. That is not patriarchy, that is how ownership works in every context: businesses, buildings, families. The person who lays the foundation names the thing. If you go through what it takes to lay a foundation for marriage in Nigeria, please by all means insist he takes your surname.
Christy( mother of many Generations)@itzchristunique

Dear men, your wife's name should come before yours and your SURNAME.. Her identity shouldn't disappear because she's married to you.. She had identity before getting married to you.. She had a name , she had a Brand, a business, She has certificates, she had a skill, before she meet you. Why must she be identified as "Nwunye Emma", "Mama favor" Nwunye John" that's irritating.. A man can be identified as " Mr Peter, Mr okoro, Mr Matthew and so on but when it comes to the woman, you will hear " Mr okoro 's wife, Mr Peter's wife and so on.. From today make that correction, tell them ; My wife have a name. My have have an assets, My wife is a graduate not just ordinary lady, My wife have a Brand, put some respect to my wife's name... She should be addressed as " Mrs Sylvia Okoro" Mrs Queeneth Peter" I believe you have heard how our powerful successful women we have today are being addressed? "Patient Ozokwor" Nogzi Ezeonu" Bishop funke Felix Adejumo, Pastor Mildred Okonkwo and so on. Her name should not wipe out because you're her husband.. Ladies build your legacy! Build your identity today! Build your brand! You have a name, build it!!!

English
0
0
0
7
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
Slavery is free labour under duress. A man works to provide for his family whether he likes it or not, whether he is up to it or not ,but the woman is always the one associated with slavery because she cooks and takes her husband's surname. Let me explain something. I don't know if you are married or not, but if you are not, here is something worth understanding. The family you and your husband will build , he has already laid the foundation, and he did it in his name. That is structure. Anybody that wants to be part of that family, whether as a spouse or a child, will keep the unique identity he gave it. He didn't get that right because he is a man. He got it because he laid the foundation. So if you want those same rights, put in the work he did. Nothing is free even in Freetown.
English
0
0
0
11
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
In other words, wives are not people? The things you people say are amazingly crazy. The real problem isn't that girls are being raised to be "people" borrowing your words, the issue is that these same girls still expect boys to be husbands. The evolution was one sided in their plan. Women evolved. That's fine. The miscalculation was assuming men would stay the same. Men are adapting to the current reality too, and that was never factored in. So now their expectations and reality are colliding and they are not ready for it.
English
1
0
3
162
Solyricon
Solyricon@Solyricon·
Daughters are no longer raised to be wives. They're raised to be people. And some people are really not okay with that.
English
110
5.5K
31.9K
278.6K
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
It is because a lot of women do not see anything wrong in what they say or do until it comes from a man. When we talk about domestic violence, how many women acknowledge violence by women against men, women against maids, or women against stepchildren? Those are crimes women commit frequently and that is exactly why they are never factored into the conversation.
English
1
0
8
318
Talk2veee
Talk2veee@talk2veee·
A man comes out to say his wife died of HIV and women are saying he should have not said it in publicly. He is not even shaming her, just clearing the air especially as he has been accused of using her for ogwu ego (rituals) Luckily him and his children are negative. My question to the woman saying he should keep quiet. If it is a man that died of Hiv, and his wife speaks out, what will be the response?? Credit:Amanda Chisom
English
33
84
410
17.9K
oke jnr 🌱
oke jnr 🌱@okejnr01·
Just coming to my notice now,please does impression reduce when you’re not a premium user?
English
2
1
2
66
Nwa Eze retweetledi
Amaka the barber 💈
Amaka the barber 💈@Lorde_Studios·
If you have a long natural hair, and you’ve been wanting to loc your hair for a while, I will do it for free for you. Send me a DM.
English
7
8
14
606
ONE-CHOJO💕
ONE-CHOJO💕@bilionaire_dgb·
Day 1 of my 30 days challenge of searching for more Supportive mutu@ls. Who's in.
English
116
58
158
1.9K
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
@rukky_nate Correct me if I am wrong, but if the algorithm shows my post to a jury comprising 10% of my mutuals and none of them engage, that means my mutuals saw it and voted no then the algorithm didn't ignore me. My mutuals did.
English
0
0
0
6
Mazi Nathan
Mazi Nathan@rukky_nate·
Your followers are not ignoring your posts, the algorithm is. here’s what happens when you make a post on X: X doesn't show your post to all your mutuals at once. it uses a seed system to test your content first by showing it to a tiny, random sample —often less than 10% of your mutuals. it then waits to see how they react. if those first few people don't engage immediately, the algorithm stops distributing the post entirely. imagine making a post and getting 90 views in 50 minutes. that isn't your mutuals seeing and ignoring you. it’s the algorithm stopping the push after the first 90 people didn't hit a specific engagement "velocity" threshold. if the post fails that initial "velocity" test, X simply stops showing it to the rest of your mutuals. so technically, if the algorithm doesn't push the post, there’s no way for your people to see it, let alone ignore it. out of sight out of mind. you aren't being snubbed, you’re just being filtered out of their timelines by the algorithm. agree, mutuals do ignore posts. but the bulk of the blame is on the algorithm. next time before you blame your mutuals, you might want to consider the algorithmic behavior first.
English
22
20
39
1.5K
ONE-CHOJO💕
ONE-CHOJO💕@bilionaire_dgb·
@Tallesty_ The funny thing is he doesn’t look useless and it not an anonymous account. So I am curious on what is wrong with him
English
1
0
0
93
ONE-CHOJO💕
ONE-CHOJO💕@bilionaire_dgb·
Please men, I want to genuinely know, is they away you will send a Dm to numerous girls so much and you will not be able to recognize which one u have sent a message to in the past. Because this is my third account on X and this is the fourth time this guy is texting me about relationship without knowing I am the same person. On this particular account, This is the second time with his second account and he still doesn’t know I am Same person. At this rate it’s giving mental illness. But is it possible since you guys are the chasers. Do u chase so much that u lost count or can’t remember faces or is this one just mad and have no one to tell him.
ONE-CHOJO💕@bilionaire_dgb

Some thing keeps happening and I want to understand.

English
13
9
19
2.4K
Nwa Eze
Nwa Eze@Tallesty_·
Winifred's family are not good people.
Inibehe Effiong@InibeheEffiong

REPLY TO WINIFRED OGBUJA Hello @Winifunds, It is offensive that you had the audacity to go on the record to trivialize your role in the exploitation of the late Ochanya Ogbanje. Ochanya’s family is particularly offended by paragraphs 4 and 5 of your statement where you stated as follows: “For clarity, in 2013, I was a student in boarding school in SS2 and had only just gone on vacation after my mock examinations. At the time, I was about 12 years old and was not present at the location where these events are being alleged to have occurred. This has been established in the course of legal processes.” “I did not witness any act of abuse as has been suggested in some narratives, and this position has also been reflected in the legal proceedings connected to this matter.” For the sake of unsuspecting members of public, the following facts are worthy of note: 1. Assuming without conceding that you were “about 12 years old” as at 2013, you became 17 years of age as at 2018 when your father, Andrew Ogbuja, and your mother Felicia Ogbuja were arrested by the Police and NAPTIP respectively. 2. No one asked you to give evidence while you were 12, as at the time of investigation, you were about 17 years old (again, going by your own assertion). 3. Winifred, claimed that she was about 12 years old in 2013. But, her younger brother, Victor Ogbuja, was about 20 years old and in his final year at the University of Agriculture in Makurdi as at 2018. 4. Victor was eventually expelled from the University following a report made against him to the University by NAPTIP. 5. You stated boldly that you didn’t witness any act of abuse and that this fact “has been reflected in the legal proceedings connected to this matter.” 6. Apart from the fact that a witness testified under oath at the Federal High Court in Makurdi that Winifred knew about the sexual exploitation of the late Ochanya, it is important to inform Nigerians that the mother of Winifred appealed against her conviction and lost. 7. In fact, the Court of Appeal made a very direct finding that Winifred knew about the sexual exploitation of Ochanya. The Court of Appeal in dismissing the appeal of Felicia, held thus at page 19 of the judgement: “The harm suffered includes not only the illnesses she suffered but also the abuse itself which affect her well-being, the conduct of the Appellant is highly condemnable to have allow such heinous crime to take place under her watch even when her own daughter brought to her attention the sexual exploitation of Ochanya she did nothing to protect the innocent girl who is now late as a result of the harm done to her. The Appellant I hold does not deserved any sympathetic consideration of this Court. 8. The Court of Appeal also found that your mother, your father and other members of your family made efforts to compromise justice. The Court found as follows at page 20: “In fact the Appellant, her husband and some of their family members made efforts towards that direction as they bought drinks and kolanuts to beg PW1, the father of late Ochanya that the matter be resolved within the family. See page 166 of the record.” 9. By law, a child who has not attained the age of 14 years is a competent witness in a judicial proceedings and can give unsworn evidence - “if in opinion of the court, he is possessed of sufficient intelligence to justify the reception of his evidence and understands the duty of speaking the truth”. However, “a child who has attained the age of 14 shall give sworn evidence in all cases”. See Section 209 of the Evidence Act, 2011. 10. At the commencement of the trial of your parents in 2019, you were no longer a child. 11. By the way, the exploitation lasted beyond year 2013 mentioned by Winifred. 12. The concurrent findings of the Federal High Court and the Court of Appeal established that you had direct knowledge of the sexual exploitation of Ochanya. Evidence is attached. Stop dancing on the grave of Ochanya.

English
0
0
0
17
Nwa Eze retweetledi
Simplicity
Simplicity@itdami_·
You didn't make it yesterday. Today is another day. You try again!! Good morning ❤💡
English
2
2
5
23