Yuri S. D. Olorunfemi 🇳🇬|🇷🇺|🇨🇳
3.5K posts

Yuri S. D. Olorunfemi 🇳🇬|🇷🇺|🇨🇳
@YDimitre
Web Developer | Building functional tools and digital business solutions
Federal Capital Territory, Nig Katılım Mart 2014
463 Takip Edilen177 Takipçiler

@Alex_Oloyede2 Damn....
This just made my day.
Grandpa 👴 whipped them really good. 🤣🤣🤣
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@FreedomLover651 @realMaalouf That's what you think.
We ain't that dumb.
Say something else
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@thetonymichaels Then what does your father want for them?
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@MarioNawfal So he opening his mouth and saying it, makes it true, huh?
With those stats, Nigeria 🇳🇬 will be a chaotic state then.
7 out of 10 😕 🫤?
Do you even know the population of this country, the Christian population?
He sits and blabs rubbish in front of his CPAC donors.
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🇺🇸🇳🇬 Nigerian attorney:
“7 out of 10 persecuted Christians anywhere in the world are in Nigeria.
It is a systematic deliberate plan to obliterate Christians from that part of the world.”
The forgotten ones in all these world-wide conflicts.
x.com/OliLondonTV/st…
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@kmbiamnozie They made the world 🌎 hate them.
With their own hands
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I have spoken with them in the field. Men and women from across the Middle East. Hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands. I asked a simple question: What drives your animosity toward Israel? Toward the West?
Over 20,000 responses. Ninety-nine percent, without hesitation, pointed to the same thing: perceived injustice. Not ideology. Not religion. Not abstract hatred. Injustice.
The pattern is unmistakable. Perceived betrayal. Broken promises. Occupation. Bombed neighborhoods. Generations of frustration and humiliation. That’s the fire they carry. That’s the reason they rise.
And yet, the same powers that claim to fight for democracy, freedom, and civilization, those powers continue to ignore it. Continue to wage wars that deepen the wounds. Continue to act as if carpet-bombing will erase grievance.
But you cannot erase perception. You cannot bomb the memory of humiliation out of a people. You cannot buy loyalty where injustice has taken root.
This is the real battlefield. Not deserts. Not cities. Not flags. It is the human heart, the human spirit, long scarred and endlessly remembered.
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@oliverburdick Invite Israeli Jews to convert to Christianity first.
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@LucinehK_ You have big dreams ✨️ 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Or dumb dreams
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Yuri S. D. Olorunfemi 🇳🇬|🇷🇺|🇨🇳 retweetledi

@FoxNews So, he is celebrating 🍾 the Americans for killing the citizens he wants to rule? 😕 🤔
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@IRMilitaryMedia I stood till the very end.
Died fighting 😢
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Martyr Yahya Sinwar:
When the Arabs did not support us, it was #IRAN that stood by us with full, unwavering support.
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So, because you asked, you want the truth?
Fine. Let’s dispense with the theater.
There is no such thing as a decisive victory in modern warfare. Not anymore. Not in this era of endless interventions dressed up as moral obligations. Unless, of course, you’ve been willfully sedated by headlines and flag-waving ceremonies, I haven't.
For over half a century, powers like the United States and Britain, including NATO, have marched into conflicts with unmatched firepower and unmatched confidence, and walked out with neither victory nor clarity. Yes, they inflict damage: economic ruin, shattered cities, broken generations, but they bleed too. Quietly. Expensively. Repeatedly.
Take the War in Afghanistan, that miserable adventure, a 20-year odyssey of ambition and illusion. Trillions spent. Thousands of soldiers were lost. A generation psychologically scarred. Infrastructure at home? Neglected. And at the end of it all, power was handed right back to the Talibans whom America and NATO went to liberate Afghans from. America counted its losses and ran away.
You tell me, was that strategy, or was that insanity?
And Iraq, ah yes, Iraq. Another carefully packaged promise of liberation that quietly dissolved into evacuation schedules and negotiated exits. Not victory. Not success. Just an awkward retreat dressed up as “mission accomplished.” America will tell you that they killed Saddam, they captured Iraq's Oil, fine, those are capturables, which you will give up, just one day.
So again, I ask - what exactly does winning look like?
Because from where I stand, it looks like trillions of dollars burned overseas while roads, bridges, and systems decay back home. It looks like young men and women sent to fight ghosts, fight for profit wars, only to return with wounds you can’t see and a country that barely remembers why they were sent.
Meanwhile, China isn’t dropping bombs, it’s laying rail, building ports, expanding cities, and investing in the future with a patience that borders on surgical precision.
One builds. The other intervenes. But tomorrow, you will blame China and call them an existential threat because they refused to be stupid.
And then there’s the grand illusion, the ever-convenient enemy. Yesterday it was terror. Today it’s something else. Names change. Faces rotate. But the machine? Oh, it runs beautifully.
You were told it was about Al-Qaeda, then it was ISIS. Always a new villain, always a new justification. But the outcomes? Strangely consistent.
So, now we arrive at Syria.
Ohhhhhhh Syria, how fascinating.
For years, you were told there was a man so dangerous, so irredeemable, that the only appropriate response was a bounty and a bullet. His name is Ahmed al-Sharaa (often formerly referred to as Abu Mohammed al-Jolani). Branded a terrorist. Hunted. Condemned in every respectable room where power gathers behind polished doors.
And yet, brothers and sisters, here we are.
The same man, once described as the embodiment of chaos, now occupies a far more tolerated space in the geopolitical conversation. Not quite embraced, not quite exiled, just inconveniently present.
He is now the West-installed President of Syria.
So it raises a rather uncomfortable question, doesn’t it?
Was he truly the monster they said he was?
Or was he, at some point, a useful instrument? Another piece on the board in a game most people never even realize is being played?
Because history has a peculiar habit of rewriting its villains. Yesterday’s extremist becomes today’s “local actor.” Yesterday’s enemy becomes today’s “strategic reality.” Labels shift. Language softens. Interests - evolve.
You were told he must be eliminated on sight. Now, he exists in a gray zone of quiet acknowledgment. Shaking hands with those who sought his death, with each of them smiling and showing all their 32 God's given tooth. From Washington to Paris, from London to Riyadh, From Istanbul to the Kremlin, they love him now.🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
Curious, wear your thinking cap, people.
So which is it?
A freedom fighter resisting a regime? Or a destabilizing force that outlived its usefulness?
Here’s the part they don’t advertise:
It doesn’t have to be one or the other.
Men like this are often both, shaped by ideology, sharpened by war, and, at times, indirectly empowered by the very forces that later condemn them. Not because of some grand conspiracy but because chaos, when managed carefully, can be remarkably useful.
And when the dust settles? No one revisits the script. No one explains the contradictions. They simply move on, hoping you and I won’t notice the rewrite. But you did.
But then I ask, could it be that Abu Mohammed al-Jolani was the nice guy all along, but we were told he is a monster? Leave your answers in the comments.
And that, more than anything, is what makes this conversation dangerous.
So what you see in the Western Military Strategy is nothing other than chaos. Withdrawal out. Rinse. Repeat. And while we are at it, the Military Industrial Complex and her Consultants have grown so fat they couldn't buckle their pants.
So no, don’t insult intelligence by calling it victory.
Call it what it is: a cycle. A very expensive, very destructive, and very well-disguised cycle.
A club of power, influence, and carefully managed narratives.
And the most remarkable part?
They’ve convinced the world to keep applauding while footing the bill.
What in God's name has happened to all of us?




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@lorddrey They didn't know, I believe they still don't know.
WHY?
Cause it was written in Blaxk and White print.
We no dey read 📚 for this continent.
Please enlighten them, biko🙏🏾
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Yuri S. D. Olorunfemi 🇳🇬|🇷🇺|🇨🇳 retweetledi

How much more humiliation and contempt are Arab leaders willing to endure just to cling to a failed strategy of reliance on the United States?
For two decades, they dismissed Iran’s offers to remove U.S. bases and build a regional framework for collective security. Today, they have neither protection nor even a semblance of respect.
They have squandered both Arab honour and security, while Iran is showing the world what dignity and self-reliance truly look like.

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