Yoruba Youth Council
113 posts

Yoruba Youth Council
@Yoruba_YC
The Yoruba Youth Council (YYC) advocates for the empowerment of Yoruba youth through employment, equality, and leadership opportunities, fostering progress.





One of the more revealing crises in Nigeria is not merely political instability, but the collapse of critical comprehension and intellectual culture. The reaction to my comments on the Biafra question, including the deliberate distortion, selective interpretation, and emotionally charged misreading, demonstrates how fragile public discourse has become. Too many people no longer engage ideas analytically; they approach discourse tribally, emotionally, and defensively, often substituting outrage for comprehension. The result is a political culture where coercion, mob intimidation, and performative hostility are deployed to silence nuance and flatten intellectual independence. That culture does not intimidate me. It merely confirms the urgency of rebuilding Nigeria’s educational and civic foundations. I am an academic. A social scientist. I reserve the right to interrogate national questions, including Biafra, identity, nationalism, memory, federalism, and belonging. And yes, I am equally entitled to engage those issues through the lens of my lived experience as an Igbo woman within the Nigerian federation. That is not extremism; it is citizenship, scholarship, and democratic participation. A society that cannot tolerate intellectual plurality without descending into hysteria is confronting a far deeper problem than disagreement.




If algorithm brings this to you, quote with anything

Salako’s mum’s ibo family rejected her for having a child with a Yoruba man. They neglected her, but the son of a b!tch transferred his anger on Yoruba people. Na we neglect your mama ? Omo ale.





