el Yosef

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el Yosef

el Yosef

@Yusuffola656

🍽 SELLER OF SEAFOOD. 🎓 ACCOUNTANT. 🏋️BODY BUILDER. 📝 POET. ⚽️ CFC FAN.

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Temmuz 2022
606 Takip Edilen152 Takipçiler
Rodin Simi
Rodin Simi@RodinSimi·
These players are already on the market. Real Madrid will look to balance the books. Someone like TAA, who struggles defensively, would not start a game under Mourinho. 1. Álvaro Carreras 2. Trent Alexander-Arnold 3. Dean Huijsen 4. Eduardo Camavinga Chelsea should try to sign Dean Huijsen.
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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@Letter_to_Jack It is on this note that I say the state government is a proud sponsor of terrorism. Rubbish
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Man of Letters.
Man of Letters.@Letter_to_Jack·
720 repentant terrorists swearing by God that they won’t return to violence, and the state government somehow accepted that as a sufficient proof of surrender. This is top-to-bottom insanity wrapped in foolishness. We are gambling with public safety. And for those who don’t get it, this is why it is so difficult to win the war against terrorism. When you forgive terrorists, you compound the problems of the country in so many ways. First, you demoralize our troops, people who have seen their friends, superiors, and juniors fall brutally in the hands of these animals. The second disaster is how you are indirectly incentivizing terror; restoring residual hope that these animals can embrace violence for as long as they want and they’ll still be integrated back into society through some stupid amnesty means instead of severe consequences. Let’s take an ultra-conservative approach and assume 10% of them don’t mean it; that’s another 72 terrorists that have been pardoned by the state who would go back to terrorism at the slightest inconvenience. What if the 72 are informants, spies and recruiters? This is the cycle of terrorism playing out right in front of us. Recruitment— violence— amnesty— return to violence.
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories

“On behalf of the Good people of borno state and Nigeria we have forgiven them. And they have swear by the Quran not to go back to any form of violence” ~ Official says as rehabilitated T€rrorist are reintegrated to society

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Nigeria Stories
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories·
A Legislature That Cannot Say ‘No’ Is Not A Legislature At All. ~ Former Senate President Bukola Saraki says
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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@Realoilsheikh @ProfZulum We can not deter terrorism in this way. This will be an assurance for their recruits that they're got big people's back
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𝐇𝐢𝐝𝐢𝐦𝐚, 𝐏𝐡.𝐃.
Dear @ProfZulum, Whoever is advising you people to continue bringing back terrorists into the society in whatever name is doing us a great disservice. This is the height of foolishness. God that created terrorists states that anyone who kill people should also be killed, and especially terrorists. You're flouting the rule of God and endangering the lives of your own people and Nigerians at large. What level of foolishness is this? The @HQNigerianArmy should be the first tonrejevt this, considering they're the first victims of these animals, and they have lost a lot of gallant men and women to them. I ask, why it the Nigerian Govt still bringing back terrorists into the people in whatever guise and still claim they are willing to end the insecurity in Nigeria?
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories

BREAKING: Borno State Government reintegrates 720 repentant t£rrorists into society after rehabilitation

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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@YusufAsunmogejo Late Ayinde Barrister once sang "Allah is my Creator, Muhammad is my friend and he was sent to all mankind for the purpose of Islam". My fellow yoruba folks, Islam itself is a complete and comprehensive way of Life. Accept it.
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A.Y.O
A.Y.O@YusufAsunmogejo·
Islam and Yoruba Culture: Where We Draw The Line Over the past two days, my timeline has been filled with all sorts of vituperation from self-styled "Yoruba Nationalists." To them, there is no place for people like me in Yoruba land because I openly speak against certain cultural practices. They claim that to be fully Yoruba, you must swallow everything whole without questioning it. I find that deeply appalling, and it is exactly why I want to make this categorical statement. First of all, I am a fully blooded Yoruba man. My Parents are fully blooded Yoruba. I was born in Isolo, Lagos, and I spent over 25 years of my life living, learning, and building in the South West. If there were physical stakes for being a Yoruba, my stakes would be incredibly high. None of you holds a greater monopoly on our heritage than I do, so you can keep your tribal gatekeeping to yourselves. Beyond my ethnicity, I am a Muslim. I identify with Islam completely because I believe, with absolute certainty, that it is the only path to eternal salvation. Having said this, let me clear up a massive misconception: Islam does not come to wipe out a people’s identity. It never has. When the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) arrived in Arabia, he did not systematically destroy the existing culture. He met a people with deep traditions in poetry, hospitality, trade, and respect for kinship. Instead of erasing those customs, Islam embraced, refined, and validated them. The Prophet famously affirmed good cultural values, saying he was only sent to perfect good character. Our beautiful Yoruba values (e.g: the respect we accord elders, our communal solidarity, our rich attire, and our industrious spirit) are entirely aligned with the spirit of Islam. Islam leaves room for culture to breathe, thrive, and beautify our lives. But as Muslims, this is exactly where we draw the unyielding line: Aqeedah (Faith and Monotheism). Culture is beautiful until it attempts to compete with the sovereignty of Allah. A custom is acceptable for a Muslim up until the exact moment it crosses into Shirk (associating partners with God), or requires us to validate traditional incantations, ancestral covenants, and pagan rituals. You cannot claim to submit to the Creator of the universe on Friday, and then celebrate Egun, Eyo or the invocation of Ayajo or traditional spells on Saturday under the guise of "cultural pride." When a cultural practice directly violates the clear commands of Allah and His Messenger, that culture steps down, and our faith steps up. My identity as a Yoruba man is an accident of birth; it is a geographical reality. But my identity as a Muslim is a conscious choice of submission that dictates my eternal destiny. I will continue to love my language, my people, and the noble virtues of our heritage. But I will never compromise my Aqeedah (creed) to appease a tribal sentiment. If standing firmly for the oneness of Allah makes me a rebel in your eyes, then so be it. My loyalty belongs to my Lord first, and everything else comes a distant second. Allah knows best.
A.Y.O@YusufAsunmogejo

Wasiu is supposed to be a Muslim Tinubu is supposed to be a Muslim Yet, you have Muslims in the CS cheering a man openly chanting Ayajo? Now you wonder why the North don't believe Tinubu is Muslim enough? You are a hypocrite.

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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@YusufAsunmogejo I am a Muslim and a yoruba but too many yoruba Muslims commit shirk likewise a lot of Northern Muslims. I have seen amulet tied round their waist and upper arms while performing salah with them. We should call out shirk in general not in isolation. Salam alaikum
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A.Y.O
A.Y.O@YusufAsunmogejo·
Let me make a necessary clarification for those intentionally missing the point of my previous tweet: where did I say I am using "Northern Islam" to judge anyone? If you know me well on this space, you know I have always maintained that the Prophet (peace be upon him) taught us that no tribe is superior to another except in piety. Islam is one. What binds us is our faith in the Almighty and your tribe plays no role there. My post was a direct reaction to Man of Letters (this quoted post) cheering a video and claiming: "something powerful must have been invoked on this day" — as a response to a lady who asked why the President’s enemies are confused. To Man of Letters and others like him, this invocation is (or one of) the reason his enemies are confused. So I asked a simple, logical question: what exactly was invoked here, and by whom? Wasiu, the person chanting the Ayajo, is supposed to be a Muslim. Tinubu, the person receiving it, is supposed to be a Muslim. When it is politically convenient, you people scream "Muslim-Muslim ticket" to rally support. Yet, when the conservative North points out the massive compromises and openly says this isn't the type of Islam they want to associate with, you catch feelings. They said it, not me. I am only pointing out the blatant hypocrisy. And if you have claims of Northern Muslims engaging in incantations, bring them, I will openly condemn it. It has nothing to do with tribe, but all to do with Islam. It’s Truth over Tribe for me. Is chanting Ayajo now acceptable for a Muslim because he is Yoruba? Should we celebrate traditional incantations that cross directly into Shirk just because of "Yoruba culture,” If you like, abuse me more, invoking ancestral spells has absolutely no place in Islam, and it makes one question their Islam whether the North says it or not. Allah knows best.
Man of Letters.@Letter_to_Jack

Something powerful must have been invoked on this day. Tell your Yoruba friend to interpret the lyrics to you.

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H’s mom
H’s mom@aiishadahir·
Tell me about Islam, even if it is just one word.
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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@imakun122 Since there's no mention of investment in this narrative I think that's why he got broke. Things are cheaper in Nigeria than in Ghana. With proper business running he can make a fortune here 10k cedis
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Imakunblog
Imakunblog@imakun122·
“I came to Nigeria with 10,000 cedis thinking I would become a multimillionaire because, while I was in Ghana, we used to make m0ckry of the naira. But when I came, within just a few months my money finished and I became frustrated. I called all my friends in Ghana, but nobody helped me. My house rent expired and I couldn’t renew it. From there, I started selling the little household appliances I had, but today I am homeless and j0b/££z I can’t even afford two square meals a day.” A stranded Ghanaian sleeping at an Aba bus stop cried out after he was chased out of the bus stop multiple times.
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Dimeji
Dimeji@Makavellidon77·
The real Yorubas who are true to their identity and safeguard their identity are the Yoruba Muslim
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𝐇𝐢𝐝𝐢𝐦𝐚, 𝐏𝐡.𝐃.
I say this without mincing words: Anyone you see saying "I am Yoruba first before Muslim" didn't come from a house Islam is being practiced. It is always those ceremonial Muslims that have very little or nothing to do with Islam in reality.
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Murray Rothbard
Murray Rothbard@MurraySuggests·
The Iranian navy, which has been destroyed eight times, has apparently closed the Strait of Hormuz again, because the United States, for the seventh time, won the war that wasn’t a war, so now the United States has to open the Strait of Hormuz that was already open before the not-war began. The not-war began because Iran had uranium that was totally, completely, beautifully obliterated, so they can’t build the nuclear bomb they weren’t building, which is why the United States had to start the not-war it definitely didn’t start. Now the United States, which has nuclear weapons, is threatening to use nuclear weapons to stop Iran from getting nuclear weapons, because nuclear weapons are far too dangerous for countries with nuclear weapons to allow other countries to have. If the United States saw the United States doing what the United States does in other countries, the United States would invade the United States to liberate the United States from the tyranny of the United States.
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Shalewa🤎
Shalewa🤎@BKudrot35429·
I'm a Yoruba Muslim,my ethnicity comes first before any alien religion, I breathe Yoruba, I speak Yoruba and I also pray in Yoruba My Father was a popular award winning Ifa priest/herbalist before he died,and allows his wives and children practice any religion. I can choose to...
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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@Big_marvis A hunter traveling that distance with his hunter gun in the bag? I can't say he is a criminal and I can't say he is innocent but proper investigation should be allowed to be done. No jungle justice, everything done within the right framework
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Akinwumi
Akinwumi@Big_marvis·
This is a Hausa man who traveled to Oyo with a hunting rifle inside his bag. After he was found with the firearm, some people allegedly assumed he was a Fulani bandit. He tried to explain himself, but there was a communication barrier: he could not speak English, and those around him did not understand Hausa. ⚠️ Please warn your relatives and loved ones: if they are traveling to any part of the country in search of work or business opportunities, they should never carry a hunting rifle or any firearm in their vehicle or luggage without proper authorization. If such a weapon is discovered before security personnel arrive, the situation could escalate quickly, putting lives at risk and potentially leading to serious injury or even death. Language barriers, fear, and suspicion can sometimes turn misunderstandings into tragedies. Let us all be cautious and prioritize safety.
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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@YusufAsunmogejo Consciousness in this context is valid sir. You cannot claim to be census officers with ID. Not even local govt officials aware of this. To me those women should be pressed more.
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Prince Adeshina
Prince Adeshina@RealAdeshina·
I am not saying you should not arrest Fulani/Hausa in the forest. But please, let’s learn to differentiate between a cattle rearers and bandits. They are not the same. If we continue to react impulsively as events unfold, this matter could lead us to war. Let us also apply wisdom in our approach.
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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@Otunbakush1 You should make sure you don't punish innocent people just because they're Fulanis.
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el Yosef
el Yosef@Yusuffola656·
@TheYorubaTimes I hope these boys are not arrested just because they're Fulanis. It's shouldn't be war on Fulani but war on banditry and terrorism
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The Yoruba Times
The Yoruba Times@TheYorubaTimes·
PANIC 🇳🇬⚠️: Bandit attack reported in Imesi Ile, Obokun LGA, Osun State on Wednesday, June 3, 2026, as local security operatives led by Chief Layi Abesin and Chief Muyiwa Oguntoye reportedly arrested suspects hiding on nearby mountain during response operation.
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𝑰𝒅𝒓𝒊𝒔 𝑨. 𝑶𝒏𝒊 PhD
The boys in the video do not appear to be harmed, and there is nothing inherently wrong with arrests where security concerns exist. However, decorum, professionalism and proper investigation are extremely important so that innocent people are not punished for the crimes of others. Every suspect deserves a fair investigation. Guilt should be established through evidence, not assumptions, profiling or collective blame. Justice is only meaningful when the innocent are protected alongside the punishment of the guilty. That said, living deep inside forests and remote bush areas without proper regulation is neither healthy nor sustainable in the modern age. The era of unrestricted open grazing has effectively come to an end. Fulani herders, like livestock owners across the world, must increasingly embrace ranching and other modern livestock management systems. That is the most practical and peaceful path forward. Furthermore, even where no weapons are involved, the destruction of people's farms, crops and means of livelihood is completely unacceptable. Farmers have rights. Their lands, investments and harvests deserve protection. Those who wish to raise cattle should do so on lands lawfully designated and managed for that purpose. Fulani leaders also have an important responsibility at this time. They must call their innocent youths and herders to order, encourage compliance with the law and support peaceful coexistence with host communities. If this is not done, innocent people may continue to suffer the consequences of the actions of a few irresponsible individuals. The solution lies in justice, modernization, accountability and mutual respect—not in collective punishment, ethnic hostility or lawlessness. Nigeria deserves peace, security and a livestock system that protects both herders and farmers alike.
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unlimitedRofeeha
unlimitedRofeeha@unlimitedRofiah·
Islam has been constantly subjected to attack over time, if it were to be other religion, it would would have gone into extinction. They are pained because Islam, the true religion of God, the true religion of Peace is thriving, fact is this isn't the first and won't be the last but regardless, Islam is here to stay, to thrive and preach the greatness of Almighty Allah Islam is a God-promoted religion, it will thrive to eternity.
Oba 👑 Wacko@Obawacko

People were seen staging a “Say No to Islam” protest 😳

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