Jeff Mo

54.5K posts

Jeff Mo

Jeff Mo

@apachefirefly

Aries BTL, Agric, Investments

Lagos Katılım Mart 2011
469 Takip Edilen364 Takipçiler
Jeff Mo retweetledi
LEGENDARY J.O.E
LEGENDARY J.O.E@LegendaryJoe·
Peter Abacha Obi is leaving the ADC - But he shouldn't be bullied. Now Listen, As I argued for Atiku - he has a right to contest at any age, and no man should be bullied for exercising what is lawfully his right. The only thing Atiku's consistent pursuit of the Presidency reveals is his quiet contempt for the gentleman's zoning arrangement our founding fathers, in their wisdom, promoted to preserve the soul of this democracy. His persistent insistence on being on every ballot, regardless of whose turn the rotation demands, exposes a man whose hunger for power has long eclipsed his commitment to the survival of Nigeria as a democratic project. But it remains his right to run. And he should not be bullied for it. We will reject him at the polls - not because of his age, not because he has been running forever - but because a leader must be selfless enough to place the greater good above personal ambition. Atiku is too selfish for that role. His glaring incompetence, we shall set aside for another day. The same principle governs Peter Abacha Obi. He should never be bullied for exercising his right to freedom of association - even when he exercises it as frequently as a dysenteric infant changes diapers. His serial defections confirm what many have long suspected: he is not a leader of conviction. He is not a man who builds structures that endure. He is not one who organises people and institutions into something lasting. He arrives, agitates, and when the weather shifts - he moves. But it is still his right. And he should not be bullied for it. We will reject him at the polls not because he is perpetually on the move like a commercial whore. Some politicians who have switched parties have gone on to lead nations. That alone is not disqualifying. We will reject him because his movement is never toward contest - it is always away from it. He does not want to compete. He wants to be installed. He seeks only pastures where power is handed to him on a platter, where the primary is a formality and the coronation is the point. Every defection is not a political evolution - it is an escape from accountability. A man who cannot survive a simple party primary has no business leading Nigeria - A Nation of multiferous, multifaceted, multidimensional complexities. Otherwise, we may wake upon a day when the Commander in Chief will flee from his office as President because he simply couldn't cope with the enormous demands of the office We do not want a man who must be pampered into power. Nigeria deserves a leader who has been tested - and stayed. Good Morning Severally...
LEGENDARY J.O.E tweet media
English
38
86
157
5.4K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
Foundational Nupe Lawyer
People who can not manage intra party disputes, how can they be trusted to manage the affairs of over 200million people? Nigerians better shine your eyes!
English
69
293
810
13.2K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
D. H Bwala
D. H Bwala@BwalaDaniel·
He is about to port ohhh. Anywhere belle face
D. H Bwala tweet media
English
1.7K
156
627
92.1K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪@ennyola0015·
Guys, Egypt is in trouble.🤦🙆 Four years ago, they faced an FX crisis that made it difficult to balance trade. They turned to the IMF for a loan, and the IMF agreed but imposed stringent conditions, which Egypt accepted and implemented (including devaluing the local currency). Austerity has hit hard. The cost of living is high, and the government is struggling financially. They have even concessioned parts of their airport operations to raise funds. But the core risk remains: Egypt imports a large amount of food and energy while carrying heavy external debt. Any global shock can quickly worsen the situation.
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪 tweet media𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪 tweet media
English
58
76
261
18K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
#AsiwajuOladimeji
#AsiwajuOladimeji@AsiwajuOladimej·
But when INEC obeyed the CoA ante-bellum, you all set the INEC chairman up by calling for his resignation. You all went ahead and led a protest to the INEC office. Subjected the INEC chairman to all sorts of ridicule. The joke is on you and your fellow ADC members. INEC will always obey the court order/judgment whether it suits you guys sentiments or not!
Jibrin Okutepa San@sanjsokutepa

I am a legal practitioner. I am not a registered member of any political party in Nigeria. I am equally not an employee of any government. I owe no allegiance to anybody except the truth, justice and the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I was the lead counsel to Sen David Mark at the Supreme Court in the judgment delivered by the Supreme Court yesterday. When I checked INEC portal it was clear that INEC without prompting has restored to their portal the leadership of ADC. See INEC portal at:inecnigeria.org/political-part…. For me the restoration of the names of the leadership of ADC on INEC portal as shown on INEC Portal above is the right thing to do. The decision of the Supreme Court yesterday was clear. The appeal of Sen David Mark was allowed in part. The order of the Court of Appeal for "maintainance of status quo ante bellum" was held to have been made without jurisdiction and accordingly set aside. It was the order of the Court of Appeal that INEC said it acted upon when it removed Sen David Mark and his Exco from their portal. INEC as a corporate entity has accorded respect to the decision of the Supreme Court without pretending that it was yet to be served formally with the judgment of the Supreme Court. That is the right thing to do in the circumstances. INEC was represented in the Supreme Court. The prompt restoration of the leadership of ADC to INEC portal is commendable.That is how it should be under the rule of law. Until we agree to be bound by the rule of law and due process and avoid taking the laws into our hands Nigeria developments will be a mirage. INEC in this particular case exhibited rare understanding of respect for the rule of law without waiting to be served with the judgment of the Supreme Court as some institutions and other highly placed Nigerian government officials will always do. Too many in power have no respect for court and courts orders. In most cases impunity reigns supreme in our land. Even within the legal profession courts processes and orders are disregarded for personal benefit and in abuse of power. Today many in privileged positions abused their powers and positions against the people and the society they are meant to serve by disrespecting judgments and orders of courts. Examples are legions. The abuse of power cut across all the strata of the country. Even in the legal profession powers are being abused. The security agencies abused their powers too. Everyone appears to be law unto themselves in this country. On this particular occasion I must commend INEC for their prompt restoration of the leadership of ADC on their portal without waiting for letters from the legal team of Sen David Mark. INEC must do what it needs to do for the good of Nigeria and democracy. INEC must be bold and courageous to attain good success in protecting and safeguarding Nigerian democracy.

English
0
9
16
832
Jeff Mo retweetledi
TallJohn🌍
TallJohn🌍@JohnFanimokun·
It has become a predictable cycle: Peter Obi identifies a "comparable" country, tells Nigeria to "understudy" their success, and then watches as that very model implodes under the weight of reality. Whether it’s intentional or just poor scouting, the Obi Map consistently leads to economic dead-ends. The Argentina Mirage: Just recently, Obi praised the "bold reforms" in Argentina, claiming they turned their fortunes around in two years. In reality, while inflation is cooling from its 300% peak, over 52% of Argentines have been plunged into poverty. He’s asking Nigerians to adopt a model where the "success" is measured while half the population can’t afford to eat. The Egypt Fire Sale: Peter Obi spent days "understudying" Egypt, today, that same Egyptian government is so deep in a debt trap that they are considering selling the management rights of Cairo International Airport just to satisfy IMF conditions. He studied their "finance" only to miss the part where they had to auction off the national gates. The Bangladesh Delusion: Obi frequently holds up Bangladesh as the gold standard for using debt for "productivity." Yet, today, Bangladesh is grappling with such severe infrastructure and climate stress that over 68 million people lack access to safely managed drinking water. He points to their GDP growth while ignoring the fact that millions are literally struggling for a clean drink on the street. It is obvious Peter Obi lacks economic foresight. He is a "stat-chaser" who falls for shiny GDP figures and HDI rankings while completely ignoring the structural rot beneath them.
TallJohn🌍 tweet media
English
5
20
29
534
Jeff Mo retweetledi
Akinwumi
Akinwumi@Big_marvis·
NATIONAL CONFAB 2014: YOU WILL NEVER UNDERSTAND WHAT TINUBU IS DOING UNTIL YOU READ THIS POST. If you really want to understand what President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is doing, stop reacting only to headlines and go back to Nigeria’s long history of constitutional conferences. Many of you GENZs and others I call "emergency patriots" just woke up in 2023. And to you that's enough to understand and judge rightly what Nigeria's problems are. Many of you don't even know why Nigeria is where it is in. Go back to the history of constitutional conferences in Nigeria, you'll understand. Because the truth is simple—and uncomfortable: Nigeria has already diagnosed its problems many times. From the Ibadan Constitutional Conference of 1950 to the 2014 National Conference, the same issues have been raised over and over again: - Too much power concentrated in Abuja. - Weak, dependent states. - Resource control and revenue imbalance. - Lack of true federalism - Overloaded Exclusive List - Security architecture that is too centralized. - Political structure that discourages productivity. Different eras. Same diagnosis. Now here’s where it gets interesting… Leaders before today didn’t ignore these problems. Many of them actually set up conferences to discuss and document solutions: Under Olusegun Obasanjo — the National Political Reform Conference 2005. Under Goodluck Jonathan — the 2014 National Conference. Under Ibrahim Babangida — political bureaus and constitutional debates. Even under Sani Abacha — the Constitutional Conference 1994–1995. They all talked. They all debated. They all produced reports. Documents were written. Committees sat. Delegates argued. But implementation? That’s where Nigeria always stalled. Because vested interests sat on the recommendations and the leaders were afraid to go against them. Now look at today. Without calling a big national conference, reforms are happening that touch on the same core issues those confabs identified decades ago: Fuel subsidy removal and correcting fiscal imbalance and freeing state finances. Exchange rate unification and addressing structural distortions in the economy. Tax and revenue reforms and pushing toward a more sustainable fiscal system. Local government financial autonomy. Focus on subnational viability and forcing states to think beyond federal allocation. You may not like the approach. You may disagree with the speed. But don’t pretend the direction is new. Here’s the blunt truth many people don’t want to hear: Many Nigerians don’t actually understand the country’s core structural problems—yet they argue the loudest. We shout “things are hard” (they are), but ignore why the system has been unsustainable for decades. We demand change, but resist the consequences of fixing what is broken. Go back and read the confab reports. You’ll see clearly: Nigeria’s problem has never been a lack of ideas. It has never been a lack of recommendations. It has always been a lack of political will to implement them. So before you dismiss everything happening today, ask yourself: Are these reforms addressing issues Nigeria has debated since the 1950s? Are these the same structural weaknesses identified repeatedly across conferences? And if yes… then what exactly are we arguing against? You don’t have to agree with president Bola Ahmed Tinubu. But at least understand this: Nigeria is not experimenting. Nigeria is finally confronting long-identified problems. History has been speaking for over 70 years. Maybe it’s time we listened. I support Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu with my full chest.
Akinwumi tweet media
English
9
55
106
4.9K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
Senator Shehu Sani
Senator Shehu Sani@ShehuSani·
The Supreme Court ruling is like this
Senator Shehu Sani tweet media
English
502
117
614
45.7K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
Omo Ologo 🇳🇬🇨🇦
I researched into Peter obi's Egypt electricity funding. Guess what I found? Egypt 🇪🇬 has borrowed 40 billion dollars and gave up some beach ⛱️ front to UAE before they could get some stable electricity My question to Nigerians is, do you want Nigeria to follow the Eygpt borrowing and giving up land to get electricity 🤔 I really want to know?
Omo Ologo 🇳🇬🇨🇦 tweet media
English
19
19
37
1.9K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
Woye
Woye@woye1·
N259bn for the people of Ijebu-Ode to Ibadan road dualisation has been approved by the FG not Tinubu. 2: the South West will remember.
English
11
63
207
2.7K
Jeff Mo
Jeff Mo@apachefirefly·
@ennyola0015 It is horrible. Thank God it's been extracted. Continue with salt and warm water for the next couple of days.
English
0
0
0
4
Jeff Mo retweetledi
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪@ennyola0015·
I sincerely want Atiku on the ballot. Let’s forgive their self-inflicted blunders and let them in. Shutting the door on a poorly prepared opposition often paints the government in a bad light and can sometimes lead to chaos.
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪 tweet media
English
16
11
36
1.8K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
Akin Olaoye
Akin Olaoye@akintollgate·
As a frequent global traveler flying in and out of Nigeria, the arrival process at MMIA used to be the one thing that instantly raised my blood pressure. Today, the entire process has been fully digitized. I cleared customs in just 3 minutes, no human interaction, no stress, and no begging from immigration officials. This is a massive win and deserves huge kudos to the PBAT @officialABAT admin! ✈️ One more 🌹 for you @fkeyamo I love good things, you should too! If you have experienced this process, please share.
Akin Olaoye tweet mediaAkin Olaoye tweet mediaAkin Olaoye tweet media
English
65
262
803
33.1K
ADC Vanguard
ADC Vanguard@ADCVanguard_·
David Mark is the weapon fashioned against Tinubu second term ambition. Tinubu is gone.
ADC Vanguard tweet media
English
103
497
2.3K
24.4K
Jeff Mo retweetledi
JJ. Omojuwa
JJ. Omojuwa@Omojuwa·
Sign of trouble for APGA, you run. Wahala never start for PDP, you run. Labour faces the perturbations of becoming a mainstream party, you run. ADC advancing toward its primaries, you run. But somehow, you have the capacity to save Nigeria from its century old challenges. Whoever believes you should be certified dumb, dumbo, obidient. Or dumbest.
English
113
399
998
31.6K
Jeff Mo
Jeff Mo@apachefirefly·
@ennyola0015 We are lucky that at least the ship has left dock. All along we were window dressing and paying lip service to economic and structural reforms.
English
0
0
0
2
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪@ennyola0015·
President Tinubu is hiring eggheads to fix the power sector. Good start. But let’s be honest, his entire second term will be spent battling structural problems, pushing painful reforms, and surviving the litigation that will come with them. Serious investors don’t throw billions into a sector filled with policy uncertainty and market dysfunction. The next government may be the one that actually goes out to attract massive investment after the reforms are in place. In many countries, reforms come first. Big money comes later.
𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪 tweet media𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪 tweet media𝔼𝕟𝕟𝕪 tweet media
English
43
113
433
24.2K