
Emeka Transition
5.3K posts

Emeka Transition
@asapemeka
Sport Analyst and a lucky guy Man United forever.























I’ve been saying this for ages. If you want a proper remote job this year, get on Reddit immediately. You can let me know in the comments if you’d want a video guide. Just find your way to Reddit ASAP.





I have 4 days to raise 2m In my life I haven't been this scared I'm so scared guys😔💔

Our prediction for today. Winner gets £10. You have to predict the correct score for both games. PSG v Chelsea Real Madrid v Man City As usual, If you win, and you don't want the money, you can ask me to give someone else that you choose. Let’s just have fun. Its not worth cheating, no usage of burner accounts or multiple predictions please, not worth it.


If you’re in a critical condition and you were referred to UBTH, the chances of you meeting God is higher than the chances of a Doctor attending to you immediately. God forbid that hospital!!😒







He don post again 👀 Make we see how many go deliver here. Who can book these correct scores abeg, make we try am 🙏🏼

NEOCOLONIALISM IS NOT A VICTIMLESS CRIME Samuel, a 19‑year‑old scavenger in Lagos, is introduced as an emblem of youth crushed by poverty in the Global South. A viral act of individual charity appears to change his life, but this story is misleading if treated as a solution because with over half of young Nigerians under‑ or unemployed, charity can only ever touch a tiny fraction of those in need. Only the state has the power to transform society at scale, as shown by China’s mass poverty reduction through planned, state‑led development. In most of the Global South, states cannot play this role because they are not truly sovereign. Instead, they are neocolonial structures run by “puppet” elites serving foreign capital. Extreme global wage inequalities and value transfers are evidence of a system that enriches the North through cheap labour and shortens lives in the South by deliberate design. Post‑independence anti‑colonial land movements were crushed and replaced by comprador elites who, under IMF and World Bank “reforms”, imposed austerity, privatization, and land dispossession. Public services, especially education and health, were gutted, pushing millions like Samuel out of school. Instead of funding social schemes to help young people like Samuel, Nigerian wealth siphoned off through corrupt schemes tied to foreign interests. This is not random “corruption” but a deliberate neocolonial order that blocks the South from using the same tools of development once used by the North. Export‑oriented monocultures, sanctions, political interference, and even war and destabilisation keep countries locked into supplying cheap raw materials. Local leaders who accept this role become the “middle management” of empire. This global imperial structure is not invincible. Recent popular revolutions, such as in Africa's Sahel region, are proof that when seized and utilised, national sovereignty can redirect resources toward national development. Ultimately, recognizing poverty as the product of imperial design—not fate or individual failure—is the first step toward dismantling the system that shapes the lives of millions of impoverished people across the Global South. @VoxUmmah @venanalysis @qiaocollective @ProgIntl @KawsachunNews @OrinocoTribune @blkagendareport @SoberaniaPod @DavidHundeyin










