Pelumi Isaiah

75 posts

Pelumi Isaiah

Pelumi Isaiah

@atpemzy

Elect || University of Ibadan

Katılım Nisan 2025
155 Takip Edilen11 Takipçiler
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
FC Barcelona Femení
FC Barcelona Femení@FCBfemeni·
TEMPORADA PERFECTA ✨🏆🏆🏆🏆✨
FC Barcelona Femení tweet media
Español
226
6.9K
55.5K
383.3K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
TheGrEAtGuYLaNRaY
TheGrEAtGuYLaNRaY@LaNRaY_SHeeRan·
I watched my dad take us from Face me , Face you to having a house of our own. While working twice as hard. Father’s don’t get the same praise as mothers cos the didn’t cuddle us. Repost this if you are proud of your dad ❤️
English
13
548
1.7K
14.8K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
The Spearhead
The Spearhead@Spearhead_Af·
Mahdi Shehu on Alleged 1995 U.S.-Backed Plot Against Abacha Mahdi Shehu’s account of the 1995 Durbar Hotel bombing speaks to foreign interference, regime change politics, and the hidden hands that have shaped Nigeria’s political history. According to Shehu, a U.S. Embassy political officer approached him in Kaduna, offered him money, and asked him to drop a parcel at the Durbar Hotel as part of what he described as a campaign against the Abacha government. Shehu says he refused, only for the hotel to be bombed shortly after, with journalist Bagauda Kaltho later linked to the incident. This story forces a larger question: how many times has Nigeria’s instability been engineered, sponsored, or encouraged by foreign powers, only to be later presented to us as our own failure? This is why Africans must pay closer attention to the history we are told, the history that is hidden, and the people who benefit from our chaos.
English
46
1.1K
2.2K
228.6K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
For those who don't know, Gadaffi's Great Man Made River Project was in the process of re-greening the entire Libyan Sahara and part of the Sahel using vast underground fossil water reserves. So when the White People Coalition Army arrived in 2011, they bombed the project sites and even its pipe factory so that the Sahara and North Sahel would remain poor, underpopulated, and eternally dependent on food imports. Little history lesson.
The Spearhead@Spearhead_Af

Why Did The West Destroy Libya’s Water Supply In 2011? Did you know that the West destroyed one of the largest water infrastructure projects ever attempted in human history, just to punish the sovereign African country that created this project? In this report for the Spearhead, @okorieuche_ sheds light on Libya’s fabled and tragically ill-fated Great Man-made River Project (GMRP), a project that could have sustained Libya’s water supply into the distant future, and transformed the wider Saharan and Sahelian regions of Africa, geologically and economically, for the better, had NATO not carried out its illegal invasion of Libya in 2011 and murdered its popular, revolutionary leader Muammar Gaddafi.

English
56
2.8K
5.2K
168K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
Fabrizio Romano
Fabrizio Romano@FabrizioRomano·
❤️🤍 Mikel Arteta on his wife: “She needs to understand that without her, none of that would have happened for sure”. “She is the person and the reason why I’ve kept my composure, my self-confidence, my energy at the level that was required to do what we’ve done”, told Sky.
Fabrizio Romano tweet media
English
1.2K
4.8K
65.2K
1.8M
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
Fabrizio Romano
Fabrizio Romano@FabrizioRomano·
🚨🇸🇳 OFFICIAL: Senegal World Cup squad has been released. Some of the main players left out. ⛔️ ❌ Malang Sarr ❌ Boulaye Dia ❌ Habib Diallo ❌ Nampalys Mendy ❌ Cheikh Sabaly ❌ Nobel Mendy ❌ Abdou Diallo
Fabrizio Romano tweet media
English
1.3K
3.6K
37.2K
2.3M
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
aditya
aditya@adxtyahq·
Nobody is more busy than the unemployed+lazy combo person Bro thinks he’s running out of time, studies for 3-4 hours a day, then spends the rest of the time thinking, manifesting something, and scrolling brainrot content. Come out of your comfort zone and see people are giving 12-14 hours a day. After their jobs, they still go build other stuff and never say they’re running out of time. They just love the work and keep doing it, stop blaming time and take action or things only get worse.
aditya tweet media
English
52
77
1K
38.4K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
Biggest Mack
Biggest Mack@Big_Mck·
Our challenges are not the same, you fraud. We want to be left alone to control our resources. Europe is facing identity crisis, rise in fraudulent leaders like you, and declining birthrate and “civilization.” We are not twinning. Leave Africa alone. Go back to your abusive husband.
Emmanuel Macron@EmmanuelMacron

Les défis de l’Afrique et de l’Europe sont les mêmes. Nous voulons la paix, la prospérité et la souveraineté.

English
8
207
546
7.2K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Today in 'things you didn't know because nobody teaches them in school', some of Kwame Nkrumah's most important financiers and loyal supporters who brought him all the way from jail to power were wealthy Ghanaian women. @joyfwen for @Spearhead_Af
English
25
1K
2K
34K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
Megatron
Megatron@Megatron_ron·
🇺🇸🇨🇳 The president of Belarus Lukashenko says: "If you can't handle Iran, then you can't mess with China. You'll never be able to deal with that kind of power."
Megatron tweet media
English
136
2.2K
12K
358.1K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
Unfiltered
Unfiltered@quotesdaily100·
ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS & WHAT THEY LEFT BEHIND: - Mesopotamia – gave us writing - Egypt – gave us monuments - Greece – gave us democracy - Rome – gave us law - Indus Valley – gave us urban planning - China – gave us paper and printing - Maya – gave us advanced astronomy - Persia – gave us roads and governance - Aztec – gave us agricultural innovation - Inca – gave us mountain engineering - Phoenicia – gave us the alphabet - Carthage – gave us trade networks - Nubia – gave us iron smelting - Babylon – gave us the first legal code - Minoans – gave us Europe's earliest palace culture - Sumer – gave us the wheel - Vikings – gave us oceanic exploration
English
67
310
1.3K
116.5K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
SHAV★
SHAV★@shavnyuy·
Burkina Faso is one of the hottest countries on earth with temperatures that sit at 40°C during peak season. While most West African cities keep building concrete boxes that trap heat and run up electricity bills nobody can afford, Burkina Faso keeps showing the rest of us what building for your climate actually looks like. The Bangre Veenem school complex is built from laterite stone bricks native to the area. Compressed earth brick vaults for the classrooms, thick walls that absorb heat during the day and release it at night, keeping interiors cool without a single air conditioning unit. A double roof system creates a buffer of moving air above the vault, whisking away Saharan heat before it reaches the students below. The classrooms are oriented north-south to catch prevailing winds. Centuries-old Néré trees were preserved on site and integrated as structural shade elements. Bougainvillea vines are trained over pergolas to become living screens, green, cooling and beautiful. “The students don’t say it’s really hot and want to go home because they’re comfortable and can concentrate” that’s the school’s education adviser speaking. A school that keeps children in class because the building works. That’s the standard. 📍Bangre Veenem School Complex, Koudougou, Burkina Faso. Architect: Albert Faus. 📷 Milena Villalba
SHAV★ tweet mediaSHAV★ tweet mediaSHAV★ tweet mediaSHAV★ tweet media
English
8
154
743
31.2K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Predictably, everyone is mad at me for saying this but here is a very simple thought experiment to prove that I am right. Picture each person in your Nigerian life that "loves" you and imagine a button is placed in front of them with the sole instruction that if they push it, they receive $1M (N1.3bn) cash immediately, no questions asked, but you die instantly. Will they push the button? If you hesistated for even a microsecond before answering "no" for each person you pictured, that means you yourself have acknowledged that whatever relationship exists there is at best cordial, but cannot be described as "love". Because someone who loves you can never place a monetary amount on the value you bring to their life by existing. The fact that as you're reading this, you KNOW that the majority of people who know you would push that button is what disturbs you, because it sounds like a moral indictment on Nigerian people. Meanwhile I couldn't care less about the individual morality of Nigerians, because that's not the point I'm making at all. The point I'm making is that Nigeria by design CANNOT incubate "love" because it is still running entirely on an extractive operating system. Once upon a time when our ancestors still owned their own minds and had sovereignty over their own decisions, it was possible for them to love each other because they were the ones who built their society to fit their own aspirations as a group. Love requires the stability and safety offered by a society that controls its own direction. Love cannot exist under colonial logic. Under colonial logic, nothing is sacred. Everything exists to be harvested, consumed, extracted and fucked. The land is no longer the place where you and your ancestors have lived for thousands of years. It is now a mine with a quota for vomiting out shiny rocks for a man with a gun who says he "owns" it. Your wife and daughter are now the sex slaves of the man with the gun along with a hundred other people's wives and daughters, and the resulting destruction of social order is none of his business. Your religion and way of connecting with the divine which have served your people for thousands of years are now suddenly outlawed, and you are now to worship a god that doesn't look like you. Your farm is no longer the thing that feeds your family. It is now a plantation for things you can't eat which the man with a gun forces you to remit to him as tax in exchange for not being locked up or rendered landless. Your entire society is in total chaos and the only way to rise above the chaos is to somehow fight to become the Warrant Chief of the man with the gun, or his armed askari warrior. This is the same logic that Nigerian society is still operating on 200 years later. Everyone is still fighting to become the economic or political Warrant Chief with enough power to lord it over their neighbour or to emigrate. Or they are the cult, agbero, or police askari warrior whose ability to wield violence gives them an edge in the same mad scramble to survive a hostile, extractive, unpredictable environment. Why on earth would "love" blossom and thrive in such an environment? That would be like slaves on a plantation claiming to "love" each other. What slaves on a plantation share is not "love." It is the strong bond of shared trauma. It is mutual affinity. It is sexual desire. It can even be affection. But it's not "love". "Love" is a societal condition that can only become a thing after the slaves revolt, kill the slavemaster and his family, take over the plantation, and turn it into a farming community built on the logic of mutual beneficience instead of extraction. Until then, they're just carrots inside a massive blender who, instead of figuring out how to destroy the blades and render the blender inoperable, are busy having lots of pointless carrot sex, making meaningless little carrot babies that will only become the next generation of carrot juice to be extracted from the blender. Anyway I don't know why I'm arsed to sit and write stuff like this for the benefit of an audience that is as intellectual as I'm Chinese. I'd be better off talking earnestly to the billboards at Spintex roundabout.
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin

They never do. I've said for years that almost nobody in Nigeria has experienced actual love before, whether male or female. Not from their romantic partners, not from their family, not even from their parents. It's all an unhealthy soup of unprocessed emotions, theatre performance and the worst kind of unbridled capitalism. Nigerian relationships are characterised by a lot of things. Things like Desire. Lust. Dependency. Codependency. Convenience. Need. Force. Love is unfortunately not one of them.

English
97
551
1.7K
100.5K
Pelumi Isaiah retweetledi
Khalid Warsame
Khalid Warsame@KhalidWarsa·
I’m pro Chinese products whether it’s cars, electronics, infrastructure, food, or even AI because they’re affordable to buy and operate. African countries need them the most. Take Somalia for example. Electricity is so expensive people ration it. Fridges don’t run 24/7, only a few hours a day at most. Same for washers. Dryers, microwaves, and deep freezers are extremely rare because they’re outrageously expensive to buy and run. I went to the biggest fish market in my recent Somalia visit. They don’t run freezers because going on another fishing trip makes more economical sense. Do you have any idea how affordable electricity and freezers are gonna change that market? If I was a Somali leader, I would flood the country with Chinese solar panels and electronics.
Duke Of Nigeria.@xagreat

China is seriously crashing the prices of cars in Africa. Recall that China helped crashed the prices of smart phones and laptops for Africans.

English
29
195
1.4K
88.2K
Pelumi Isaiah
Pelumi Isaiah@atpemzy·
@AmacoUSA @Omoyemi2108 @xxfw1da Really, but why are you trying so hard to belong ? Untrained twats? because of a bant, one you clearly couldn't even relate with. I don't see untrained twats here, who I see is a dimwit, and that's you!
English
0
0
30
539
Kado
Kado@AmacoUSA·
@xxfw1da Again, always them… 👆👆 Like I said earlier, do with this info whatever you wish
English
6
0
4
2.7K