Sir Bright retweetledi
Sir Bright
1.3K posts

Sir Bright retweetledi
Sir Bright retweetledi

🚨 HOW TO FORMALLY LEAVE ADC 🚨
1) Write a resignation letter (use template below)
2) State clearly: you resign EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY
3) Add: you withdraw any prior membership (important!)
4) Sign (digital signature is fine if sending as email)
5) Send it NOW using any or all of these contact:
📧 info@adcregistration.ng
&
support@adcregistration.ng (email)
📍 121 Adetokunbo Ademola Crescent, Wuse 2, Abuja (letter)
📱 +234 702 642 0430 (optional WhatsApp/SMS: “I’ve emailed my resignation”)
6) Keep proof:
✔️ Email sent (screenshot)
✔️ PDF copy of letter
7) You are LEGALLY covered once sent (Resignation is effective upon communication, not upon ADC acknowledgement)
8) You can now safely join NDC ndcregister.com
9) Post your resignation publicly on social media for timestamp evidence (you can cover your full names and NIN for privacy if you want!)
10) Final step: Don't forget to unfollow ADC accounts 😌
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📄 RESIGNATION TEMPLATE:
[YOUR FULL NAME]
[ADDRESS]
[PHONE]
[EMAIL]
[DATE]
The National Chairman
African Democratic Congress (ADC)
Abuja, Nigeria
Subject: Resignation from ADC Membership
Dear Sir,
I hereby resign my membership of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) with IMMEDIATE EFFECT.
I initially registered [online only / and completed ward authentication – pls choose one]. Notwithstanding this, I hereby withdraw any prior expression of membership and confirm that from the date of this notice, I am not a member of the ADC.
Please update your records accordingly.
Yours faithfully,
[SIGNATURE - digital or printed]
[YOUR FULL NAME]
---
OBIDIENTS, stay sharp. Document everything!!!


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Sir Bright retweetledi

A Unified Message to All As you are all now aware, His Excellency Peter Obi is going to be our new presidential candidate and the face of this movement. We call on everyone to vigorously market and promote our candidate with honour and facts. We will not attack or abuse any other candidate, and we expect the same courtesy in return. If you abuse Peter Obi or attempt to tarnish his character, be ready we will respond accordingly. We prefer peace, but if it is a fight you bring, we are more than ready to meet it. To my dear Northern brothers and sisters: Do not come to my page with religious or tribal attacks. They will not work here i won't tolerate it. We who support this movement believe Nigeria belongs to everyone Igbo, Hausa, Yoruba, Christian, Muslim, and all others. Our strength lies in our unity, not in division. The unity of our nation is what we dream of and will continue to fight for. My reasons for supporting Peter Obi are clear: his outstanding track record as Governor of Anambra State and the positive plans he has for my region the Northern Nigeria. No one can stop or intimidate us. As true Kwankwasiyya, we do not fear challenges we welcome them as opportunities to prove our determination and strength.Peter Obi and Kwankwaso represent our new project for a New Nigeria. We will take this message to the markets, homes, chambers, streets, and every corner of this country. We will campaign with passion and sell this vision to our people. To all supporters of this movement: This is our moment to show Nigerians that love, respect, and unity can be stronger than religion or tribe. Let us promote this movement across every platform and every community. Let us grow together as one.
One Nigeria Must Be OK.

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Sir Bright retweetledi

Dear Obidients,
PO has left the ADC building. Please DE-REGISTER immediately.
Register with NDC today. Now.
membership.ndcnigeria.com/internal/signup
Regards,
Babatunde O. Gbadamosi
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Sir Bright retweetledi
Sir Bright retweetledi
Sir Bright retweetledi

@DStvNgCare my Yanga subscription doesn't show 152 and other channels meant for the package. They return an error message that the channel is not available in Nigeria.
Kindly assist 7018265668.
English
Sir Bright retweetledi

Sir Bright retweetledi

Fellow Nigerians, good morning.
I woke up this morning after my church service with a deeply reflective heart, and despite every constraint, I felt compelled to share these thoughts with you.
Many people do not truly understand the silent pains some of us carry daily—the private struggles, emotional burdens, and quiet battles we face while trying to survive and serve sincerely in difficult circumstances.
We now live in an environment that has become increasingly toxic, where the very system that should protect and create opportunities for decent living often works against the people—a society where intimidation, insecurity, endless scrutiny, and discouragement have become normal.
More painful is when some of those you associate with, believing you would find understanding and solidarity among them, become part of the pressure you face. Some who publicly identify with you privately distance themselves or join in unfair criticism.
We live in a society where humility is mistaken for weakness, respect is seen as a lack of courage, and compassion is treated as foolishness—a system where treating people equally is questioned simply because you refuse to worship status, tribe, class, or power.
Personally, I have never looked down on anyone except to uplift them. I have never used privilege, position, or resources to oppress others, intimidate the weak, or make people feel small. To me, leadership has always been about service, sacrifice, and helping others rise.
Let me state clearly: my decision to leave the ADC is not because our highly respected Chairman, Senator David Mark, treated me badly, nor because my leader and elder brother, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, or any other respected leaders did anything personally wrong to me. I will continue to respect them.
However, the same Nigerian state and its agents that created unnecessary crises and hostility within the Labour Party that forced me to leave now appear to be finding their way into the ADC, with endless court cases, internal battles, suspicion, and division, instead of focusing on deeper national problems and playing politics built more on control and exclusion than on service and nation-building.
Even within spaces where one labours sincerely, one is sometimes treated like an outsider in one’s own home. You and your team become easy targets for every failure, frustration, or misunderstanding, as though honest contribution has become a favour being tolerated rather than appreciated.
And when you choose to leave so that those you are leaving can have peace, and you step out into the cold, you are still maligned and your character is questioned. Despite all your efforts to continue working for a better Nigeria and engaging people with sincerity and goodwill, those who do not wish you well continue to attack your character and question your intentions.
There are moments I ask God in prayer: Why is doing the right thing often misconstrued as wrongdoing in our country? Why is integrity not valued? Why is the prudent management of resources, especially when invested in critical areas like education and healthcare, wrongly labelled as stinginess? Why are humility and obedience to the rule of law often taken to be weakness rather than discipline?
Let me assure all that I am not desperate to be President, Vice President, or Senate President. I am desperate to see a society that can console a mother whose child has been kidnapped or killed while going to school or work. I am desperate to see a Nigeria where people will not live in IDP camps but in their homes. I am desperate for a country where Nigerian citizens do not go to bed hungry, not knowing where their next meal will come from.
Yet, despite everything, I remain resolute. I firmly believe that Nigeria can still become a country with competent leadership based on justice, compassion, and equal opportunity for all.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Sir Bright retweetledi

The Real Power of the Sultan
Most outsiders don’t understand what the Sultan of Sokoto actually holds.
He is the Sarkin Musulmi — Commander of the Faithful. The 20th-generation heir to dan Fodio’s throne, unbroken for 222 years. Spiritual leader of more than 100 million Sunni Muslims — half of Nigeria.
In pure numbers, that puts him among the highest-ranking Sunni authorities on earth.
Islam means submission. When the Sarkin Musulmi rules on a matter of religion, every Muslim under his authority is obligated to obey. Not invited. Obligated.
He chairs Jama’atu Nasril Islam — the umbrella body of Nigerian Sunni Islam.
He chairs the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs.
He is grand patron of Miyetti Allah — the Fulani pastoralist body whose factions are credibly accused of running the militia killings across the Middle Belt.
Every Northern emir — Kano, Zaria, Adamawa, Borno, dozens more — sits below his throne. Every Sharia court in twelve Northern states operates inside his doctrinal framework. Every Friday sermon in tens of thousands of Northern mosques follows his lead.
Every Northern governor, every Northern senator, every Northern president has paid him homage. None has publicly opposed him on a matter of substance. Ever.
He could end the killing in 90 days.
A binding fatwa from his office naming Boko Haram, ISWAP, and the Fulani militias as khawarij — rebels outside Islam — would split them from their kinship cover overnight. Every imam in Northern Nigeria would have to choose between obeying the throne or siding with men the throne has declared apostate.
He could publicly call out the nine billion dollars a year being looted from his own lands. He could withdraw his blessing from the political class running the cover-up. He could order cooperation with Nigerian security forces on every kidnapping ring operating in his domain.
He has every tool. He has every platform. He has every authority.
He has used none of it to end the terror or vast mineral looting in his lands.
That is not a man without power.
That is a man without desire.
#EarthShaker
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Sir Bright retweetledi
Sir Bright retweetledi

This whole thing is surreal.
Atiku Abubakar — banned from the United States for a decade for laundering $40 million, his fourth wife caught taking $1.7 million in Siemens bribes, now running for president with the Butcher of Kaduna on his ticket — just hired a Washington fixer.
The fixer's name is Karl Marx.
I am not making this up. The man Atiku just paid $1.2 million is legally named Karl-Marx Edward Ikemefuna William George Okeke-Von Batten. FARA filing. April 1, 2026. Look it up.
A Nigerian-American Republican fundraiser named after the father of communism. Hired by a longtime Caliphate-aligned Northern strongman. To lobby a Trump White House that just slapped Nigeria with a Country of Particular Concern designation.
Six installments. Twelve months. $1.2 million. Atiku didn't even sign it himself — sent an ADC officer to put pen to paper.
You don't hire Karl Marx if you have a clean record. You hire Karl Marx because Caliphate connections won't get you a meeting with Marco Rubio.
Now — what this means for the narrative war.
Tinubu has DCI Group. Nine million dollars. Atiku has Karl Marx. One-point-two million. Two wings of the same Caliphate. Two competing fixers. Same Washington game.
For political tourists, this looks like a real fight. APC versus ADC. Hatchet versus hatchet.
For the people on the ground — it isn't.
Watch what Atiku attacks. Fuel subsidies. The economy. Tinubu's competence. Tinubu's mandate. Watch what he never attacks. The genocide. The Sultan. The Middle Belt killings. The Sharia constitution. The IDP camps Abuja denies exist. The blasphemy lynchings. The Catholic schoolchildren still missing in Niger State.
He cannot. The moment he does, his Northern base evaporates. So he won't. Ever.
Which means the entire ADC-versus-APC narrative war is a fight over surface things only. Subsidies. Inflation. Cabinet appointments. Who gets the contracts.
For the people fighting actual darkness in Nigeria — the IDPs, the Plateau widows, the Middle Belt pastors, the Igbo families still mourning Kanu — the difference between Karl Marx and DCI Group comes down to three questions.
Who signs the checks.
Who gets bashed online.
Who gets snaps taken with Washington honchoes.
That's the whole fight.
The genocide doesn't get mentioned. The Sultan doesn't get touched. The constitution doesn't get rewritten. The displaced don't get counted. The Butcher of Kaduna stays on the brochure.
We can watch with some grim entertainment as Karl Marx takes whacks at Tinubu over the next twelve months. It will be loud. It will trend. It will not change a single thing for the children buried at Yelewata.
Real opposition doesn't need a fixer. Real opposition has the people.
Atiku doesn't have the people. He has $1.2 million and Karl Marx.
The Plateau widow can't afford a fixer. Neither can the St. Mary's parents.
They don't need one. They need a free election, a new constitution, and self-determination on the ballot.
That fight doesn't cost $1.2 million.
It costs courage.
#EarthShaker

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Sir Bright retweetledi

@EthosReviews @DStvNgCare @DStvNg @britaworld @fccpcnigeria @NgComCommission Thank you so much. This has lingered for a while. I had to come here because their customer service number 09082368533 is switched off.
Please DStv resolve this.
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@DStvNgCare @DStvNg could you look into resolving this issue raised by @britaworld as soon as possible. Every minute unresolved indicates loss of money and value paid for. We're tagging @fccpcnigeria and @NgComCommission for the record.
Mr Bright@britaworld
@DStvNgCare my Yanga subscription doesn't show 152 and other channels meant for the package. They return an error message that the channel is not available in Nigeria. Kindly assist 7018265668.
Bournemouth, England 🇬🇧 English
Sir Bright retweetledi

Edo Governor Admits President Tinubu Is Releasing Federal Money for Election westafricaweekly.com/edo-governor-a…
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Sir Bright retweetledi

From Miriam Pschak “I was born a Muslim in Iran. I was raised on Islam, educated in its scriptures, and even became an Islamic leader here in America—an Imam, an executive director of CAIR, and president of the Muslim Forum of Utah. So don’t insult my intelligence by telling me I believe in something I don’t understand. I understand Islam inside and out—and that’s why I left it. You say Islam is the religion of Abraham and that Christianity is paganism? That’s the same tired propaganda I used to preach before I studied the Bible for myself. Abraham looked forward to the promise of the Messiah (John 8:56), and that promise was fulfilled in Jesus Christ—the Son of God, not just a prophet, but God in the flesh. You call it idolatry, but the truth is, you worship a distant, unknowable deity who demands submission but offers no assurance of salvation, no love, and no personal relationship.
Islam claims simplicity, but it's not spiritual clarity—it's theological shallowness wrapped in slogans. You say “God alone,” but then claim the Qur'an is eternal and uncreated, that Muhammad is the perfect man, and that prayers must be recited in Arabic to be valid. That’s not pure monotheism—that’s blind ritualism. You call Christianity confusing, yet it’s Islam that denies the very sacrifice that fulfills God's justice and love. I’ve seen Christian doctors, scientists, and theologians embrace Jesus not because they’re deceived, but because they found the truth—a truth you refuse to face because it means letting go of the lies you were fed. Islam is not the religion of Abraham—it’s a 7th-century political invention that twisted Scripture to build an empire. I left Islam not because I was ignorant—but because I finally understood it. And once I saw the truth in Christ, I was set free.”

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