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Isaac
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Fuel is ₦1350.
Cement is ₦12,000.
Band A is ₦250/kWh.
A loaf of bread is ₦2000.
Cooking gas is ₦1700/kg.
A kilo of turkey is ₦11,000.
One crate of egg is ₦7,500.
A carton of Indomie is ₦11,000.
The Hungry man size is ₦21,000.
Pampers (Jumbo pack) is ₦40,000
Children pay over ₦600K in public universities.
But they should Relax, Tinubu is fixing Nigeria?
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There is a world of difference between “we have” and “we will”.
This “master strategist” has spent three years prioritizing politics of state capture, while borrowing astronomically and enabling corruption.
He is still talking in prospective terms, not on the basis on what he has achieved.
He is telling us what he will do.
This man has ruined our economy and made nonsense of the country.
Channels Television@channelstv
We’ll Place Nigeria On Irreversible Path Of Economic Expansion With Another Four Years — Tinubu channelstv.com/2026/05/24/wel…
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Went house hunting yesterday at a dream residential area in Abuja where I’d genuinely love to permanently reside someday.
And I kept asking myself how people are able to afford 1 billion naira homes.
Funny enough, I used to think the exact same way about owning a 100M+ car… until it happened to me.
Life has a way of making today’s impossibilities look normal tomorrow.
I don’t know what the future holds yet.
But I know this too will eventually come to pass.
From my mouth to God’s ears.
Back to the drawing board 🙂↔️💜




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Most really good trading/actionable intel accounts only have a low amount of followers. Yet the larps/liars and incompetent grifters have hundreds of thousands.
This just reveals the problem with society and why most people are poor and miserable.
They don't want to think for themselves and would rather listen to a fool who says anything with 100% certainty than having to use their own brain and learn and question and analyze.

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Isaac retweetledi

Elon Musk's first wife once described what it's like to watch him fail.
She said he doesn't react the way normal people react. When a rocket explodes, most people in the room go silent. Some cry. Some start calculating the financial damage.
Musk pulls out his phone and starts making calls. Not emotional calls. Engineering calls. "What failed. When can we fix it. When's the next launch." His voice doesn't change. His face doesn't change. The rocket that just cost $60 million is already in the past. The next one is all that exists.
She said it was the most unsettling thing she'd ever witnessed. Not because he was cold. Because he genuinely wasn't affected. The failure didn't register as failure. It registered as data. An experiment that produced results. Results that inform the next experiment.
This is why he wins. Not because he doesn't fail. He fails more spectacularly than anyone in history. He wins because failure occupies zero psychological space. It enters as data and exits as action.
Most people lose not because they fail but because they spend weeks processing the failure before acting again. Musk spends zero seconds. The gap between failure and next attempt is a phone call.
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Instead of declaring a strike action or going on protest at a minimum over the kidnap of their colleagues, the clowns leading the Nigeria Union of Teachers in Oyo State are embarking on a 3-day fasting and prayers.
They are even making silly excuses for the government. The same government that has failed to protect life and property?
We have a lot of sick people in this country.

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Isaac retweetledi

Dangote has done three things in the last 72 hours that the Nigerian government could not do in 60 years.
He cut aviation fuel to N1,650 per litre, slashed diesel and aviation fuel prices at ex-depot level, and filed a lawsuit to stop NNPC and private marketers from importing fuel that his refinery is already producing in surplus.
Now the oil marketers are crying monopoly.
Let us be honest about what monopoly means in this context. For 60 years, a cartel of fuel importers held Nigeria hostage, collecting $10 billion annually in subsidy, keeping state refineries deliberately broken, and charging Nigerians premium prices for refined crude they sent abroad themselves.
Nobody called that a monopoly. Nobody filed a lawsuit about market stability when ordinary Nigerians queued for fuel in an oil producing country for decades.
One private refinery starts cutting prices, increasing supply, and going to court to enforce a law that already says imports are only permitted when local supply is insufficient, and suddenly the marketers have discovered the language of competition and consumer protection.
The law is clear. The Petroleum Industry Act only permits fuel imports when domestic supply cannot meet demand. Dangote’s refinery is supplying over 90% of Nigeria’s daily petrol consumption. The legal basis for those import licences does not exist. He is not asking for a favour. He is asking for the law to be applied.
The marketers built their business model on Nigeria’s inability to refine its own oil. That inability has been solved by one man with private capital. Their business model is obsolete and their objection is not about market stability. It is about market access to a rent they no longer deserve.

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Yesterday, May 19th, in Abuja, I attended the Presidential screening organised by our party, which took over two and a half hours. They carefully reviewed all my documents, including my degree certificates, NYSC credentials, and age declarations.
During the process, I also addressed questions regarding my vision for a new Nigeria and the type of leadership our nation urgently needs right now. Following this, I was cleared and received the presidential nomination form I had previously paid for.
I would like to commend the screening committee, led by former governor Sam Egwu, for their thorough and professional approach. Additionally, I appreciate our party's leadership for upholding the democratic process.
A New Nigeria is POssible. - PO




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People did not vote for Buhari by mistake. They know that Buhari was a failure as a military head of state. They voted for Buhari out of hate for Jonathan.
Similarly people did not vote for Tinubu out of ignorance. People know he's a great thief. People voted for him out of hate for Igbos, tribal bigotry, and religious sentiment.
Don't let anybody deceive you by "i didn't know Tinubu will be like this". We all know what we are doing.
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Have you ever Seen “Car Parked At Owner’s Risk” and wondered if the Law truly protects them?
You see that sign almost everywhere today in
banks, hotels, Churches, Malls, and Event centres.
But here is the real legal question:
If your car gets stolen or damaged inside that premises, can the owner simply point to the signboard and walk away from responsibility?
The law does NOT automatically excuse them just because they wrote “Park At Owner’s Risk” on a board.
In law, courts look beyond paint on cardboard.
They look at FACTS.
Once a premises begins to control parking by:
✔️ Issuing parking tickets
✔️ Employing security guards
✔️ Installing CCTV cameras
✔️ Controlling entry and exit
✔️ Collecting your car keys
The law may consider that they have assumed a DUTY OF CARE over your vehicle and once a duty of care exists, negligence can create liability.
Under the famous case of Donoghue v Stevenson, anyone who owes you a duty of care must act reasonably to prevent foreseeable h@rm.
So if a hotel, bank, or mall creates the impression that your car is secure, the court may ask:
✔️ Did they provide reasonable security?
✔️ Was there negligence?
✔️ Could the theft or damage have been prevented?
✔️ Did they fail in their duty?
Even Section 169 of the Evidence Act, 2011 may prevent a premises owner from denying responsibility after making customers believe their vehicles were safe there.
This is why courts do not blindly worship warning signs.
A signboard is not stronger than evidence.
“Park At Owner’s Risk” is a warning. It is not automatic immunity from liability. Because in law, liability is not decided by what is written on a board. It is decided by:
🥢 Duty.
🥢 Breach.
🥢 Negligence and
🥢 Evidence.
Now tell me did you know this before now?
©️Confidence Aribibia

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Isaac retweetledi
Isaac retweetledi

There’s a silent disaster happening in Nigeria that nobody wants to confront honestly.
We keep shouting about unemployment, bad leadership, low productivity, corruption, poor healthcare, failed institutions and why our country is not working. But many people are avoiding the root cause.
Our education system has been deeply compromised.
A student enters secondary school or university full of dreams, intelligence and potential. Then the system teaches them something dangerous:
“You do not need competence to succeed.”
WAEC malpractice. NECO malpractice. GCE runs. Sorting. Sex for grades. Extortion. Intimidation. Victimization. Handout rackets. “See me after class.” “Talk to your lecturer.” “Settle this course.”
And after 4 or 5 years of surviving that environment, we expect excellence to magically appear.
It won’t.
A country cannot repeatedly reward dishonesty in classrooms and expect integrity in government offices, hospitals, engineering sites, courtrooms and businesses.
This is where many of our unemployable graduates are coming from.
Not because Nigerians are not intelligent.
Not because our youths are lazy.
But because too many people were trained inside a system where merit was murdered.
The painful part is this:
UNN, UNILAG, FUTO, ABU, UI, IMSU, ABSU and many others are using largely the same NUC-regulated curriculum.
The difference is standards.
The universities that still command respect are usually the ones with stronger resistance against sorting, extortion and academic fraud.
The ones collapsing in reputation are often the ones where corruption became normalized.
Once a student realizes they can buy an “A” with ₦20,000, or sleep their way through a course, or manipulate results through connections, the motivation to truly learn starts dying slowly.
And when millions of such graduates enter the labor market, the entire country pays the price.
That weak engineer may eventually supervise a bridge.
That poorly trained nurse may handle a patient.
That compromised accountant may manage public funds.
That fake first-class graduate may become a lecturer and reproduce the same cycle again.
This is no longer just an education problem.
It is a national security problem.
Countries become great because they protect competence fiercely.
Singapore did it.
China did it.
Germany did it.
South Korea did it.
You cannot build a first-world country with a third-world attitude towards education integrity.
Nigeria does not have a shortage of talent.
Nigeria has a shortage of systems that protect excellence.
And until we become ruthless about fighting academic corruption, exam malpractice, sorting, sex-for-grades and institutional intimidation, we will continue producing certificates instead of competence.
This fight is bigger than schools.
It is about the future survival of Nigeria itself.
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Isaac retweetledi

If you are already a profitable trader,
stop searching for new strategies for a while.
Because the more you keep searching,
the more confused you become
while executing the strategy that already works for you.
Sometimes growth is not about learning more.
It is about repeating what works with discipline.
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Isaac retweetledi

State visits by Leaders are not tourism, and diplomacy is not a fashion parade. Every foreign trip undertaken by a government must deliver measurable benefits to the people, including investments, technology transfer, trade agreements, factory expansion, industrial partnerships, and job creation.
During President Trump’s recent visit to China, the American delegation reportedly included a few top government officials, and many of the biggest figures in global business and technology:
Consequently, huge trade deals worth several billion dollars including about 200 Boeing orders were achieved.
The list of the entourage included
1. Donald J. Trump – President of the United States
2. Marco Rubio – Secretary of State
3. Pete Hegseth – Secretary of Defence
4. Elon Musk – CEO, Tesla & SpaceX
5. Jensen Huang – CEO, Nvidia
6. Tim Cook – CEO, Apple
7. Larry Fink – CEO, BlackRock
8. Stephen Schwarzman – CEO, Blackstone
9. Kelly Ortberg – CEO, Boeing
10. Brian Sikes – CEO, Cargill
11. Jane Fraser – CEO, Citigroup
12. Larry Culp – CEO, General Electric
13. David Solomon – CEO, Goldman Sachs
14. Sanjay Mehrotra – CEO, Micron Technology
15.Cristiano Amon – CEO, Qualcomm
16. Dina P. McCormick – President of Meta
17. Ryan McInerney – CEO, Visa
18. Michael Miebach – President, Mastercard
19. Jim Anderson – CEO, Coherent
20. Jacob Thaysen – CEO, Illumina
That is how serious nations approach diplomacy, by aligning foreign policy with economic expansion, industrial growth, innovation, and national productivity.
I hope that lessons can be learned from these recent visits comparing them with the President of Nigeria’s recent state visit to the United Kingdom.
A large entourage of politicians, aides, and government officials travelled, yet Nigerians are still asking a simple question: what exactly did Nigeria bring home?
Which factories are coming to Nigeria?
What power, technology, manufacturing, agricultural, or industrial agreements were secured?
How many direct jobs will this visit create for Nigerian youths?
What investments were attracted?
What measurable economic outcomes can the ordinary Nigerian point to?
The delegation reportedly included:
1. President Bola Tinubu
2. Senator (Mrs) Tinubu
3.12 governors
4.9 ministers
5.7 members of the National Assembly
6. Over 20 senior State House staff
7. Over 30 security personnel
8. Over 10 domestic staff
9. Several supporters and associates
It is not enough to ride horses, wear matching uniforms, attend royal banquets, and release glossy photographs. Symbolism without substance cannot feed hungry citizens.
Today, Nigeria is in decline, battling serious insecurity, food insecurity, unemployment, a weakened naira, declining industrial productivity, and worsening poverty.
At a time when millions of Nigerians struggle daily to afford food and survive economic hardship, every kobo spent on foreign trips must produce tangible national value: investments, factories, jobs, exports, infrastructure, and economic opportunities.
Nigeria needs leadership that is focused less on optics and more on productivity; less on ceremony and more on measurable economic results.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Someone asked on X why Elon Musk always takes his son, X Æ A-Xii, to high level business meetings, including his trip to China.
I was also wondering, but then I remembered I had read about the psychology behind things like this in a book before, and the patterns were consistent.
The child serves many purposes, but I can only share two and withhold the remaining three because I might need them in the future.
The first purpose is safety. The child protects Elon in public more than he protects himself.
The second is psychological. It becomes difficult to turn down his offers or requests because the child softens you immediately they arrive. You try to be nice and playful with the child, lose your guard in the process, and boom, Elon strikes. At that point, you’re more likely to say YES.
This is not something you can do with every child. You have to raise/train your child for things like this. Some of you are raising children who can’t stay calm when necessary, they might just mess things up for you.
Do this with a child you can pass instructions to, and they immediately play along. Like I said, na your duty to train one to that level. Children are like computers; whatever you program into them becomes part of who they are. I love children, they are the future.
© Richard Chibo

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