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@drjoe347

Against Convention

Davy Jones Katılım Mayıs 2012
2.8K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
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Benkingsley Nwashara
Benkingsley Nwashara@Benking443·
"Teachers went on strike under Peter Obi" 🤡 "Doctors went on strike too" 🤡 Now listen to this video and stop disgracing your generation. PETER OBI IS NOT YOUR MATE!
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CHIZZY_BB
CHIZZY_BB@CHIZZY_BB·
Jesu! I nearly choke at Normal😂😂 Test urx and tell us where u stopped
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TheCable
TheCable@thecableng·
"I was in South Africa for a wedding when the impeachment of Obasa commenced. I was confused when I returned. I saw my colleagues signing and I signed too thinking the order was from the presidency until the president called us to return the speaker which we did." — Desmond Elliot
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Daniel Regha
Daniel Regha@DanielRegha·
You must be an incredibly w'cked person to defend this present administrations and failure of govts; State and Federal levels inclusive.
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Àgbà John Doe
Àgbà John Doe@jon_d_doe·
Peter Obi and Kwankwaso are not poor men. They don't need to use their money to bribe voters or give them bags of rice and garri. They should join funds together with all well-meaning Nigerians, and their party to: 1. Build a high tech central collation center and hire tech gurus to man it. 2. Pay volunteers and mobilization groups to cover for logistics. 3. Ensure that they have delegates in all 774 local governments (if possible) in Nigeria and all polling units who would live stream the results to the collation center. 4. Embark on massive grassroots awareness and campaigns across the country, especially in the remote areas of Nigeria. 5. Form an alliance with local and foreign media and alert them to any malpractices taking place. 6. Mobilize religious leaders to constantly campaign for them in the churches and mosques all over the country. The efforts would yield very good results. In my own little capacity, I am willing to donate N3m towards their campaign. Whether they win or not, I'll not regret it. End.
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IMPERVIOUS 8🌍💰👑
IMPERVIOUS 8🌍💰👑@HenryDivine10·
We easily forget things in Nigeria. Millions of Nigerians suffer from short term and long term memory loss
IMPERVIOUS 8🌍💰👑 tweet media
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CIPHER BLINKS | WEBSITE DEVELOPER | SHOPIFY
@_pauliegee The explanation is good. You just don’t get it yet. Whether he later got the 1k back doesn’t change the fact that at that moment, he sacrificed it for you. For Jesus, He died to separate humanity from sin, and rose again to give humans power over death.
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🐬
🐬@_pauliegee·
god see question o 😭😭
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Àgbà John Doe
Àgbà John Doe@jon_d_doe·
Even thugs & touts that have penetrated our political space are sending their kids abroad to school. But they're giving your parents who couldn't even send you to good schools in Nigeria, 1k & bag of rice to vote for politicians. Some of you, your parents are your undoing. End
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Tall Ogoni Girl
Tall Ogoni Girl@medlyn_kobo·
The next morning we went for a morning walk with the Fmr President Olusegun Obasanjo This man walked all the way to and fro some of the candidates were tired but baba wasn’t 😂😭😭
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Chelsea True Coach
Chelsea True Coach@minafuropeleke·
@medlyn_kobo What should Nigeria do with this information? How does this add value to the life of Nigerians? 😩
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Esperanza
Esperanza@Dating_Diary2·
@Mikeliberation @nollyclips28 Not necessarily impatience. An interview is a two-way test, while they assess your skill, you also observe how they treat your time. If respect starts poorly, it often doesn’t improve later. Sometimes walking away is also a decision, not a mistake.
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De Liberty
De Liberty@Mikeliberation·
One of my classmates sent out his CV last week and got a response from the MD of a company last night, inviting him for an interview by 9 a.m. today. Around 7 a.m. this morning, the MD called him again and said the interview venue had changed, but the time remained the same. Luckily for him, the new location was even closer to where he lives. He got there about 10 minutes before 9 a.m. and was told to wait a little. By 9:15 a.m., he called the MD just to let him know he had arrived. The man told him to wait another 10 minutes because he was in a meeting. My classmate waited… and waited. After over one hour and twenty minutes, he quietly carried his bag and left. About 15 minutes later, the MD called him and asked where he was. My classmate replied, “Sir, I already left.” The man sounded shocked and asked why he would leave after being told to wait. My classmate replied: “I have other commitments today, sir. I can’t work for someone who doesn’t respect time.” The MD replied, "That was the interview and you failed". Was my classmate too impatient?
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Cyborg Warlord
Cyborg Warlord@Admiral_Cyborg·
There was a time in Nigeria when one man sat at the intersection of business, politics, foreign power and military influence. That man was Moshood Kashimawo Olawale Abiola. Most Nigerians only remember MKO for June 12. But before that, there was another story many people either forgot, ignored or were too afraid to touch. ITT. International Telephone and Telegraph was not just an ordinary company. It was one of the most powerful multinational corporations in the world at the time. In Nigeria, it handled massive telecommunications contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars during the military era. And at the center of it all was MKO Abiola. American investigations and reports from the late 70s and 80s alleged that millions of dollars were moved around as “commissions” tied to Nigerian contracts. Some reports claimed those funds found their way into the hands of powerful Nigerian officials to secure deals. ITT denied wrongdoing. Abiola denied bribery. But the allegations never disappeared. Then came Fela Kuti. Fela looked at the entire system and called it what he believed it was: “International Thief Thief.” That song was not just music. It was an accusation against foreign corporations, Nigerian elites, military rulers and the unholy alliance between them. This is why Nigerian history is never black and white. The same MKO many people see today as a democratic martyr was also once deeply tied to one of the most controversial multinational contract scandals in Nigerian history. And this is the uncomfortable truth about power: In Nigeria, saints and sinners often sit at the same table. Sometimes, they are the same person.
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Oracle
Oracle@drjoe347·
@nansbello When Nigerians plan luxury, health care is never included
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