Perfidy in Robes Pi π

6K posts

Perfidy in Robes Pi π

Perfidy in Robes Pi π

@henriOO7

mad love for humanity, simple things in life, nature, hiphop and Arsenal

Katılım Ağustos 2022
2.6K Takip Edilen1.6K Takipçiler
Perfidy in Robes Pi π
@Ak_flexy @SamAmadi @woye1 Where is it stated in our constitution that it's illegal for him to serve as vice president again? I also remember that his camp is not saying it's illegal for him to be VP again..
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Sam Amadi
Sam Amadi@SamAmadi·
Cowards Die Many Times Nigeria is a republic. There are no first class and second class citizens. You cannot continue to insist on bossing everyone else, even those better than you. If a man won over 6m votes, excluding those not counted, he deserves the respect of being treated as an integer, not a fraction. For those who care to know, if O cannot win, A cannot win. If O and A need to be together to win, then it should be OA this time, not AO
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Let's loud this. Atiku will ruin our lives if he becomes our president..repost as u read..
Mike Arnold@MikeArnoldTruth

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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Perfidy in Robes Pi π
@Iamindiscov I am not sure you are married. If you are you will not say this.. Children will always have a favourite parent.. it's nothing new
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Indiscov
Indiscov@Iamindiscov·
Yul Edochie's daughter "Danielle" is beautiful but no wise man will want to wife her considering the role she played amid the marital issues of her parents, as a child whose parents are having issues she's not supposed to take sides but she did. Imagine as young as she is coming on internet to talk bad against her own father, if she can publicly defame and disrespect her father then who are you that she won't do worse to? Please, believe indiscov that if she can disrespect her father publicly, constantly made disrespectful posts to shade her father then you're nothing my brother. A woman who doesn't respect her father will never respect "You" her husband. Most of you just marry because a woman is beautiful overlooking the dangers ahead, it's a dangerous red flag for a man to marry a woman like Yul Edochie's daughter. The purpose of this article is not to paint her badly but to use her behavior towards her father amid her parents marital issues to teach other women. I hope she sees this and corrects herself by apologizing to her father publicly for the same way she dragged him directly and indirectly. Before you marry any woman, the signs and dangers are always there but it is you that is looking for something where it doesn't exist. If you fail to take your time and scrutinize, investigate and study any woman you want to settle down with, believe me it will never ever well. There will be no happy ending for you if you fail to do your homework before committing to any vvoman regardless of her beauty. If you agree with me kindly repost this sermon. Sermons over!
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Nwafresh 🍥⚽
Nwafresh 🍥⚽@Nwafresh·
DEAR NDI-IGBO —ATIKU ABUBAKAR IS NOT OUR PROBLEM. —THE HAUSA MAN IS NOT OUR PROBLEM. —THE FULANI MAN IS NOT OUR PROBLEM. Peter Obi must understand one clear truth, and that's Ndi-Igbo will not abandon the ADC if he chooses to leave tomorrow. We have made our decision. As a people, we are committed to rallying around the ADC. We will solidify our interests, strengthen our structures, and build a formidable presence within the party. This is not about following any individual. It is about strategic positioning, protecting Igbo interest, and refusing to remain perpetual spectators in Nigerian politics. We have endured enough marginalisation. The time has come for calculated, independent action. Let it be known that ADC is our vehicle now. We are not passengers, we are co-owners and stakeholders. Whoever chooses to board with us is welcome. Whoever decides to alight is free to go. But Ndi-Igbo are staying. We move as one. We stand firm. We build for the long term. #ADCIsOurPlatform #NdiIgboDecide
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Emma ik Umeh (Tcee )🇳🇬
If Peter Obi and Kwankwaso decide to leave the ADC, i just hope my people, from the south east won't allow themselves to be played again. Let me say it here. Peter Obi won't win the election if he decides to run on his own. Don't allow yourself to used again.
Emma ik Umeh (Tcee )🇳🇬 tweet media
Emma ik Umeh (Tcee )🇳🇬@emmaikumeh

Hmmmm, Peter Obi didn’t post about the Ibadan submit and now didn’t post about ADC’s victory in court yesterday. He hasn't attended any of the meetings of ADC since this week. He and Kwankwaso haven't said a word about it. It seems the rumor about them leaving the ADC might be true. In the coming weeks, we will see what happens 👀

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Perfidy in Robes Pi π
@emmaikumeh Funny lots...How much were you paid to repeat the same thing you said in 2023? You ppl said this and still Obi won the election though Ebola Colombiano snatched and ran away with the result and declared himself president..
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akinyemi
akinyemi@Ak_flexy·
@SamAmadi @woye1 But common sense should tell you that A can not be vice president again after he had already served as vice president for two terms before.
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Jimmy Cartel
Jimmy Cartel@truthfuljamo·
Sam Amadi, stop all this noise. I believe you have Atiku’s contact number, call him or send him a direct message and tell him that you would want him to deputise your Peter Obi. The main coward here is your favorite Peter Obi. A simp, a man who is always interested in getting free tickets. Always afraid of battling things out to achieve his purpose. A very weak simp at that.
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Nuel
Nuel@LfcNuel·
@Alive_LFC @grok Arsenal definitely gonna cry in the second leg
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Nuel
Nuel@LfcNuel·
Hey @grok, what did the Atlético Madrid fans mean by throwing tissue papers into the field?
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Chinenyenwa Nwachinemere
If you have a working Laptop Iphone with enough space Internet speed of 50mbps and above Light If you can work 8 hours shift daily, 6 days a week, please send me a dm.
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Perfidy in Robes Pi π
@atiku Ruiners of Nigeria just wrote an epistle in behalf of his paymaster Ebola Colombiano
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Atiku Abubakar
Atiku Abubakar@atiku·
A Missed Opportunity for Transformation. During the 2023 presidential campaign, I presented Nigerians with an alternative vision. Our manifesto proposed a $10 billion economic stimulus programme, a bold, people-centred intervention that would have used the savings from subsidy removal to directly transform the lives of Nigerians. This plan was designed to create millions of jobs across agriculture, manufacturing, technology, and infrastructure. It would have lifted millions out of poverty, provided targeted support to the most vulnerable, and ignited the kind of economic activity that grows the tax base organically. A stimulus of that scale, properly implemented, would have generated far more revenue for government than any tax increase ever could, because it would have been earned from a growing, productive economy rather than extracted from an impoverished, shrinking one. It would have meant that the pain of subsidy removal was temporary, giving way to a period of genuine renewal, renewal of opportunity, of employment, of hope. Instead, Nigerians were given a coastal highway awarded without due process to a presidential buddy. The contrast between these two visions, one centred on the people, one centred on self, could not be starker. A Message to Nigerian Workers. On this Workers' Day, I want to speak directly to the men and women who wake up every morning and go to work in spite of everything: the civil servants who have not received their full entitlements, the traders whose goods no one can afford to buy, the factory workers whose employers are closing shop, the teachers and medical personnel holding together systems that government is failing to adequately fund. You are not invisible. Your suffering is not a statistic. It is real, it is documented, and it is a direct consequence of a trial-and-error policy choices made by those entrusted with the responsibility to serve you. Nigeria's working people did not cause this crisis. They did not vote for impoverishment. They voted for hope, and that hope was taken from them. They deserve leadership that spends the nation's resources on their welfare, not on opaque mega-projects that serve the well-connected. They deserve a government that measures its success by their living standards, not by the size of its spending, the growth of its debt, or the breadth of its patronage networks. Nigeria can and must do better. The resources exist. The talent exists. What is lacking is the will to govern for all Nigerians rather than for the few. A Call for Real Renewal. Nigeria can, and must do better. The resources exist. The talents abound. What is lacking is the will to govern for all, not just for a privileged few. On this Workers' Day, I reaffirm my commitment to building a Nigeria where the dignity of labour is matched by its reward m, where hard work pays, where honesty is protected, and where government truly serves the people. The Nigerian worker deserves genuine renewal, not the Orwellian version. A renewal that is tangible, measurable and real. Not as a slogan. But as a lived reality. -AA
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Atiku Abubakar
Atiku Abubakar@atiku·
#WorkersDay2026: Broken Promises, Shattered Hopes: The Nigerian Worker's Burden Under the Tinubu Administration. Every first day of May, nations across the world pause to honour the dignity of labour and the men and women whose sweat and toil sustain civilisation. In Nigeria, Workers' Day has always carried a particular poignancy, a moment to celebrate the resilience of a workforce that endures much and receives little. But as we mark this year's commemoration, I write not with celebration in my heart, but with grief. Grief for the Nigerian worker who was promised renewed hope and received instead renewed hardship. A Slogan Betrayed. "Renewed Hope" - those two words carried the dreams of millions of Nigerians who trooped to the polls in 2023. They were words that promised a departure from the suffering of previous years; a promise that the government would finally work for the people. Today, as we assess nearly three years of the Tinubu administration, it is painfully clear that what was renewed was not hope, but hardship. What was refreshed was not the fortunes of the Nigerian people, but the pockets of those in power. The Nigerian worker, the teacher, the nurse, the factory hand, the civil servant, the artisan, has been the primary victim of an administration that, by all observable evidence, is far more interested in increasing the revenue at its disposal than in improving the lives of the citizens it governs. Trillions Saved, But Nothing Felt. The fuel subsidy removal was a necessary step, recklessly executed. Let me be clear: the removal of the fuel subsidy was, in principle, a policy that many, including myself, had long advocated. The subsidy had become a fiscal haemorrhage that enriched cabal middlemen while denying the government of the resources needed for development. Its removal was necessary and overdue. But the manner in which the Tinubu administration executed this policy was irresponsible and callous. On the day of inauguration, with no preparation, no safety nets, no cushioning mechanisms, and no transition plan for ordinary Nigerians, the President announced the end of the subsidy. The price of fuel skyrocketed. Transportation costs doubled and tripled overnight. The cost of food and basic goods hit the roof. The Nigerian worker, who was already struggling to survive on a salary eroded by years of inflation, was suddenly confronted with a cost of living that made mere survival feel like a luxury. A responsible government would have spent the preceding months preparing Nigerians for this transition, establishing social safety nets, empowering the most vulnerable, and ensuring that the pain of reform was shared equitably. This administration did none of that. It simply removed the subsidy and left the Nigerian worker to drown. Trillions were ostensibly saved, but nothing gained by the people. The fuel subsidy removal freed up enormous sums of money. Billions of dollars that had previously been committed to keeping pump prices artificially low were suddenly available. Nigerians, who had suffered the immediate consequences of the removal, were right to ask: Where has this saved money gone? What has been done with it to improve their lives? The answer is deeply troubling. Rather than being channelled into programmes that would directly benefit Nigerians, infrastructure that serves the people, healthcare, education, or an economic stimulus, these funds have been shared among the various tiers of government. The bulk of the federal government's share, disturbingly, appears to be financing the controversial $11 billion Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway project. As desirable as this project was, it was not subjected to competitive bidding or due process. It was awarded to a company owned by a man that President Tinubu himself has publicly acknowledged as his business partner. This is not governance, it is the brazen conversion of public resources for private enrichment.
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Perfidy in Robes Pi π
@AishaYesufu Does it help? SC directed them to go back to lower court. Will d matter be concluded today or tomorrow when we know dat Inec deadline is in 10th..if lower court rules will the matter not go back to supreme court again? Does it end in d lower court? I don't see hw it favours ADC
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Aisha Yesufu
Aisha Yesufu@AishaYesufu·
David Mark and Rauf Aregbesola are back on the INEC PORTAL CONGRATULATIONS to all ADC members!
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Ibrahim H Abdulkarim
My Dear Fellow Nigerians, Haba! How did we get here? How do we watch a man bleed for us, Yes! he literally take bullets for us and then turn around and treat his sacrifice like yesterday’s news? For three unbroken years, Peter Obi has been on the streets. Not in Dubai. Not in some air-conditioned mansion waiting for election season. He has been moving from city to city, town to town, village to village, and country to country, rain or shine, day or night, keeping the flame of opposition alive when almost everyone else had gone quiet. He has visited hospitals where our people lay broken by calamity. He has sat with IDPs, wiped tears, shared meals, and reminded forgotten Nigerians that they are still seen. He has poured his own money, conservatively around ₦300 million, every single month, Donations to Almajiri schools and schools of nursing across the land, boreholes, and donations to victims of disaster, as well as to his hotels, transport, and staff allowances. Do the math: that is ₦3.6 billion every single year for three good years and still counting, relentless giving, just to keep the opposition going. While he was doing all this, they came for his family. His wife was attacked. His son was attacked. His brother’s property in Lagos was demolished. And in his own businesses, the businesses he built with his bare hands before any of us knew his name and now the government inflicted losses of over ₦20 billion between 2024 and 2026 alone. Yet Peter Obi never folded. He never ran. He never sold out. He simply kept standing for you, for me, for the idea that Nigeria can still be better. His only “offence”? He dared to say he wants to serve this country as President. He dared to believe that leadership should not be the exclusive property of a few godfathers or recycled politicians who only remember Nigeria exists when it is time to campaign. And now we are comparing him to Atiku? The same Atiku who used to relax in Dubai until election year, then fly in to make promises? Or Amaechi, who is nowhere to be found until the start of the coalition? Peter Obi changed that script. He brought energy, consistency, and presence. He made opposition real, not seasonal. He made politics feel human again. So I ask you, my brothers and sisters especially those of us who still have a conscience. Why are we not zoning this ADC ticket to the South to honour this man’s sacrifice? Why are we pretending that fairness, equity, and national unity are just beautiful words we say during campaigns? Peter Obi did not ask for a crown. He earned it with sweat, tears, bruises, and billions of his own money. He kept the opposition space breathing when many had given up. He stood when standing was dangerous. He gave when giving was costly. This is not about one man. This is about us. This is about whether we still have the moral courage to say “thank you” to someone who took the bullet for all of us. This is about whether we want a Nigeria where sacrifice is rewarded with respect, or one where loyalty is punished with abandonment. Well-meaning Nigerians, the eyes of history are on us right now. Let us not fail this test. Let the ADC ticket go to Peter Obi, not as charity, but as justice. Not as favour, but as the bare minimum we owe a man who has given everything so that the rest of us can still dream of a better country. For the sake of our children. For the sake of our conscience. For the sake of the Nigeria we all claim to love. Peter Obi did not fail us. The real question is, will we fail him? In tears and in hope, Yours always Ibrahim Abdulkarim
Ibrahim H Abdulkarim tweet media
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Mike Arnold
Mike Arnold@MikeArnoldTruth·
Tinubu has answered me. The Sultan has answered me. Sheikh Gumi has answered me. When the President, the Caliph, and the chief jihadi cleric of Northern Nigeria all break silence to address one Texan with an X page — you know what they're scared of. They are not scared of me. They are scared of you. Every follower this account adds is one more witness to the Christian genocide they spent fifteen years burying. One more voice they can't silence. One more set of eyes they can't blind. Here's the ask: 1) Follow @MikeArnoldTruth if you don't already. 2) Repost this post. 3) Tag three people who need to be following along. Let's give Aso Rock a heart attack! #EarthShaker
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
THEY THREATEN MY LIFE. THEY WASTE THEIR TIME. By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden I am receiving death threats. Let me be direct about what is happening and who is behind it. A man named Okenwa Nnamani — born 2 December 1980, a Facebook user whose profile is fully public and documented — sent me the following message: “You are the son of a murderer and that’s a fact.” “Your death isn’t gonna be prettier than Shekau’s regardless of if you get to possess or out possess Elon Musk in cash.” “You can only come home a prisoner.” “So, boil all you like. You aren’t gonna succeed in your goals.” Let that sink in. This man invoked the brutal death of Boko Haram’s Abubakar Shekau — beheaded and mutilated — and applied it to me as a prediction. This is not trolling. This is not venting frustration. This is a death threat, documented, timestamped, and preserved. I have reported this to the relevant authorities. The screenshots are safely archived. Now let me tell you exactly what this means. These are Tinubu operatives. I have no doubt. When a government cannot defend its record — when it cannot answer for a stolen certificate, a DEA drug case, a looted treasury, a collapsing naira, and a nation brought to its knees — it sends men like Okenwa Nnamani to silence those who speak. This is the Tinubu playbook. Not policy. Not argument. Not debate. Violence. Threats. Intimidation. They are criminals. Not metaphorically. Literally. And this threat proves it. But I want to be absolutely clear: I was educated at Eton. I trained at Wharton. I served in Nigeria’s National Assembly. I come from a family that helped build this nation — my father was Nigeria’s first Solicitor-General, the first African UN Under-Secretary-General, General Gowon’s personal envoy to Washington. My grandfather sat at the 1958 Constitutional Conference that shaped Nigeria’s independence. I do not frighten easily. I do not frighten at all. Okenwa Nnamani and whoever sent him can take their threats and file them where they belong — in the dustbin of failed intimidation. I will continue to write. I will continue to speak. I will continue to hold Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his criminal network accountable before the Nigerian people, before the diaspora, and before the international community. You will not silence me with Shekau references. You will not silence me with predictions of imprisonment. You have already lost the argument — that is why you resort to this. To the Tinubu operatives reading this: You are wasting your time. Every threat you send makes my case stronger and your master’s position weaker. To Nigerians watching: This is what desperation looks like. This is what a regime in panic looks like. Hold the line. The 2027 reckoning is coming. And no death threat will stop it. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden #NigeriaDecides2027 #TinubuMustGo #DeathThreat #OkenwaNameani #NigerianDiaspora #AccountabilityNow #PressureMountsTinubu #SaharaReporters #NigeriaTwitter #KioAmachree #JusticeForNigeria #DiasporaVoice
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Bashir El-Rufai
Bashir El-Rufai@BashirElRufai·
Hate him. Ridicule him. But in the streets of Nigeria for the ordinary citizen he is Peter Obi. His bond with the masses are undisputed by any of his rivals. He is a conduit for a greater emergent Nigeria & one of the most misunderstood individuals I have had the pleasure of ever meeting.
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Perfidy in Robes Pi π
@jrnaib2 Jamb questions.. U never start...we don't need Ur support. Support whoever U want to support..we don't care
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Abdul-Aziz Na'ibi Abubakar
I will support Peter Obi over Atiku Abubakar in the ADC primaries if Peter Obi can convincingly answer the questions below: 1. Why did Peter Obi support Goodluck Jonathan in 2011, despite it clearly being the North's turn according to the PDP zoning arrangement? 2. Why did Peter Obi support Goodluck Jonathan in 2015, even though the North was at a five-year deficit according to the PDP zoning arrangement at that time? 3. Why does Peter Obi think it is unfair for a Northerner to contest in 2027, despite the North being at a 7–8 year deficit according to the PDP zoning arrangement? 4. Has Peter Obi ever supported a Northern candidate before he was selected to serve as a running mate to one? 5. If Peter Obi was right to support a Southern candidate twice when it was the North's turn, why does the North not have the right to fill the deficit that injustice caused? Peter Obi, can you actually be fair to the North if elected President?
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