IBT Learning Africa

113 posts

IBT Learning Africa

IBT Learning Africa

@ibtlearning

Empowering the next generation of African tech leaders for global careers

Katılım Mart 2023
1 Takip Edilen65 Takipçiler
End Wokeness
End Wokeness@EndWokeness·
Gov. Newsom to a black crowd in GA: "I am like you. I'm a 960 SAT guy. I can't read."
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Election Maps UK
Election Maps UK@ElectionMapsUK·
"Yesterday, Rupert Lowe MP launched a political party named Restore Britain. If there were a General Election tomorrow, how would you vote in that election?" RFM: 25% GRN: 20% LAB: 15% CON: 13% RES: 10% LDM: 10% Via @FindoutnowUK, 14 Feb.
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IBT Learning Africa
IBT Learning Africa@ibtlearning·
@RonFilipkowski Meanwhile Nigerians are happy about this, especially the ones who have faced these slaughters for decades. Keep your Trump hate aside.
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Ron Filipkowski
Ron Filipkowski@RonFilipkowski·
The malignant narcissist can’t stand America trying to have a peaceful Christmas without him.
Ron Filipkowski tweet media
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IBT Learning Africa
IBT Learning Africa@ibtlearning·
@labourlewis If you hold on to "harsh, racist word" from 50 years ago - there's a problem with you. I have been called the N word and punched in the face not once but twice and laugh about it today when I retell the story.
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Clive Lewis MP
Clive Lewis MP@labourlewis·
I’ve held back from commenting on the revelations about Nigel Farage’s past racism. Not because the story shocked me. For many in this country, it merely confirms what we’ve suspected for years. But some will be hearing these allegations for the first time, and it’s to you that I want to speak. Most of us have said or done things when we were young that we look back on with regret. That’s part of growing up. We make mistakes, we cringe at our former selves, we learn, we change. Some of those early attitudes fall away. Others become the foundations of who we later become. What’s now emerging about Nigel Farage isn’t a single stupid comment or one heated moment. Former classmates are describing a pattern of behaviour. Not just a bully. A racist bully of the ugliest kind. That doesn’t automatically mean he holds every one of those views today. But look at his politics. Look at his rhetoric. Look at the company he keeps and the division he trades in. It paints a picture of a man whose worldview didn’t appear to grow out of those foundations, but grew from them. So what does that mean now? If you already oppose Farage, this only hardens your resolve. If you adore him, nothing I say will shift you. But there’s a group of people I do want to reach: those considering voting Reform. I’m not going to patronise you. I understand why many are thinking about it. If you’ve watched your pay stall, your bills rise, your community decline, and your politicians shrug for years, you might well think: what have I got to lose? Why not give the system a kick? Why not try something different? And you may feel the country has taken a wrong turn. That we’ve lost something precious and need to put it right. Those instincts aren’t wicked. They aren’t racist. They come from frustration, disappointment, and a desire for dignity and control in your own life. But here’s the truth that cannot be dodged. Most people in this country are good, decent, fair-minded. They don’t want to see hate imported into the heart of their politics. They don’t want their children growing up in a country defined by fear and division. So ask yourself this, quietly and honestly: is Nigel Farage a changed man? Has he shown any sign that he regrets the person he was? Or has he built a career by sharpening those same instincts into a political weapon? Because if he hasn’t changed, then every vote for Farage isn’t a protest. It’s permission. It hands real power to a man whose teenage cruelty seems less like a phase and more like a blueprint. This country is far from perfect, but it is worth fighting for. And once a politics of hatred takes root at the top, a country doesn’t easily come back from it. You know this in your gut. We all do. Nigel Farage is not fit to lead this country. A vote for him, or for those who still cheer the views he held as a teenager, would stain the country we love with something we may never fully wash away. And to the Reform diehards who will now pile into the comments with abuse: crack on. You’ll only prove the point.
Clive Lewis MP tweet media
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IBT Learning Africa
IBT Learning Africa@ibtlearning·
@TimesRadio As a black person in America I am still waiting to see the harm that Charlie caused to black people! What a load of rubbish. You celebrated Charlie's murder - you really believe he deserved to be un-alived! Ridiculous
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Times Radio
Times Radio@TimesRadio·
"I disagreed with him. I thought his views were harmful. But he did not deserve to die." Ousted Oxford Union president-elect George Abaraonye tells #TimesRadio he apologises for comments after Charlie Kirk’s death, but Kirk's "harmful stereotypes" make free speech more vital.
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IBT Learning Africa
IBT Learning Africa@ibtlearning·
@LBC @lewis_goodall What a twat! Expecting fair criticism when you didn't have any decency after Charlie died. You gleefully celebrated. Away with you child!
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LBC
LBC@LBC·
'It was a scary, scary time, and not just for me.' Oxford student George Abaraonye reveals what he's learned from the 'racist and classist vitriol' he received after Charlie Kirk's murder. @Lewis_Goodall
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Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai
Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai@elrufai·
NIGERIA UPDATE - EVERY NIGERIAN SHOULD READ THIS INSIGHTFUL PIECE: Think Naija: The Reform Notebook. THE NARRATIVE BEFORE THE INTERVENTION: HOW WASHINGTON IS SHAPING NIGERIA’S STORY. - November 21, 2025 - Part 1 Foreign intervention never begins with airplanes, sanctions or soldiers. It begins with stories. It begins with how a country is described, framed, understood and judged by powerful nations. Iraq did not begin with missiles. It began with a narrative about weapons of mass destruction. Libya did not begin with bombs. It began with a narrative about protecting civilians. Syria did not begin with airstrikes. It began with a narrative about humanitarian responsibility. The same pattern is now forming around Nigeria, and the speed is alarming. The life sentence delivered to Nnamdi Kanu on November 20, 2025 is a perfect example. A Nigerian court, after years of legal proceedings, found him guilty on seven terrorism related charges, including directing violence, issuing sit at home orders, caused hundreds of deaths, and guiding bomb making. The court described him as an international terrorist and chose life imprisonment instead of the death penalty. Within hours, a US lawmaker declared that the conviction was evidence of religious persecution. A terrorism judgment became a faith narrative in a single step. This did not happen randomly, it is structural and it is how congressional narratives are built. A legal event happens. American lawmakers interpret it through a moral lens that suits domestic politics. The narrative becomes a talking point. Talking points become resolutions. Resolutions become sanctions or conditions. And at the end of that chain lies the justification for foreign intervention. This is the architecture we are watching being built around Nigeria. What makes the situation even more concerning is that this narrative did not start yesterday. It has been shaped for years, intentionally and deliberately, through structured lobbying. Foreign Agents Registration Act filings in Washington show that IPOB and its affiliates hired American lobbying firms to promote a narrative of Christian persecution in Nigeria. The message was clear: Nigeria is killing Christians, the Nigerian state is complicit, and the South East faces genocide. These claims were crafted to appeal to the American evangelical and conservative network that sees global Christian victimhood as a core political issue. This lobbying created a permanent narrative frame. Even after contracts ended, the impression remained inside congressional offices, in briefing notes, in staff memory and in committee debates. Lobbying does not disappear when the cheque stops. It leaves a shadow. This is why the same Congress that invokes Christian persecution rarely mentions certain facts. It ignores that Boko Haram has killed more Muslims than Christians. It ignores that banditry in the North West is driven by economic motives, not religion. It ignores that many Christian communities in the Middle Belt are attacked, but Muslim communities across the North and Middle Belt also suffer the same fate in even larger numbers. It ignores that IPOB and ESN splinter groups killed over 700 Christians in the South East and enforced violent sit at home campaigns. It ignores that Finland, a Western nation, convicted a key Biafran agitator for terrorism in September 2025. It ignores that the Nigerian court conviction of Kanu was based on evidence, not on faith. And it ignores the deaths of Muslims who are also victims of the same terror networks. Only days before some US lawmakers repeated the Christian genocide narrative, terrorists abducted and murdered the Ameer of the Muslim Students Society of Nigeria in Kebbi State, Alqasim Uthman Ibrahim. He was kidnapped and killed in captivity, without media attention, international outrage or congressional concern. …nknaijathereformnotebook.blogspot.com/2025/11/the-na…
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IBT Learning Africa
IBT Learning Africa@ibtlearning·
@georgegalloway Oh shut up you deranged twat, you know nothing of what you speak of Nigeria. Best guess is you've never been to Nigeria. Go yell on the Piers Morgan Show and get some relevance.
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George Galloway
George Galloway@georgegalloway·
“Nigerians sir, 250 million of them…” Boko Haram, the Al-Qaeda/Isis chapter has been slaughtering Africans for decades. More Muslims than Christians actually…
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Pastor Okezie J. Atañi
I am a Christian, I am a Nigerian, I am not facing any existential threat! May God bless Nigeria 🇳🇬 🙏
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Elham Ishmael ✍︎
Elham Ishmael ✍︎@EIshmael_·
I can’t understand the outrage or the division the US far-right government is trying to create in Nigeria. In September alone, 60 Muslims were killed in Darul Jamal village. Nigerians, don’t let Americans drive a wedge between you. Boko Haram is attacking both Christians and Muslims, and you must stand together against them
Elham Ishmael ✍︎ tweet media
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Bola Ahmed Tinubu
Bola Ahmed Tinubu@officialABAT·
Nigeria stands firmly as a democracy governed by constitutional guarantees of religious liberty. Since 2023, our administration has maintained an open and active engagement with Christian and Muslim leaders alike and continues to address security challenges which affect citizens across faiths and regions. The characterisation of Nigeria as religiously intolerant does not reflect our national reality, nor does it take into consideration the consistent and sincere efforts of the government to safeguard freedom of religion and beliefs for all Nigerians. Religious freedom and tolerance have been a core tenet of our collective identity and shall always remain so. Nigeria opposes religious persecution and does not encourage it. Nigeria is a country with constitutional guarantees to protect citizens of all faiths. Our administration is committed to working with the United States government and the international community to deepen understanding and cooperation on protection of communities of all faiths. BOLA AHMED TINUBU PRESIDENT OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA
Bola Ahmed Tinubu tweet media
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Candace Owens
Candace Owens@RealCandaceO·
“A full payload of bombs was dropped” followed by “now is the time for peace”. Utterly deranged. If we had raised the 100 million Adelson gave him on Go Fund Me, maybe he would have kept his promises. Guess we’ll never know.
Donald J. Trump@realDonaldTrump

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Gavin Newsom
Gavin Newsom@GavinNewsom·
Hey @JDVance — nice of you to finally make it out to California. Since you’re so eager to talk about me, how about saying it to my face? Let’s debate. Time and place?
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Tola🦋
Tola🦋@QuiescentTee·
After months of learning devops at @ibtlearning, i'm running a java springboot app for the second time, this time i did it without referencing my notes, i'm so proud of myself
Tola🦋 tweet media
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Apostle Harrison Ayintete
Apostle Harrison Ayintete@Preacherrapper·
I have done water baptism over four times, all because of ignorance!! Watch this 🤣
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IBT Learning Africa
IBT Learning Africa@ibtlearning·
@ianmiles Sir, when are the boots getting on the ground again in Ukraine and planes in the air?
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Ian Miles Cheong
Ian Miles Cheong@ianmiles·
Keir Starmer, who rejects peace with Russia and whose country has urged Ukraine to continue fighting, frames the UK as a peacemaker and the Zelensky regime as the party of peace. Fully Orwellian.
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Ridvan Aydemir | Apostate Prophet
Ridvan Aydemir | Apostate Prophet@ApostateProphet·
For 10 years, I was an atheist and agnostic. For 2 years, I have been searching. Today, I have been accepted as a catechumen in the Orthodox Church, on my way to becoming a baptized Christian.
Ridvan Aydemir | Apostate Prophet tweet media
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