Hisenberg MD.

5.8K posts

Hisenberg MD.

Hisenberg MD.

@john4milan

Medical Doctor// Patriot// Christian// #Forzamilano!

Adamawa, Nigeria Katılım Aralık 2012
546 Takip Edilen288 Takipçiler
Hisenberg MD.
Hisenberg MD.@john4milan·
@OurFavOnlineDoc In my opinion, he should not have joined them in the first place. A leopard cannot change his skin
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OurFaveOnlineDoc 🇬🇧 🇳🇬
Peter Obi has announced his exit from the ADC. This is good and long overdue. It is pointless being in the same party with the same greedy old bastards who hope to induce people with money and snatch the party ticket. Atiku can now have the ADC to himself. He can continue to run every 4years for the next 100 years. And he can still get another Obi as his running mate- he can try Mikel Obi or Obi Cubana. But it will never be Peter Obi. Again, as I said before, IF the coalition will crumble because an 80year old desperate greedy clown will never put the country first, doesn’t mind to ruin himself and will never support a southern candidate to help defeat BAT, then let the coalition burn and die.
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Hisenberg MD. retweetledi
Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
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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muhammad sulaiman umar
@SadiqMaunde Obedients are the most clueless and delusional set op people aswear....do you really think Peter obi and kwankwaso stand a chance against tinubu ....Peter obi will not even get half the votes he got in 2023
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Abu Amir
Abu Amir@SadiqMaunde·
It’s time to say this now, The IBADAN summit wasn’t only about the opposition fielding a single candidate come 2027, it was also agreed upon that the south will produce that single candidate to come & complete the remaining 4yrs of southern presidency, Only for them to come to the venue of the summit & talked about only fielding a single candidate, deliberately ignoring the zoning agreement (after many behind the scenes that I don’t want to talk about here). These aren’t the kind of people you will want to work with, as a man of integrity. Nigeria will be OK!!!
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Orbán Viktor
Orbán Viktor@PM_ViktorOrban·
Europe is heading toward one of the most severe economic crises in its history. The world is facing a serious energy crisis. Europe is in grave danger. The only way out is to lift the sanctions imposed on Russian energy. Immediately. We must think not about Putin, but about our own country and our peoples. Instead of warmongering, love and save your country, Donald!
Donald Tusk@donaldtusk

The threat of NATO’s break-up, easing sanctions on Russia, a massive energy crisis in Europe, halting aid for Ukraine and blocking the loan for Kyiv by Orbán - it all looks like Putin’s dream plan.

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𝐃𝐫 𝐁𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐨𝐩
Going by these priority categories, NHSE is essentially saving money on visa sponsorship it used to spend. It is an economically sound idea. But the implementation for 2026 recruitment programme is very flawed. It should have been brought in at the start rather than choosing lower ranked candidates based on these criteria. But it’s now very political and nobody really cares about merit at this point.
𝐃𝐫 𝐁𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐨𝐩 tweet media
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Dr Leah Ajayi,MD,MRCP(UK),PGcert(Meded),SCE(Acute)
Update for IMT applicants: . The Medical Training (Prioritisation) Act has received Royal Assent and is now law. Interview scores and ranks remain unchanged. . For 2026, offers will be prioritised first to UK medical graduates and defined priority groups (e.g. Irish graduates and certain EEA/EFTA applicants) before others. . Watch out for my detailed blogpost tomorrow breaking down: • What the new law actually says • What it means for IMGs already in the UK • What it means for IMGs planning to come to the UK..
The BMA@TheBMA

The Medical Training (Prioritisation) Act has officially become law. This is a first step in tackling the jobs crisis for doctors, something we’ve long campaigned for. And after extensive BMA lobbying, we understand that the Government will be commencing the Act tomorrow. We recognise the impact the Act will have on non-prioritised doctors already working in the UK. We’ll continue to push for longer term contracts and proper protection for them. Find out more 👉 bma.org.uk/advice-and-sup…

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Dejii™
Dejii™@_Dejii·
Daniel Bwala met a serious journalist that actually does his research and he capitulated. Very embarrassing outing. I don’t blame him sha, defending Tinubu on security is a lost battle.
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Kalu Aja
Kalu Aja@FinPlanKaluAja1·
Remember “ineffectual buffon”? That was how the Economist magazine described the then-President of Nigeria, Goodluck Ebele Johnathan. Excerpt: Everyone in the know understood that the article was written by a Nigerian who later worked for the government This is international lobbying 101 A white liberal American lady does not know Nigerian dog whistles like “Igbo trader”. Once I read that @nytimes article, I knew a Nigerian wrote it. 1. A lobbying group accepts a contract from the government 2. The lobby commissioned a Nigerian to write an article. In summary, the article is saying the co-operation of the Nigerian intelligence services and the President of Nigeria's prior authorisation to the Americans to bomb Sokoto was inconsequential. The US alphabet intelligence agencies read the posts of a trader in Onitsha, then bombed Sokoto. 3. The lobbying agency then finds a “credible” white liberal journalist who has written on the issue, gives her the Nigerian-written article, which she then publishes as hers. The New York Times then has the cover to publish a hit piece blaming a Nigerian “trader” in “Onitsha” for the executive decision to bomb Sokoto in the Week of January 15th. Date and locations are coincidental or randomly selected 4. Let's not mince words, someone wants a Nigerian “ trader from Onitsha” to take the blame for an action in Sokoto that the Government of Nigeria has already claimed responsibility for being aware of before, and authorised. 5. If you are not following yet, let me dumb it down. Christian Trader in Anambra State promoted the US military to bomb the Muslim caliphate in the week of January 15th” It would not surprise me if I see another article from Vanity Fair saying the “Onitsha traders” are exporting gold from the NE This is dangerous stereotyping, paid for with oil money. This is the way Africans muddy the waters, then blame the CIA SHAME
Kalu Aja tweet media
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velele (Nwa PitaKwa)
velele (Nwa PitaKwa)@velele17·
1. This "95% tax" claim is misleading, but again, this is to be expected of the Tinubu-like mind. These disingenuous slimes are deliberately confusing top marginal tax rates for the richest with what ordinary people actually paid. Nigerians, FYI, in 1950, the median German’s marginal rate was about 18%, AND NOT anything near 95%. 2. Also, countries didn't get built by "pay first, ask questions later." That way of thinking is how criminals, scammers & forgers operate. Countries got & still get built by tax-and-accountability bargains: citizens pay, government delivers, and citizens demand transparency continuously, not afterwards!!! Par example: "Yo, dirty microphone-licking imbeciiile, Why TF are you always running off to France & wasting our scarce FX for? Why TF are all your budgets always padded and riddled with senseless entries? What TF does crude oil theft and illegal mining mean? Are you not sovereign?" 3. Finally, Nigerians, in places where spending is opaque and waste is normal, "pay first, demand later" is not civic virtue. It's simply funding the leakages & wastages while gaslighting Nigerians whose resources are being wasted.
velele (Nwa PitaKwa) tweet mediavelele (Nwa PitaKwa) tweet media
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PharmHeydayy
PharmHeydayy@Templegaurd·
This is why I sometimes admire the so-called rascality of Gen Z. Imagine your bonus is withheld for no valid reason. Upon investigation, you discover the funds were actually released, but someone deliberately sat on them and refused to disburse them or they were never released in the first place. Yet somehow, the problem is no longer the person withholding the money, but the players complaining about unpaid bonuses. This warped logic is exactly why many talented African athletes renounce their national teams and choose to represent countries that treat them with dignity and professionalism. This issue goes far beyond unpaid bonuses. It reflects a long-standing pattern of systemic disrespect and poor treatment of athletes. We have heard the stories. We have seen the evidence. We cannot continue to excuse injustice behind closed doors in the name of “protecting face.” What face, exactly? What is even more disturbing is Anazodo referencing experiences from as far back as 1996, despite the fact that nothing has changed since then, and directing his anger not at the system but at the players. This is deeply concerning. It shows how people enter positions of authority carrying unresolved trauma and then weaponize it against the next generation. Because one team endured harsh conditions in 1996 and still won gold, he sees no issue with another team being subjected to the same treatment simply because “someone else survived it before.” This mindset is dangerous. It is how bad systems sustain themselves. It is how suffering is normalized and institutional failure is recycled. You’re telling them to protest at home to what end? We know it will be more difficult task protesting at home because they don’t have the cards to maintain advantage. If they eventually lose? Nobody cares because you didn’t win and so the bonus never hits their account. If they eventually win, you have brought what you could have used to have an advantage going into the protest and if the bonus is held, nobody will still care. The same logic explains why health professionals are treated poorly. The government remains indifferent, and when doctors or nurses protest, the narrative quickly shifts: the blame is no longer on those responsible for the injustice, but on those reacting to it. God forbid this level of thinking. The bigger person in the picture should always move towards avoiding embarrassment and it’s never the players or athletes.
SportsDokitor (Odogwu👆)@sportsdokitor

“I’ve withdrawn my support for the Super Eagles, whether they win AFCON or not, I don’t care. It’s your money but you’re disgracing the country by protesting for your money where you’re doing it.” - Charles Anazado slams the Super Eagles for protesting for their unpaid bonuses.

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Hisenberg MD.
Hisenberg MD.@john4milan·
@sportsdokitor Hypocrites, nonsense the NFF leadership cannot eat their cake and have it. It's a very basic thing, they should be paid when due, they should not have to fight for their money. It's common sense
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SportsDokitor (Odogwu👆)
SportsDokitor (Odogwu👆)@sportsdokitor·
“I’ve withdrawn my support for the Super Eagles, whether they win AFCON or not, I don’t care. It’s your money but you’re disgracing the country by protesting for your money where you’re doing it.” - Charles Anazado slams the Super Eagles for protesting for their unpaid bonuses.
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Hisenberg MD.
Hisenberg MD.@john4milan·
@uaeae_ Wow! Looks like a lot of thoughts has gone into this
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🇦🇪 عليا عيسى
ّهذا الخبر بلا مبالغة أبرز أخبار هذا الأسبوع، لارتباط صدوره بهذا التوقيت ولما يكشفه يوما بعد يوم من بعد نظر واستبصار مبكر لدى قيادة دولة الإمارات التي كانت من أوائل دول المنطقة التي واجهت التطرف والإرهاب في صورته الأيديولوجية والتنظيمية، وتصدت بوضوح للتنظيمات والجماعات الراديكالية قبل أن تتكشف آثارها العميقة في مجتمعات أخرى. وفي الوقت ذاته، يفتح هذا القرار أبوابا لعدة محاور نقاشية أوسع، من بينها: – مسؤولية الدول عن البيئة الفكرية التي تدار فيها مؤسساتها التعليمية. – العلاقة بين التعليم المفتوح وغياب الرقابة الفكرية، وحدود الحرية الأكاديمية حين تتحول إلى منصة للتجنيد الأيديولوجي. – فشل بعض المجتمعات الغربية في الفصل بين التعددية الفكرية والتسامح مع التطرف المنظم. (( وهو الخلل الذي تتعامل معه بعض القيادات الأوروبية حتى اليوم بوصفه ملف حريات، رغم كلفته الأمنية والاجتماعية المتراكمة )). – أهمية الأمن الفكري كجزء لا يتجزأ من الأمن الوطني، وليس ملفا ثانويا أو مؤجل. والأهم في كل ذلك، أن القرار يعكس حرص الإمارات العميق على أبنائها، وإيمانها بأن التحصين الفكري يسبق أي شهادة علمية، وأن سلامة البصيرة أهم من أي درجة أكاديمية، فبناء الإنسان المتوازن فكريا هو الاستثمار الحقيقي الذي لا تقبل الدولة المساومة عليه. 🇦🇪
Visegrád 24@visegrad24

BREAKING: The UAE announces it will cuts funds for citizens who want to study in the UK out of fear of Emirati students being radicalized by Muslim Brotherhood Islamists on British campuses. An Arab state now views a European state as a dangerous Islamist radicalization hotspot

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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
A Young Nurse Encounters Nigeria Sunday, January 4th, was an unusually demanding day for me. I had an event in Ughelli, Delta State, and had to drive from Onitsha to the city. From there, I proceeded to another event in Mgbidi, Imo State, and thereafter traveled from Owerri to Lagos. On the Air Peace flight, I sat in 5A, beside me in 5B was a young woman of about 24 years, Chidera Ugwokeba, whose parents are from the South East, but who was born and raised in the USA. She had just graduated from nursing school and was visiting Nigeria with her parents for the first time. She had exchanged her seat with her sibling to enable her talk to me having been told who I am. During the flight, she began to share her sadness and confusion about Nigeria. Her first question was simple but piercing: Why do basic things not work in Nigeria? She then recounted a painful experience. Her sister, also visiting Nigeria for the first time, had a domestic accident and was rushed to what they were told was the best government-owned hospital in the area. On arrival, even though her sister’s hand was bleeding, the hospital staff insisted that payment must be made before any treatment could begin. Shocked, they asked the hospital attendant whether he truly did not see the urgency of the situation. In response, they were shown other patients with even worse conditions who were also being left unattended because they had not paid. They eventually paid, and it was time for the blood test. Traumatised, they realised the hospital had only one blood-testing machine for all patients, and it was not being sterilised between uses. When she raised concerns that the equipment had not been properly sterilised, they were bluntly told to stop asking questions if they wanted her sister to be treated. Despite their payment, they had to buy all the items needed for her treatment. She found it hard to believe because, according to her training and every hospital she had visited, treatment comes first - payment comes later. She told me they had considered organizing a GoFundMe to support healthcare back home, but relatives warned them that any money raised would likely be embezzled. Then she said something that struck me deeply: “I now understand what happened to Boxer Joshua. This is why there was no ambulance to rush him to a nearby hospital.” She wondered aloud whether it was simply because the country is poor. Yet she added that she would willingly offer her skills and service for free and help raise money to make things better. Listening to the lament of a young, patriotic Nigerian who is prepared to offer free service and raise money to help her country and its citizens, I painfully replied by encouraging her not to lose hope. The country is not poor, but it is poorly governed. Nigeria can afford basic necessities, especially critical and necessary ones, but they are often not considered priorities due to incompetent leadership. A standard ambulance costs about ₦150 million ($100,000). Nigeria spent ₦39 billion refurbishing the National Conference Centre in Abuja and ₦21 billion rebuilding the Vice President’s residence. Those two projects alone- ₦60 billion -could have provided about 400 brand-new ambulances, roughly 11 per state, including the FCT. Had 11 functional ambulances existed in Ogun State, one might have been available for Joshua. Building a primary healthcare centre in a community costs about ₦75 million. Yet we spent about ₦300 billion ($200 million) on an additional presidential jet - money that could have built over 4,000 primary healthcare centres, about 110 per state. The only visible value the jet adds is the ability of the President to occasionally disappear without the public knowing where he is, as is the case now.
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Kalu Aja
Kalu Aja@FinPlanKaluAja1·
This guy talks, then does. Have you seen him being dragged now? Or abused today? Have you seen him abuse anyone? If you talk, he will carry evidence and choke you He started rough with that contract saga, but boy has re-focused. He is not 100% there; many gaps remain, but everyone can see what he is cooking. This is what we want (I included), evidence not cho cho cho Don't do 5% and host then 5% party Do 80% sef and walk like a man (or woman) Sorry, let me go back to Anambra, sorry, Kosofe.
Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo@BTOofficial

We are working round the clock to build a Nigeria that works for all where every citizen has access to opportunities, security, and a brighter future. Our results speak, and we are proud to be part of Mr President's agents of good governance. As we set sail, again, in 2026, we reflect on 2025 as a year of significant reforms where we took bold decisions aimed at strengthening our institutions, improving service, and enhancing the overall well-being of our gallant officers across paramilitary agencies. Again, on behalf of President @officialABAT Tinubu (GCFR), I personally invite you to join us on this journey with your support and objective criticism as reasonably necessary for growth and development in a democratic system. It can only get better.

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Chude
Chude@Chude_ND1·
Watching Arise TV now, this FRSC officer was talking about how proactive the Nigerian emergency number (122) is, and the presenter tried to dial it, but it said the number does not exist 😭😅
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Muhammed Zak
Muhammed Zak@muenzak·
@FinPlanKaluAja1 This evil scum told us then that the attack on Venezuela was not oil related and that the US has the largest oil reserves in the world and cho cho cho. Is it not funny how u're now parroting the same thing we've been telling brainwashed ass lickers like u all this while?
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Kalu Aja
Kalu Aja@FinPlanKaluAja1·
What just happened in Venezuela has strategic economic implications for Nigeria First, the Venezuela action is called a Double Play in baseball. With Russia distracted in Ukraine, America takes out two key players, Venezuela and Cuba (plus Hizballah) The real issue I hear with Maduro is that he allowed Hezbollah a foothold in the Americas. That was a US redline. Maduro offered the US oil and renewed relations to stop this invasion, but it didn't fly. Chevron already had rights to import and export Venezuelan oil, but the US must have felt Maduro had to go. The “narco” boat strikes were to establish a drug case. Why? So the same legal precedent used in the case of Manuel Noriega of Panama will be applied to Maduro. The Southern District of New York has already charged Nicolas Maduro with drug offences (yes, already) Cuba was Maduro's protector; it ran his internal security forces. Cuba has now lost its source of cheap energy and foreign exchange. It can't turn to Russia or Iran. It can turn to China, but will China risk its economy over Cuba? In closing, remember that all politics is local; this Venezuela action solidifies GOP support among key Cuban and Venezuelan voting blocs in America, in time for the midterms. This is also a Macro Rubio play for 2028 Back to Nigeria Key for Nigeria now is oil supply; if the new leader of Venezuela (US-backed) decides to pump more oil, which they will, then the US will have achieved another aim of reducing global oil prices and pressuring Russia. So triple play That $64 benchmark crude price for Nigeria in the 2026 budget now feels very generous; if Russia has a ceasefire in Ukraine, oil prices crash further. Nigeria has to adopt an austerity budget now, in preparation.
Kalu Aja tweet media
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