The Yinka Faj

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The Yinka Faj

The Yinka Faj

@lordfaj

Super Pikin

Keke Napepe Katılım Mayıs 2011
1.1K Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
The Yinka Faj retweetledi
avey
avey@maranellosun16·
Saying “Leclerc barely finished ahead of him” is wild considering Charles finished nearly 10 seconds and 3 positions ahead. Meanwhile Lewis was closer in position and time to Pierre in his Alpine and Max in his RB than he was to Charles
avey tweet media
ali@dxbestani

@vandansavage I don't think you understood my tweet. All that and Leclerc barely finished ahead of him. Imagine if Leclerc faced a 28 year old Hamilton lol. Would've been wraps for ur boy

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avey
avey@maranellosun16·
Ferrari this race was the third fastest car so Lewis finished exactly where he was supposed to. It’s Charles who over performed and kept faster cars behind him for a lot longer (Kimi and Lando in the first stint, George in the second after SC) in a car that has Lewis’s DNA.
La Gazzetta Ferrari@GazzettaFerrari

🚨 | Lewis Hamilton: “Not really a great battle, I mean even somehow Charles had more power than me today, so you know, same car, so I need to understand why that is.” “So he did a good job to get to third place, but yes, lacking power from somewhere.”

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Liv
Liv@liv16_liv·
"Lewis was simply faster start to finish on another level this weekend, hats off to him. I’m happy for his podium. I’ll work on being better next time at this circuit". That’s how a respectful teammate should respond, instead of looking for excuses or raising doubts
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La Gazzetta Ferrari@GazzettaFerrari

🚨 | Lewis Hamilton: “Not really a great battle, I mean even somehow Charles had more power than me today, so you know, same car, so I need to understand why that is.” “So he did a good job to get to third place, but yes, lacking power from somewhere.”

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Goals Side
Goals Side@goalsside·
Inevitable duo…Drogba x Frank Lampard. 🔵🔥
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The Other Side Of The Coin
No one envies our: - Owners - Sporting Directors - Manager - Majority of our players I hate this ownership so much. They have ruined a fantastic football club and turned us into the biggest laughing stock. #BlueCoOUT
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Yemi
Yemi@yemifadahunsi·
@lordfaj What tears ? We are not the ones threatening to quit the sport lol
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Yemi
Yemi@yemifadahunsi·
@lordfaj Yimu Facts don’t lie
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LiveScore
LiveScore@livescore·
Chelsea have seen 🔟 consecutive Academy Player of the Year winners reach the international stage 🌟🏟️ Nowhere does it quite like Cobham 👏
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TK
TK@TeaKupps·
Gerrard is not a bigger Liverpool Legend than this guy man I’m sorry..
Mohamed Salah@MoSalah

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Michael Oyewole 🇳🇬
Michael Oyewole 🇳🇬@MichaelOyewole_·
Typed so much text without actually saying anything of substance. You didn't provide verifiable data to dispute all the claims made by @BolajiADC
O'tega Ogra@otegaogra

Dear Mr. Bolaji Abdullahi, Fmr Honourable Minister under GEJ, Fmr APC publicity secretary, Fmr PDP stalwart, Fmr State Commissioner, Fmr State Governor’s Aide. In politics since 2003 @BolajiADC There is a certain elegance to your message, sharp, emotional, deliberate. But there is also a certain amnesia to it, selective, strategic, convenient. Whilst it is unfortunate you chose the birthday of our President to highlight this amnesia, permit me, sir, to speak to it. Three things can be true at once: a nation can reinvent itself, a government can act, and a people can endure. You speak of hardship as though you discovered it. You speak of insecurity as though it began yesterday. You speak of governance as though you were never inside the room when decisions were made. You have not just criticised but you have made an attempt at reinventing history. Yes, Nigerians are hurting in some areas. Yes, fuel prices have risen, sharply, painfully, undeniably even though President Bola Tinubu has made cheaper alternatives availabke. But let us not pretend this storm began this morning. For years, we subsidised illusion, deferred reality, borrowed comfort, and let rent-seekers take hold of our Commonwealth. You know this more then many, sir. For years, Nigeria built a system where cheapness was artificial and sustainability was optional. Now the correction has come, and suddenly, those (including you and many members of your new-found contraption) who midwifed the distortion have become its loudest critics. The Tinubu-Shettima administration did not remove subsidy because it was easy. We removed it because it was necessary. Hard choices, real consequences, no pretence. Here is the antithesis you glide past so effortlessly. What feels like punishment today is what prevents collapse tomorrow. We endure to rebuild, not rebuild to endure On security, your words carry weight, but not balance. Nigeria did not become insecure in a single administration, nor will it be secured by a single speech. The threats we face are multi-layered including insurgency, ‘glocal’ terrorism, organised crime, cross border networks. Yet capacity of our systems have improved, security coordination has tightened, investments in intelligence and equipment have increased. Is it enough? No. Is it nothing? Also no. To describe a nation contending and fixing structural issues as a nation collapsing is not analysis, it is exaggeration. And exaggeration may win applause, but it does not build solutions. You invoke grief, and rightly so. Every life lost diminishes us. But grief must not become a tool for theatre. Because while you speak of failure, you carefully omit history, the years when these fires were lit, the years when you and those in power chose delay over decision. You were not a spectator then. You were an integral part of the system. On the economy, the strain was real. Prices were high but are coming back down. Pressures were visible yet we have mostly stabilised. But reforms are not judged in headlines, they are judged in trajectories. FX stability is improving. Revenues are strengthening. Investment signals are returning. You do not fix decades in months. You correct distortions and direction, then you build momentum as President Bola Tinubu is doing. We are not where we want to be. But we are no longer where we were. And then democracy and your quiet warning of a one party state. Yet here you are, criticising loudly, freely, publicly. A democracy that permits this level of dissent is not shrinking, it is alive. Imperfect, noisy, contested, but alive. This is the paradox your message cannot resolve. You criticise a system you once helped shape. You condemn outcomes without acknowledging inputs. You demand urgency now, but defended patience then. We shape our narratives, and then our narratives shape us. Nigeria is not perfect. Nigeria is not painless. Nigeria is not instant. But Nigeria is not what you are trying to sell either. 1/2 cont’d.

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