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MAY
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Young men are RETURNING to religion.
42% of men under 30 now say religion is “very important” to them, a big jump from 28% in 2023, according to a new Gallup poll.
At the same time, young women are moving in the opposite direction, with just 30% saying the same.
The resurgence is playing out in the pews, too, with church attendance ticking back up among young men, especially in Republican circles.
Meanwhile, young Democratic men are showing a DROP in church attendance over the last 20+ years, according to the polling data. In 2000, 40% of Democratic men reported church attendance, compared to just 26% now.

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Please kindly help repost so it can reach a wider audience. 🤲🏽🥹
It’s painful that I couldn’t get the help I truly needed. Still, I’m deeply grateful to everyone who supported me—financially, through prayers, and with genuine kindness. May God bless you all abundantly.
Even though my story trended for 48 hours after I shared it, and many platforms like Instablog, Gossipmill, BellaNaija, Punch Newspaper, Glitch Africa, Nairaland, and others helped amplify it, the main reason I spoke up was never to trend. I only wanted help—to support my mum and clear her debt so we could get back on our feet.
I reached out, tagged, and pleaded with influencers on X, but none responded. I’ve been doing this all alone, trying my best to help my mum. She has struggled so much—running her trading business on loans, repaying some while still borrowing more just to survive.
Somehow, she managed to raise ₦17 million—it still feels like a miracle to me.
But the burden is not over yet.
Please, Nigerians, I’m humbly asking for your help. My mum still has an outstanding debt of ₦3.8 million. Any support, no matter how little, would mean everything to us. 🤲🏽😭💔
2088772282
UBA
OLANIYI GBOLAHAN EMMANUEL
God bless you abundantly.



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The news of the abduction of innocent UTME candidates in Benue State is not just heartbreaking but a damning indictment of the failure of leadership and the collapse of security in our nation.
Young Nigerians striving for an education are being met with terror. In a country where the share of tertiary graduates is already painfully low (about 1%) which is far below peers like Indonesia (about 13%) and South Africa (around 10%). This is unacceptable. We cannot afford to lose even one more student to violence.
Those entrusted with protecting these young students appear increasingly preoccupied with the next election, projecting strength and power to rig elections, rather than deploying that same power and agencies to secure our roads, prevent these crimes, and rescue the abducted children who should not be in the hands of criminals but in examination halls.
This is no longer an isolated tragedy. It is a pattern. It is a national crisis. And it demands urgent, decisive, and responsible action, not excuses, not silence, but leadership that matches the scale of the emergency this deserves.
A nation that abandons its youth abandons its future. This cannot continue.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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