Ejire Ara Isokun retweetledi

America has 50 states.
And every single one of them operates under its own laws, courts, policing systems, and legal culture while still being bound by federal law.
That is the difference.
The United States understood something long ago that Nigeria still refuses to confront:
You cannot effectively govern hundreds of millions of people with completely different realities from one central authority.
In America, federal law handles national matters:
immigration
national security
constitutional rights
interstate crimes
currency
But individual states control much of what affects daily life:
policing
criminal justice
business regulations
education
taxation
property law
civil disputes
So what works in Texas does not have to be forced on California.
What works in Florida does not automatically become law in New York.
Each state adapts to its own people, culture, economy, crime rate, and social realities.
That decentralization is one of the greatest strengths of the American system.
It creates speed.
It creates accountability.
It creates competition between states.
It prevents dangerous levels of power concentration.
And most importantly, it allows local problems to be solved locally.
Meanwhile Nigeria calls itself a federation, but operates like an overprotected unitary state wearing a federal costume.
Everything leads back to Abuja.
Security? Abuja.
Policing? Abuja.
Major judicial power? Abuja.
Revenue dependence? Abuja.
Even governors that are called “Chief Security Officers” cannot fully control police operations in their own states.
Think about how absurd that is.
A governor can watch insecurity spread in real time and still wait for federal approval before meaningful action can happen.
That is not federalism.
That is administrative dependency.
Nigeria is trying to centrally manage over 200 million people across completely different ethnic, economic, religious, and security realities as if Sokoto and Port Harcourt experience the same problems.
They do not.
And the damage is obvious.
Our courts are overloaded.
Judicial processes move at a painful pace.
Security coordination is weak.
States wait for federal allocations instead of building real economic independence.
Every election becomes a war because too much power is concentrated at the center.
Control Abuja and you practically control the country.
That is why political tension in Nigeria is always explosive.
Too much authority sits in one place.
America distributed power intentionally.
Nigeria concentrates power dangerously.
And that difference affects everything from policing efficiency to judicial speed to economic development.
The American system is not perfect.
Far from it.
But one thing it understood correctly is this:
Local realities require local solutions.
Nigeria still governs like every state is the same country inside the same problem.
It is one of the biggest reasons governance keeps failing, institutions remain weak, and justice feels painfully distant from the average citizen.
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