Sabitlenmiş Tweet
naseeyr
46.2K posts

naseeyr
@naseeyr1
business educator business mindset 🌍
Zaria, Nigeria Katılım Temmuz 2019
306 Takip Edilen868 Takipçiler
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi

Any money you did not put in my account cannot pressure me.
NASIRU@iamnasboi
The money you showcase online is quietly putting the next generation under unnecessary pressure.
English
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi

The entire essence of having money is to outsource tedious chores, so one can focus on important matters.
Sheni Coker@sheni_coker
If you have the money to outsource chores or anything, outsource it. Nobody is giving out medals for housework.
English
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi

In my country they would steal it before midnight and join us to complain about bad governance.
James Melville 🚜@JamesMelville
Switzerland 🇨🇭 Solar panels on train tracks. A hell of a lot more logical than plastering over prime farmland.
English
naseeyr retweetledi

Nothing tops dwelling in a high trust society, Nothing. For it is from that everything flows, good governance, clean cities, civil servants who actually do their jobs, neighbours who look out for each other, functioning infrastructure, happy citizens and accountable leadership.
James Melville 🚜@JamesMelville
Switzerland 🇨🇭 Solar panels on train tracks. A hell of a lot more logical than plastering over prime farmland.
English
naseeyr retweetledi

From Insults to Impact: Rethinking How Nigerians Hold Leaders Accountable.
Nigeria has a funny political habit. Every president enters office with hope, leaves with insults, and somehow ends up being missed a few years later.
From Olusegun Obasanjo to Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, Goodluck Jonathan, Muhammadu Buhari, and now Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the script has barely changed. Nigerians complain, criticize, mock, and sometimes completely dismiss whoever is in charge. Then time passes, and the same leader begins to look better in hindsight.
At first glance, it feels like Nigerians just never get good leadership. But if you look closely, something deeper is going on.
We tend to treat the president as if he is the entire system. When things go wrong, the anger goes straight to one person. Fuel prices rise, it is the president. Insecurity increases, it is the president. The economy struggles, it is the president. While leadership absolutely matters, this way of thinking oversimplifies a very complex reality.
Nigeria’s real challenges are not just about who is sitting in Aso Rock. They are about how the entire system works. Weak institutions, overcentralized power, poor accountability at state and local levels, and a political culture that rewards access over competence all play a role. No single leader can fix all of that overnight, no matter how brilliant or determined.
So when criticism turns into pure insults, it misses the point. It reduces serious national issues to name calling. Instead of asking hard questions like what policy failed, what institution broke down, or who else is responsible, the conversation becomes emotional and shallow.
There is also a hidden cost. When public discourse is full of insults, leaders stop taking citizens seriously. It becomes easy to dismiss criticism as noise. At the same time, other powerful actors quietly escape scrutiny. Governors, lawmakers, and local officials often operate with less pressure, even though they control many of the things that affect daily life.
Then there is the effect on citizens themselves. If every leader is described as useless or hopeless, people begin to believe that nothing works at all. That kind of thinking kills participation. Why vote seriously if nothing changes? Why engage if the outcome feels fixed? Slowly, frustration turns into apathy.
Yet there is a better way.
Instead of general anger, Nigerians can focus on specific demands. Ask clear questions. What exactly is the government doing about power supply? How is money being spent at the state level? What measurable progress is being made in security? Specific pressure is harder to ignore than loud complaints.
Attention also needs to move beyond the presidency. Many of the changes people want can happen faster at the state and local level. Holding governors and local leaders accountable may not trend as much on social media, but it often produces more direct results.
Most importantly, the focus should shift from personalities to systems. Strong institutions outlast any leader. Electoral reforms, transparent budgeting, and an efficient judiciary can quietly transform a country in ways that no single speech or slogan ever will.
None of this means leaders should be shielded from criticism. Far from it. Criticism is necessary. But it should be sharp, informed, and purposeful. Not just insults thrown in frustration.
In the end, the pattern Nigerians keep repeating tells a story. It is not just about bad leaders. It is about a system that has not been properly fixed, and a style of engagement that often targets symptoms instead of causes.
Anger is understandable. The conditions people live in are not easy. But if that anger is not directed with intention, it becomes noise. And noise, no matter how loud, rarely changes anything.
Real change comes from pressure that is focused, informed, and consistent. That is less exciting than insults, but far more powerful.

English
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi

That’s why I stopped lending money.
If you ask for 200k, I give 10k, if you ask for 100k, I give 10k. If you ask for 50k, I give you 10k, if you ask for 20k I give you 10k, if you ask for 10k, I give 5k.
The only person I can confidently lend 1 million naira to is my best man, and my right-hand man.
YOM🗣️@ThaBoyYom
Lending of money has silently ended more friendships than actual disputes have.
English
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi
naseeyr retweetledi











