Mr Lama 🫆

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Mr Lama 🫆

Mr Lama 🫆

@osman_diamond

Pan-Africanist || Agri-Business man || Hauler || Dad👨🏾|| Africa rising ✊🏾 #DecolonizeYourMind 🖤💚❤️

Earth Katılım Ekim 2019
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HEPA García 🇻🇪
@DaniMayakovski Excelente comentario @DaniMayakovski Hay pobres que defienden a éstas personas, instituciones y sistemas. Pobres descerebrados, que solo sirven de instrumento ciego para defender a quién los oprime y asfixia‼️ #3May
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Nnamdi Obi
Nnamdi Obi@nnamdiobiii·
They stole 210 trillion. That’s roughly 197 billion . It’s enough to put trains in every state and major city in Nigeria. Like transportation problem Will be solved for life
L____T²@anonymous___T

@nnamdiobiii @Uzomathewicked If the money they stole from NNPC was spent there we’d have something to hope on. Paying taxes will make sense to the ordinary man!! Right now I’m not sure there’s a reason for me to pay tax seeing what has been looted in the country

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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
The problem is that the real masquerades he is up against don't care. They won't even allow an Obasanjo or even a Goodluck Jonathan type to occupy that office again. We only get Buharis and Tinubus. The only way P.O. gets anywhere near that office is total national rebellion. And if he's too rich and polite to make it happen, but he insists on occupying impotent political space with an electoral ambition that is not going to happen, then what is the point of all this exactly? That is my point. I actually want this man to become president, but *HE DOESN'T!*
Morty@Femi_blaine

@DavidHundeyin He's not a Lumumba, his character can't just change overnight, he can't go to war with the west (in the capacity of a revolutionary), but he sure as hell can stop this nosediving into hell that western stooges have put us on in the last decade or two

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Typical African
Typical African@Joe__Bassey·
Julius Sello Malema 🇿🇦
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WithoutHistory
WithoutHistory@WithoutHistory·
“Better a noble death saving the country, than to live like a slave”. 💪🇲🇱 Yeah, Mali will be just fine. The young people get it.
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Sy Marcus Herve Traore
Sy Marcus Herve Traore@marcus_herve·
You wonder how over 12,000 western mercenaries got to Mali 🇲🇱 to coordinate their attacks on April 25th? Well, some of them came in as refugees and they had legal documents delivered by the UNHCR. @GoitaAssimi @Gal_Abd_Maiga @GouvMali you need to shut down the damn UNHCR right now!
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BRICS News
BRICS News@BRICSinfo·
JUST IN: 🇮🇷🇨🇳 Iran says China and Iran are "ignoring" and "humiliating" the United States.
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Mr Lama 🫆
Mr Lama 🫆@osman_diamond·
@jrnaib2 Sheikhs them drinking whiskey 🥃 and reading this like 🥱
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Abdul-Aziz Na'ibi Abubakar
Kwankwaso shouldn't let the Arewa Sheikhs know that Peter Obi built a brewery while he was governor and is allegedly still involved in the brewery business. Friendly advice. 🤭
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
A lot of his generation didn't understand Pan-Africanism as primarily a material struggle against a global empire, but as an emotional identity project. It was very easy to coopt them. Nkrumah was the only leader in that generation who genuinely understood how the world works, which was why he was the only one with the foresight to use an arranged marriage with an Egyptian noble woman to create an important political bridge across the Sahara *that still exists today.* Achebe and his contemporaries would have dismissed such an idea simply because Fathia was not a black woman and in their minds, "Pan-Africanism" = "Black identity project". Also, because theirs was the first generation to have widespread access to western brainwashing, they almost uniformly developed a fawning, uncritical admiration for the west, and they kept getting rewarded for it, which created a feedback loop. You can see that in the lives of Achebe, Soyinka, Ayittey etc. They were literally not in their right minds, and they get a lot of undue credit while Nkrumah the one was doing most of the intellectual heavy lifting of that generation. Unfortunately, both in Ghana and across the continent, he was surrounded by very dumb people who spoke very good English, and who mistook their ability to speak good English with intelligence and political awareness.
Khazad dum@anthropoorlogy

On the issue of Achebe. I respect his African rooted philosophy but I stop to think every now and then: was Mazi Chinualomogu so stvpid to see that he was quite literally a pawn in the hands of the department of state? Did he just give up on the pan African ideals after Biafra?

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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Nigerian who can't afford to eat meat 3 times a day and is wondering how to charge his phone tonight after the latest national grid collapse, speaking about why his preferred political candidate should continue losing politely and changing nothing:
Paddie's@mgbodee

@DavidHundeyin He's not that desperate oga

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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
There's no way to offend a Nigerian like telling him to look at the wider context of his problem and find a systemic solution instead of fixating on the eye-level problem and reacting blindly. Telling them this makes you an unbearable know-it-all, and who do you think you are?
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Kaycee Gadget & Accessories 📱💻🐐
Aptly put, no imperialist/capitalist would fold his hands and watch you try to sway his over 250millions customers away from consuming his products to producing theirs, without putting up a serious fight with you.
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin

The basic issue with P.O. is the same issue I had until 2024 - he refuses to acknowledge that his platform is fundamentally anti-imperial. The idea of moving Africa's largest population "from consumption to production" is a fundamentally anti-imperialism idea. The existence of Nigeria as a consumer-import-dependent, natural resource exporter that spends resource export revenues on imported finished goods without having an industrial base to manufacture its own, is not an accident of "poor leadership" - it is the direct goal of neo-colonialism. When instead of manufacturing goods, Nigeria instead haemorrhages its natural resources and human talent, and only receives some insufficient USD resource rents in return, this ensured that Nigeria and its African contemporaries remain artificially poor, while people who live in places where for 6 months every year, the ground freezes solid and daily sunshine is only 5 hours, remain artificially wealthy. That is the core of the Euro-American imperial system. The military branch of this imperial system is called NATO. The governance/policy arms are called IMF/World Bank. The economic arm is called WTO. The academic/social arms are the Foundations, NGOs, policy research institutes and universities. This is what P.O. is actually up against. So if P.O. says he wants to "move Nigeria from consumption to production", it is the same thing as declaring war on Europe, its sugar daddy in Washington, and its spiritual leader in Tel-Aviv. And if you're going to do that, you need to be fully locked in, and you need to be prepared to lose everything of yours that is under the empire's control. I finally realised this in June 2024, and that's why I quit my £40,000/year project management job in Newcastle, packed up all my shit, withdrew all my money, gave up my 5-year UK visa, and bought a 1-way ticket back to Accra. As I am now, if and when I end up in a position of power, there is zero leverage that any white man anywhere on earth can use to blackmail me into maintaining this imperial system. I don't have property in their countries. I don't have money in their banking systems. I don't have children in their schools and universities. The most they can do is ban me from their social media. P.O. does not want to do the same. His children are comfortable and integrated pseudo-westerners. He has property in the UK. He has money in their banks. He enjoys that regular suite at the Hilton Paddington too much. He's trying to run on a revolutionary, anti-imperialist platform while pretending that he is a friend of the Western world who doesn't want to pick a fight with them. The problem with this is that oyibo people don't play those games. These people murdered Patrice Lumumba over a speech. You might not see yourself as their enemy, but they DEFINITELY know on what side their bread is buttered, and they know that a Nigeria where ships berth everyday, offload consumer goods, and sail away only with natural resources or empty, is a Nigeria that remains strategically poor and profitable to their empire. They KNOW that a Nigeria under Peter Obi where education and health are properly funded, where Chinese-inspired industrial policy is enacted, where railways and steel production move to the top of national priority, and where those ships eventually start sailing from Nigeria laden with manufactured goods for export to the world, is the Nigeria that will destroy their entire parasitic way of life. And I'm sure P.O. knows this too, but he's invested in pretending that he can play both sides, the same way Patrice Lumumba wasted valuable time doing "I am not a Communist" and trying to play nice with the same people until they killed his ass, dissolved him in sulphuric acid, and kept his gold tooth as a souvenir. That's why I've moved on from the Obidient thing. Both he and his supporters don't know what they want and I'm exhausted. Even his Bible says "How long will you be limping between two opinions?"

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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Since I started reading at 4, I've got used to being the "oversabi" whose existence offends people because why does he think he knows everything, and why is actually right about the things he says? People are more bothered by the tin, 1-inch barrier that is the temporary loss of ego that comes with submitting before superior information or thinking, than by the terrible consequences of being proudly wrong. They don't mind suffering lifelong fallout of wrong decisions as long as they don't have to admit that the "oversabi" might be right. It's an experience I've grown so accustomed to that it doesn't even bother me anymore. I've had it in Nigeria. I've had it in the UK. I've had it in the Netherlands. I've had it in Dubai. I've had it in Kenya. I've had it in Ghana. I've had it in Tanzania. 7 countries, 3 continents, multiple nationalities, ethnicities and racial groups, but the same experience remains constant. People would rather be proudly wrong than tolerate the minor inconvenience of surmounting their own ego long enough to take correction.
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Nnamdi Obi
Nnamdi Obi@nnamdiobiii·
You just proved everything I said. Nigerian politicians laundering money, yes, through Western banks. Through Barclays. Through Deutsche Bank. Through shell companies registered in London, Delaware, and the British Virgin Islands. Through real estate in Dubai and Mayfair. That is the infrastructure. And it is not Nigerian. When James Ibori stole billions from Delta State, where did it go? London. Who caught him? Scotland Yard, eventually, after years. Who enabled the movement of those funds? Western correspondent banks and offshore secrecy jurisdictions that Britain runs. When Abacha looted $5 billion, where was it? Swiss banks. Jersey. Liechtenstein. The money did not sit in Abuja. It traveled on Western rails. So your own argument confirms mine. The infrastructure that moves dirty Nigerian money is not in Nigeria. It is in the West. Which means the West sees it, touches it, profits from it, and prosecutes it selectively, on their own timeline, for their own purposes. Bring a counter-argument, not an age insult. 90s here but then e no really matter.
Nnamdi Obi tweet media
Mirror Man@Mcfinga

@nnamdiobiii You sound like you were born post 2005. Nigerian politicians have been laundering far bigger sums. Do they ship it via cargo? Again nice joke. If you think it's about info war/narratives, pls do indulge them with whatever you think have. Especially your chatbot

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Sovereign Media
Sovereign Media@sov_media·
THE WEST FEARS AFRICA’S FUEL LIBERATION For over a century, Africa has been trapped in a colonial "extraction loop": exporting raw crude for pennies and buying back refined fuel from the West at a massive premium. But the era of dependence could be coming to an end. Following Nigeria’s shift into a net exporter of refined fuel, driven by the success of the Dangote Refinery, Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, has unveiled plans to replicate his success in Nigeria by building a 650,000-barrel-per-day mega-refinery in East Africa — a move that could signal the export of a model aimed at breaking dependence on imported fuel. The cost of Africa’s fuel dependency is staggering. For example, while Angola holds nearly 8 billion barrels of oil, it still spent $854 million on fuel imports at the end of 2025 alone. This “trap” drains foreign reserves while enriching overseas refineries. However, in Nigeria, the Dangote Refinery is beginning to disrupt this cycle, processing around 565,000 barrels per day as of March 2026 and supplying the vast majority of the domestic market. As a result, the chronic fuel queues that once defined daily life in Africa’s second-largest economy have largely disappeared. But Africans refining for Africans is a nightmare for European oil giants. Consequently, the World Bank - where the US is the largest shareholder - has launched a counter-offensive. In April 2026, the Bank advised Nigeria to resume fuel imports, claiming they are "cheaper." Critics suggest that this "advice" is an attempt to force Nigeria to reopen import licenses for Western giants whose market share has evaporated. The West only advocates for "competition" when it means African industries competing against subsidised European giants. By refining at home, Africa saves billions in foreign exchange and creates thousands of local jobs. True sovereignty is not found in World Bank loans with colonial conditions. It is found in the power to fuel your own future.
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Nigeria Democratic Congress
Nigeria Democratic Congress@NigeriaNDCHQ·
Peter Obi and Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso are here. Medicals ongoing. Here we go, soon!!!
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Nigeria Democratic Congress
Nigeria Democratic Congress@NigeriaNDCHQ·
No factions No on going court case No leadership crisis No status quo ante bellum. Ready to serve
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Nigeria Democratic Congress
Nigeria Democratic Congress@NigeriaNDCHQ·
Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso receiving their NDC Membership cards from the National Chairman, Senator Moses Cleopas.
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Mr Lama 🫆
Mr Lama 🫆@osman_diamond·
@DavidHundeyin @PeterObi Sir Obi need to make it happen. We will fight the fight together. By 2027, that’s 12 years gone. How many more years do we waste doing nothing? Getting buhari and tinubu as our president for the past 12 years of my life 😭. 🖕🏿🇺🇸. APC must go should be Different 🩸⚰️
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