Pharooq

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Pharooq

Pharooq

@talib_pharooq

Earth Katılım Ocak 2017
221 Takip Edilen225 Takipçiler
Ameen-Amshi
Ameen-Amshi@ameen_amshi·
To the person who hit an elderly man around Sun City Galadimawa Traffic light yesterday at about 4:00 PM and ran away, the old man has sadly passed away. His Janazah will take place after Jumu’ah prayer at the Central Mosque. May Allah forgive him and grant him Aljannatul Firdaus.
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Inside Ilorin NG 🇳🇬
Inside Ilorin NG 🇳🇬@InsideIlorin_NG·
If you want peace of mind and a girl that won’t cheat on you, date Ilorin girls. Peace of mind go wan finish you
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Pharooq
Pharooq@talib_pharooq·
@dekreationz 😭 haaa Omo 😭 😭 Watch mojo carry am 😭
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صبر
صبر@1_Q_X·
بلاش إباحية… واللهِ وباللهِ وتاللهِ؛ أنتَ لا تستحقُّ هذه القذارة، ولا يليق بك أن يُدفن عقلك تحت صورٍ زائفة وشهواتٍ عابرة. ارفع قدرك… احترم ربَّك… احترم نفسك… احترم قوَّتك. كُن سيِّد رغبتك، ولا تكن عبدًا لها.
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Pharooq
Pharooq@talib_pharooq·
@dStoolofWisdom @itz_taser Yes, Buh porn has made filth more accessible, even younger audiences can access it with just few clicks
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Black_Melanin🥰
Black_Melanin🥰@itz_taser·
Most g@y people started off as a p0rn addict. Women who allow their dogs fxck them are also p0rn addicts. Women who use dildos or vibrators are also p0rn addicts. Everything started from watching p0rn.
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The Stool Of Wisdom𓃵
The Stool Of Wisdom𓃵@dStoolofWisdom·
@itz_taser So, what about gays in the ancient world? Bestiality in the ancient world as well? Cleopatra used dildo thousands of years ago 😂 You people are funny sha
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mommas🖤
mommas🖤@primeanniey·
@Nazannwa THIS!!! Went back to the house where he knew the woman had home advantage, she could call neighbors, family etc and could possibly be manhandled, but he still went back, his safety and all. And she didn’t come out 😭. Guilty, she is your Honor.
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LOLO👸. Chinazamekpere🤍
if a rider eats my fried rice and he comes back to explain, I must go out to at least scream at him. wym, he went back & you refused to go and meet him? them dey do avoidant for stolen food?
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
David Hundeyin tweet media
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May
May@notMay01·
The evil you have in the world is not tied to gender but tied to power dynamics (dog eat dog). The pattern; Older woman abuse young boys Men abuse Women Women abuse children/step children/maid. and the cycle goes on and on. Whatever evil a human does, it does because it’s in a position of strength.
THEGRANDMABOY@TheGrandmaBoy

A mother from Imo State, who has three children, used boiling water to peel off the fingers of a five-year-old child living with her. She also used a candle to burn the child's private area. She continues to burn her own body with the candle and leaves her to die.

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Field Marshal of the Han Dynasty
Field Marshal of the Han Dynasty@General_Oluchi·
What did Epstein know about Boko Haram’s operation in Nigeria to have predicted the kidnap of polio workers for ransom in Kano which actually turned out to be the murder of 9 polio health workers in Kano back in 2013? Epstein also felt that the best way to convince the Nigerian govt that Bill Gates had good intentions was to offer "candles and small mirrors,” a metaphor for using cheap trinkets to manipulate or bribe indigenous populations. I hope Nigerians are following these revelations?
Sayer Ji@sayerjigmi

🚨 BREAKING: Newly released Epstein documents show Jeffrey Epstein and Bill Gates's science advisor Boris Nikolic privately discussed how to overcome African resistance to vaccination campaigns. Their solution? "Candles and small mirrors, the same as the Americans did with their native Indians." In a March 2013 email, Epstein tells Nikolic he consulted his "best sources" — people whose conclusions he says are "very often better than the list of the various 26 three-letter agencies." The topic: Nigerian communities resisting a polio program "associated with both the west and with bill and melinda." Epstein's source — described as "the most sophisticated, experienced and successful of the group, great experience in countries of your interest" — offered this advice: "If he wants to get their consent, he needs to use candles and small mirrors, the same as the Americans did with their native Indians." Nikolic's response? "Great input — I guess we will need colorful beads and mirrors." This is Bill Gates's senior science advisor — the man later named backup executor of Epstein's will — laughing along with a colonial metaphor about manufacturing consent from African populations. Nigeria's distrust of Western vaccination wasn't irrational. In 1996, Pfizer tested an experimental drug on children during a meningitis outbreak in Kano. Eleven children died. The resulting Trovan scandal fueled decades of vaccine hesitancy across northern Nigeria. But in this private exchange, African resistance isn't treated as a legitimate grievance rooted in lived experience. It's treated as a problem to be outmaneuvered with trinkets. Epstein also predicted that Boko Haram would begin kidnapping polio workers for ransom — a prediction that proved largely correct. He wasn't guessing. He was receiving intelligence-grade analysis from sources he claimed outperformed the CIA. And he was routing it directly to the man who controlled Bill Gates's scientific agenda. Nikolic told Epstein: "I would rather seek your opinion than seek opinion of 1,000 of global health experts." Think about that. The person advising the world's largest private health funder trusted a convicted sex offender's intelligence network more than the entire global health establishment. Publicly, the Gates Foundation describes its work in Africa as "community-centered" and "evidence-based." Privately, the people shaping that work compared winning African consent to trading beads with Native Americans. That's not a communications problem. That's a legitimacy problem. 📄 Source: EFTA01761706, released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act justice.gov/epstein/files/… View my 5-part investigative series below: 🧵👇

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Iyo Obietonbara
Iyo Obietonbara@sankofa360·
One of the many insults Africans endure in foreign lands is provocatíve generalisation. I encountered it during a lecture. The topic was dietary assessment. The lecturer, a Japanese, was explaining how different populations are assessed, how data is collected. Pictorial slides of different methods across countries appeared on the screen. They were super clean; bright kitchens with well lit dining tables. Plates arranged neatly, portions measured with clean, washed hands. Then the next slide came up: Children with dark skin adorned in dirty torn clothes, bare feet on muddy ground. A dirty and unwashed hand measuring food with Plates that looked like they hadn’t seen soap in days. Nothing in the picture was allowed dignity. This, we were meant to understand, was Africa. I looked around in shock and everyone was nodding and writing down heaven knows what. The lecturer continued speaking. She talked about challenges, limitations, developing regions. But the slide remained. I raised my hand and asked if I could make an addition. She nodded. I cleared my throat ceremoniously and began, ‘This slide here is misleading. Africa is not a place of dirt and neglect. One image cannot define an entire continent.’ I saw the surprise on their faces but I continued on the spree. I talked about urban Africa. Middle class households. Supermarkets. Standardised dietary tools. Public health surveys that look nothing like that image. I asked why deprivation was the default visual language. Why dirt had to explain Africa. Why complexity was ignored. The lecturer nodded and said it was just an example, and that the intention wasn’t offensive. She changed the slide immediately and the lecture moved on. We had a presentation coming up the following week. I had spent hours preparing slides and notes. On the day of the presentation, each student came up, spoke, and at the end received polite and hearty accolades. It was my turn. I hurried through the main points. I didn’t linger on what everyone expected. Then I came to the slide I had saved for last. I asked the lecturer to please zoom it. She did and the picture filled the screen. It was unpleasant. A neglected urban area in Japan, where the lecturer came from. Broken pavements. Graffiti everywhere. Garbage piling on the sides. A few children standing around, scruffy and unkempt. A woman sitting near what looked like an overflowing bin. I let the image settle for a moment. ‘This,’ I said, ‘is how Asia in all its glory looks. It is a perfect example of public service neglect.’ I paused to measure the look on her face. And yes, it was exactly the reaction I was looking for. I continued. ‘You’ll notice the dirt. The disorder. The environment left to itself. The people living in it. It has become a way of life in Asia.’ And with that, my presentation came to a conclusion. I walked briskly back to my seat. No applause came. Not like the others received. And that was fine. Because this wasn’t about praise. It was about making the point sink. Chukwuemeka Onyemachi.
Iyo Obietonbara tweet media
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Vincent The Therapist
Vincent The Therapist@mrhighfoster·
Let me explain what this means so that you understand better. . Sometimes tiny cells in our stomach get very stubborn and turn into bad guys called cancer. They grow way too fast and don't listen to the body's rules. . But you see, these smart scientists in Korea didn't want to fight them with big scary bombs and bazookas like old medicines do. Instead they sat the cells on a wooden bench and said "Look here you stubborn cells, why don't you just remember who you really are and be good again? . So they made a pretend computer twin of our belly cells. Just like a magic video game version. (something like that sha) so they played around in the game to find the three bossy switches that were making the cells stay stubborn. . . Those three bossy switches have funny names. They are MYB, HDAC2, and FOXA2. Fantastic 3 lool . The scientists turned those three mean switches Off. Poof. And just like that guess what? The stubborn cancer cells were like "Ohhh… I remember now! . Then they calmed down, grew up properly, and turned back into nice, normal belly helper cells. No more bad growing. They then tried this in Mice, and the poor mice got better. The bad lumps got smaller because the cells stopped being the bullies they were. It's like telling your barking Dog at home to shusss and calm down. And it actually calms down. . . This isn't ready for humans yet, as it's still developing. But it's going to help out someday. And well, a lot of people are gonna be wayyyy happier. . . . Kudos to the scientists once again and I'm super happy about this development and the positive impact it's going to have on affected people 💪🏾💪🏾 . ✍️ Vincent The Therapist
All day Astronomy@forallcurious

🚨: Cancer cells can now turn back to normal cells, thanks to South Korean scientists

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Pharooq
Pharooq@talib_pharooq·
@H4LCarter calm down make you read am well
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lemeseeyougolololo
lemeseeyougolololo@TheGooveDuck·
Nigerian men buying PS5 and abandoning it after 1 week is peak "nostalgia" moment. You're not a true gamer. You just wanted to make up for something you lacked as a child.
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Pharooq
Pharooq@talib_pharooq·
@kunle_kenny Omo I no meet this one o 😂 …… Egbon 🙌
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