Themustacheguyyy

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Themustacheguyyy

Themustacheguyyy

@themustacheguyy

See Something, Say Something, Do Something. #Safetyfirst

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Eylül 2011
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Themustacheguyyy
Themustacheguyyy@themustacheguyy·
Despite using body cream this morning 😀
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PLUCL88
PLUCL88@MgUalghtani·
@jaberjaber1232 @Firas_FCBAYERN فريقك الوضيع سارق تشيلسي ٥ بلنتيات وطردين في زمن ال HD وهدف الفوز بالابطال عام ٢٠٠٦ تسلل وقبلها هدف شيفشنكو بنصف النهائي اللي ما فيه احد بالعالم كله يعلم ليش الغاه الحكم !!!!
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فراس المناصير
فراس المناصير@Firas_FCBAYERN·
الريال فاز باول خمس بطولات ابطال بفترة الخمسينات عندما كانت اوروبا مدمرة بسبب الحرب العالمية و بطولات كانت ببطاقات دعوة كأنه عرس شعبي رخيص ، حتى ان تشلسي رفض دعوة للمشاركة لتواضع مستوى البطولة ثم غاب من بداية الستينات ٣٢ سنة عن التتويج حين اصبحت بطولة نظامية و بقية البطولات سرقات و فهلوه ثم ياتيك متبلطجا متبجحا يفرض عليك يقول لك 15 ابطال متناسيا كل ما سبق ذكره و لا يحب الخوض بالتفاصيل .. يا عزيزي التاربخ النقي يكتبه العظماء فنحترمه و اما اللصوصيه و السرقات ف مكانها مزبلة التاريخ و لا نعترف بها
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Slim
Slim@onu_slim·
Every Nigerian Should be Scared Now El-Rufai’s mother died. And because of that, not because of any court order, or because of any legal process, they let him out of detention. Think about what that means for a second. A former governor of Kaduna State, a Nigerian citizen with constitutional rights, was only granted his freedom because his family was in mourning. Not justice but grief. That is the country we are living in right now. This man has been locked up since February 16, 2026. Over 40 days. No bail granted or substantive hearing concluded. His bail application was literally still pending, the court had fixed March 31st to rule on it. So while the judiciary was still doing its work, the ICPC quietly released him on “compassionate grounds”. Tell me, on whose legal authority? Who gave them the power to play God with a man’s liberty outside the courtroom? Because last time I checked, that’s what judges are for. Now let’s talk about the pile-on, because this is where it gets really ugly. It wasn’t just one agency. It wasn’t just one charge. They sent in the EFCC first, ₦423 billion misappropriation allegation. Then the ICPC re-arrested him. Then the DSS filed a separate three-count charge at the Federal High Court over allegations of intercepting phone calls belonging to the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu. Three agencies with three charges. One man….as how na. In any serious democracy, lawyers have a word for this pattern: persecution. In Nigeria, the government calls it “fighting corruption”. The difference matters. And it gets worse. On February 19th, the ICPC raided his Abuja home. El-Rufai has since filed a N1 billion lawsuit against them, claiming the search warrant was invalid and the entire operation was unlawful. He’s asking the court to throw out every single piece of evidence collected that day. If he’s right, and the courts will decide, then this entire prosecution is built on a broken, illegal foundation. They locked a man up for over a month based on evidence that may not even be admissible. That is not law enforcement it is theatre with handcuffs. And through all of this? The ICPC released no official statement about the terms of his release today. No press conference or conditions disclosed or transparency whatsoever. A government agency holds a high-profile citizen for 40+ days, then quietly opens the door when his mum dies, and says nothing to the public. This is how you know it was never purely about the law. Because the law demands accountability. This government demands obedience. Listen to what I need you to understand, this is not about whether you like El-Rufai. Many people don’t, and that’s valid. But rights are not reserved for people you admire. The Constitution doesn’t say “you get bail unless we really don’t like you”. It doesn’t say “three agencies can chase you at once if Twitter agrees you’re guilty”. It doesn’t say “you can go home when tragedy strikes your family”. If they can do this to a former governor, a man with lawyers, political connections, and a national profile, imagine what they do to ordinary Nigerians who can’t fight back. Who have no cameras on them. Whose mothers can die and nobody opens any doors. This government is not fighting corruption. It is weaponising the anti-corruption architecture to eliminate political threats. And the most dangerous part? They’re doing it in broad daylight, daring you to say something. So say something.
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Cyborg Warlord
Cyborg Warlord@Admiral_Cyborg·
While we were distracted, this happened: On February 25th 2026, Hon. Alex Mascot, a key member of the Aids and Loans Committee confronted Wale Edun, over the disappearance of capital project funds, despite trillions of naira in loans and record-breaking revenues. It began as a routine budget defence but escalated into a high stakes interrogation when Hon. Mascot revealed a disturbing pattern: - N1.15 trillion had been raised and specifically approved by the National Assembly to fund 30% of the 2025 capital budget. - Multiple loans had been secured, including: $1.2 billion for digital infrastructure, $500 million for economic stimulus, $500 million for MSMEs, $500 million from the AFDB for economic governance and energy transition, and a recent executive request for $21 million, 15 billion Yen, and 4 billion Euros. He queried why despite this avalanche of borrowed money and strong revenue performance by agencies like FIRS, Customs, and others, capital projects across Nigeria remain at zero disbursement. "With all these funds put together, I want you to enlighten us on why the 2024 budget is yet to be fully implemented, and why the 2025 budget has only been funded 34%, most of which is recurrent expenditure?" He asked the minister to enlighten Nigerians on why the capital projects still remain at zero. Minister Wale Edun shifted responsibility to the Minister of State for Finance, Doris Uzoka-Anite, claiming she handled disbursements. The infuriated committee members then asked; "If the substantive Minister of Finance cannot account for ₦1.15 trillion approved for capital projects, who can?" Some lawmakers called for the ministers to resign, but the committee had no choice but to adjourn the hearing to Thursday, February 26th, summoning the Minister of State to provide the clarity the nation deserves. After the committee meeting, Hon. Mascot spoke to the press and said, “When capital projects funding are at zero, development stops. When development stops, Nigerians suffer”. On Thursday, hearing resumed, then the Minister of State for Finance, Doris Uzoka-Anite, was summoned to account for the missing ₦1.15 trillion. It was confirmed that ₦1.15 trillion was indeed approved for capital projects. However, disbursement protocols require multiple sign-offs, and that certain "pre-disbursement conditions" had not been met by some ministries. She argued that while the funds exist, they cannot be released until Project documentation is complete The committee members, armed with the Health Minister's earlier testimony that he received only ₦38 million of his ₦286 billion allocation, then asked, "if protocols were the issue, why were some ministries given the runaround while others weren't?" Mascot rose again and asked: “Mr. Chairman, can the minister tell this committee which specific ministry met all conditions and still did not receive funding? If none existed, why was ₦1.15 trillion approved when the government knew conditions weren't met?" The minister could not provide a single example. Mascot then said: "· If capital funds were approved, where are they? · If they were misappropriated, who is responsible? · If this is a crime, who will be held accountable?" Mascot stated that if funds were approved but never reached their destination, that is not poor administration. That is a crime. On February 27th 2026, Hon. Mascot was invited to Aso Rock by President Tinubu for a close door meeting. After the meeting with the president, Hon. Ikwechegh announced his resignation from his party APGA, announcing his intention to join the APC. This is a classic move by Tinubu who always buys off his critics and sadly, Hon. Alex Mascot Ikwechegh has become his latest victim. Hon. Alex Mascot Ikwechegh will soon begin to sing “on your mandate” and he will never never again demand for accountability. It will be; see no evil, speak no evil. All these happened while we were shouting Mirabel, Simi, VDM and Mitchy. Good PM.
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Enigmas
Enigmas@Enigmas0x·
In a system where the officiating and VAR failed to provide a fair contest, the walk-off served as a manual override. ​By stopping the game for 17 minutes, Senegal broke the momentum of bias. ​It forced the world to look at the screen. It effectively iced the kicker. Brahim Díaz’s subsequent missed Panenka is blamed on the delay, but a supporter would say the delay simply restored the natural pressure of the game that the referee’s bias had tried to remove. ​Banning Senegal from the World Cup for this would be the ultimate gaslighting by FIFA. ​Senegal was the team that had a goal wrongly disallowed. Senegal was the team that faced a dubious last-minute penalty. ​To ban the winners of the tournament because they dared to protest a systemic breakdown is essentially FIFA saying: You must sit there and let us take the game from you, or we will destroy your future. ​Critics call the walk-off shameful, but the team actually returned and won. They didn't forfeit; they protested, regrouped under Sadio Mane's leadership, and proved they were the better team by winning in extra time. A ban would punish a team for a 15-minute protest that they self-corrected, while the refereeing errors that caused the chaos would likely go unpunished. ​If FIFA bans Senegal, they aren't protecting integrity; they’re protecting incompetence. Senegal didn't walk off because they were losing—they walked off because the officiating was an insult to the sport. They came back, they faced the penalty, and they won on the pitch. Banning a team for refusing to be robbed is just FIFA admitting they care more about optics than fair play.
The Touchline | 𝐓@TouchlineX

🚨 𝗝𝗨𝗦𝗧 𝗜𝗡: FIFA could ban Senegal from playing the World Cup after walking off the pitch during the AFCON final! — @mundodeportivo

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folowosele adeboye
folowosele adeboye@boye4christ2006·
We’re already 18 days into 2026. If you’re serious about japa but don’t have money, you should have applied to at least 20 scholarships by now. I post scholarships daily on this page, and many are still open. I also run a free WhatsApp group where I mentor people at no cost. We have Q&A sessions every Saturdays and now Sundays, and I personally answer questions. It’s been great so far. If you’re in the WhatsApp group, share a brief experience there so far, if you want to join, type “I’m interested”
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Themustacheguyyy
Themustacheguyyy@themustacheguyy·
@MikaelCBernard But they still awarded the penalty, if they had scored, I think it would have counted.
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Ben the Seer
Ben the Seer@MikaelCBernard·
Senegal has shown the world how to deal with corruption in African football. Walk out
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Fabrizio Romano
Fabrizio Romano@FabrizioRomano·
🚨💣 BREAKING: XABI ALONSO LEAVES REAL MADRID WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT.
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FC Barcelona
FC Barcelona@FCBarcelona·
The trophy is at home.
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َ@szniic·
Lamine Yamal vs Real Madrid one of one.
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Dr POPOOLA 🌐⚕️
Dr POPOOLA 🌐⚕️@popoolaadaniel·
I’ll Expose Something that’s been hidden today. The secret No one wants to let out, It’s a long read but you’ll understand why. Nigeria’s healthcare system needs reform. Not cosmetic reform. Not committee-after-committee reform. Real reform. Structural reform. Urgent reform. And at the centre of this collapse is something we don’t talk about enough: the teaching hospital system. It has been bastardized. Quietly. Gradually. Almost politely. And people are dying because of it. Let’s slow down for a moment. A teaching hospital, in its true sense, is not just another big hospital with many buildings. It is supposed to be the final referral point in the health system. The place where the most complex cases go. Where specialists teach. Where research informs care. Where time, depth, and thinking matter as much as drugs and procedures. Ideally, a teaching hospital should sit at the peak of a pyramid: •Primary Health Care handles common, simple conditions •Secondary (general) hospitals manage moderately complex cases •Teaching hospitals deal with rare, severe, complicated, or poorly understood problems That is the theory. Now, let’s be honest about the Nigerian reality. In Nigeria, teaching hospitals spend the bulk of their time doing what primary and secondary facilities were created to do. Very uncomplicated cases. Cough and catarrh. Simple diarrhoea. Uncomplicated urinary tract infections. Normal labour with no risk factors. Patients stroll straight into teaching hospitals for issues that should never be there in the first place. The result? Doctors, nurses, and trainees are overwhelmed. Clinics are overcrowded. Wards are congested. Emergency rooms are flooded with non-emergencies. By the time the real teaching hospital cases arrive, the system is already exhausted. And this is the most painful part. When the complex cases come, the ones that actually require: •prolonged clinical reasoning •multidisciplinary discussions •careful review of literature •tailored, patient-specific management …the doctors are already physically tired. Mentally drained. Emotionally worn out. So what happens? Care becomes rushed. Teaching becomes shallow. Research becomes an afterthought. And patients who needed the highest standard of care receive something less than optimal. Not because doctors don’t care. Not because they are incompetent. But because the system has set them up to fail. A teaching hospital is supposed to be your last bus stop. The place where nothing is too complex. The place where a single patient can be discussed for hours if needed. The place where someone can say, “Let’s go back to the literature,” and actually have the time to do it. That vision is largely lost in Nigeria. What we have now are teaching hospitals functioning like overcrowded general hospitals, just with more titles, more stress, and higher expectations. And people are paying for this failure with their lives. If we are serious as a country, we must rebuild the referral system. Strengthen primary health care. Make secondary hospitals functional and trusted. Enforce proper referral pathways. Until that happens, teaching hospitals will remain overwhelmed, diluted, and dangerous in ways that are not immediately obvious. This is not noise. This is not complaining. This is a warning. Reform Nigerian healthcare. And do it now.
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Ugochukwu
Ugochukwu@EkeVanVictor·
I know campaigns are not built off a single photograph. Strategy, context, partnerships, and long-term planning matter. But sometimes, one image is enough to spark an idea. I couldn’t help but imagine what it would look like if @CAF_Online used this picture to drive a Clothing and Shelter Drive for millions of homeless African children. The main copy almost writes itself: “The rain doesn’t choose who it falls on. But we can choose who we protect. Across Africa, children sleep exposed to rain, cold, and fear. Help us put a roof over a child’s head and warmth on their back.” This is why I believe in Sports for Change and Storytelling for Change. Because beyond medals, rankings, and results, sport still has the power to remind us who we are and who we should be protecting. If anything we do doesn’t, in some way, help change the world, then we may be missing the bigger picture. I remain interested in conversations and opportunities around sports marketing, communications, and purpose-driven campaigns where storytelling can create real impact. Sometimes, impact begins with simply paying attention. Thank you for capturing this moment @PoojaMedia
POOJA!!!@PoojaMedia

While Ndidi covered one mascot with the small flag, Nwabali took off his tracksuit to cover the other. More than just football ❤️ #AFCON2025WithPooja

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Abiodun
Abiodun@bin_gbada·
128 billion Naira ($88m) is missing from the ministry of power. 88 million USD!!!
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Ugochukwu
Ugochukwu@EkeVanVictor·
My boss at work abroad told me on a call last week, "God revealed to me that Apostle Iren is my Pastor, and from this new year, my family and I will be joining CCI". Couldnt contain my joy when I saw a picture of him deep in worship on their CCI Campus' page a few minutes ago 😀
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Ugochukwu
Ugochukwu@EkeVanVictor·
Its not his birthday today, but I want to openly and specially thank Adedolapo @themustacheguyy for his love and support for me in this year 2025. Words are not enough to tell how grateful I am to have you in my corner. You’ve been a pillar in @SibsInChrist and @TheCockpitMedia and I pray that 2026 will be your year of great rewards in Jesus’ name 🙏🏽
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