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Homemade

@tunkash

FOOTBALLER⚽️. Tech. WEB3. ARSENAL F.C. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS.

Look beyond what you see Katılım Şubat 2016
177 Takip Edilen163 Takipçiler
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Arsenal
Arsenal@Arsenal·
This belongs to all of us.
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Arsenal
Arsenal@Arsenal·
We did it, together.
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Chetuya Math Chinagolum
Chetuya Math Chinagolum@Chetuyachinago·
This is what I heavily emphasized yesterday in a Twitter space. There can never be talk of any "revolutionary" movement in Nigeria until we dismantle the current educational system in the country. There is no bypassing this important stage. We can tweet from now until the next 100 years, we can write volumes of political essays, we can march in the streets until our boots wear out, we can occupy embassies all we want, we can even bring a J.J. Rawlings type figure into Nigeria to uproot all the elites in power. All of these are empty and meaningless endeavors. I have said it in the past and I will leave it in writing for those who will come after me that I have renounced the current Nigerian educational system completely. I have been in the field and taught Mathematics long enough to recognize this rot. I have sat down with some of my lecturers and demonstrated how the Mathematics syllabus in universities in Nigeria is never going to allow the Engineering department to develop. I have shown how Nigeria can never produce high profile researchers even in the next 100 years if this syllabus is allowed to exist. We learn Real and Complex Analysis in Nigeria without a foundational course on Analysis, no Euclidean geometry, no in depth treatment of Series, and no rigorous introduction to discrete mathematics or set theory. And then when the actual analysis is taught, students are forced to memorize a body of theorems and proofs and regurgitate them in the exam halls. And this is just Analysis. We have not even talked about Topology for spatial data structures and advanced physics, or Combinatorial Mathematics that is the backbone of AI and Machine Learning, or Graph Theory which models modern telecommunications, or Cryptography which secures the entire global financial framework. I can go on forever. In fact, I can even write a 500-page dissertation on how the current Mathematics educational system in Nigeria will make it impossible for Nigeria to industrialize. The best we can hope for is to import fancy equipment from China because we have a system that was designed to raise an army of idiots with degrees. Their sole value is to perform administrative tasks for the corporations that are extracting their resources and wealth. And this is just for Mathematics. The same line of reasoning can be extended to all departments in the country. And this is why no matter our passion on this platform, no matter our calls for total decolonization of the African mind, it is simply insufficient. It is insufficient because the educational system in the country has made our people impervious to rational thought. It is insufficient because our people are being educated in general by the ghosts of Lord Lugard to work for Chevron and other corporations that continue to plunder us. It is insufficient because our people are still being educated by the Salafi Wahhabi schools established and funded by Saudi Arabia on behalf of the transatlantic empire to create an army of sleeper cells in Nigeria that they can activate at any time for insurgencies. It is insufficient because in the South our people have been reduced to complete idiots by the mega churches and their prosperity gospel. They are taught to interpret poverty and underdevelopment as a sin rather than an institutional failure and foreign backed imperialism. This is why our vibrant youth population has been reduced to prayer warriors fighting against demonic arrows instead of revolutionaries fighting against the colonial institutions that are looting their future dry. It is insufficient because our media platforms are designed to entertain and distract rather than educate and mobilize. It is insufficient because our cultural institutions have been hijacked to celebrate subservience and mediocrity instead of critical thinking and rebellion. All of these are part of the educational system that must be dismantled: the churches, the Salafi Wahhabi schools, the obsolete university curricula, and the media syndicates that keep the masses sedated. It is only when these institutions are defeated that we can talk about a revolutionary movement. It is only then we can confront the colonial institutions. The true African revolution will not be birthed in the pews of a mega church or the classrooms of a foreign funded school. It will only begin when we forcefully reclaim our minds. Let the total deconstruction of the Nigerian educational system be the first and most decisive step toward our absolute liberation.
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin

Pro-sovereign media like The Spearhead can only do so much in raising the mental level of our people. The real magic bullet is the primary and secondary education syllabus. If I ever hold state power, there will be a once-in-a-century earthquake at the Ministry of Education. The new syllabus will not be an updated version of the current one. It will be a completely different one that nobody is familiar with. A syllabus designed to prepare children to understand their developing country and grow up to take control of its destiny, not one designed to prepare them to pass anstract exams so that they can be plucked and harvested by oyibo people. When I get my way, by the time a Nigerian kid writes their junior WAEC, they will know exactly who they are, where they come from, their place in the world, and where they are going. That's the only way to sweep out the decrepit millennial and Gen X generations who are already beyond redemption, and replace them with younger Gen Z's, Alphas and Betas who understand how the world works and know how to be useful to themselves within it.

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Agọziem-Art
Agọziem-Art@nneamaka_orji·
My name is Chiagọziem Nneamaka Chivụzọ Ọrjị, this is my artwork titled Ada Oke Osisi.
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Sky Sports Premier League
"I believe somehow" 😆 Eberechi Eze reacts after watching back a heart-warming Arsenal prediction from his younger self.
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
I'll also say this as someone who grew up on the nice side of the barbed wire fences and high gates in the very nice part of town where the Nigerian 0.1% live - learn to touch grass and worry about yourself because rich people really do not care about you. Like, at all. The Nigerian rich don't even like each other. They barely tolerate one another and make practical alliances to preserve wealth and influence. And now that the economy is too small to support all the children of the Nigerian 0.1%, nearly everyone I grew up with in the nice, leafy part of town now lives in Toronto or London or wherever. You, Mr N250k/month Union Bank contract staff are not part of rich people's thinking at all. At. All. The rich have no plans for you. They have no plans to create opportunities for you. They have no plans to fix the things they broke on their way to building that N1bn townhouse in Parkview Estate. They have no plans to contribute towards making society better. If Satan came from Hell with a tail and horns growing out of his head and he ran for political office, the rich would all go make deals with him - because in the world of the rich, the only thing that matters is their own interests, and making sure that they never, EVER have to live like you or next to you. So all this simping and vicarious fawning over wealth and fame that you people do everyday is the most redundant thing in the world - the rich have no intention of expanding their circle to let you in, and they have no intention of enabling the conditions for you to create your own independent circle of wealth. The only thing the rich need from you is to be poor and obedient, so that your labour can be cheap, plentiful and replaceable. Statistically as a Nigerian, you will NEVER be rich or close to it. You will NEVER live in Maitama. 99.99% of Nigerians who have existed since 1960 have prayed and fantasised about becoming rich, and 99.99% of those prayers and fantasies never came true. That's just math. You will never be a rich and famous celebrity. You will never be a successful content creator. You will never make millions shilling crypto, trading Forex, sports betting, or whatever the fuck is the latest quick wealth fantasy in town. It's just not going to happen. That being the case, a much more constructive use of your time would be to fight for the material elevation of what you actually have, where you actually have it. Instead of daydreaming about the N300m house in Lekki that 3 generations of your family cannot buy, get involved in a local effort to give your own immediate neighbourhood a facelift, or a political campaign to pressure the state to build high quality social housing. If you hate being harassed without consequence online, instead of vicariously enjoying how a celebrity has used their wealth and influence to jail someone for making a horrid tweet, fight for a judiciary and legal system that is transparent and accessible to all, so that a singer living in the UK on a global talent visa doesn't get to have more access to your Nigerian justice system than you who lives in Nigeria 24/7. Instead of building your mental architecture around the false idea of being a "temporarily embarrassed millionaire" who will someday take your rightful place on Banana Island, touch grass tonight and accept that it will never happen, and what you need to do instead is fight for where you are to become a better, more liveable place that you no longer wish to escape from. Stop cosplaying as rich folk. Stop cooing and fawning over rich folk. Stop daydreaming about someday "blowing up" and buying a house next to Burna Boy. Rich people have no intention of sharing their world with you. Free yourself from the tyranny of living vicariously through people who don't care that you exist. Them no really send any part of your papa at all.
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Master of the game.
Master of the game.@IsrealAdem10019·
@tunkash @McFlybowy Money be built and acquired himself,not given? So if you make money for yourself,you are advised to throw it away?
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Ororo😎
Ororo😎@McFlybowy·
The strongest case for Sir Alex Ferguson over Pep Guardiola is actually pretty simple. Football management is more than tactics. Pep may have influenced football more stylistically, but Ferguson mastered every single aspect of management at the highest level for over 25 years. He wasn’t just coaching a team, he was running an empire. What makes Ferguson unique is that he built multiple great teams from scratch and kept winning through entirely different football eras. Most managers have one peak cycle. Ferguson had about four. The early 90s side with Cantona was different from the Treble side. The Treble side was different from the Ronaldo/Rooney era. Then he still won another title in 2013 with a squad that honestly had no business dominating the league the way it did. That level of reinvention over two decades is probably the hardest achievement in football management history. And unlike Pep, Ferguson did not always have the best squad, best structure, or most money. He regularly outperformed stronger teams through mentality, adaptability, and sheer force of leadership. There’s a reason rival fans still talk about “Fergie Time” almost like mythology, his teams psychologically overwhelmed opponents before games even started. Another thing people underrate is how difficult Ferguson’s environment was. The Premier League during his era had constantly changing rivals: Arsenal under Wenger Chelsea under Mourinho with Roman Abramovich’s money Liverpool historically Newcastle’s rise in the 90s Blackburn spending heavily Then later the rise of billionaire-backed clubs Yet Ferguson remained the constant. Pep, meanwhile, has mostly coached elite, ready-made superclubs with extraordinary infrastructure already in place. That’s not his fault, but it matters in historical comparisons. Ferguson turned young players into world stars repeatedly. Beckham, Giggs, Scholes, Ronaldo, Rooney different generations entirely. Pep improves elite players, Ferguson often created them. And then there’s the longevity argument, which is massive. Staying at the top for 25+ years in football is nearly impossible now. Dressing rooms change, tactics evolve, player power grows, ownership changes happen, pressure increases. Ferguson survived all of it and still retired as champion. Pep may end up as the greatest tactical coach ever. But Ferguson’s argument is that he was the more complete football manager leader, builder, psychologist, developer, winner, and cultural architect all in one.
The Touchline | 𝐓@TouchlineX

🚨 𝗧𝗥𝗨𝗘 𝗢𝗥 𝗙𝗔𝗟𝗦𝗘: Pep Guardiola will go down as a better manager than Sir Alex Ferguson.

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Homemade
Homemade@tunkash·
@McFlybowy He still bought players to fit his style, same thing Pep does. Different era same Ideology, different styles.
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Ororo😎
Ororo😎@McFlybowy·
@tunkash But he wasn’t chasing established players like that
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Sky Sports Premier League
On this day in 2004: Arsenal became the first and only team to go UNBEATEN in an entire Premier League season! 🏆🔴
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Loki
Loki@loki_Eph·
@Hybrid_Ola @iam_ayodamola10 Insecurity in a woman can make her accuse you of things that would make you run mad In a bid to win public sympathy, she has started throwing names around, she would probably be paying a lot of damages soon
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Vampz
Vampz@Hybrid_Ola·
Amaka Okeke shares her side of the story!! - Frank Edoho’s ex-wife mentioned Amaka Okeke as one of the ladies her ex-husband was allegedly having an affair with, and people have been calling out the women involved. - Amaka Okeke responded, saying the accusations circulating online are false and baseless. - Amaka revealed that she met Frank Edoho in 2024 strictly for business-related matters, but they became close friends in 2025 when he was dealing with personal matters. - She said she would not be speaking about the personal matters for privacy reasons, but all the narratives about herself and Frank are untrue. - She asked people to refrain from spreading fake narratives and unverified claims that can harm individuals and families. - Amaka ended by saying she would be taking legal action, as she already has her legal team on board working with her. What are your thoughts???
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Vampz@Hybrid_Ola

Frank Edoho’s wife shares her side of the story - After the video recording between her and Chike was leaked by a blogger, Frank’s ex-wife made a post about “surviving Frank Edoho.” - She revealed that while she was pregnant with their first child, Frank Edoho allegedly had an affair with actress Mbong Amata and other women. - She explained that she would cry on the floor for days, begging him to see her, but he would walk out and not return home for days. - She also revealed that he pressured her to abort their second child because he was not ready to be a father, while she accused him of having numerous relationships. - Sandra Edoho revealed that she went through emotional, psychological, mental, and physical abuse, but she stayed committed and shielded him. - Sandra called Frank a deadbeat and said she had been the one funding his lavish lifestyle. She said she paid for all his trips, business class tickets, home bills, and bills for his children from his previous marriage. - She said she took his mum to the United States and that she lived with her parents for several years. - She accused him of spending her money on different women and hotels because he had access to her funds. She also said he sold her property without her permission and spent the money on different girls. - She claimed he would disappear for weeks with Adaeze Ugboaja and BBN ex-housemate, Tega Dominic. She also revealed that he linked up with Amaka Okeke and said he told her he was trying to connect her for an endorsement, but she accused him of sleeping with her too. - She talked about how he is on Snapchat with different women, blowing them kisses. She revealed she once walked in on him talking to another lady for over an hour, and she almost passed out from anger. - She said she was a great and faithful wife to him, but she chose herself, walked away, and filed for divorce. - She ended it by saying she is an adult woman and can be friends with or date anyone she wants. - She revealed that there is evidence for all the allegations and advised Frank to move on. What are your thoughts??

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The Halfway Post
The Halfway Post@HalfwayPost·
BREAKING: The Texas televangelist who claimed God is using the Iran War to begin the Biblical Apocalypse and Rapture up all the Christians to Heaven on Trump's birthday this June 14th because Trump is the "2nd Messiah" just got arrested for cooking meth in his church basement.
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Ogochukwu ❤️
Ogochukwu ❤️@TheEmmalez·
The last few months has been a tough and excruciating battle with my life. I am sure I have had to suffer more pains than the guy at the cross who asked Jesus for a place in his kingdom. For those who don't already know, I have a lump on my throat and it has grown to the point where it's now capable of eating my own blood. The lump, according to the series of scans I have done is called Lymphoma. In simpler terms, I have been battling Lymphoma. I have gone days where I couldn’t talk, days where I couldn’t move my body from the bed for the whole day, nights where I have had my life flash before my eyes just because I chose to pee, days where I have had constant blurry visions where I couldn’t see things or anyone clearly, this explains why I have stayed off Facebook because I can’t see for long. I am very weak. It’s the first thing you’d notice when you see me. I am being assisted to walk as I cannot walk on my own. In two months, I have fallen at different places that have sometimes resulted into injuries. How I am still alive, I do not understand it yet. The weakness is very evidenced in my voice, it has been the weakest it has ever been and my speech has become somehow incoherent. When I talk for over 30 seconds, I begin to gasp for air. I am sure some of those who have called me during this period will understand this better. I have emaciated a lot. I don’t even look like me anymore. I have been receiving treatment at the teaching hospital here in Uyo. I am scheduled for a biopsy soon, but I have to wait another week cus the hospital decided to shut down the hospital and send patients home after an issue that occurred at the hospital entrance yesterday. For those who don’t know, a biopsy is done to check if a lump is cancerous or not. So a mini surgery is required as they’ll have to cut a part of my throat to remove the small lump they need for the biopsy. The result of what the biopsy would be scares me a bit. First, because I don’t have the energy to go through cancer treatment after this horrible last two/three months. I really hope it’s not cancer so I can begin to prepare my mind for a major surgery instead. My family and friends have been supportive financially, emotionally, morally during this period. But I’ll be needing your help and support as they can’t do it alone. The biopsy and a possible surgery will cost me significant finances. I need your help. I already thought I’ll be dead by now. But I wake up to life every morning, surprisingly. And since the universe still wants me alive, please help me stay alive. Thank you very much. 7083295784 Ufonime Opay 6869773014 Ufonime FCMB I hope to return to Facebook again after all these. But I need to be okay first. At least get the blurry vision out of the way so I can see your updates on my screen again. I am thankful to everyone who has reached out one way or the other to ask about my well-being. I opened my Messenger app for the first time few days ago and I was overwhelmed at the plethora of new messages. I would attend to those messages as soon as I can gather enough strength. Thank you everyone. God bless you. If God wills, I will be back. Please help Hufon Hime survive His Before. After Photo below 👇
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Dev Singhal
Dev Singhal@devSinghal·
@lispectorcapitu @footballcritix I know that. I am old enough to have seen him play in his prime. Still for every sportsperson discipline is key. I don't like to have exceptions. Coaches at the very top do not entertain any exceptions. You cannot play 10 vs 11 against top teams.
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Football Critix
Football Critix@footballcritix·
Carlo Ancelotti: "AC Milan'dayken Ronaldo'yu transfer etmiştik. Geldiğinde tam 100 kiloydu. İlk maçtan önce ona, 'Kilo vermen gerektiği için seni oynatamam, bunu biliyorsun' dedim. Bana şu cevabı verdi: 'Sahada ne yapmamı istiyorsun? Gol atmamı mı yoksa koşmamı mı? Eğer koşmamı istiyorsan beni yedek kulübesine koy, ama gol atmamı istiyorsan beni oynat!' Onu oynattım... Hiç koşmadı ama o maçta iki gol attı."
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Ajoje⚽⚖️
Ajoje⚽⚖️@israel_ajoje·
Every time a professional footballer is transferred, 5% of that fee belongs to the clubs that trained him. Most of those clubs never see a penny of it. This is the FIFA solidarity mechanism. And it is one of the most important financial provisions in football law that the people it is designed to protect know the least about. Here is how it works. Under the FIFA Regulations on the Status and Transfer of Players, every club that contributed to a player's training between the ages of 12 and 23 is entitled to a share of 5% of every transfer fee paid for that player. Not just the first transfer. Every transfer. For the rest of their professional career. That 5% is taken from the buying club and distributed proportionally among the development clubs based on how many years they trained the player. A club that had a player from age 12 to 15 gets a different share than one that had him from 18 to 21. But every club that contributed gets something. It is not a goodwill gesture and it is not negotiable between clubs. It is a legal obligation built into the architecture of the transfer system. The buying club owes it automatically by design. Now think about what that means in practice. Victor Osimhen moved from Napoli to Galatasaray for a reported €75 million. Five percent of that is €3.75 million distributed among every club that trained him between 12 and 23. That reportedly includes Ultimate Strikers Academy in Lagos. A Nigerian academy. Money they are legally entitled to. Romelu Lukaku has also been the subject of multiple transfers between Everton, Chelsea, Manchester United and Inter Milan. The academies he made for got a cut for every one of those moves he made. The problem is not the rule. The rule is well designed. The problem is that countless academies across Africa, South America and Asia have trained players who went on to multi-million euro careers and never pursued the solidarity payments they were owed. Either because they did not know the mechanism existed, did not know how to file a claim, or did not have the legal support to navigate the process. Every academy director, club administrator and coach reading this needs to understand one thing. If your club trained a player who went on to play professional football anywhere in the world, you may be owed money right now. The mechanism exists. The obligation is real. Go and claim what belongs to you. You can reach out to me if you need help. My name is Ajoje. I am a FIFA Licensed Agent and International Sports Lawyer. I write on the Law and Business of Football, a lot. Repost and Follow if you want to read more posts like this.
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