AbdulAzeez, AbdulMaleek

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AbdulAzeez, AbdulMaleek

AbdulAzeez, AbdulMaleek

@Azeez_Maleek

Strategic Communications • Writing (esp. Creatives) • Public Speaking • Operations & Management • proud 🇳🇬n | Compere • Dedicated to Ethical Leadership

Nigeria Entrou em Eylül 2013
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AbdulAzeez, AbdulMaleek
AbdulAzeez, AbdulMaleek@Azeez_Maleek·
#SevenBrainTeasers 1. If you could send a five-word message to every person on Earth, knowing it would stick with them forever, what would you say?
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A.Y.O
A.Y.O@YusufAsunmogejo·
This question has got me thinking ever since I saw it. I believe I should say something about it. I understand the feeling we have when we look at the terrifying scale of the cosmos. And it is only logical to think about how it could have been built in 6 days. On the surface, it feels mathematically impossible. However, I know that this conflict only exists because we subconsciously force God (an infinite creator) into a finite human clock. To answer this properly, we need to arrive at a consensus. Both the Quran and the Bible agree that the Almighty God created the heavens and earth in 6 days. If we agree to this, then we can move forward. First of all, we need to deconstruct time itself. A standard day is defined by one rotation of the Earth facing the Sun. However, how do we measure the first phases of creation using a 24-hour earthly clock when the Earth and the Sun did not even exist yet? We all know that Time is a physical construct bound by gravity and mass. God created time. Therefore, he is not trapped inside it. Then we need to go into the scriptures to understand the word “Day” itself. The Quran, which was revealed in classical Arabic, used the word "Yawm." The Bible (in Hebrew) used the word "Yom". Both Yawm and Yom share the same ancient Semitic root. Today, people restrict these words to a normal day. But in the actual ancient Semitic usage, both terms meant a distinct epoch, a long era, or a defining phase of time. In fact, the Quran defines this relativity internally. In Surah Al-Hajj (22:47), Allah says a day with your Lord is like a thousand years of your counting. When we go further into history, the answer becomes even clearer. Augustine of Hippo, one of the most authoritative theologians in the entire history of Christianity, addressed this very question in his work “The Literal Meaning of Genesis.” Mind you, he wrote this book in the fourth century, which is more than 1500 years before any modern cosmology existed. He stated clearly that the days of Genesis should not be read as ordinary solar days. He argued that the human mind cannot fully comprehend what kind of days those were, since the sun had not yet been created to measure them by. If we come further to Islamic theology, Imam al-Tabari, in his Jami al-Bayan, recorded the positions of Ibn Abbas and Mujahid from the earliest generations of Islam. They explicitly stated that the six days of creation were not earthly days but rather each day was equivalent to a thousand years of human reckoning. This was the position of the first generation of Islamic scholars. Interestingly, Imam Al-Qurtubi in Al-Jami li Ahkam al-Quran stated the philosophical reason behind it all. He explained that God could have created everything in a single fraction of a second with the command “Be.” He said that the Almighty built it in six stages to teach His creation the concept of deliberation, order, and the law of cause and effect, which has been the driving force of all innovation and discovery ever since the inception of man. After all I’ve said, it is safe to say that we land in one common spot: (1) That the word “Day” is not literal in the modern sense. (2) That the human clock cannot accurately measure cosmic creation because it is a logical impossibility to use a solar clock to measure the universe before the sun was even formed. Time is relative, and the Creator is not bound by the physical constraints of it. (3) That the titans of ancient theology established this understanding centuries before modern cosmology existed. (4) That the six stages represent divine order and a deliberate choice to establish the laws of physics and teach creation the concept of process, structure, and deliberation. I hope this answers your question, Oladele.
Ọládélé 🇳🇬👑@Theoladeledada

After watching those NASA video, I have a question. How did God create the earth in 6 days?

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The Yoruba Times
The Yoruba Times@TheYorubaTimes·
Taiwo Hassan Ogogo Speaks Out – “I was called to a production one day, the person didn’t tell me the role I’m going to play, the person paid me 250k naira upfront. When I got there, the person explained the story and said I’m playing a gay role. I asked him, how do they do it and you are not even scared to call me for this? The person is alive today, I sent his money back to him and I asked everyone sitting there what they will eat and drink and used my money to get it for them. Any role you want me to play, if I feel like doing it I will, and if I don’t, I will let you know. If you want to do me bad, I’m not God but you will think twice. I don’t even fight my own battles, I don’t like people maltreating others. I was at a location one day and people were struggling to get what to eat. I always help our elders in the industry because I understand their situation. At that location, the crew said they’ve not eaten anything since yesterday. I was furious, I called the producer and asked why, he said he will find a way, and I told him he just bought food for three actors in front of me. I told his crew members to leave what they are doing, before they touch anything they must be paid food allowance for the next five days.”
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Vince Langman
Vince Langman@LangmanVince·
This is my favorite prank phone call! 🤣
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AbdulAzeez, AbdulMaleek
AbdulAzeez, AbdulMaleek@Azeez_Maleek·
May God bless him, and others like him.
smv@slimvnsn

My father never came to a single thing I invited him to. Not my primary school graduation. Not my secondary school prize giving where I collected 3 awards and kept looking at the gate. Not my university matriculation. Not the ceremony when I got called to bar in 2012. I'd send him the date weeks in advance and he'd say I'll try and that was always the full sentence. I'll try. No follow up. No explanation after. My mother would sit in his place and clap loud enough for 2 people. I stopped inviting him after the bar call. Not from anger. Some people love you completely and still cannot show up and after a while you stop making them feel guilty about it. He was not a bad man. I want to be clear about that. He was a mechanic in Mushin for 35 years. Worked 6 days a week. Sent every one of us to school. Never raised his hand. Never left. The lights stayed on and the rent was paid and there was always food and he did all of it quietly without asking to be celebrated. He just could not sit in a plastic chair and watch something. I accepted that and moved on. Last year I bought my first property. A flat in Ojodu. Took 9 years of saving and 2 years of paperwork and a lawyer who nearly finished me. When the keys finally came I sat in the empty flat on the floor for an hour just breathing. I called my mother first. She screamed. My sister cried. I didn't call my father. 3 days later he called me. Said he heard about the flat from my mother. Said he wanted to come and see it. I didn't know what to do with that so I just said okay. Gave him the address. Figured he'd say I'll try and we'd never speak of it again. He showed up on Saturday at 9am. Stood at the door in his good agbada. The one he only wears for serious things. Holding a small nylon bag. I let him in and he walked through every room without speaking. Not quickly. Slowly. Like he was counting something. He checked the pipes under the kitchen sink. Knocked on the walls. Opened and closed the windows twice each. Looked at the ceiling in every room the way only a man who has fixed things his whole life looks at ceilings. Then he came and stood in the sitting room and looked at me. Said the pipework is good. Said the windows seal properly. Said whoever built this knew what they were doing. I nodded. Long silence. Then he opened the nylon bag. Inside was a small framed photo. Me at maybe 7 years old sitting on the bonnet of an old car in his workshop. Grinning. Both legs swinging. He's standing beside me with his hand on my shoulder looking at something outside the frame. I remember that day. I had gone to the workshop after school and he let me sit there while he worked and gave me a Fanta and put a Michael Jackson cassette on the small radio. I didn't know anyone had taken a photo. He said he kept it on his workshop table for 22 years. Said he wanted me to have something for the new place. I held that frame and stood very still. He said he knew he missed things. Said he was not good at the sitting and watching. That crowds made something in him go wrong in a way he never knew how to explain. Then he said the flat was good and he was proud and he asked if there was anything in the kitchen because he hadn't eaten. I laughed. Made him eggs and bread while he sat at my kitchen table in his good agbada like he owned the place. We ate and he told me about a car he was working on. I told him about a case that was giving me trouble. Normal conversation. The kind we should have been having for years. He left at 1pm. At the door he gripped my shoulder the same way he did in that photo. Didn't say anything. Didn't need to. The photo is on my sitting room wall now. First thing I hung in the whole flat. Some fathers cannot sit in the plastic chair. But mine drove to Ojodu in his good agbada on a Saturday morning with a 22 year old photograph in a nylon bag. That was his standing ovation. I just didn't know to look for it in that shape.

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Brighton & Hove Albion Women
Still thinking about this Chiamaka save… 🤯
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oseni rufai
oseni rufai@ruffydfire·
I asked a question and he evaded the question and abuse Rufai that’s what thy do! They never have answers I ask why do we have approvals in 2024, 2025 and 2026 Till date the Genco’s are suffering and he goes on a wild goose chase to explain what doesn’t make any sense! I am really shocked how the information managers of government don’t even have information and the repeat press releases! Accountability isn’t propaganda! Why will the president approve a 4 trillion Genco bond in 2025 and in 2026 he’s approving another Genco payment! It’s obvious they can’t answer! Let me humor them, you approved 4 trillion in bond payments in 2025 and this year you claim you have scaled it down again. These guys really think we are fools! TOLU, I speak to the Genco’s directly they are not party to any one sided audit by the government! By the way the debt is now over 6 trillion!
Tolu Ogunlesi@toluogunlesi

I can’t resist the urge to weigh in here, given my vow before God and man to always be there to save my dear brother @ruffydfire from his self-inflicted journalistic shortcomings. What I’m about to explain is publicly available material on Google: These are not different approvals. It’s merely different stages of the same process/program. The FGN has always made it very clear that the 4 Trillion Naira approval was not final. See this news, from July 2025: ‘The figure remains subject to downward revision, pending final validation. “While there is an anticipatory approval of this ₦4 trillion bond programme, it is subject to negotiations and final settlement of agreements. Only the amounts that the federal government validly owes are the things that will make it into the [bond] issuance…”’ Link here, via @vanguardngrnews: vanguardngr.com/2025/07/tinubu… What’s different now / what has changed since then is that, according to @NigeriaGov, those audits and negotiations have now been done and a final settlement of 3.3 trillion reached. And GenCos have started signing settlement agreements. And that’s not all, a first bond has been raised (see @ARISEtv reporting from January 2026), and payments have now finally started to Gencos and Gascos—which is what yesterday’s @NGRPresident statement was all about. Will never tire of telling my dear Rufai that social media energy shouldn’t just be for commenting/trolling, it should also be for research, otherwise one risks descending from journalism to jejune-alism. You have a right to disagree with any policy, and critique it, but this right shouldn’t be based on or fueled by ignorance or by an unwillingness to do basic research. PS. And you should take time to read AriseTV news from time to time. Thank you for your attention to this matter.

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Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri
Allahumma la sahla illa ma ja’altahu sahlan, wa anta taj’alul-hazana idha shi’ta sahlan. O Allah, there is no ease except in that which you have made easy, and you make the difficulty, if you wish, easy🤲🤲🤲🤲
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Ifedayo (JIMCRUZ)
Ifedayo (JIMCRUZ)@ifedayo_johnson·
Power is not served à la carte. When Oke Ogun people are ready, they will speak in one voice and present a formidable candidate. See what Ogun West people are doing with Yayi. That’s how it works. I sincerely believe they should be given a chance but it’s not by saying it on twitter while having a divided house.
OMOJADESOLA@omojadey

@ifedayo_johnson @nuclearpr_ Ifedayo ,let us consider oke-ogun ibarapa people now

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SarkinFOTO
SarkinFOTO@FotoNugget·
When Nigerian troops win against terrorists, let’s make it a habit to loud it the same way losses are broadcast.
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