Seth Job.

161 posts

Seth Job.

Seth Job.

@SethJob2

Entrou em Kasım 2022
313 Seguindo19 Seguidores
Seth Job. retweetou
Tevin Macharia Mukabana
Tevin Macharia Mukabana@TevinMacharia·
THEY TOLD ME TO STOP PRAYING 🙏 Maya Johnson, a US Army soldier deployed to Iraq (2019–2021) in convoy security. she was mocked as “Church Girl” for praying before every mission, yet God protected her and her entire unit. Maya grew up Pentecostal and took her faith seriously—she brought prayers, worship songs, and even anointing oil to Iraq. From the very first day, before every mission, she would sit in her truck and pray out loud with her team. Not everyone appreciated it. Teammates (including atheists and Buddhists) laughed at her and called her “Church Girl.” One soldier even told her to her face, “I don’t wanna hear your prayers, Maya. Keep that to yourself.” She replied, “Well, I’m still gonna pray. You don’t have to listen, but I’m doing it.”She refused to stop. And through mission after mission in war zones full of ambushes and IEDs, her team was never hit by a bomb while she was with them.Then she got punished for being a “hothead” and was pulled off convoy duty. The moment she stopped going with them, the team started getting hit by bombs every time—as if the protection had lifted. Her team leader eventually came to her and said, “Hey, can you come back out? We keep getting hit, and we need your protection. Whatever you’re praying, it’s working.” She returned, and the attacks stopped.One mission stood out: about six months in, she was exhausted from long shifts and nearly falling asleep at the wheel. She drove right over a bomb… but it didn’t detonate. She kept going. A truck coming the opposite way hit the same bomb and exploded, killing the two soldiers inside. After that, she went all in. She set up speakers in her truck and blasted Pentecostal worship music loud—“Black-Church-Sunday-morning loud.” Teammates complained, but she told them, “Hey. You’re gonna get hit, but I ain’t gonna get hit. You may not want these prayers, but I guarantee you this: We ain’t getting touched.” Maya came home safely with her entire unit—300 soldiers, not one death—in the middle of a dangerous war zone.She ended her testimony with this powerful message: “To everyone who’s ever been called Church Girl or Church Boy or too much or too religious, keep praying. You have no idea whose life depends on it.” This story has been shared widely on Instagram, Facebook, and other platforms in the past week, with people praising God for His protection through prayer. It’s a beautiful reminder that faithfulness in the face of mockery can literally save lives. Thank you, Maya, for sharing your testimony—God is faithful! If you’d like links to the original video clips or more details, just let me know.
Tevin Macharia Mukabana tweet media
English
93
704
2.9K
41.4K
ObaSapy
ObaSapy@ObaSapy·
The comparison is not entirely accurate. To be fair the current price of fuel at N1300 per liter is not caused by PBAT administration, it’s the effect of the ongoing US-IRAN-ISREAL conflict. Before the conflict fuel was around N700 per liter. It is biting hard because we rely majorly on one refinery which is privately owned and considering the PIB/PIA, the market has been deregulated, so petroleum products are sold at prices corresponding with the international crude price.
English
14
0
0
351
CHUKS 🍥
CHUKS 🍥@ChuksEricE·
“If you buy 5 litres of fuel every day, this is what you would spend in a year under different administrations: during former President Olusegun Obasanjo, you would spend ₦136,850; under late President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua, ₦118,625; under former President Goodluck Jonathan, ₦158,775; under former President Muhammadu Buhari, ₦355,875; and under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, if fuel continues to sell at ₦1,300 per litre, the yearly cost for 5 litres daily would rise to ₦2,372,500. Now ask yourself, if a company is spending this much on fuel alone, how much profit are they actually making?” — Man reacted.
English
50
324
417
16.3K
Seth Job. retweetou
MaziTundeEdnut
MaziTundeEdnut@originalproflle·
“He goes by the name bola tinubu but nobody knows his real name. His whole background is a mystery…. One of his college diplomas was for a female. He was forced to leave the US..” - Mike Arnold continues to reveal tinubu’s identity globally
English
67
1.9K
2.4K
30.4K
Seth Job. retweetou
Cyborg Warlord
Cyborg Warlord@Admiral_Cyborg·
APC reps were passing a bill, no soft copies, no hard copies, only 2 copies, one with Kalu and the other with the APC rep. An amendment to the ELECTORAL ACT! And there was not even a single copy? Thank God for Honorable Dasuki.
English
217
3.8K
6.3K
186.4K
Seth Job. retweetou
Obiasogu David
Obiasogu David@afrisagacity·
Frame 1: The Peoples Gazette exclusive leak, showing documents of Wike’s illegal allocation of land in the FCT to his first son. Frame 2: Wike’s response to the expose. He rather insulted the sensibilities of all of Nigeria with reckless cockiness. His response was “My children have the right to own land.” Frame 3: The Peoples Gazette exclusive report showing that Wike illegally allocated land to his 90-year-old father and his relatives. When he saw that there was no uproar after he allocated land to his children, and in fact, Nigerians cared less, he went berserk on a land allocation spree. According to the Peoples Gazette, he gifted his aging father and relatives with lands in Abuja. Still, his illegality was met with utter silence. Now, the political jobbers called Ambassadors are to benefit from his landing gifting spree. 70 of them would get lands in the FCT as rewards for being Tinubu’s fanboys. I hope the next government doesn't allow these reckless allocations to stand. Revoke all!✍️
Obiasogu David tweet mediaObiasogu David tweet mediaObiasogu David tweet media
Obiasogu David@afrisagacity

Wike causally allocated acres of land to 70 of the so-called Ambassadors, to compensate them for being rejected by the countries they're posted to. And everyone is silent. What have Reno Omokri and Femi Fani-Kayode done to deserve a land gift? Okezie Ikpeazu stole Abia silly, when he was governor. He's also given a portion of land. For being the most corrupt and clueless governor in Abia? Yet, no one is talking. The traditional media, rather than broadcasting this crass abuse of office and corruption, are running stories redirecting everyone’s attention.✍️

English
4
261
242
9.7K
Seth Job. retweetou
OurFaveOnlineDoc 🇬🇧 🇳🇬
If you have a child under the age of 5years old, pls give them no phones, no tabs, no iPads, no laptops. Basically no screens. Scientists have found a relationship between screen exposure and brain damage in kids under 5years old. Pls share this video🙏🏿
English
100
1.8K
3.1K
195.6K
Seth Job. retweetou
Governor Amuneke
Governor Amuneke@KevinblakC·
Say No to Xenophobia !!!
English
1.2K
9.1K
28.8K
911.4K
Seth Job. retweetou
BUCOS
BUCOS@TENIBEGILOJU202·
BREAKING!!! ANOTHER FOUNDING MEMBER OF APC LOST HIS COOL AND SCATTERED THE TABLE O... He said Tinubu has failed woefully in all sectors and deserve to be ousted. If not for anything, let's respect the words of the president that we shouldn't vote for him if he can't give us 24 hours power. Retweet massively pls.
English
71
2.2K
3K
56.4K
Seth Job. retweetou
Inibehe Effiong
Inibehe Effiong@InibeheEffiong·
CONTROVERSIAL TEXTBOOK: PARENTS OF NURSERY SCHOOL PUPIL PETITIONS LAGOS STATE GOVERNMENT, NERDC We wish to confirm in the public interest, and for the sake of transparency, that we have formally petitioned the @followlasg through the Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, against the use of the controversial textbook titled: ENGLISH LANGUAGE FOUNDATION FOR NURSEY SCHOOLS, authored by one Mr. Ayengbe Ebhohimen JB, We have equally petitioned the Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council. The petitions are at the instance of Mrs. Mary Queen Udoka who was targeted by the police and her husband. They bought the book from a school in Ojo, Lagos for their 5-year-old Nursery 2 son. In the petitions, we are demanding that the government should immediately probe the suitability of the book and take necessary regulatory and disciplinary measures to safeguard Nigerian children. We are pleased that the Lagos State Government has swiftly responded by making a preliminary statement to the effect that the controversial textbook was not approved for use by schools in Lagos. In our petitions, we disclosed the name of the particular school where the book was sold to our clients. We have also informed the government that following public outrage, the said school has withdrawn the book from its shelves and taken steps to conceal its complicity. We have provided the Ministry of Basic and Secondary Education and the NERDC with copies of the controversial book to aid the investigations. Our clients are going to cooperate fully with the investigations. People must be held accountable. Thank you.
Inibehe Effiong tweet mediaInibehe Effiong tweet mediaInibehe Effiong tweet mediaInibehe Effiong tweet media
English
141
809
1.4K
43.6K
Seth Job. retweetou
BLESSED 🥷
BLESSED 🥷@Dee_9889·
Tinubu Is Total Failure - He Said This Wearing Tinubu's CAP THERE IS NO PATHWAY FOR TINUBU TO WIN 2027 ELECTION.
English
19
376
564
25.6K
Seth Job. retweetou
Von Batten-Montague-York, L.C.
H.E. Bola Ahmed Tinubu (@officialABAT), the current President of Nigeria, is a statesman with a long and respected legacy. Nevertheless, his tenure as President is not viewed favorably by a majority of Nigerians. As American registered foreign agents, we have no authority to remove a sitting leader from office; that power rests exclusively with the Nigerian people. We are briefing key members of President Donald Trump (@realDonaldTrump)’s Administration on the insecurity and ongoing attempts to undermine the integrity of Nigeria’s elections because these concerns are grounded in fact. Former Nigerian Vice President Atiku Abubakar (@atiku) is not your adversary, but a fellow statesman who has directed us to advocate for U.S. engagement aimed at ending the killing of innocent Nigerians and ensuring that the right to free and fair elections is fully respected. The Nigerian presidency is not your birthright, but a privilege bestowed by the Nigerian people, and if the Nigerian people decide you have to go, then you have to go. We will continue to advocate for appropriate US accountability measures, including consideration of Global Magnitsky sanctions, to freeze assets wherever located, should credible evidence establish that you or members of your government are complicit in the killing of Christians in Northern Nigeria or in efforts to rig the upcoming presidential election @WhiteHouse @HouseForeignGOP @HouseForeign @SFRCdems @SecRubio @StateDept @AsstSecStateAF @SenateForeign @NGRPresident @HouseNGR @NGRSenate @CNNAfrica @BBCAfrica @Reuters @Atiku @officialABAT @AFP @ForeignPolicy @inecnigeria @SenTedCruz @RepBrianMast
English
0
828
1.6K
159.5K
Seth Job. retweetou
Brytex👽
Brytex👽@Brightola11·
There is this woman in our compound who sells cold sachet water. She’s the only one whose Gen is always on, and she’s always complaining that the General Meter money we contribute is too much. So she got her own private meter. She even pressurized the Landlord to let her install her own meter so she can cut cost. The NEPA officials came for a random check yesterday and discovered a Ghost Wire. This woman had connected her 3 deep freezers to the compound’s pumping machine wire, which is paid for by everyone’s service charge. Her private meter was only connected to one light bulb in her room. She’s been running a commercial coldwater business on the sweat of the other tenants for 1 year, while acting like the victim. The compound has been on war since yesterday because the pumping machine bill jumped to 150k. I seem not to understand why people are like this. Some people got no conscience at all.
English
46
133
1.1K
50.2K
Seth Job. retweetou
Bello Saleh, PhD بيللؤ ساليح۔
The Ink Dried Up: An Open Letter to Matthew Hassan Kukah (From he Facebook page of Prince Daniel Aboki - facebook.com/share/p/1CiWgL…) ————-// Dear Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah I write you with the utmost sense of respect. Permit me to begin by congratulating you. Not in the usual way, but in a manner that reflects a keen observation of recent developments in our country. Since the emergence of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as President, and coincidentally since your assumption of office as Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of Federal University of Applied Sciences Kachia, there appears to have been a remarkable shift in the narrative of insecurity across Nigeria. From Zamfara State to Sokoto State, Katsina State, Benue State, Plateau State, Kwara State, and indeed across several troubled parts of our nation, one might be tempted to conclude that the k!llings have suddenly come to an end. The silence is striking. The headlines have softened. The urgency has waned. It is this very contrast that compels this letter. You will recall, Bishop, your powerful and courageous interventions during the administration of Muhammadu Buhari. Your voice rang loud through a series of open letters that captured national attention and stirred both conscience and controversy. On Christmas Day, December 25, 2018, you wrote with piercing clarity about a nation drifting, warning of a “nation at w@r with itself.” Again, on December 25, 2019, your message, “A Nation in Search of Vindication,” questioned the moral and political direction of leadership, calling attention to bloodshed and division. On December 25, 2020, in “A Nation in Search of Peace,” you spoke even more bluntly, addressing the worsening insecurity and the growing despair among Nigerians. And on December 25, 2022, your letter once again raised concerns about governance, justice, and the value of human life in Nigeria. These interventions were not just letters. They were moral signposts. They reminded leadership of its duty and the nation of its conscience. It is against this backdrop that your current silence, or perhaps restraint, becomes more noticeable. Has the situation improved so dramatically that the urgency of those words is no longer required? Have the forests suddenly emptied? Have the highways become safe? Have the cries of victims ceased? Or is it that the burden of national admonition must shift depending on who occupies the seat of power? Lord Bishop, sir, your voice has always carried weight not because it was loud, but because it was consistent. Not because it was critical, but because it was principled. Nigeria still needs that voice. Not selectively. Not occasionally. But steadfastly. If indeed peace has returned to the troubled lands of Zamfara, Sokoto, Katsina, Benue, Plateau, Kwara, and beyond, then you deserve commendation for witnessing such a transformation. But if, as many still believe, the reality on the ground has not changed as dramatically as the silence suggests, then your voice is needed now as much as it was then. Unless there is something we are not seeing that you would want us to see, could it be a case of “Tinubu I love, Buhari I hate”? Or should we begin to wonder whether conviction has given way to convenience? Bishop, sir, would you recommend that we keep silent when we benefit and speak up only when we do not? Over time, we have seen that history is kinder to those who remain constant in truth than to those who are convenient in silence. I write not in condemnation, but in expectation. Prince Daniel A Concerned Citizen
Bello Saleh, PhD بيللؤ ساليح۔ tweet media
English
56
303
383
15.9K
Seth Job. retweetou
Mike Arnold
Mike Arnold@MikeArnoldTruth·
Share this far and wide
Mike Arnold tweet media
English
627
20.3K
28.3K
546.2K
Seth Job. retweetou
Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
EFCC's Troubling Revelation on Our Students. The worrisome statement by the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) that 6 out of every 10 Nigerian university students are involved in “419” is deeply troubling and must not be taken lightly. Nigeria already has a very limited number of students in higher institutions, estimated at 2 to 2.5 million. If indeed about 60% of them, roughly 1.4 million young people, are involved in fraud, then we are not just facing a crime issue; we are confronting a serious moral and systemic failure. The question we must ask ourselves is: what has brought us to this level? Who are the role models these students are looking up to?. What values are they learning from society? We must understand that young people become what they consistently see. When a system appears to reward wrongdoing, when integrity is not upheld, and when those in leadership are associated with allegations of forgery and dishonesty without consequence, it sends a dangerous message. It suggests that hard work does not matter, and that results, by any means, are acceptable. These points clearly point to a collapse of moral values. As Socrates rightly said, “An unexamined life is not worth living.” Nigeria must now examine itself. This is not about condemning our young people. It is about accepting that leadership sets the tone. If we do not demonstrate integrity at the top, we cannot expect it at the bottom. We must urgently rebuild our value system, enforce accountability without bias, and create an environment where honesty, hard work, and discipline are rewarded. That is the only sustainable path to securing the future of our nation. A new Nigeria is POssible! -PO
English
1.1K
9.2K
19.6K
320.7K
Seth Job. retweetou
Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
A decaying Nation Crying for Leadership. What we have witnessed across our country in just the past 48 hours is not only tragic, it is utterly unacceptable and a damning indictment of our collective failure of leadership. From the reported killings in Katsina, Adamawa, Kaduna and Benue States, to the gruesome murder of an entire family in Plateau State, and the heartbreaking abduction of innocent children in Kogi State, one of the incidents involves children conveying their mother's dead body for burial. Nigeria is bleeding. We are fast becoming a nation where human life is treated as expendable, where citizens live in fear, and where the basic duty of government, to protect lives and property, is repeatedly neglected. 11 innocent Nigerians were killed in Katsina State. 7 more in Benue State. 23 in Adamawa State in just one day. An entire family was brutally murdered in Plateau State. 24 children were abducted from an orphanage in Kogi State, and 10 more children were taken in Kaduna State, all within 48 hours. These are not mere statistics; they are our fellow Nigerians, fathers, mothers, sons, daughters, whose lives have been brutally cut short or violently disrupted. This cannot continue. A nation cannot develop under the weight of such persistent insecurity and human tragedy. The normalisation of these horrors is itself a crisis. We must ask, with all sense of urgency and responsibility: where is the leadership? Where is the coordination, the competence, and the compassion required to confront this menace decisively? My heart goes out to all the grieving families across these states. I pray for divine comfort for those who have lost loved ones and for the safe and immediate return of all abducted children. A New Nigeria is not just a slogan; it has become an urgent necessity. A New Nigeria is Possible. -PO
English
863
8.9K
16.8K
227.4K
Seth Job. retweetou
BUCOS
BUCOS@TENIBEGILOJU202·
THIS WHY THEY HATE HIM, PETER OBI WILL NEVER APPROVE A CAR OF 300M NAIRA FOR LEGISLATORS.. He won't approve billions of naira for his wife's office to buy new cars and won't waste 150bn naira on a new jet let alone billions of naira to buy Yacht. Retweet massively pls.
English
16
288
550
9.3K