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@_1and0

Geophysicist🌐 * Node.js | TS | Nest |MongoDb | a bit of CI/CD & Docker * Alumni of @AltSchoolAfrica * Still rising until i stand on mountain top * Prov 22:29

where the righteous go Entrou em Aralık 2016
5.5K Seguindo3.3K Seguidores
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Michael Taiwo
Michael Taiwo@AskMichaelTaiwo·
THINGS YOU MOST LIKELY WILL NOT REGRET DOING Studying more. Drinking more water. Being more honest. Going to bed early. Meditating more. Quitting a job you absolutely hate. Being kind to a stranger. Taking a break when you need one. Looking after your body. Crying when you need to. Putting yourself first. Leaving your comfort zone. Hugging someone you love. Trying out new things. Telling your loved ones how much you care. Taking care of your mental health. Trusting your intuition.
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𝑭𝒓𝒆𝒅🦇
𝑭𝒓𝒆𝒅🦇@Freddnova·
Nigerian parents can reduce aura .. Which one is come to the bus-stop station with wheelbarrow 😭😭 To come do wetin????💔
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Arinze Odira
Arinze Odira@CaptainArinze·
The North has more elite families. The proper elites are up North.
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LEYE
LEYE@leyeConnect·
I just want to know the party you finally join, I will resume designing posters from my end. Proper publicly accessible brand assets will be done. Even website we will develop.
Peter Obi@PeterObi

Fellow Nigerians, good morning. I woke up this morning after my church service with a deeply reflective heart, and despite every constraint, I felt compelled to share these thoughts with you. Many people do not truly understand the silent pains some of us carry daily—the private struggles, emotional burdens, and quiet battles we face while trying to survive and serve sincerely in difficult circumstances. We now live in an environment that has become increasingly toxic, where the very system that should protect and create opportunities for decent living often works against the people—a society where intimidation, insecurity, endless scrutiny, and discouragement have become normal. More painful is when some of those you associate with, believing you would find understanding and solidarity among them, become part of the pressure you face. Some who publicly identify with you privately distance themselves or join in unfair criticism. We live in a society where humility is mistaken for weakness, respect is seen as a lack of courage, and compassion is treated as foolishness—a system where treating people equally is questioned simply because you refuse to worship status, tribe, class, or power. Personally, I have never looked down on anyone except to uplift them. I have never used privilege, position, or resources to oppress others, intimidate the weak, or make people feel small. To me, leadership has always been about service, sacrifice, and helping others rise. Let me state clearly: my decision to leave the ADC is not because our highly respected Chairman, Senator David Mark, treated me badly, nor because my leader and elder brother, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, or any other respected leaders did anything personally wrong to me. I will continue to respect them. However, the same Nigerian state and its agents that created unnecessary crises and hostility within the Labour Party that forced me to leave now appear to be finding their way into the ADC, with endless court cases, internal battles, suspicion, and division, instead of focusing on deeper national problems and playing politics built more on control and exclusion than on service and nation-building. Even within spaces where one labours sincerely, one is sometimes treated like an outsider in one’s own home. You and your team become easy targets for every failure, frustration, or misunderstanding, as though honest contribution has become a favour being tolerated rather than appreciated. And when you choose to leave so that those you are leaving can have peace, and you step out into the cold, you are still maligned and your character is questioned. Despite all your efforts to continue working for a better Nigeria and engaging people with sincerity and goodwill, those who do not wish you well continue to attack your character and question your intentions. There are moments I ask God in prayer: Why is doing the right thing often misconstrued as wrongdoing in our country? Why is integrity not valued? Why is the prudent management of resources, especially when invested in critical areas like education and healthcare, wrongly labelled as stinginess? Why are humility and obedience to the rule of law often taken to be weakness rather than discipline? Let me assure all that I am not desperate to be President, Vice President, or Senate President. I am desperate to see a society that can console a mother whose child has been kidnapped or killed while going to school or work. I am desperate to see a Nigeria where people will not live in IDP camps but in their homes. I am desperate for a country where Nigerian citizens do not go to bed hungry, not knowing where their next meal will come from. Yet, despite everything, I remain resolute. I firmly believe that Nigeria can still become a country with competent leadership based on justice, compassion, and equal opportunity for all. A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO

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Mohamed RM 🏆15
Mohamed RM 🏆15@frwqmmd741562·
James Rodríguez: "The cold and the German language made my life difficult there, and I couldn't adapt." ​Díaz after 6 months:
Mohamed RM 🏆15 tweet media
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Michael
Michael@OladejiTosin15·
How did we get to this point 😡 For context, in 2019 my monthly spend on car fuel was 13k. By 2022 (just before this regime), it moved to 25k. Now, I spend approx 300k/month on fuel. Today, I literally thought the attendant made mistake when 80k couldn’t fill up the tank, until I noticed another increase in the pump price😖😖 This’s not sustainable. We are literally drowning and we can’t normalize what’s happening…. As we Dey face am for Fuel, we Dey face am for housing cost, face am for food…how do we expect the average Nigerian to cope….having this kind of cost of living crisis is too bad
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ClandestineFreedom
ClandestineFreedom@Scammer_Aware·
My wife was declared cancer free yesterday, so we bought a new car to celebrate...2026 Chey Trax
ClandestineFreedom tweet media
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Michael Dell 🇺🇸
Michael Dell 🇺🇸@MichaelDell·
This is where it started. 42 years ago: a dorm room at @UTAustin, $1,000, and a belief that technology should be personal, powerful, and accessible. FY26: $113.5B in revenue — an all-time record. The world has changed. The mission hasn’t. AI is the biggest platform shift of our lifetime, and @DellTech is built for this moment. To our customers, partners, and the Dell team: thank you! 🙏 We'll keep building what’s next. Onward 🚀 #PlayNiceButWin
Michael Dell 🇺🇸 tweet media
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consol.log()@_1and0·
Our leader has spoken, we await the next line of action
Peter Obi@PeterObi

Fellow Nigerians, good morning. I woke up this morning after my church service with a deeply reflective heart, and despite every constraint, I felt compelled to share these thoughts with you. Many people do not truly understand the silent pains some of us carry daily—the private struggles, emotional burdens, and quiet battles we face while trying to survive and serve sincerely in difficult circumstances. We now live in an environment that has become increasingly toxic, where the very system that should protect and create opportunities for decent living often works against the people—a society where intimidation, insecurity, endless scrutiny, and discouragement have become normal. More painful is when some of those you associate with, believing you would find understanding and solidarity among them, become part of the pressure you face. Some who publicly identify with you privately distance themselves or join in unfair criticism. We live in a society where humility is mistaken for weakness, respect is seen as a lack of courage, and compassion is treated as foolishness—a system where treating people equally is questioned simply because you refuse to worship status, tribe, class, or power. Personally, I have never looked down on anyone except to uplift them. I have never used privilege, position, or resources to oppress others, intimidate the weak, or make people feel small. To me, leadership has always been about service, sacrifice, and helping others rise. Let me state clearly: my decision to leave the ADC is not because our highly respected Chairman, Senator David Mark, treated me badly, nor because my leader and elder brother, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, or any other respected leaders did anything personally wrong to me. I will continue to respect them. However, the same Nigerian state and its agents that created unnecessary crises and hostility within the Labour Party that forced me to leave now appear to be finding their way into the ADC, with endless court cases, internal battles, suspicion, and division, instead of focusing on deeper national problems and playing politics built more on control and exclusion than on service and nation-building. Even within spaces where one labours sincerely, one is sometimes treated like an outsider in one’s own home. You and your team become easy targets for every failure, frustration, or misunderstanding, as though honest contribution has become a favour being tolerated rather than appreciated. And when you choose to leave so that those you are leaving can have peace, and you step out into the cold, you are still maligned and your character is questioned. Despite all your efforts to continue working for a better Nigeria and engaging people with sincerity and goodwill, those who do not wish you well continue to attack your character and question your intentions. There are moments I ask God in prayer: Why is doing the right thing often misconstrued as wrongdoing in our country? Why is integrity not valued? Why is the prudent management of resources, especially when invested in critical areas like education and healthcare, wrongly labelled as stinginess? Why are humility and obedience to the rule of law often taken to be weakness rather than discipline? Let me assure all that I am not desperate to be President, Vice President, or Senate President. I am desperate to see a society that can console a mother whose child has been kidnapped or killed while going to school or work. I am desperate to see a Nigeria where people will not live in IDP camps but in their homes. I am desperate for a country where Nigerian citizens do not go to bed hungry, not knowing where their next meal will come from. Yet, despite everything, I remain resolute. I firmly believe that Nigeria can still become a country with competent leadership based on justice, compassion, and equal opportunity for all. A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO

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Ugonna Okeke
Ugonna Okeke@Victorokeke_·
This is what a slum area in South Korea looks like. Old township areas with cramped roads and not enough car parking spaces. They're largely inhibited by old and poorer people.
Ugonna Okeke tweet mediaUgonna Okeke tweet mediaUgonna Okeke tweet mediaUgonna Okeke tweet media
CON@chrisoliver_T

@Victorokeke_ do me a favor and snap there shanties, like the ghetto part of South Korea and quote this. Let’s compare the least developed parts

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OjieMusic
OjieMusic@TweetOjie·
There’s a phase you get to in life life, all those hymns you sang in your childhood as mere songs , starts making total sense Because what a friend we really have in Jesus ?
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Akpor Ikogho
Akpor Ikogho@legal_padi·
Corporate Nigeria is quiet about Tinubu for the same reason you don’t argue with the person holding your operating license. In a high-stakes regulatory environment, their support is not really an endorsement. It’s self preservation & risk management. Don’t ask execs what they think about the Tinubu economy. Ask your mechanic, the market woman on the street, the fruit seller. The street is not that quiet.
Dr. Toks 🦇@fimiletoks

There is no corporate finance person, Investment and Asset manager and business leader who is not backing President Bola Ahmed Tinubu except those blinded by bias. Some of them don't show it publicly but they do. Hardly will you find anyone from CFO - ED - MD / CEO / business leaders in corporate Nigeria who is not backing the president. The last time this sort of shift happened was in 2003.

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Faithfulness Okom
Faithfulness Okom@AttorneyF_·
A friend of mine once made the mistake of attending a house party near a Chosen church about seven years ago. He had no idea the drinks from the dispenser were laced, so he got completely wasted, wandered out of the party, and somehow ended up sitting near the church, less than 100 meters away. The next morning, I get a call from an unknown number: “Do you know XYZ? If you do, you need to come.” I drive over… and find my guy in chains. 😂 Apparently, while they were deep in intense prayers, casting and binding demons, he stumbled onto their premises. In their minds, he wasn’t drunk… he was a wizard who had just been destabilized by their prayers. They beat non existent demons out of him. 😂
Bane@jodambusta

Flying this in Nigeria when MFM or Chosen church are having tarry night

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AgricQueen
AgricQueen@ChimdiIbeawuchi·
In 2012, I was fresh out of college and I went to China for the Canton Fair. My parents allowed me travel overseas alone for the first time in my life and I was excited. I decided that I will Eat Healthy Oyibo Food so on day number 3 I ate SHRIMP 🍤, I grew up in Bauchi and Abuja as a Child so I have never eaten seafood. To cut the long story short, I am eternally grateful to The Chinese for building an Efficient society and training their people to be Responsive. I didn’t know I was allergic to SEAFOOD, I couldn’t breathe, my Airway was blocked in less than 2 minutes of eating Shrimp 🦐. For the next 2 days, I couldn’t go anywhere, So Now I am an advocate of “EAT WHAT YOU KNOW” because if you get an Allergic Reaction in a wrong country, you may not survive it.
Pan African (Igbos are from Rivers State too)@IzunnaDike

I borderline hate Nigerians who live abroad and only eat Nigerian food.

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Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon University@CarnegieMellon·
Simi Olusola-Ajayi, a graduating Master's student in Human-Computer Interaction, will represent the graduating class as the student speaker at the 2026 Commencement Ceremony. 🎓👏 At CMU, Simi has focused on responsible innovation and the governance of emerging technologies.
Carnegie Mellon University tweet media
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