D Vearse

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D Vearse

D Vearse

@dvearse

Software Developer| PHP,Vue,Node,React | Creator of @playthis_tweet | Portfolio https://t.co/MP8KSem4Ut https://t.co/IiqvW18bmo 📧 [email protected] Y782X6D

worldwide Entrou em Temmuz 2016
4.3K Seguindo2K Seguidores
Science in Yoruba
Science in Yoruba@Sci_in_Yoruba·
Leave it for our Ilajẹ people. Here are the Yoruba words for strait and canal. Ẹ jẹ ka fi silẹ fun awọn eeyan wa lapa Ilajẹ. Awọn ọrọ Yoruba fun strait ati canal niyi.
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Johnny
Johnny@jay_de_second·
@Markosonke1 You have said it all, i don't know if those causing problems don't know what is a cultural title
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In A Nutshell🥜
In A Nutshell🥜@Markosonke1·
Look at the world… you’ll find Chinatowns in almost every country, with Chinese cultural leaders, festivals, even community structures, but you don’t see chaos or people burning things over it. You’ve got Indian communities across the globe celebrating their traditions, crowning cultural figures, hosting festivals… no one is panicking saying "they’re taking over." Even Europeans move everywhere British, French, Spanish communities exist worldwide and nobody is fighting because someone represents their culture abroad. So why is it different with us? If Nigerians crown a king in East London, it doesn’t suddenly make him king of South Africa… it’s clearly a cultural/community thing. Why are we so quick to fight, destroy, and divide? Africans,kanti yini ngani… what are we really angry at? Why do we hate each other like this?
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D Vearse
D Vearse@dvearse·
@Markosonke1 Nigeria is not monolithic or a single tribe or are united for the commotion you are trying to create
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Goals Side
Goals Side@goalsside·
Inevitable duo…Drogba x Frank Lampard. 🔵🔥
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Adeyemi
Adeyemi@_secret_ops·
@Newzroom405 @Sipha_KemaSA Yes i am loving this Go all the way south africans !!!!!!! Burn every foreign nationals you can find !!! Make your country great again 😂😂😂😂😂
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Newzroom Afrika
Newzroom Afrika@Newzroom405·
[WATCH] Protesters have torched vehicles and buildings allegedly belonging to foreign nationals in protest against the installation of a Nigerian king in the Eastern Cape. @Sipha_KemaSA reports
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Navy Captain Abi Folorunsho
Navy Captain Abi Folorunsho@AA_Folorunsho·
@otwimu21780 The Nigerian state funds the armed forces and determines our acquisition based on threat assessment. When we do, you will know. Thanks
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Navy Captain Abi Folorunsho
Navy Captain Abi Folorunsho@AA_Folorunsho·
Many people wonder what the Nigerian Navy actually does. I do understand as the majority of our work is away at sea. In fact, our influence is best felt by our absence from Land. So I will begin posting on the full range of naval operations on Sea, Air & Land. Stay tuned.
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joy roro
joy roro@Ayotunde8080·
@akintollgate Your Ooni is making Ife worst, no roads in Ife as himself pass through modakeke to avoid the bad roads, Ife is sinking because of illegal gold miners brought to Ife by Ooni Adeyeye he's not loved,he invested the gold money outside Ife. Ife need rescue from OBA AWAKUSA
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Akin Olaoye
Akin Olaoye@akintollgate·
When the Ife-Modakeke war reached its peak between 1998 and 2000, I was a student at Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in the Faculty of Science and Engineering. Our family house in Omole Estate, Ile-Ife, became a target of arson not once, but twice. One night, around 10pm, a violent mob stormed our street. Young men brandishing pump-action rifles, pistols, and charms descended on our gate with the look of the devil etched on their faces. For nearly an hour, nonstop gunshots had echoed through the neighborhood. With my heart pounding, I stepped outside and confronted the mob from behind the locked gates. I told them my family had no stake whatsoever in the conflict. My father was in Port Harcourt, where he provided opportunities, housing, and mentorship to many young graduates from the community as they sought their fortunes in the Niger Delta. We were neither sponsors nor participants in the war. In the chaos, one of them suddenly shouted: “E ma so ina si ile Baba Shell oh!” in Yoruba, “Don’t burn down the house of Baba Shell!” They came prepared with loaves of bread, jerry cans of fuel, and sticks wrapped as firebombs, ready to set roofs ablaze. At that moment, my life flashed before my eyes like a scene from a movie. After a brief standoff, the rowdy mob moved further up the street and set another house on fire. The next morning at around 7am, I called my parents and narrated the terrifying encounter. They were shocked and wondered why I had remained in the house during such a tense period. That night, I stayed awake playing my Super Nintendo, using the game as a desperate distraction, half-expecting the mob to return and torch the building. Mercifully, they never did. The following morning, I quickly packed a few clothes and relocated to my cousin’s room on Road 7 in the University quarters. As I slipped out of Omole Estate through the back streets, the air was thick with smoke and the sickening stench of death. Near Samtad, I saw three corpses lying in the open, riddled with bullet wounds. I continued on a long bush path, passing through several neighborhoods where residents had locked themselves indoors out of fear. The atmosphere across the city was eerily tense. Very few people dared to venture outside, while military vans patrolled the streets. I trekked a long distance to the OAU campus gate, where I boarded a bus to the quarters. Along the route, I witnessed more burnt properties and the devastating scars of communal violence. This was not government-created terror or state-sponsored insecurity. It was a brutal conflict between the Ife and Modakeke communities, a war that claimed many innocent lives & destroyed countless properties, all in the name of a 200 yr feud that predated most of those fighting in it. Fortunately, the conflict eventually subsided and life gradually returned to normal. However, for nearly two decades afterward, Ile-Ife looked like time had stood still. Locals were too scared to rebuild boldly, and investors stayed away. A once-bursting city in the heart of the old Southwest became a shadow of its former self and almost a pity story. Today, the glory is being restored. Much credit goes to the current Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, Ojaja II, whose visionary leadership and economic investments are rivaling those of long-established industrialists from the 80’s. I will always maintain this, “Local leaders and communities bear primary responsibility for insecurity in their domains” (barring external incursions or targeted attacks). The government’s role is to act as a referee, ensuring the rule of law is applied fairly and impartially. If a community remains unsafe, then the community leaders, stakeholders, and inhabitants must look inward. Screaming at the fed govt to secure your streets while local actors promote division and conflict is simply madness. Policemen assigned from Makurdi cannot adequately address local security needs in Uyo! Pass State Police Laws!
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D Vearse
D Vearse@dvearse·
@LOSEYIE @akintollgate Oooh. That was the period OPC was fighting them in Ajegunle, too. I guess. Do OPC help at all
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EMPEROR LỌ́GỌ̀
Who else do you think? We won, get the lands back, set an everlasting boundaries and curtail them in Ondo State. People that fought us with 2 states. Delta, Bayelsa and Rivers.... Just against ìlájé of Ondo alone.... But we came out victorious. Nah them run go Abuja to call for ceasefire.
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EMPEROR LỌ́GỌ̀
@akintollgate Only those that has not witness war or crises will call for it. This same period is when the ilaje/Ijaw crises was ongoing in the Ondo South.... Although ours serve us in two way sha.... But I don't pray such happened again.
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LO & Co.™
LO & Co.™@olatayobaby·
@Iledare @InsideIlorin_NG No church in Oja Oba and there can never be a church at Oja Oba, Ode Alfa Nda, Kuntu, and all those core ilorin communities.
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Dr. Toks 🦇
Dr. Toks 🦇@fimiletoks·
Your assumptions are too basic and the numbers don't add up. This is economics and decisions have consequences. Your suggestions would destroy the economy in 2 weeks. Let's look at them with numbers. 1. Customs to reduce fx rate to N100 for 90 days. If this is done, the Naira will crash to 5,000 due to the fact that imported goods would be 90% cheaper within the window period and all importers would rush to the buy what they need leading to a surge in demand for fx. Our 3 months import wage bill is around $10bn. You will unleash importers on NAFEM and CBN. Even me, I will look for dollars to import 5 cars. The demand for fx will surge to heavens and the Naira will crash in 1 week. CBN in other to protect the Naira will have to empty our reserves weekly. Apart from this, estimate the revenue loss from customs. Multiply N1,280 which is the difference and you will realise the impact on FAAC. 2. Dropping VAT to 2.5% for 90 days. 90% of VAT currently goes to States and LG and VAT makes up 45 - 55% of revenues monthly depending on oil receipts. For non -oil producing states, it could be higher. You will directly cut the revenue to states and LG by at least 50%. Civil servants won't earn salaries for 3 months. The states will become broke. You will create a crisis at the State and LG and the FG will have to print money to bail them out. You are triggering inflation. 3. Cutting CIT to 10%. Nigeria makes approx N3trn from CIT quarterly, looking at the Q3 and Q4 figures. If you wipe our this revenue with your cut, what do you think will happen to the budget deficit? In all, your suggestions will leave a N7trn hole in the Federation's purse within 90 days. CBN will have to go back to ways and means. Injecting N7trn from CBN through ways and means within 90 days will lead to inflation. The purchasing power of the people will be completely eroded and the Naira will become weaker. Your suggestion on custom rate would devastate the economy and fx market in 2 weeks. This is Sri Lanka 4.0. Talk like they say is cheap. Have a good a week.
Kalu Aja@FinPlanKaluAja1

You don't have to subsidise PMS imports 100%, thats a waste. In the US, farmers get a special diesel subsidy, but others don't. why? Farming is strategic Nigeria can't hide behind cost to deny a palliative, as crude oil has gone from $46 to $112. Instead, you subsidise PMS for target groups, especially transporters, by using the vehicle VIN, tied to NIN and eNaira, at the pumps. This ensures only Nigerian cars can buy subsidised PMS and Diesel, by paying via NIN phone using eNaira or any other payment method You will reduce public transportation without the huge N900B cost. On this N900b, yes, states will suffer financially, but states will suffer more if the entire commerce in the state collapses because citizens have to choose between food and fuel The federation revenues have increased by more than 100%, the war in Iran is a black swan event, and it will not last more than three months (amen). The government can do many things to lower the PMS cost, not related to subsidies on PMS imports 1. Immediately instruct Customs to adopt $1 to N100 as an exchange rate for 90 days 2. Reduce VAT to 2.5% for 90 days 3. Suspend CIT to 10% for 90 days if companies will pay a special transport bonus to their staff. Where is the Excess Crude Account? The benchmark is $65; Brent crude is $116. Where is this account? Can we use all the ECA for just 90 days? In summary, When there is a will, there is a way When there is no will, there is no way

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Festus Ekpen
Festus Ekpen@ekpenmarvel·
@wlcback14 He is an advocate of good governance. We know that. You know that. Your false claim cant change it. Good will triumph over evil.
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Dr. Yoruba .
Dr. Yoruba .@wlcback14·
This is the face of a Yoruba hater. He make his money living in Yorubaland and still hate the people. His number : 08061351366 His email: kevinblakcreativez@gmail.com His employer: support@veloremit.com He live in lekki Pls retweet for wider audience.
Dr. Yoruba . tweet media
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AYOMIPOSI 👑
AYOMIPOSI 👑@HonestarsenalF·
Just in 🚨: Funke Akindele snubbed Toyin Abraham at Iyabo Ojo’s film premiere, where she was seated with Mercy Aigbe. Toyin Abraham then went on Instagram and posted this, but reportedly deleted it shortly after. She allegedly called Funke Akindele a failed politician. But what could have transpired between them? Because I don’t think this is ending anytime soon… at this point, we might even need the president to declare a state of emergency for this 😭
AYOMIPOSI 👑 tweet media
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Nse
Nse@nsemboo·
@yunusxonline where does the Badagry section starts from?
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ThePolitician ❁
ThePolitician ❁@yunusxonline·
The Sokoto - Badagry superhighway, Kebbi axis, spanning more than 250 kilometres. The superhighway would include solar-powered lighting, dams, and rail infrastructure to support agriculture, electricity generation, and commerce.
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D Vearse
D Vearse@dvearse·
@AKakanfo @AKakanfo, I hope you are not revealing too much information. Is it not better to stick to a status quo of the future like this? Our unity is much important just like our history
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D Vearse
D Vearse@dvearse·
@Rich_pips @whobedeez Make your research. Nobody will make a public video just to discredit SE without political interference
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