God's love 💖💖💖🕑

13.4K posts

God's love 💖💖💖🕑 banner
God's love 💖💖💖🕑

God's love 💖💖💖🕑

@Div20201

Giving you same energy you bring to the table... Chess enthusiastic. Chelsea fan. I tweet for fun.

Nigeria Присоединился Ekim 2017
1.1K Подписки293 Подписчики
God's love 💖💖💖🕑
@Onsogbu But the Yorubas allowed the dumbest among them to rule them. Yorubas are slaves with no thinking of their own. They only know how to betray
English
0
0
0
2
Pst Okezie JAMES Atañi 🦨
The Yorubas are too sophisticated and educated to allow criminality fester in the South West. They're not SOME Igbos who allowed Nnamdi Kanu use IPOB ESN to brainwash them
English
26
14
51
2.1K
God's love 💖💖💖🕑
@Riddwane Even you that is defending Tinubu, he's ready to sacrifice you to remain in power. Just go and collect your Tiri K. And stop posting rubbish
English
0
0
0
2
AJE
AJE@Riddwane·
Your fellow citizen volunteered his tech expertise to help the police track the suspect. Pls, you too can be the solution, cos you have brain too. Do something to help the police track those bandits on TikTok 👀
Increase Chisom • Website Developer@chisomincrease

Terrorists are doing Tiktok live every now and then and none of them have been tracked down, but yeah, let's find the guy that made the fake AI voice note causing trouble between the Presidency and Very Dark Man 🤡

English
12
30
101
3.1K
God's love 💖💖💖🕑 ретвитнул
Parallel Facts
Parallel Facts@ParallelFacts·
Nigerians Are Not Asking Pastor Adeboye To Protest, They Only Demand That He Speaks Truth To Power Like He Did Under Jonathan — Social Commentator , Harry Da Diegot parallelfactsnews.com/nigerians-are-…
Parallel Facts tweet media
English
64
791
1.9K
27K
God's love 💖💖💖🕑
@femiogunleye9 Na only SW Tinubu fit win, SS SE NC including Kano and Kaduna are all lockdown for Peter Obi. The battle lies in NE and NW. OBI is the next president of Nigeria.
English
0
0
0
8
FEMI 🇳🇬
FEMI 🇳🇬@femiogunleye9·
Emotions doesn't work in politics, you can't keep insulting and denigrating my ethnic and expect absolute support from Yoruba, it doesn’t work like that.
English
23
9
43
834
God's love 💖💖💖🕑
@Sistaliano Na only Yoruba State Tinubu go fit win, you SS, SE,NC, they are all lockdown for Peter Obi including Kano and Kaduna. Then Obi Atiku And Tinubu go follow share NE and NW
English
0
0
0
16
God's love 💖💖💖🕑
@Pillihpnaed There are good Yorubas but many people are just tribalistic and they will prefer that their kinsman remains in power even if it means sacrificing their children
English
0
0
0
3
random dude
random dude@Pillihpnaed·
If you see 10 people attacking Peter Obi, 8 are from one particular region. I wonder why
English
11
20
93
2.2K
God's love 💖💖💖🕑 ретвитнул
Abiodun
Abiodun@bin_gbada·
Una come love Tinubu more than you love your life. I never see this kain thing before.
English
7
122
280
4.2K
God's love 💖💖💖🕑 ретвитнул
oseni rufai
oseni rufai@ruffydfire·
Can I beg that after elections All campaign buses be converted to Ambulances and donated across the country to save lives Some can also be converted to school buses
English
73
69
229
4.6K
A. Ayofe
A. Ayofe@abdullahayofel·
Don’t say anything, just retweet aggressively 🙆👇😳👀
A. Ayofe tweet media
English
47
79
126
4.6K
God's love 💖💖💖🕑
@nuhuyohanna39 Atiku should allow the South to complete their tenure, Obi supported him when it was the time of the North, why is Atiku refusing to support a Southern Aspirant when it becomes the time of the South? Atiku is a Selfish politician who should never be allowed to be close to power
English
0
0
0
4
Yohanna Nuhu
Yohanna Nuhu@nuhuyohanna39·
No matter how you think you got offended by Obi leaving the ADC, his pragmatic brothers from the SE are offended most. They are no longer mincing words to tell the bitter truth. They're saying it more bluntly than any one else has. Obi really messed up.
English
66
17
66
4K
Osas
Osas@osazenoo·
Obidients are quick to argue that NELFUND only became necessary because federal universities increased their fees. My question is simple: when Peter Obi increased school fees in Anambra from about ₦80,000 to ₦230,000, what support did he put in place to help parents and students cope with the increase? Tinubu’s government introduced NELFUND to provide students access to financing. Whether you support it or not, there is at least a mechanism to ease the burden. What was Peter Obi’s equivalent intervention when he implemented his own fee increase?
Osas tweet media
English
6
27
35
838
Aare kurunmi kakanfo
Aare kurunmi kakanfo@AKakanfo·
Tinubu till 2031✌🏿. The Jonathan script will not be repeated for Asiwaju✌🏿
English
51
163
508
11.4K
Foundational Nupe Lawyer
With respect, this post raises valid pains but suspends logic for emotion and selective facts. Reforms are not “reckless punishment”, they are necessary corrections to decades of unsustainable distortions. Now, let us examine your points with evidence, not assumptions, as it appears to me, no any logical or factually grounded counter has been offered, just heat. Point 1 - “Strips benefits, offers virtually nothing”: False. The FG has deployed massive palliatives: N5bn+ per state in food/fertiliser, expanded cash transfers (HoPE-CT/NG-CARES reaching millions), ₦25k+ wage awards, pension support, and NELFUND student loans (hundreds of billions disbursed to over a million students). CNG initiatives are rolling out conversion centres and stations nationwide to cut transport costs. These are documented bridges, not “nothing.” World Bank and IMF have noted these efforts alongside stabilisation gains. Point 2 - No investments, factories, or electricity: The savings and new revenues are funding real infrastructure. Coastal Highway, Sokoto-Badagry Expressway, AKK Gas Pipeline, rail expansions, PHC revitalisation (thousands upgraded), and power reforms under the Electricity Act enabling states/private players. CNG push is creating jobs in conversion and maintenance. IMF 2025 Article IV praises bold reforms (subsidy removal, FX unification) for improved resilience, revenue, and investor confidence. No “Industrial Revolution” overnight, structural change takes time, but direction is clear. Pre-reform trajectory was fiscal collapse. Point 3 - Wealth transfer to elites: Increased FAAC allocations have enabled many states to pay salaries consistently (impossible pre-2023 in several cases) and fund projects. Yes, governance challenges and leakages exist, so it is in order to demand accountability. But dismissing all as “private pockets” ignores visible projects, tax reforms for equity, digital registries for transparency, and private sector responses (NGX rally on reform signals). Local Government autonomy ruling further decentralises development. Not perfect, but not “purely wealth transfer.” Point 4: Hardships & “Suffering without purpose”: Hardships are real; inflation, fuel costs hit hard. No denial. But calling it purposeless ignores expert consensus: World Bank notes reforms stopped Nigeria from “fiscal cliff” and created space for people-centred actions (social safety nets, food inflation fight). IMF highlights stabilisation, growth potential, and resilience. Electricity/security are inherited + multifaceted problems; efforts like CNG/gas value chain and state police pushes address them. Reversing to old subsidy regime solves nothing, it returns debt and shortages. I agree, implementation can and must improve, better targeting, communication, anti-corruption. But your response presents a one-sided “elitist, futile” narrative that downplays necessity and documented progress. True reform serves people long-term by fixing fundamentals. Painful? Yes. Reckless? No. Evidence shows deliberate direction with light ahead for those who see beyond immediate emotion. Disagree on gaps? Fair game. But let’s engage facts, not suspend logic. Demand better execution from all leaders across all levels of government, without cherry-picking.
AYO💡💡@sepril23NG

Reforms itself is not the issue. I have no fundamental objection to reforms or the urgent need for better revenue generation which is the sole aim of tinubus reforms, none of them ensures lives of Nigerians will be better than he met the country. What I have consistently highlighted and what remains deeply troubling is the reckless manner in which these reforms are being implemented. True reform should serve the people, not punish them. Yet this administration has pursued a one-sided approach that fails on every critical measure: 1. It strips ordinary citizens of the few benefits they once received from the country, subsidies, palliatives, and basic protections of lives and properties, while offering virtually nothing in return. 2. It has failed to channel the savings and new revenues into direct, visible investments that create jobs and build industries. Billions are being “saved” or raised, yet there is no corresponding explosion in manufacturing, agriculture value chains, solid minerals processing, or public works that put money directly into pockets of citizens who are ready to work hard. Where are the factories? Where is the Industrial Revolution ? Where is the electricity compared to other countries that tax as high as Nigeria is currently taking from citizens that get absolutely nothing in return as a citizen? 3. It simply hands over the additional funds as increased allocations to the same political class that has repeatedly proven it cannot be trusted with public money. We all know what happens next: the funds disappear into private pockets, inflated contracts, and patronage networks. This is not economic reform, it is purely wealth transfer from struggling citizens through stripped benefits and x10 taxes to political elites who use the money to buy cars for party faithfuls and political allies life is becoming measurably harder for the average person. Fuel prices have soared, inflation has crushed purchasing power, electricity remains a joke in 2026, and taxes are being piled on an already impoverished population. Meanwhile, the political class and their cronies grow richer. And more taxes and borrowings ate still coming This is suffering without purpose. There is no discernible light at the end of this tunnel bro, only deeper darkness for the masses while the elites feast. Until a government shows the political will to balance its revenue drive with genuine industrialisation, job creation, and protection for the vulnerable, it can not be in the interest of the masses. Right now tinubus reform is working against them. The tragedy is not that we are reforming. The tragedy is that we are reforming in the most painful, elitist, and ultimately futile way possible.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ If atiku, Obi or whoever also campaigned about these reforms, I have no problems with them, my sole problem is this type of implementation, it’s shady and only benefits politicians, this cannot be the only way, and these old politicians are not the only ones, the fact that these are our major options alone saddens me, security is literally in shambles, as an insider what I know about the insecurity breaks my heart daily. And we have not even seen the worst, but the government could care less. 😞

English
23
144
323
14.3K
God's love 💖💖💖🕑 ретвитнул
AYO💡💡
AYO💡💡@sepril23NG·
Reforms itself is not the issue. I have no fundamental objection to reforms or the urgent need for better revenue generation which is the sole aim of tinubus reforms, none of them ensures lives of Nigerians will be better than he met the country. What I have consistently highlighted and what remains deeply troubling is the reckless manner in which these reforms are being implemented. True reform should serve the people, not punish them. Yet this administration has pursued a one-sided approach that fails on every critical measure: 1. It strips ordinary citizens of the few benefits they once received from the country, subsidies, palliatives, and basic protections of lives and properties, while offering virtually nothing in return. 2. It has failed to channel the savings and new revenues into direct, visible investments that create jobs and build industries. Billions are being “saved” or raised, yet there is no corresponding explosion in manufacturing, agriculture value chains, solid minerals processing, or public works that put money directly into pockets of citizens who are ready to work hard. Where are the factories? Where is the Industrial Revolution ? Where is the electricity compared to other countries that tax as high as Nigeria is currently taking from citizens that get absolutely nothing in return as a citizen? 3. It simply hands over the additional funds as increased allocations to the same political class that has repeatedly proven it cannot be trusted with public money. We all know what happens next: the funds disappear into private pockets, inflated contracts, and patronage networks. This is not economic reform, it is purely wealth transfer from struggling citizens through stripped benefits and x10 taxes to political elites who use the money to buy cars for party faithfuls and political allies life is becoming measurably harder for the average person. Fuel prices have soared, inflation has crushed purchasing power, electricity remains a joke in 2026, and taxes are being piled on an already impoverished population. Meanwhile, the political class and their cronies grow richer. And more taxes and borrowings ate still coming This is suffering without purpose. There is no discernible light at the end of this tunnel bro, only deeper darkness for the masses while the elites feast. Until a government shows the political will to balance its revenue drive with genuine industrialisation, job creation, and protection for the vulnerable, it can not be in the interest of the masses. Right now tinubus reform is working against them. The tragedy is not that we are reforming. The tragedy is that we are reforming in the most painful, elitist, and ultimately futile way possible.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ If atiku, Obi or whoever also campaigned about these reforms, I have no problems with them, my sole problem is this type of implementation, it’s shady and only benefits politicians, this cannot be the only way, and these old politicians are not the only ones, the fact that these are our major options alone saddens me, security is literally in shambles, as an insider what I know about the insecurity breaks my heart daily. And we have not even seen the worst, but the government could care less. 😞
Foundational Nupe Lawyer@egi_nupe

Even within a private setting, to be a good leader, you must be a good politician. So I don’t even agree that anyone who is not a good politician is a good leader. One fundamental question I have been asking without answer is: which of the reforms of Tinubu will be reversed by the next person, let’s assume Tinubu is not even on the ballot for the next election, that you think will make the lives of the average Nigerian better? Who among the current set of candidates or aspirants can effect or implement those alternative or better reforms?

English
7
12
29
15.6K
Chab
Chab@BiggChab·
“what does this symbol even signify 🤔?”
Chab tweet media
English
250
6
82
14.3K