Ernesto

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Ernesto

Ernesto

@quicklinkentr

Agada gbachriri Uzo

Lagos, Nigeria เข้าร่วม Mart 2024
585 กำลังติดตาม61 ผู้ติดตาม
Ernesto
Ernesto@quicklinkentr·
I think it is quite simple to say Igbo's gospel artists are leading in the industry whilst Yoruba musicians are shaping the Afro industry. Win win for the two tribe.
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
We started an AI founder twitter group... reply with "I'm in" if you're a founder and want to be added
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SAINTS & SINNERS
SAINTS & SINNERS@ANsMontiCristo·
@MediaBoyfriend This is no news, if u have any help to give find him in@ Osu Castle near the Klotey lagoon. He will appreciate it trust me . Hmmm
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Media Boyfriend
Media Boyfriend@MediaBoyfriend·
Hanks Anuku is no longer Nigerian. Nollywood's original bad boy, the face that appeared on every villain poster from the 1990s through the 2000s, packed up and moved to Ghana. Not temporarily. Permanently. He naturalised. Became a Ghanaian citizen. His new name: Nana Kwame Fiifi Kakra Anuku. He said God told him to leave Nigeria. He said the crisis in Nigeria forced him out, sending his family to London while he built a new life in Accra. And he said he planned to spend the rest of his life in Ghana. Think about the size of that decision. One of the most recognisable faces in old Nollywood, a man whose screen presence defined a whole genre of Nigerian cinema, decided the country that made him famous was no longer somewhere he could thrive. Hanks Anuku left. Not for Hollywood. Not for Europe. For Ghana. And he took a new name when he arrived.
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Onyeka Nwelue
Onyeka Nwelue@onyekanwelue·
A swell time at my 30th birthday soirée with US Ambassador to Nigeria, William Stuart Symington IV. Mr. Symington is a member of the Symington family and he is the grandson of Senator Stuart Symington, who served as the first secretary of the Air Force from 1947 to 1950 and was a United States senator from Missouri from 1953 to 1976. On my 30th birthday, I had about 12 Ambassadors present, to honour me.
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Ernesto รีทวีตแล้ว
Ayo-Elesho
Ayo-Elesho@Ayoelesho·
In secondary school, our native language was labelled ‘vernacular,’ and students were punished for speaking it. Yet, over 90% of secondary schools did not teach the English language as it ought to be taught. The result today is that many Nigerians can't speak Queen's English flawlessly and also can't speak their native language impeccably. We lost on both ends.
Bella Hadidn’t@SkinwithLolami

Whoever told you it’s razz to speak your native dialect really did a number on Nigerians. Won de mo oyinbo were oun na so daadaa o.

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Opeyemi
Opeyemi@shidof99·
It’s starting to look like Daniel Regha is the only one with actual principles among these Gen Z influencers. If these are the "future leaders" and "vocal voices" of a New Nigeria, then the future is truly bleeding. ​Ọmọ yín o ṣe agbafo o n gbe epo wà ile, ẹ ri ojú ole, ẹ mún. We are celebrating the wrong mindsets. 🇳🇬💔
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RUTH 🇨🇦
RUTH 🇨🇦@it_Rutie·
Blessing CEO sc@mmed people of 13 million naira, but na Abazz wey deliver jersey una mount. Oya nau.
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Aunty Teda
Aunty Teda@imoteda·
Do y'all do family meetings in your house? Like you all sit around the table and talk about what's going on with you, work and achievements then people weigh in and give advice/encouragement?
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Ernesto
Ernesto@quicklinkentr·
@peng_writer @AjokeOnifaari Happy birthday to the incredible woman of your home. May happiness and success never depart from her. Amen.
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Ibrahim Kazeem, MBA.
Ibrahim Kazeem, MBA.@peng_writer·
Happy birthday to my forever baby. @AjokeOnifaari Thank you for being such a great glue holding our home together. Thank you for the light you bring into everyone's life at all times. I am so lucky to call you mine and I pray Almighty Allah continue to bless you and direct your affairs. Love you always baby. 💜 ❤️
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Michael Taiwo
Michael Taiwo@AskMichaelTaiwo·
Do you need money? Answer without using: Yes, Ya, Yeah, Yup, Absolutely, of course, sure.
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Ibrahim Kazeem, MBA.
Ibrahim Kazeem, MBA.@peng_writer·
I joined X with zero follower in 2018 but I now have 45,000 online friends many of whom are rooting for me. Thank you all for finding me worthy and engaging overtime. 💜🎈🙏 Let's continue to create mutually beneficial relationship and opportunities. Check tomorrow for a special gift if you are a business owner or Marketer. Peng@45
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BIG RAJJ
BIG RAJJ@BiggRaj·
Assalamu’alaykum Please vote for my sister to help her get this scholarship to seek more islamic knowledge. Here’s the link and it takes less than 30 seconds. Jazakumullahu khyran!! ramadan.amauacademy.com/story/storyofu…
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Chime
Chime@Chime_Fave·
without naming your city... who is the most famous person from your city?
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Henok Ghirmai
Henok Ghirmai@henokga·
@DavidHundeyin I am Eritrean, and for the first time in a long while, this graceful writing uplifted me. God bless you, brother!
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Whenever I see Africans having all of the takes over countries like Eritrea, I just want to cover my face and go somewhere to have a lie down. Because the way some of you talk is a confirmation of every malicious racial stereotype that was ever created about African people. You have no original thoughts or independent opinions inside your head. Everything that comes out of your mouth is Garbage-In-Garbage-Out programmed nonsense that was dictated directly directly into your head by the BBC news anchor who talks like they have plums in their mouth. Kinikan "Eritrea is a dictatorship," "They don't have freedom," "Police state that citizens need permission to leave." First of all, let's be clear on something - no African country is fundamentally better off than Eritrea. You might not be under the same sanctions as they are, so you might have access to the cheapest cast-off consumer items from global trade that China gracefully lets you have, which creates the illusion of wealth and comfort, but the minute your weak and compromised governments ever try to exert actual sovereignty and independence, is the minute you will discover that global trade is a mafia operation controlled by US sanctions, and we are ALL at the same level as Eritrea. Just because you have cheap consumer items from Guangzhou and Shenzhen, and you have MTN or Safaricom 4G internet that you use to play Nairabet and watch porn does not make you better off than an Eritrean who doesn't have those things. Because the price your country is paying for having those things can be measured in all kinds of horrible ways, like how IMF structural adjustment has devalued your Nigerian currency 99.7% since 1986, or how British soldiers at their base in Kenya regularly rape and murder local women without being legally answerable to Kenyan law. That is the price Eritrea refused to pay, so think about that before you sneer at people who to a certain extent are actually better off than you. Second and more importantly, "freedom" is a concept that you should define for yourself as an adult human being with a fully functioning brain. If a group of white people and their NGO/media/civil society servants in Abuja and Nairobi have told you all your life that "freedom" means "multiparty universal suffrage elections", "free trade", "free press" and "individual liberty", that is fine and I love it for you. But as a grown-ass adult in a world that is clearly bigger than you, perhaps you also need to ask yourself what "freedom" means to Agnes Wanjiru, the Kenyan nursing mother in Nanyuki who was gang raped by British soldiers, stabbed in her lungs (so she drowned in her own blood), and dumped (alive) into a septic tank where her body was discovered 3 years later. What does "freedom" mean to the 3 million people who died in Nigeria's civil war, which was externally instigated by Charles de Gaulle, who wanted to punish Nigeria and set it up for long term instability because Nigeria dared to publicly oppose France's nuclear bomb tests in Algeria? What does "freedom" mean to the local Tuaregs in Algeria around those nuclear test sites whose descendants still suffer extremely high rates of cancer, birth defects, and genetic mutations 60 years later? What does "freedom" mean to 40 million black South Africans who were born into an economy whose structure has NOT changed since 1994, and who are statistically condemned through no fault of their own, to live tiny lives surviving off small government handouts, all because someone crossed the Atlantic, came to their country, stole all the means of production, and codified their theft into law? All these people I have mentioned have elections and smartphones and Google and porn and mobile money and some measure of gay rights, and whatever other thing that these NGO people have told you constitutes "freedom." What use are these things to them? As an African adult in 2026 with a functioning, non-colonised mind that can take in and process information independently - and not just mindlessly parrot whatever you have been told - you should be able to define what "freedom" means in your own personal, communal, national and civilisational context. Because the ability to trade memecoins, use Uber, make an online purchase with your Mastercard, subscribe to somebody's OnlyFans, express dissatisfaction with your government openly, be part of political opposition, or attend a Pride parade are definitely important freedoms to some people. But freedom from white people and their IMF, World Bank, CIA, MI6, Mossad, DGSE, International Bank of Settlements, New York Federal Reserve, foreign military bases, NGO industrial network, sponsored terrorism, contrived colour revolutions, and Epstein safari trips to hunt and eat your kids are even more important freedoms to other people. And since in the world that existed between 1945 and 2023, it was basically impossible to have both sets of freedoms at the same time, Eritrea chose the second set of freedoms over the first set, as is their sovereign right to. So if you come from a country that allowed Epstein islanders to hunt and eat your babies and drown your women in septic tanks in exchange for having Mastercard, Sportpesa and Pornhub, maybe focus on managing the faustian bargain your government made and quit rubbernecking at Eritrea. You actually have bigger problems than they do.
Wode Maya ®@wode_maya

Tonight YouTube video is about Africa’s Most Isolated Country! *No internet On Your Sim Card *No ATM machines *can’t leave the country without approval from government *can’t travel from one city to another without permit *No Independent Press *One President since the country gained its independence *No National Election *Visa is almost impossible to acquire in Africa *Mandatory and indefinite 18 months internship *Health Care Is Free *Education is Free *Safest Country In Africa *The longest war for Independence with Ethiopia *You can’t fly from Ethiopia to Eritrea even though they share a border See You at 4pm gmt

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Ernesto
Ernesto@quicklinkentr·
Good evening, guys.... We are looking for a competent sales manager whose insight and expertise would bring long-term values to us. If the person is you or your friends, then this offer yours. Nb. Ilorin residents only. Apply on enercoinnovations.energy @peng_writer
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