Mike Aray

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Mike Aray

Mike Aray

@Mike_Aray

Strategic thinker | Policy & governance observer | Liverpool FC fan | Focused on accountable, leadership | I don’t follow narratives; I examine them

Nigeria Tham gia Nisan 2011
4.3K Đang theo dõi1.2K Người theo dõi
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
When we talk about @PeterObi, we are not talking about politics. We are not talking about Party. We are not talking about just a person but a movement for better Nigeria. How will we have @PeterObi and still think of another. no be juju be that? #PeterObi4President2023
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Good Morning 🌞 🌞 🌞 and Happy Sunday. Heavenly Father, thank You for the gift of a new day and the blessing of seeing another Sunday. As we gather to worship You, may Your presence fill our hearts with peace, joy, and gratitude. Let Your grace guide our steps, Your wisdom direct our decisions, and Your mercy speak for us in every situation. As we enter this new week, may we walk in faith, love, and righteousness. May the works of our hands prosper, and may we remain under Your divine covering. Let our homes be filled with peace, our hearts with hope, and our lives with reasons to rejoice. In Jesus' mighty name, Amen. Have a blessed and glorious Sunday filled with God's goodness and abundant favor.
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Good morning! ☀️ Let’s turn those morning intentions into actions. Connect, engage, and grow your account today by building organic followership . Let's make today a breakthrough day! 🚀📈"
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Good morning! ☀️ Let’s turn those morning intentions into actions. Connect, engage, and grow your account today by building organic followership . Let's make today a breakthrough day! 🚀📈"
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Good morning! ☀️ Let’s turn those morning intentions into actions. Connect, engage, and grow your account today by building organic followership . Let's make today a breakthrough day! 🚀📈"
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Good morning! ☀️ Let’s turn those morning intentions into actions. Connect, engage, and grow your account today by building organic followership . Let's make today a breakthrough day! 🚀📈"
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Night gains
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Ironically, He is not the only African today with that opinion. Many Africans supported Mexico against South Africa during the last World Match, they cited South Africa's history of xenophobic attacks on fellow Africans. Whether one agrees with that position or not, at least it was based on a specific grievance that directly affected other Africans. With Morocco, the main criticism I often hear is that some Moroccans prefer to identify more with the Arab world, Europe or the Mediterranean region than with Sub-Saharan Africa. While that may be a valid topic for discussion, is that alone enough reason to root against an African team on the pitch? Every country has politicians, public figures and sections of society with differing views about identity. But beyond these debates, Morocco has not been widely associated with the kind of recurring xenophobic violence against fellow Africans that has shaped perceptions of some other countries. For me, football should not be turned into a test of who is "African enough." Morocco is geographically in Africa, competes under Africa, and represents Africa in international competitions. You can support Brazil because you love Brazilian football, but supporting Brazil simply because you don't see Morocco as African enough seems like a weak argument. What do you think: Should African solidarity in sports depend on geography, culture, politics, or something else entirely?
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Mike Aray đã retweet
DARL COMMENT
DARL COMMENT@Darleeton3·
Breaking News .: The Pan Africa advocate from South Africa 🇿🇦 and one of South Africa biggest opposition leader , Julius malema said he’s going to be supporting Brazil 🇧🇷 against morocco 🇲🇦 in their game Group C match in fifa 2026 World Cup Who do you think our biggest opposition leader in Nigeria 🇳🇬 Peter Obi will be supporting? #fifaworldcup #africa #Brazil
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
@KE_MrBlack When you have finished satisfying your urge and the man now nurtures his feelings towards you in that regard. Casala go burst
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MrBlack™
MrBlack™@KE_MrBlack·
Women are something else 😂
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Michael Taiwo
Michael Taiwo@AskMichaelTaiwo·
Don’t know why the US dollar is not as pretty & colorful as the currency of most other countries.
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Evening Gains. Let's connect
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Evening Gains. Let's connect
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GOOD
GOOD@Gooddlovee·
Good morning guys 😊 Let's connect 👥
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
This right here is one of the reasons women may live longer than men. 😂 No woman is trusting another human being with her life like this just for vibes and friendship. Women calculate risk differently. Before they cross a small gutter, they have already considered ten possible outcomes. Meanwhile, men will look at a situation where one tiny mistake can send them to the hospital and say, "My guy, I trust you." Then both of them proceed without a backup plan. People call it brotherhood; women call it unnecessary risk. 😅
A.K.A@kayzywizzzy

The things men do to put food on the table.

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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
This right here is one of the reasons women may live longer than men. 😂 No woman is trusting another human being with her life like this just for vibes and friendship. Women calculate risk differently. Before they cross a small gutter, they have already considered ten possible outcomes. Meanwhile, men will look at a situation where one tiny mistake can send them to the hospital and say, "My guy, I trust you." Then both of them proceed without a backup plan. People call it brotherhood; women call it unnecessary risk. 😅
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A.K.A
A.K.A@kayzywizzzy·
The things men do to put food on the table.
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Murat
Murat@mrtbrglMB·
If you want over 3000+ verified ❓ Just say “Want” 🏆 Let’s connect now🙋‍♂️🔔🔔🔔
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
I find it interesting that some Africans are quick to support Brazil against Morocco simply because Morocco is playing. Ironically, many of the same people who criticize Moroccans today were among those who allegedly supported Mexico against South Africa during past football competitions, often citing South Africa's history of xenophobic attacks on fellow Africans. Whether one agrees with that position or not, at least it was based on a specific grievance that directly affected other Africans. With Morocco, the main criticism I often hear is that some Moroccans prefer to identify more with the Arab world, Europe or the Mediterranean region than with Sub-Saharan Africa. While that may be a valid topic for discussion, is that alone enough reason to root against an African team on the pitch? Every country has politicians, public figures and sections of society with differing views about identity. But beyond these debates, Morocco has not been widely associated with the kind of recurring xenophobic violence against fellow Africans that has shaped perceptions of some other countries. For me, football should not be turned into a test of who is "African enough." Morocco is geographically in Africa, competes under Africa, and represents Africa in international competitions. You can support Brazil because you love Brazilian football, but supporting Brazil simply because you don't see Morocco as African enough seems like a weak argument. What do you think: Should African solidarity in sports depend on geography, culture, politics, or something else entirely?
𝐕𝐚𝐫𝐭𝐢𝐜𝐨@Varticoo

Mark attendance if you are supporting Brazil against Morocco tonight. 🇧🇷

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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
I find it interesting that some Africans are quick to support Brazil against Morocco simply because Morocco is playing. Ironically, many of the same people who criticize Moroccans today were among those who allegedly supported Mexico against South Africa during past football competitions, often citing South Africa's history of xenophobic attacks on fellow Africans. Whether one agrees with that position or not, at least it was based on a specific grievance that directly affected other Africans. With Morocco, the main criticism I often hear is that some Moroccans prefer to identify more with the Arab world, Europe or the Mediterranean region than with Sub-Saharan Africa. While that may be a valid topic for discussion, is that alone enough reason to root against an African team on the pitch? Every country has politicians, public figures and sections of society with differing views about identity. But beyond these debates, Morocco has not been widely associated with the kind of recurring xenophobic violence against fellow Africans that has shaped perceptions of some other countries. For me, football should not be turned into a test of who is "African enough." Morocco is geographically in Africa, competes under Africa, and represents Africa in international competitions. You can support Brazil because you love Brazilian football, but supporting Brazil simply because you don't see Morocco as African enough seems like a weak argument. What do you think: Should African solidarity in sports depend on geography, culture, politics, or something else entirely?
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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Prof. Amadi raises an important constitutional argument about citizenship and political rights, but for the sake of consistency, should the same principle apply across all parts of Nigeria? If an Igbo man can legitimately aspire to become Governor of Lagos because he is a Nigerian citizen, would the political establishment and people of the South-East equally accept a Yoruba, Hausa or any other Nigerian becoming Governor in an Igbo-speaking state? This is not about supporting or opposing anyone's ambition. It is simply about asking whether we are prepared to apply the same standard everywhere. National integration works best when rights and opportunities are reciprocal, not when they are expected in one region but resisted in another. Perhaps the real conversation should not be whether anyone can contest, but whether all Nigerians are willing to accept the same principle regardless of whose state is involved.
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja

You Can’t Stop Igbos From Contesting for Governorship in Lagos — Prof. Sam Amadi Insists Former chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Prof. Sam Amadi, has insisted that Nigerians should be free to seek political office anywhere in the country, regardless of their ethnic background, stressing that Igbos have the right to contest for the highest positions in Lagos. Speaking on issues of citizenship, integration and national unity, Amadi warned against treating any ethnic group as second-class citizens in Nigeria. “You cannot tell Igbos that they should not vie for the biggest office in Lagos because they are not Yoruba people. That’s an error,” he said. According to him, the principle of common citizenship means every Nigerian enjoys equal rights across the country. “The idea of common citizenship is that we are all citizens of Nigeria. We can’t be less citizen in Sokoto,” he stated. Amadi, however, distinguished between cultural rights and legal rights, arguing that while non-indigenes may not lay claim to traditional institutions in their host communities, they retain full political and civic rights. “An Igbo man who has built his business, who says ‘I want to represent Apapa,’ has a right. And the people have a right to choose him or not,” he said. He urged young Igbos not to live in fear of backlash while pursuing legitimate opportunities and political aspirations. “We should be wise, respectful and tolerant, but we must be assertive. We must be clear that we are part of Nigeria,” Amadi said, adding that national integration cannot succeed if citizens are discouraged from feeling a sense of belonging outside their ethnic homelands. The former NERC boss also lamented what he described as growing perceptions of ethnic discrimination among young Nigerians, saying many feel opportunities are determined by tribe rather than merit.

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Mike Aray
Mike Aray@Mike_Aray·
Prof. Amadi raises an important constitutional argument about citizenship and political rights, but for the sake of consistency, should the same principle apply across all parts of Nigeria? If an Igbo man can legitimately aspire to become Governor of Lagos because he is a Nigerian citizen, would the political establishment and people of the South-East equally accept a Yoruba, Hausa or any other Nigerian becoming Governor in an Igbo-speaking state? This is not about supporting or opposing anyone's ambition. It is simply about asking whether we are prepared to apply the same standard everywhere. National integration works best when rights and opportunities are reciprocal, not when they are expected in one region but resisted in another. Perhaps the real conversation should not be whether anyone can contest, but whether all Nigerians are willing to accept the same principle regardless of whose state is involved.
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Instablog9ja
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja·
You Can’t Stop Igbos From Contesting for Governorship in Lagos — Prof. Sam Amadi Insists Former chairman of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), Prof. Sam Amadi, has insisted that Nigerians should be free to seek political office anywhere in the country, regardless of their ethnic background, stressing that Igbos have the right to contest for the highest positions in Lagos. Speaking on issues of citizenship, integration and national unity, Amadi warned against treating any ethnic group as second-class citizens in Nigeria. “You cannot tell Igbos that they should not vie for the biggest office in Lagos because they are not Yoruba people. That’s an error,” he said. According to him, the principle of common citizenship means every Nigerian enjoys equal rights across the country. “The idea of common citizenship is that we are all citizens of Nigeria. We can’t be less citizen in Sokoto,” he stated. Amadi, however, distinguished between cultural rights and legal rights, arguing that while non-indigenes may not lay claim to traditional institutions in their host communities, they retain full political and civic rights. “An Igbo man who has built his business, who says ‘I want to represent Apapa,’ has a right. And the people have a right to choose him or not,” he said. He urged young Igbos not to live in fear of backlash while pursuing legitimate opportunities and political aspirations. “We should be wise, respectful and tolerant, but we must be assertive. We must be clear that we are part of Nigeria,” Amadi said, adding that national integration cannot succeed if citizens are discouraged from feeling a sense of belonging outside their ethnic homelands. The former NERC boss also lamented what he described as growing perceptions of ethnic discrimination among young Nigerians, saying many feel opportunities are determined by tribe rather than merit.
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