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υ η я υ ℓ у

@_onGodMode

record holder for most suspended accounts probably 🥇

outside the matrix 加入时间 Nisan 2026
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υ η я υ ℓ у
υ η я υ ℓ у@_onGodMode·
i like people who find a way there is always a way
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.@LBGamestips·
There's a town in South Africa where black people are not allowed to enter, yet they couldn’t do anything about it. The name of the town is Orania, it’s a small, wh!te only town in South Africa and was founded in 1991. Yet they think fellow black Africans searching for their next meal are their problems YOU SOUTH AFRICANS 🇿🇦 WILL R£GR£T THIS
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EKEANYANWU CHỊMÈREUCHEYA (NATIVE)
CATHOLIC CHURCH use confession method to know the secrets of its members so that they can use it to control & manipulate them.
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Chetuya Math Chinagolum
Chetuya Math Chinagolum@Chetuyachinago·
The one-million-dollar question right now is this: since the colonial democracy we inherited from our slave masters is absolutely never going to drag us out of this multidimensional poverty, what system will work? I get this question sent to me daily, both in my comments and in private messages. Well, for a start, let's address the elephant in the room. Capitalism is a meaningless fairy tale, conveniently smuggled into economics textbooks to justify the ruling class exploiting the working class under the guise of vague, mystical concepts like the "invisible hand." The invisible hand is what they use to pick your pockets without you realising it. Under capitalism, a corporation is allowed to assume "God" status. It can buy politicians to write bespoke laws that allow it to exploit society, and it can outright purchase the regulators meant to keep it in check. Under this glorified pyramid scheme, a rogue billionaire is given a free pass to hoard massive land masses in millions of acres, push housing prices to the stratosphere, create an entire generation of homeless people, and audaciously brand it "real estate investment." A pharmaceutical cartel can patent life-saving medicine and watch the poor die just to keep its profit margins fat. Multinational oil conglomerates can turn the Niger Delta into a toxic wasteland, buy off the lawmakers, and walk away with record-breaking dividends. This is exactly why you will never find me in any group chat, internet forum, or Twitter space preaching the gospel of Capitalism. It is nothing but an intellectual smokescreen created to allow a select elite to impose their unbridled greed upon the general population. So, the next interesting option for Nigeria is Socialism. At its most basic level, socialism is an economic and political system where the resources and businesses that create wealth are owned and controlled by the public or the government, rather than by greedy private individuals. The main goal of socialism is to obliterate inequality. It is built on the radical idea that wealth should be shared fairly among the people whose sweat and blood actually created it. It dictates that a society's primary focus should be making sure everyone's basic human needs are met, rather than allowing three men in suits to make massive, world-altering profits. On paper, this sounds like a marvelous, messianic economic doctrine. It sounds exactly like the antidote Nigeria needs right now to drag hundreds of millions of our people out of multidimensional poverty. But in practice, Socialism is incredibly difficult to implement. The biggest, most fatal setback for Socialism is actually nationalism. Although the classical godfathers of socialism, like Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, argued that socialism is opposed to nationalism, in the real world, every single nation where socialism succeeded relied heavily on a fierce sense of national identity. According to Marxist theory, a struggling cassava farmer in Anambra has vastly more in common with a destitute tomato farmer in Zamfara than he does with a private-jet-flying politician in Awka. It is only through this "class solidarity" that the masses can unite under a common umbrella to defeat the ruling class siphoning their wealth. But again, reality begs to differ. In reality, a poor miserable farmer in Anambra has been brainwashed to feel he has more in common with Arthur Eze than with a poor farmer in Zamfara. Unless there is deep, unifying class consciousness and solidarity, socialism is impossible, and the wealthy will continue to loot the state into the ground while the poor fight each other. Even in the few historical cases where socialism managed to function without rabid nationalism, it eventually collapsed. Take Europe, for example. For decades, Western and Eastern Europe championed socialist ideals, building massive welfare states where the wealth was heavily taxed to provide world-class, completely free healthcare, university education, public housing, and robust pensions for the people. However, as Western Europe experienced waves of immigration from their former colonies, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe, right-wing politicians weaponized nationalism to fracture this social trust. They successfully pushed the xenophobic narrative that immigrants and refugees were coming merely to "drain" the welfare state without contributing to it. Because traditional socialist parties are inherently pro-immigrant, internationalist, and believe in universal human rights, nationalist voters abandoned them. The white working class realized that if socialism meant sharing their national wealth with foreigners, they no longer wanted any part of it. That is the bitter irony of modern Europe. Today, Western Europeans would literally rather allow the billionaire class to plunder the masses and strip away their safety nets than offer free healthcare to "aliens." So, as impressive as Socialism is on paper, any attempt to organically smuggle this beautiful concept into Nigerian society will fail woefully, unless the concept of Nationalism is aggressively addressed. And indeed, we’ve tried. There have been brilliant, albeit small, socialist movements in Nigeria championed by titans like Nnamdi Azikiwe, Michael Imoudu, Obafemi Awolowo, and Aminu Kano. But time and time again, due to a severe lack of cohesive, pan-Nigerian Nationalism, Socialism has found it incredibly difficult to flourish here. For a true democratic socialist welfare state to function in Nigeria, a state where wealth is heavily taxed from the rich to provide world-class free education, healthcare, and infrastructure for the masses, Nigerians would need to brutally abandon tribalism and develop a profound, unshakable sense of shared national identity. A Yoruba billionaire in Lagos would need to feel a deep, nationalistic sense of kinship with a poor Hausa child in Borno to willingly support the wealth redistribution required by socialism. Because ethnic and religious identities in Nigeria will always supersede our national identity, the fundamental "social trust" required for socialism is heavily fractured. Therefore, in the Nigerian context, building a unified, fiercely patriotic nationalism isn't just a good idea, it is an absolute prerequisite for any successful socialist or social-democratic system. That is not to say that our situation is completely hopeless Understand that this tribalism and religious division that chokes us is largely artificial. It was manufactured by our colonial masters and is meticulously maintained by our present political class today. They keep us hyper-focused on our tribes and religions, ensuring we remain too divided, too bitter, and too distracted to notice while they engage in intercontinental ballistic looting. This is exactly why I rarely talk about abstract political "systems" in the context of Nigeria. Politics is not a Mathematical identity that is universally true across the globe. A system might have worked miracles for China or Scandinavia, but in Nigeria, it will continue to fail until we realize that before we can share the wealth of a nation, we must first agree that we are a nation.
Chetuya Math Chinagolum@Chetuyachinago

Unfortunately for Nigeria, the anointed Messiah everyone expects to magically kiss the 'sleeping giant of Africa' awake is currently enjoying a comfortable slumber party in bed with the Imperialists. This is exactly why I keep hammering on the fact that microwave solutions will never save Nigeria. The prevailing delusion that air-dropping Jesus Christ of Nazareth into Aso-Rock would suddenly conjure up uninterrupted power supply, paved roads, functional hospitals, and a massive industrial revolution is nothing short of clinical fantasy. You cannot build a skyscraper on a septic tank. We cannot expect any genuine societal transformation while operating on a poisoned, hand-me-down colonial democracy explicitly designed by our former masters to bleed us dry. This system is a rigged casino. It will never produce a visionary, nationalistic leader because its default factory setting is the relentless extraction of Nigerian wealth to Western capitals. And on the miraculous off-chance that this colonial contraption manages to accidentally fart out a competent leader, institutional gatekeepers like the judiciary still that is still operating under colonial doctrines will instantly paralyze any real reform. That’s before you even factor in the suffocating mountains of IMF debts the new administration has to inherit, the graveyard of abandoned projects littering the country, or the inevitable petitions and protests from the NGO mini-terror groups. To top it off, any genuine administration would hit a brick wall trying to domesticate the gluttonous elite politicians and top military generals. These are men whose very DNA has been mutated by decades of grotesque bribery and unbridled waste. The question is, is this Messiah supposed to slay all these dragons in a miserable four-year window? The true Nigerian dream shouldn't be about surviving this colonial meat-grinder; it should be about smashing the machine entirely and replacing it with an indigenous system built to serve the Nigerian public, rather than Western interests. Yet, despite my scathing criticisms of Peter Obi and his policies, I will still drag myself to the polling unit on election day to cast my vote for him. I will do it because it is my civic responsibility. But to be clear:I won't be thumbing that ballot under some hallucinatory delusion that my vote is the magic wand the Nigerian dream has been waiting for. Honestly, my presence at that polling unit is nothing more than political charity. But when the ink washes off my finger, I will go right back to working tirelessly to dismantle this colonial farce of a democracy, joining forces to replace it with a system that actually treats Nigerians as the absolute beneficiaries of their own wealth, rather than expendable fuel for Western empires.

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Felsefe Parrhesia
Felsefe Parrhesia@Fparrhesia·
"Burada devrim olmaz, çünkü yoksullar, sıradaki zenginin kendileri olduğunu düşünüyorlar." —John Steinbeck
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Brock Riddick
Brock Riddick@BrockRiddickIFB·
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Prof. Carl Sagan
Prof. Carl Sagan@ProfCarlSagan·
The role of intellectuals is to challenge authority, not serve it.
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υ η я υ ℓ у
υ η я υ ℓ у@_onGodMode·
@Bobbysnipper21 @BigYomiii We don’t brag with cars but the very first thing wey your empty brain come up with na “but you never buy Benz”. @nikitabier remove this fool from Monetizing make he grow sense and tweet well
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B.I.G......Y.O.M.I.……2💦🍑
One guy came to register his sim where I was registering mine and this guy knows his NIN number offhand 😳😳 Not account number , NIN!!!
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OJUJU
OJUJU@rockefellerwil·
If you believe in the betterment of Delta State, follow me now
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υ η я υ ℓ у
υ η я υ ℓ у@_onGodMode·
@Bobbysnipper21 @BigYomiii If you dey use your brain well you go know say Toyota get car brands for every year. Even the Benz you dey worship, some are older than most Toyotas
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@CHELSEA_LOVA💙
@CHELSEA_LOVA💙@Bobbysnipper21·
@_onGodMode @BigYomiii E better make my papa no give me anything than Toyota for 2026. Dull people they always get excuse not to use their brain, as I store am e just dey pain you because ur brain no get the ability to store that kind thing, even ur phone number I sure ur brain no fit store am😂
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Admiral Julian⚓Oghale⚓
The world is not thy friend nor the world's law🚶🏾‍♂️🚶🏾‍♂️🚶🏾‍♂️
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Osubi P.R.O
Osubi P.R.O@sir_ejes·
Your papa dey work 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
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Omiragua Teejay
Omiragua Teejay@Omiragua_Teejay·
@_onGodMode Under Buhari, we Dey use 4k fuel go Abraka come back sharply. But now, Na 35k fuel
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Omiragua Teejay
Omiragua Teejay@Omiragua_Teejay·
Incase you do t know how bad things are under this administration, this is a perfect illustration
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