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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Travel / Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. (707232 Views)
The Adventures Of A Village Scholar In Germany / Getting A Green Card By Adjustment Of Status: My Yankee Experience / Naija to Yankee Thoughts And Experiences (2) (3) (4)
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Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by cedar3: 9:58am On May 19, 2017 |
4dor:We are not saying corruption started around 2015. The issue is going to say it at the international scene. Comon!, who does that?! Is there no corruption in the American system, albeit on a low level? How often do you see the president of a country going to rubbish his state before the world? It seems he only remembers his country is corrupt and picks his lines once he's traveled. And have you noticed that the tiny shred of respect Nigeria had has gone since he came onboard? No country takes the "giant of Africa" serious anymore. Even Mali and war-torn Libya now deport our citizens. Nigerians are killed with impunity outside and nothing happens cos they know the Nigerian govt won't do jack. Me am just waiting to round-off my program here and scram! 20 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by SkinnyDude(m): 10:00am On May 19, 2017 |
FrankNetter:that last pic na morris shirt.. na 2.5k naira. if i show yankee, na okirika i go dey wear.. 8 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Pronmix(m): 10:09am On May 19, 2017 |
FrankNetter:Sooner than later he'll get here, it's quite easy, as long as he keeps reading up on Nigeria. It's a messed up situation Nairaland and Nigerians have put themselves into. 4 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by 4dor: 10:28am On May 19, 2017 |
cedar3: If I'm a thief and you call me a thief, did you do anything wrong? Yaradua got elected from a fraudulent election he got sworn in and said he knows the election that brought him in wasn't fair yet we hailed him. Just check the stories on front page and there is no single day you won't see a Nigerian doing something bad abroad. I agree that Buhari is a problem but the thing is he's not even the major problem. Citizens get the President they deserve. As for international respect, if you are a keen observer of international politics then you will agree we've had a bit of credibility, the change in attitude from the top countries is evident for everyone to see. Also, deportation is not how you measure international respect, if you go to any country and you break their laws you will be deported it has nothing to do with respect. Btw I know a neighbor that was deported from Libya like 15 years ago so it's not a new thing smartphones and the Internet has just made these stories easily accessible. 20 Likes 2 Shares |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by electronic(m): 11:04am On May 19, 2017 |
FrankNetter:@FRANKNETTER don't worry our generation would change the world! the damage has been done. what happens hence forth depends on us. #NiceGIST 4 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by fSociety: 11:27am On May 19, 2017 |
4dor: [img]https://ishouldbewashingclothes.files./2015/11/miss-the-point.png[/img] 7 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Officialkplus(m): 4:16pm On May 19, 2017 |
@FRANKNETTER what about that white babe, your colleague ..that one wey no dey go church, wey message you for Facebook... You no do that babe,again... |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Eruditor: 4:42pm On May 19, 2017 |
4dor is correct. FSociety, you are the one missing the point. 8 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by NONNYG: 6:44pm On May 19, 2017 |
electronic:make i find small trouble 1 Like |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Originalsly: 7:37pm On May 19, 2017 |
FrankNetter:Bro...don't get it twisted!....Buhari's statement made as much difference as if you add a barrel of water into the ocean. How many people ever did listen to what he had to say? How many people even know him?...try doing a test in your workplace... ask who is Buhari and I can guarantee you at least 70% will have no idea. Like you said earlier.... Africa is seen as a country but then again..... Nigeria is in a league of its own...there is Africa...and there is Nigeria.... negative Nigeria.... either a bunch of crooks ...always scheming to scam people's money...or.... as a guy... always trying to marry for papers and always having a wife and kids back home waiting. That has been and still is the perception of Nigerians abroad....nothing changed when Buhari said what he said. Tell people you are African.... they'll be pretty much cool with you. ... tell them you are Nigerian... and you'll see the difference. Nigerians...scammers.... all other Africans... hungry and starving....you will never hear of Nigerians as hungry and starving! That's the reality. On Culture..... of all the groups. ..Whites have no Culture..none. The Akatas have been intentionally stripped of their culture during slavery...but still... have some left within. Do you (not personal) ever realized that of all the religions.... none... not one was founded by Whites? They have no Culture period. In all... I do like how you are really questioning whether we are the ones that are promoting the negative image of ourselves....and how much NL is a platform for promoting self hatred. 13 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by abduldope(m): 9:37pm On May 19, 2017 |
frank from your previous post I have to say THANK YOU for opening this thread. you are a real eye opener to us those coming in here to post anything related to DON'T COME TO YANKEE Thunder FIRE!!! una Nyash NONSENSE 27 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by electronic(m): 10:04pm On May 19, 2017 |
NONNYG: |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by progress69: 10:56pm On May 19, 2017 |
FrankNetter: Bro....right from day one...u have been a Buhari hater....always finding away to link Buhari to everything on this ur thread. Seeing Nigerians as corrupt people have been there even before Obasanjo. This has nothing to do with Buhari, or did ur friend at work specifically tell u he heard that from Buhari? The truth is Nigerians are the one destroying themselves abroad....and we are indeed fantastically corrupt. Do ur part by being different at work..so others will have another perception about Nigerians. Blaming Buhari for ur friend calling Nigerians corrupt is just deep rooted hatred which u av displayed several times on this thread and on your blog. You can do ur thing here without bringing in politics into it all the time. I flew in to NY and everyone could see the compound corruption going on at the MMIA. From immigrations,customs, police,airline staffs,airport workers, FAAN officials. Visitors see all this too. Or is it our Yahoo boys that are always looking for preys abroad. Why won't they say we are corrupt. Play your part by not being dubious or corrupt and your friend at work will know not every Nigerian is corrupt! 17 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Ugosample(m): 11:05pm On May 19, 2017 |
Originalsly: What you wrote about culture is very very dumb. How can you say a sub group does not have culture? Do You even know what culture is Culture is way of life, and saying they have no culture is tantamount to saying that they are dead, because as long as you are alive, you must have a way of life, which is your culture. Stop reasoning in such manner, it's wrong 3 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by therealchase(m): 4:28am On May 20, 2017 |
Ugosample: I think he's right if you come to the u.s you'd understand that the akatas(black Americans) are lost between the western culture and their roots. They believe they are Americans because they gained citizenship by birth which is fine but what's your definition of culture when you have nothing to show for it? the funniest thing is they have hatred for Africans so much. I don't know if it's some gender stuff but the hatred is there 9 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by therealchase(m): 4:36am On May 20, 2017 |
FrankNetter: True bro this reminds me of back in nigeria i was so eager to come to the u.s like make we come see the yankee wey them dey talk about lol. welcome letter never arrive i don master interview requirments those hosiptal names and address dey boil for my head. you no go blame me |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by NONNYG: 4:43am On May 20, 2017 |
As Una don enter make Una help others come over nah, that's how we do it in QATAR/UAE thread |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Ugosample(m): 8:00am On May 20, 2017 |
therealchase: You don't get my point There is nobody, or sub group without its distinct culture. The black Americans have their distinct culture, the Hispanics have their own, and the whites have theirs too. Culture is your way of life, and how can you say that a group has no way of life? That is the dumb statement many Africans say, that a group have no culture 8 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by toluine56(m): 8:54am On May 20, 2017 |
Ugosample:Enough already. What's with your inferiority complex? He's right in a way and you're right in a way. Infact he's probably more right than you are cos if a group of people do things differently or their ways of life don't tally much, then there's little or no culture. That doesn't mean there aren't still teeny weeny things they have or do in common. You don't have to label all Africans (yourself included) dumb. WTF 1 Like |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by bayoshenko(m): 10:14am On May 20, 2017 |
toluine56: I hardly make comments here, but I had to respond to this discourse. With due respect, you got @ugosample’s assertions wrong. In language, there is what is called “implied meaning” and “what is meant”. For example, You are a boy. It might mean a young male or you are not grown-up. What is implied is always different from what is meant. Now to the issue of culture; as rightly stated by him, culture is a way of life, so there is nobody in this world without culture albeit intangible or how strange it is to us. Eating habit, food, language, dressing, piercing, even tattooing are all parts of one’s culture. Before now the majority of people in Nigeria had several piercings or tattoos on different parts of their bodies however how crude the artistry was then. But now if our parents see us trying to get the same tattoos they say we are copying other people’s culture. Cultures, traditions and norms go hand in hand. You may say they have lost their cultural values, and not that they do not have any culture. In our modern society chatting and texting are now part of our culture. Culture is invariably in a state of change. Because people are not doing was been done before does not mean they do not have any culture. It is either they have picked up something different from the previous conventions or modified it. Another example is polygamy practised widely until recently in Nigeria. Would it be right to say that if someone decides not to take up a second wife the person has lost his culture? There is always the issue of “identification” We tend to choose the way we want to be identified or what to be identified with. I may be a Nigerian and yet want to be identified as an American. This might be so if I am in that environment, but there are some things that can identify us namely skin colour(for black people), facial appearance (Chinese, Japanese, Koreans etc), language, food; these might be very difficult to change. The African-Americans, of course, do have culture. They have a peculiar way of life, even if it is different what is obtained on the African continent. Even a child born of Nigerian parents but grew up in America will most of the time have different values from a child born and grew up in Nigeria. Let us try to learn from each other, we cannot always see things in the same way. I respect other people’s opinion but that does not mean I have to accept it. Thank you very much. 24 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by toluine56(m): 1:08pm On May 20, 2017 |
bayoshenko:Okay. My grouse was the African thingy. I hardly comment here too except am pushed to. You could see I also agreed partially with him. One love. Thanks 3 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Nobody: 3:34pm On May 20, 2017 |
And you think it will be well with politicians in Nigeria? Imagine someone's dream for the youths. I weep for Nigeria 4 Likes 2 Shares
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Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Femcesc07(m): 3:46pm On May 20, 2017 |
abduldope: guyz are not smiling oooooo,baba make you take ham easy ooo abeg............ 2 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Nobody: 4:16pm On May 20, 2017 |
NONNYG:u know nah |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by therealchase(m): 6:06pm On May 20, 2017 |
Ugosample: yea i catch you. Culture is the total way of life of people the way they live,interact they have their own beliefs and ways of life fine but don't forget the akatas(black americans) originally were africans who were brought to the u.s during the slavery era. Their culture is rooted in West and Central Africa. Slavery greatly restricted the ability of African-Americans to practice their original cultural traditions, many practices, values and beliefs survived,but over time they've been modified or blended into with European cultures such as that of the Native americans. so what's that? where's the culture if it's been modified? |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Toppytek(m): 6:10pm On May 20, 2017 |
OluDare01: nawa for Mexicans ooo.. na. everything dem dey do? |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by guiddoti: 6:12pm On May 20, 2017 |
anodebeanthony:Are these barrows for graduates or non-graduates? I don't quickly jump into conclusion without asking question, who are they for, before making concluded verdict. If the barrows are for people who have been doing the business, it is good, in a way. Everyone can't work in government offices, and that, I can't support the barrows are for graduates. Also, if one has not done the job of barrowing before, I will not accept that for them. So, It depends on, who are barrows meant for. 4 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Bossman(m): 7:39pm On May 20, 2017 |
No. From his postings, I know he is not in the South-Side (It's over 95% black, but very few Nigerians live there). He is in the South Suburbs. South side is closer to downtown proper. For the most part, most of the south suburbs are crime free. Of course, there are some south suburbs that have their own share of crime. I am in the far north West suburbs...about 55 miles (about 90 kilometers) from downtown Chicago. Afam4eva: 2 Likes |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by therealchase(m): 8:13pm On May 20, 2017 |
Toppytek: Not everything just something to survive some of them do under table jobs(you suppose understand . Most of them are illegal immigrants that don't have the requirements to be employed so they do those jobs and are paid lesser than the minimum wage and them they work fireee |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by PDPGuy: 8:45pm On May 20, 2017 |
Fun day at the beach 13 Likes
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Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by austino677(m): 9:14pm On May 20, 2017 |
PDPGuy:only girls snap water |
Re: Yankee: through the eyes of a village boy. by Toppytek(m): 11:32pm On May 20, 2017 |
therealchase: e yeah.. that's one of the reasons I don't support anything illegal.. it's not easy to work talkless of been paid less than the minimum wage... I hope i'd find it easier peradventure am opportune to travel abroad prolly the US in other not to fall a victim of illegal immigrant thingy. 2 Likes 2 Shares |
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