Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,206,876 members, 7,997,101 topics. Date: Thursday, 07 November 2024 at 10:44 PM

Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post (4614 Views)

#Endsars:Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy--Washington Post / Sowore: Washington Post Condemns Buhari Over Detention / Washington Post Reacts To Buhari Clone Denial (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (Reply) (Go Down)

Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by iskoki(m): 4:33am On Oct 30, 2020
Democracy Dies in Darkness


Global Opinions
Opinions
Post Opinión
Post Opinions Arabic
Editorial Board
The Opinions Essay
Global Opinions

#EndSars shows that Muhammadu Buhari is the biggest threat to Nigeria’s democracy


Opinion by Innanoshe R.A.
Oct. 29, 2020 at 7:21 p.m. GMT+1
Innanoshe R.A. is a Nigerian writer, editor, lawyer and activist.

Some things never change in Nigeria. Police and military brutality, the terrible state of governance, the ubiquity of corruption, extreme poverty and inequality, unreliable power supply go in an endless cycle, like the year’s seasons.

Nigerian elections are like gambling. We blindly toss a coin into the air — with no guarantee of what we get. We vote out one corrupt leader for an even more corrupt one. Or, as we like to say, “you go from the frying pan into the fire.”

Take President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria, for example. As the first opposition candidate to mount a sweeping defeat of a sitting president in Nigeria, Buhari — a former general and military head of state —rode the coattails of rife anti-government sentiments to victory in 2015. To those who voted for him, he symbolized a potent antidote to the issues plaguing the country. He promised to blindly fight corruption and cronyism. He vowed to strongarm the terrorist group Boko Haram into retreat or surrender. He also declared that he would stabilize Nigeria’s dwindling economy and fix the existing gulf of socioeconomic disparities between Nigeria’s uber-wealthy few and the majority of Nigerians who are abjectly poor. In a campaign tweet two months before his historic win, he swore a solemn vow to Nigerians. “Let me make you this promise today,” Buhari wrote. “We will protect your children. We will protect your wealth. We will make this country work again.”


Today, nearly six years after making that promise, Nigeria has become a relic of what it used to be. Many signs point to Buhari’s failures. He must go.

The streets are raging with violence. Nigerians are under an unprecedented lethal attack by Buhari’s government, which recently killed unarmed citizens protesting against the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), a brutal and abusive police force in Lagos. The #EndSars movement has become a global phenomenon. After days of denials, the Nigerian army admitted Tuesday that their officers were deployed to the scene of the deadly attack to ensure statewide curfew compliance. The army still denies opening fire.

But perhaps one of the starkest portraits of Buhari’s failures to date are the graphic images and videos on social media that show multitudes of presumably hungry Nigerians fighting tooth and nail to get their hands on bags of rice, flour, noodles, sugar and other food supplies recently discovered in government-owned warehouses full of hoarded covid-19 aid across the country. The food was meant for Nigerians during the height of the coronavirus pandemic, but, like with most things in Nigeria, the politicians decided to reserve it for their own benefit.



In 2019, Nigeria dropped two spots lower than previous years on Transparency International’s annual Corruption Perception Index — which prompted Buhari’s administration to denounce the report as “baseless.” Additionally, a damning 2018 World Poverty Clock report said Nigeria, Africa’s wealthiest and largest economy, had overtaken India as the country with the largest number of people living in extreme poverty in the world. Similarly, youth unemployment has risen in recent years, and now stands at nearly 41 percent. Nigerian public universities have been shut down for the past several months due to the Academic Staff Union of Universities’ strike action. The situation may get even worse for my country. A staggering World Bank simulation suggests that “the dual COVID-19 and oil price crisis could push around 10 million more Nigerians into poverty by 2022.”

These reports and the events of recent weeks have made it abundantly clear for all to see that Buhari has not only failed in keeping to his promises, but he has also, more dangerously, defied rehabilitation from his dictatorial past. He is proving himself the single biggest threat to Nigeria’s fledgling democracy. His hands, and those of his accomplices, are covered with the blood of the young Nigerians like me whose lives, dreams and hopes he cut short for exercising their constitutional rights of assembly and protest.

In support of the recent protests against police brutality and bad governance in Nigeria, I published a manifesto on social media as a suggested framework of the ideological boundaries for the movement. There, I noted that a top-to-bottom leadership change in government and law enforcement agencies is the only path to real change in Nigeria. It seems to me, and possibly to an increasing number of Nigerians, that there cannot be any tangible or long-lasting reform within any sector in Nigeria without replacing leaders and the existing systems and processes.

AD

And perhaps, even more, this is the time to imagine a new Nigeria, that works for all. We need a new Nigeria that protects, defends and holds space for the most vulnerable amongst us — the girl-child, disabled, economically disadvantaged, women, and, yes, the LGBTQ+ community, too. We must also imagine a new national identity, one that is grounded in progressive ideals, such as equality, diversity, unity, justice, loyalty, hard work and selflessness.

Indeed, Buhari and Nigeria’s other useless politicians need to pass the baton of leadership to my generation of Nigerians who have shown a commitment to doing the job and will put the country before themselves. It’s time for Buhari to resign.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/10/29/endsars-shows-that-muhammadu-buhari-is-biggest-threat-nigerias-democracy/#click=https:///wQe6BAyJWs

23 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by scribble: 4:38am On Oct 30, 2020
That dull abok.i will rather die in aso rock than resign

18 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by AchalugoNwa(f): 4:44am On Oct 30, 2020
everybody knows that buhari is a criminal terrorist vagabond gworo chewing bastard criminal kunu sipping monkey

31 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by AchalugoNwa(f): 4:44am On Oct 30, 2020
lalasticlala fp

2 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by mcjohny(m): 4:50am On Oct 30, 2020
this old demon is hellbent on destroying this country

9 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by RedPhoenix: 4:54am On Oct 30, 2020
cool

1 Like

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by fineboynl(m): 4:54am On Oct 30, 2020
the palliative saga really exposed this administration. it will go down in history as the most corrupt administration ever.

22 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by SUFFERInSMILIIN(m): 4:57am On Oct 30, 2020
iskoki:


Democracy Dies in Darkness


Global Opinions
Opinions
Post Opinión
Post Opinions Arabic
Editorial Board
The Opinions Essay
Global Opinions

#EndSars shows that Muhammadu Buhari is the biggest threat to Nigeria’s democracy


Opinion by Innanoshe R.A.
Oct. 29, 2020 at 7:21 p.m. GMT+1
Innanoshe R.A. is a Nigerian writer, editor, lawyer and activist.

Some things never change in Nigeria. Police and military brutality, the terrible state of governance, the ubiquity of corruption, extreme poverty and inequality, unreliable power supply go in an endless cycle, like the year’s seasons.

Nigerian elections are like gambling. We blindly toss a coin into the air — with no guarantee of what we get. We vote out one corrupt leader for an even more corrupt one. Or, as we like to say, “you go from the frying pan into the fire.”

Take President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria, for example. As the first opposition candidate to mount a sweeping defeat of a sitting president in Nigeria, Buhari — a former general and military head of state —rode the coattails of rife anti-government sentiments to victory in 2015. To those who voted for him, he symbolized a potent antidote to the issues plaguing the country. He promised to blindly fight corruption and cronyism. He vowed to strongarm the terrorist group Boko Haram into retreat or surrender. He also declared that he would stabilize Nigeria’s dwindling economy and fix the existing gulf of socioeconomic disparities between Nigeria’s uber-wealthy few and the majority of Nigerians who are abjectly poor. In a campaign tweet two months before his historic win, he swore a solemn vow to Nigerians. “Let me make you this promise today,” Buhari wrote. “We will protect your children. We will protect your wealth. We will make this country work again.”


Today, nearly six years after making that promise, Nigeria has become a relic of what it used to be. Many signs point to Buhari’s failures. He must go.

The streets are raging with violence. Nigerians are under an unprecedented lethal attack by Buhari’s government, which recently killed unarmed citizens protesting against the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), a brutal and abusive police force in Lagos. The #EndSars movement has become a global phenomenon. After days of denials, the Nigerian army admitted Tuesday that their officers were deployed to the scene of the deadly attack to ensure statewide curfew compliance. The army still denies opening fire.

But perhaps one of the starkest portraits of Buhari’s failures to date are the graphic images and videos on social media that show multitudes of presumably hungry Nigerians fighting tooth and nail to get their hands on bags of rice, flour, noodles, sugar and other food supplies recently discovered in government-owned warehouses full of hoarded covid-19 aid across the country. The food was meant for Nigerians during the height of the coronavirus pandemic, but, like with most things in Nigeria, the politicians decided to reserve it for their own benefit.



In 2019, Nigeria dropped two spots lower than previous years on Transparency International’s annual Corruption Perception Index — which prompted Buhari’s administration to denounce the report as “baseless.” Additionally, a damning 2018 World Poverty Clock report said Nigeria, Africa’s wealthiest and largest economy, had overtaken India as the country with the largest number of people living in extreme poverty in the world. Similarly, youth unemployment has risen in recent years, and now stands at nearly 41 percent. Nigerian public universities have been shut down for the past several months due to the Academic Staff Union of Universities’ strike action. The situation may get even worse for my country. A staggering World Bank simulation suggests that “the dual COVID-19 and oil price crisis could push around 10 million more Nigerians into poverty by 2022.”

These reports and the events of recent weeks have made it abundantly clear for all to see that Buhari has not only failed in keeping to his promises, but he has also, more dangerously, defied rehabilitation from his dictatorial past. He is proving himself the single biggest threat to Nigeria’s fledgling democracy. His hands, and those of his accomplices, are covered with the blood of the young Nigerians like me whose lives, dreams and hopes he cut short for exercising their constitutional rights of assembly and protest.

In support of the recent protests against police brutality and bad governance in Nigeria, I published a manifesto on social media as a suggested framework of the ideological boundaries for the movement. There, I noted that a top-to-bottom leadership change in government and law enforcement agencies is the only path to real change in Nigeria. It seems to me, and possibly to an increasing number of Nigerians, that there cannot be any tangible or long-lasting reform within any sector in Nigeria without replacing leaders and the existing systems and processes.

AD

And perhaps, even more, this is the time to imagine a new Nigeria, that works for all. We need a new Nigeria that protects, defends and holds space for the most vulnerable amongst us — the girl-child, disabled, economically disadvantaged, women, and, yes, the LGBTQ+ community, too. We must also imagine a new national identity, one that is grounded in progressive ideals, such as equality, diversity, unity, justice, loyalty, hard work and selflessness.

Indeed, Buhari and Nigeria’s other useless politicians need to pass the baton of leadership to my generation of Nigerians who have shown a commitment to doing the job and will put the country before themselves. It’s time for Buhari to resign.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/10/29/endsars-shows-that-muhammadu-buhari-is-biggest-threat-nigerias-democracy/#click=https:///wQe6BAyJWs

Nigeria number one problem the people are illiterate and very stupid. 95% of Nigeria's loan in Nigeria will do nothing for them they will still go and vote for themselves the more they suffer the happy they are. If you go to developed countries like Europe and America you will know that cockroach is better than a Nigerians when you see Nigerians doing running after criminals and following criminals all over the place in developed countries. When I was in UK and America Nigerian professors will tell you they have to vote for somebody which can do nothing for them they will tell you they have to vote For Themselves it does not matter if they are suffering

Illiteracy has made the people of Nigeria the most stupid people in the world. Only thing they know how to do good for an idiot which can do that thing for them when you just see them in developed countries suffering like cockroaches and vote for themselves you be smiling at them. I do not know why the people are so stupid. Do we run away from a country which the government can do nothing for them admittedly they get to another man's land they want to vote for a Nigerian idiot

3 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Dreal1247: 4:57am On Oct 30, 2020
Nigeria does not have a President. The President is in coma. Change is the solution.

3 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Zenithpeak(m): 4:58am On Oct 30, 2020
If you are expecting Buhari and his gangs hoodlums in cabinet to solve any of Nigeria problems, then you need a critical psychological evaluation.

Before 2015 we know what Nigeria economy used to be in the league of developing nations but today nko?

After Buhari and his gang of thieves came up with their frivolous promises and deceived Nigerians that, the journey that should cost us 30 years will be reduced to just 6months and almost everyone fell for their lies.... Now we are on a destructive journey of no return.

Buhari and his political bandwagons are the major crises we are facing in Nigeria. Shikena!

15 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by 2by40ft: 5:01am On Oct 30, 2020
As Trump said, Failing washingpost.
Writer's personal opinion.
He's well known Bigot.

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by CodeTemplar: 5:04am On Oct 30, 2020
. . .
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Macphenson: 5:10am On Oct 30, 2020
Interesting
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by SUFFERInSMILIIN(m): 5:11am On Oct 30, 2020
Zenithpeak:
If you are expecting Buhari and his gangs hoodlums in cabinet to solve any of Nigeria problems, then you need a critical psychological evaluation.

Before 2015 we know what Nigeria economy used to be in the league of developing nations but today nko?

After Buhari and his gang of thieves came up with their frivolous promises and deceived Nigerians that, the journey that should cost us 30 years will be reduced to just 6months and almost everyone fell for their lies.... Now we are on a destructive journey of no return.

Buhari and his political bandwagons are the major crises we are facing in Nigeria. Shikena!

Nigerians are stupid people it is not about buhari only 95% of Nigerians know this person will do nothing for us they will still go and vote for him that is how Nigerians are all over the world following an idiot is their speciality. Just take a trip to develop countries and see how stupid Nigerians are they only think they do vote for one idiot after another. One billion years as long as Nigerians have ruling the country Nigeria will not develop

3 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by GTkester: 5:14am On Oct 30, 2020
True, but not just buhari alone, but also the Yoruba Muslims and their Fulani almajiri.

But thankfully, we have the great Igbos, the non Muslim Yorubas and the middle belter progressive who are fixing the many failings of buhari. And if we continue working together, we will send buhari and his Fulani terrorists back to futa jalon from whence they came.

To the rest of Ndigbo, please ignore any post that tries to pit us against yoruba people, especially non Muslim Yorubas. True, we aren't friends with the yorubas, but at the same time we ain't enemies, we are just competitors. Yoruba people are learned, civilized and hardworking. Unlike the Abokis, who are uncivilized, uneducated and uncultured. So they are our real enemies and we must make sure we demarket and expose them before the the world.

Henceforth our media battles should only be for the Yoruba Muslims and their almajiri counterparts. Those people should be ostracized from our midst.

15 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by juman(m): 5:26am On Oct 30, 2020
Buhari is not good president.

But he is better president than trump.
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by sapientia(m): 5:26am On Oct 30, 2020
Its not rocket science to know

1 Like

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Zenithpeak(m): 5:32am On Oct 30, 2020
SUFFERInSMILIIN:


Nigerians are stupid people it is not about buhari only 95% of Nigerians know this person will do nothing for us they will still go and vote for him that is how Nigerians are all over the world following an idiot is their speciality. Just take a trip to develop countries and see how stupid Nigerians are they only think they do vote for one idiot after another. One billion years as long as Nigerians have ruling the country Nigeria will not develop

It is true that Nigerians are democratically ignorant but I have realised that odds are always against the masses in any general election in this country. The reason is that, our political space is deeply polarized, religious and tribal sentiments are our greatest undoing. We are always left with to bad options and whichever ways we go, we are at the receiving end of our thoughtless choices.

Until we are able to change the status quo.... I repeat, we are on a perilous journey of no return.

2 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by helinues: 5:33am On Oct 30, 2020
That's Innanoshe R.A opinion

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Stalwert: 5:40am On Oct 30, 2020
Ipob liar and activist. That all you need to know.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by helinues: 5:44am On Oct 30, 2020
10x880:
[s][/s]

Mynd44
Lalasticlacla
Seun
Dominique
OAMJ4

Rule 1

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by BigSarah(f): 5:56am On Oct 30, 2020
Majority of Nigerians wanted him
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Marine54(m): 6:07am On Oct 30, 2020
helinues:


Mynd44
Lalasticlacla
Seun
Dominique
OAMJ4

Rule 1
cry me a river !
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Cyberterror: 6:15am On Oct 30, 2020
Frustration want to kill these PDP supporters and their paid writers. When Buhari hands over to another APC president from the south in 2023, I wonder how they will survive the anguish. Sai Baba got his 8 years while the ogogoro drunkard from otueke is now his houseboy. E pain them cheesy
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by TooMuchStuff: 6:24am On Oct 30, 2020
You don't expect a jihadist to run any democracy for your country. He's guided only by Islamic tenets of supremacy, hate for non Muslims, inequality, bloodletting, secrecy of intentions and general wickedness portrayed in Islam as being Strong and tough. Tueh

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by MajesticKris: 6:27am On Oct 30, 2020
My happiness right now, is that even those that voted for him are going through this same thing..

BUHARI came for revenge, someone that contested for 10yrs.. just imagine

How well do you thing he mrnas for you guys, for not giving him the chance all this time...

That man never forgives, he's a GENERAL.. AND A MUSLIM

3 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Flora2Sweet: 6:33am On Oct 30, 2020
True..

That man Never had good intentions for us...
What's so difficult,to yeld to our demands angry

Whats so difficult I'm dissolving this so called government, filled with lier's mad thief's, Rewrite the constitution, open borders cool

This Government is the worse of all..



MajesticKris:
My happiness right now, is that even those that voted for him are going through this same thing..

BUHARI came for revenge, someone that contested for 10yrs.. just imagine

How well do you thing he mrnas for you guys, for not giving him the chance all this time...

That man never forgives, he's a GENERAL.. AND A MUSLIM

1 Like

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Greatomotoy: 6:34am On Oct 30, 2020
ok
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by Daddysidhan: 6:35am On Oct 30, 2020
A particular insight I read on New York times in 2016 made me stop supporting buhari, All what was written in the article has come true.

4 Likes

Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by RuddyFusion(m): 6:39am On Oct 30, 2020
Too bad
Re: Buhari Is The Biggest Threat To Nigeria’s Democracy- Washington Post by daddytime(m): 6:44am On Oct 30, 2020
Of a truth, a lot is indeed wrong with our country, Nigeria, and calls for a re-evaluation and fixing.

From the heading, I was expecting to read from a neutral-person point of view, but that isn't the case here which will naturally leave room for the writer to be accused of not being objective or biased.


What a country.

Until we all go back to the basics, to agree on where we got it all wrong, even though we have an idea from when we got it wrong, we all still need to accept our respective culpabilities, no matter how damning or painful to the ears they might sound, and honestly agree to work towards mending the burnt bridges and rebirthing that much-eroded trust that is presently our bane as a nation/people, we shall continue to run around in circles with the same oppressive and vengeful system still in place because true repentance and forgiveness from all parties involved aren't being talked about.

Everyone is still stubbornly claiming to be politically right.

The present system and constitution upon which Nigeria is being run were deliberately crafted in that manner to be vengeful, spiteful, evil, lopsided, and generally rotten.

To have a glimpse of an idea about what I mean, ask yourself this; why is it that, those who seem and sound sane from the sidelines, and supposedly activists for the masses easily get to lose their voices and instead get swallowed up in the quagmire of everything decrepit within the system the moment they ascend the ladder on to the corridors of power?

The answer is simple, and it is akin to wearing a spotless babaringa or well-tailored suit to climb down sewage and expect not to reek of poo or get blemished. How possible can this be?

I keep telling people that the problem with Nigeria is fundamental, foundational, and structural. And until we begin to sincerely seek a way to address these issues, we'd only be piling up more blocks or floors on a structurally defect sky scrapper and the result will always be an eventual collapse besides the severe and un-healable injuries that'd have been sustained along the way.

If we don't come out, in all honesty, to discuss, seek genuine forgiveness from each other, we won't make any headway even with a million #Endsars protest or youth parties combined.

I've always thought the oldies in power are 100% the problem and as such, a chance for the youths at governance will rectify all the malaise we are presently faced with. But having tried in my little way to birth a youth movement to realize the above and getting stuck along the way, I was forced back to the drawing table to have a rethink, go back in time to history, and find out what the problem truly is.

I soon realized that the problem isn't the people that get into government perse, neither is it their qualification, age, religion, or region, but the system through which they come and upon which they operate is flawed and deliberately so to achieve a set goal.

A set goal which boils down to the history of this country, a history set on "never again", a history set on the perceived or actual betrayal of trust, a history built on " fool me once, you are the fool but fool me twice, then I'm the fool", in short, a history set on, "forgetting and forgiving is a sin".

We all need to know our history to some extent to understand where we are coming from, where we are presently, including how we got here, and ultimately, where we are headed, how we intend to get there, and of all, if we will ever get there.

To understand our history, it would be important to understand where we were as a people pre-independence, post-independence, the 1966 coup, the post-coup events, the counter-coup, the civil war, and the subsequent events that have led us here today.

We need to go back to understanding our respective regions without any bias, prejudices, arrogance, name-calling or seeing our individual regions superior to the other, et al

It is one thing to meet someone as a man or woman, feel a connect, mutual love based on trust and decide to become a couple, it is another thing to see a young girl, and decide to use all your powers including but not limited to religion, popularity, culture, and external backing to hold her to ransom and against her wish for marriage. While the first can be seen as mutual and free-willing, the latter is clearly forced, and will only breed resentment, rancor, hate, and where all these are present, retrogression naturally takes root.

We need to get rid of a system that breeds youths to power and perpetuate them into oldies in power without recourse to their downlines.

How do we go back to our pre-1966 era?
How do we rebuild the trust for one another which our actions and inactions have eroded over time?
How do we rebuild a nation where no part of the union will feel more superior politically, economically, educationally, or otherwise to the other, and rub it in without any remorse?

Always remember that if you feel justified in your myopic and selfish belief that whatever god you worship has blessed you beyond measure and above your neighbor intellectually and educationally, and as such reserve, the right to see that neighbor as a sub-human or second class human, do not be surprised when that neighbor also prays to his god and gets answered when he requests to be blessed with his own gift which could be the gift to be the custodian of "Power" to rule over those who mocks him for his inability to assimilate or learn the ways of the white man as expected by his supposedly more "intelligent" and turenci speaking neighbors who would end up becoming spoke people for the supposedly "backward and unintelligent" neighbors. I hope say somebody dey understand me here... grin

E get reason why no be everybody dey sabi the white man language or way because everybody get him own unique gift from the sharer of gifts. Apart from that, who tell una say dem dey share sense, kindness, humility or how to be a good human being for school, and above all, una know wetin dem dey call native intelligence? Lol

Me wey dey write so na WAEC I get reach oh, I no even know where the certificate dey sef.

Humility and respect for one another should be a good way to start in our quest for restructuring.

God and nature can not be mocked at the same time, and if you are a fellow youth who still believes that the issues of this country Nigeria are solely physical, you had better wake up and smell the coffee.

The spiritual angle to it all dwarfs the physical you can see.

If the truth dey always sweet you for ear, you never hear better truth be that.

The truth dey bitter for the most part and e dey pain person for ear, but if you listen to am come agree say na the truth, come implement or refuse to implement am accordingly, you go dey on your way to freedom and peace of mind.

We have a way to go my people.

I be Nigerian boy from Edo State oh!

Anybody wey ready to do him best to see how we fit take heal together and rescue whatever we can of our country, I dey ready make we work together with genuine sincerity of purpose.

(1) (2) (3) (Reply)

Nnamdi Kanu:Monday 26th July 2021 Would Decide The Fate Of Nigeria(video) / IMO Youths Covert State Major Roads To Football Pitch Ahead Buhari Visit. / Labour Decries Worsening Power Supply Across Nigeria

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 87
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.