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Politics / Nigeria Is Losing Whole Generation To Unemployment by Tips1126: 12:07pm On Jan 14, 2020
I found myself in the taxi park situated at Sango, Ibadan, very close to University of Ibadan and the Ibadan Polytechnic. My old jalopy had inexplicably broken down after I spent a pleasant afternoon with two of my grandsons. From experience, I know that mechanics are difficult to find on Sundays anywhere in Nigeria. The only place is the nearest motor park.

So, I did not wait for somebody to say “Let’s go there.” I went on my own. I got more than I expected and learnt a frightening lesson about the damage large scale graduate unemployment is doing to us and the dangers ahead. The electrician who would attend to me was away on another problem. I had to wait. The wait was worth it and I must share my experience with our political leaders and fellow Nigerians. What we do with this information is up to us. A young man came strolling through the park, not greeting anybody until he was called by the head mechanic. Everybody greeted him, welcoming him back to Ibadan.

Most were driven by very young people. It was time to investigate. First, there was no evidence of rapid economic development in the city which could account for this phenomenon. So, where was the money coming from? I added to my itinerary in Ibadan visits to various hot spots where the young gather for enjoyment – especially on weekends. My appointments were shifted to Fridays; after which I lodged in a hotel frequented by the Ibadan yahoo crowd. With eyes, ears and brain fully open, it did not take long to realise the source of the sudden influx of funds. Second, I was not, therefore, surprised when the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, started to make several arrests in Ibadan and most of the luxury cars vanished from Ibadan roads.

But, by mingling with the Yahoo community, without disclosing my identity, it was clear to me that Ibadan has become a major hub in Nigeria and West Africa for all sorts of ways to defraud banks and their customers; to divert corporate funds and to cripple accounting systems locally and globally. Third, the successes of the early invaders of private funds had attracted young people from all over Nigeria and even ECOWAS to Ibadan. They now share information about tricks which had succeeded and they have even formed several associations. Obviously, the youths of Nigeria have come to embrace the embezzlement of other peoples’ funds as a normal way of earning their living. The unemployed who were once treated with contempt is now looking down on their colleagues working for banks and even oil companies.

I have heard some proclaim that they can never again accept paid employment. “How much can they pay me which can match what I make now from Yahoo?” asked one of them one evening at a hotel near the Ijebu-Ode garage. Everybody around the table nodded in agreement. So, even a job, if offered now will be turned down in favour of living solely on crime. Finally, I had a meeting with Governor Fashola of Lagos State during his first term in office. I have had an article published in The Punch titled Survival of the unfittest.

I was then a Senior Lecturer and Consultant with the Nigerian Institute of Management, NIM, at Victoria Island. Living in Lagos Island gave me the opportunity to conduct some research into how Lagosians made their living. I was shocked to discover that close to 42 per cent of Lagosians lived either fully or partially on crime. Fashola disbelieved it when told. But, a recent casual survey has revealed a higher percentage of Lagos residents living on criminal activities. Information Technology, IT, has increased the avenues for criminals to earn a living. Our future is bleak when more and more young graduates seek employment with criminals and now reject honest work even if offered. requirements for 2020 jamb registration, Asked how long he will stay, his answer was “If business is good in Ibadan; otherwise I move on.” The following revelations came after he left. The young man, name withheld, had just been released from prison. There was a dispute regarding whether that was the second or third time he would be jailed at the age of about 29.

He is a graduate from one of Nigeria’s leading universities (again name withheld) with a second class upper degree. He faithfully completed his youth service in one of the northern states and then returned home to joblessness and the social stigma accompanying that low status. After writing hundreds of applications, visiting dozens of prospective employers, he finally landed a job with a company operating a Ponzi scheme – promising greedy and self-deluded Nigerians fantastic returns on their investments.

Six months after he started work, the Police raided the place and charged the operators for fraud. The chairman, who must have been tipped off about the raid, escaped arrest and vanished. The young man was the “manager” in the office and he was one of three employees caught, prosecuted and jailed. The poor man only got to know that what he thought was a God-sent job was actually a serious crime. Prison life exposed him to more criminals than anybody can experience outside our “correctional institutions”. when is jamb form 2020 coming out, In fact, all prisons correct is the ignorance of those sent to jail about the various ways of profiting from crime. He returned about fifteen months after and very quickly joined a crime syndicate whose members he had met in jail. Within a few days, he had money in his pocket. The good life – night clubs, spraying Fuji musicians, bedding girls at will, wearing gold necklaces, etc. – followed. Then, he was arrested again.

But, it was not clear whether or not he was convicted. He disappeared from Ibadan for almost a year. He returned as the kingpin of his own gang – among who were Yahoo boys. The survival of the unfittest “The Devil finds work for idle hands.” Let me move fast forward to arrive at the frightening aspect of this young man’s odyssey. He is now known to have taken under his wing several unemployed graduates of universities and polytechnics and he is training them. They now recruit new people and offer them “employment”.

Thus, the young man is no longer the sole threat to society anymore; he is actively cloning himself by taking some of our sons and daughters who years after graduating from tertiary institutions are still roaming the streets in search of work. It is quite possible that the young man and his “school for unemployed graduates” might not be the only one in Nigeria. Anyone who reads as many newspapers as I do will easily understand that once a social vice operates in one part of Nigeria which infects most peoples’ moral standing, it is most likely that there are others in other parts of Nigeria. Is Ibadan now the yahoo capital of Nigeria? Ibadan occupies a unique place in Nigeria’s tertiary education history. How to get 2020 jamb expo runs answers, It was the site of Nigeria’s first university. Together with Obafemi Awolowo (formerly University of Ife), there was a time almost half of Nigeria’s university students were in the Ibadan/Ife axis. It was also the Western regional capital. Unknown to most people, Ibadan is still within a short road trip from most federal, state and private universities in the South West. Unfortunately, Ibadan might soon become known as the epicentre of Yahoo operations in Nigeria. How did I reach that conclusion? For health, too complex to mention now, I found myself since the middle of last year visiting Ibadan more frequently than before. Suddenly, I noticed a major quantum jump in the number of luxury cars on Ibadan roads.

Most were driven by very young people. It was time to investigate. First, there was no evidence of rapid economic development in the city which could account for this phenomenon. So, where was the money coming from? I added to my itinerary in Ibadan visits to various hot spots where the young gather for enjoyment – especially on weekends. My appointments were shifted to Fridays; after which I lodged in a hotel frequented by the Ibadan yahoo crowd. With eyes, ears and brain fully open, it did not take long to realise the source of the sudden influx of funds. Second, I was not, therefore, surprised when the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, started to make several arrests in Ibadan and most of the luxury cars vanished from Ibadan roads.

But, by mingling with the Yahoo community, without disclosing my identity, it was clear to me that Ibadan has become a major hub in Nigeria and West Africa for all sorts of ways to defraud banks and their customers; to divert corporate funds and to cripple accounting systems locally and globally. Third, the successes of the early invaders of private funds had attracted young people from all over Nigeria and even ECOWAS to Ibadan. They now share information about tricks which had succeeded and they have even formed several associations. Obviously, the youths of Nigeria have come to embrace the embezzlement of other peoples’ funds as a normal way of earning their living. The unemployed who were once treated with contempt is now looking down on their colleagues working for banks and even oil companies.

I have heard some proclaim that they can never again accept paid employment. “How much can they pay me which can match what I make now from Yahoo?” asked one of them one evening at a hotel near the Ijebu-Ode garage. Everybody around the table nodded in agreement. So, even a job, if offered now will be turned down in favour of living solely on crime. Finally, I had a meeting with Governor Fashola of Lagos State during his first term in office. I have had an article published in The Punch titled Survival of the unfittest.

I was then a Senior Lecturer and Consultant with the Nigerian Institute of Management, NIM, at Victoria Island. Living in Lagos Island gave me the opportunity to conduct some research into how Lagosians made their living. I was shocked to discover that close to 42 per cent of Lagosians lived either fully or partially on crime. Fashola disbelieved it when told. But, a recent casual survey has revealed a higher percentage of Lagos residents living on criminal activities. Information Technology, IT, has increased the avenues for criminals to earn a living. Our future is bleak when more and more young graduates seek employment with criminals and now reject honest work even if offered.
Romance / Men Aren’t Programmed To Cope With A More Successful Wife! by Tips1126: 10:24pm On Jan 13, 2020
Some years back, Brannon Brockbank did the BBC’s Test the Nation quiz with his wife, Shirley. When it came to General Knowledge, Shirley scored higher than her husband. In public glare, Brannon threw his notebook and pen across the room and said that he was thick. His wife tried to convince him that people were clever in different ways.

They later went to bed. Next morning, Shirley found her husband dead on the living room floor after downing a bottle of Vodka and 40 painkillers! The coroner recorded an open verdict and commented: “He was a man who clearly had difficulty in coping with certain situations.”

A while back, at a pre-dinner party cocktail, Cecil, an executive director of a bank was in the midst of her male colleagues, enjoying an interesting conversation, a glass of bubbly in hand when she noticed her husband’s scowl of disapproval where he stood across the hall. “In seconds, he found his way to where I was,” said Cecil, “and pointedly ignored my colleagues, even as I tried to introduce them.

It is difficult to imagine a woman behaving in quite the same way as these insecure men, which begs the question: what is it with men and competition? “Men are genetically programmed to be competitive, whether we like it or not,” says business psychiatrist Nick Kambitisis. “They cannot handle it when the power differential changes and women are cleverer or better paid. They usually end the relationships quite quickly, which can be a problem for successful women who find it difficult to find partners.” He argues further that men are no longer sure what their role is.

According to him: “In earlier years, there were wars to fight, and tough ‘men only’ manufacturing jobs were available to help establish their social identities—their sense of who they were in society. But men are not sure of their social identify and more. They haven’t had long enough to adjust to the changes of the last 20 or 30 years. The only way relationships with a higher-earning female partner can work is if the couple doesn’t value money highly, and the man doesn’t construct his social identity around his earning power.

I'm leaving in a few minutes,’ he said rudely, ‘will any food be waiting for me at home?’ “I was really mad, but I kept my cool. He’d grudgingly agreed to join me at the dinner party and now he preferred to go home to eat instead of waiting for the lavish spread that was bound to follow. I wanted to ask him to go ahead and leave, the cook would give him dinner. But he’d create a scene and people were watching. It is tough being successful in a male-dominated profession without your husband making you look like a heartless dyke. requirements for jamb registration Even if I decided to stay, I knew the type of flak he would give me when I eventually showed up in the house.

“He has a real chip on his shoulder, that one. He was a successful insurance top executive before he decided to go it alone as an Insurance broker. He was fine at first but brokerage monetary licence renewal requirements forced him to change the status of his outfit to a consultancy; only to discover insurance consultancy was a glorified name for insurance agency and these were two a penny. Business has almost ground to a halt as the public is not as insurance -compliant as before—no thanks to the galloping inflation we currently have in the country.”

It is difficult to imagine a woman behaving in quite the same way as these insecure men, which begs the question: what is it with men and competition? “Men are genetically programmed to be competitive, whether we like it or not,” says business psychiatrist Nick Kambitisis. “They cannot handle it when the power differential changes and women are cleverer or better paid. They usually end the relationships quite quickly, which can be a problem for successful women who find it difficult to find partners.” He argues further that men are no longer sure what their role is.

According to him: “In earlier years, there were wars to fight, and tough ‘men only’ manufacturing jobs were available to help establish their social identities—their sense of who they were in society. But men are not sure of their social identify and more. They haven’t had long enough to adjust to the changes of the last 20 or 30 years. The only way relationships with a higher-earning female partner can work is if the couple doesn’t value money highly, and the man doesn’t construct his social identity around his earning power.

He states further that: “21st Century is a very tough time to be a man: we ignore the differences between the sexes at our peril. Males have 10 to 20 times as much of the hormone testosterone as women, which drive them to want to be powerful. But for the first time in human evolution, they are discovering they aren’t in control. video cloning app download Men measure their self worth by what they can achieve, while women measure theirs by the quality of their relationships. Men know the rules if they are competing against a man—you play hard ball and play rough, but they don’t know what to do when they find themselves competing against a woman.

“To compound things, the education system no longer responds to the natural male instinct to compete. Boys lack male role models, particularly in primary and secondary schools, where nearly all the teachers are female. Competition has been replaced by cooperation, learning facts replaced with empathizing with world suffering and it’s all become very caring and sharing. Boys are left in a void with no role models for maleness. The feminizing of education has divided boys into two groups—the soft, gentle types and the undisciplined bullies and school drop-outs.” Jenny is a highly successful woman who’d single-handedly raised her four children. “All of them studied abroad, thanks to the company I worked for, for nearly 25 years and which had a parent company based overseas,” she said.

“Apart from the points made by Kambitisis, we shouldn’t ignore the fact that changes in education can, in the long run, benefit men and women alike. The widening of girls’ choices and a commitment to true equality can, when correctly handled, broaden opportunities for boys as well. Male or female, our ambitions, talents, sensitivities and abilities are far more likely to be the product of social pressure and the atmosphere in which we are raised. “When my husband left all those years ago when only two of the children were in secondary schools, his grouse was that I didn’t have time for the family.

Well, what time would he have for his children by jumping ship? He remarried – to a school teacher who also had four children! ‘As to be expected, because I now earned more than he did, he stopped paying my children’s fees. We were barely civil to each other, and now three of the children live abroad and I run a thriving company with my only daughter. A ‘Loaded’ man does no wrong no matter his number of wives! “Late last year, my first son who just got married, called that his dad was with him. I couldn’t believe it. He had prostrate cancer and was being treated under the NHS since he still had his card.
It is difficult to imagine a woman behaving in quite the same way as these insecure men, which begs the question: what is it with men and competition? “Men are genetically programmed to be competitive, whether we like it or not,” says business psychiatrist Nick Kambitisis. “They cannot handle it when the power differential changes and women are cleverer or better paid. They usually end the relationships quite quickly, which can be a problem for successful women who find it difficult to find partners.” He argues further that men are no longer sure what their role is.

According to him: “In earlier years, there were wars to fight, and tough ‘men only’ manufacturing jobs were available to help establish their social identities—their sense of who they were in society. But men are not sure of their social identify and more. They haven’t had long enough to adjust to the changes of the last 20 or 30 years. The only way relationships with a higher-earning female partner can work is if the couple doesn’t value money highly, and the man doesn’t construct his social identity around his earning power.

Was the wife with him? According to my son, his crafty father told him I was still his legal wife as we never divorced. The second wife obviously abandoned him when he was retired early and what was left of the severance pay went on medication. Like the black sheep that he is, he’s now found his way back to the flock! But try telling him to see beyond his immediate resentment when he left me all those years ago and he wouldn’t have listened. Does it matter who of the sexes kill a snake as long as the snake is dead? when is 2020 jamb form coming out Once in a while, I wonder which was more humiliating for him, leaving his second wife with their four children or crawling back to a son he never cared for with a begging bowl?” Embarrassing moments to make you cringe with shame! What happens when your seemingly well-laid plans for a mind-blowing quality time with your partner goes awry? It is the worst nightmare even for the brave hearted.

Here are some hair-raising experiences gathered for your delight, of some of the brave victims of intimacy plans gone wrong)! “I’d met a lovely girl at a bachelor’s eve, said Steven, a 29-year-old information technologist; and she invited me into the house when I gave her a lift. One thing led to the other and we were going at things hammer and tongs. Mid-passion, her bedroom door flew open—and there barged in a horrified, middle-aged woman. “Mum,” the poor girl was petrified. Her mum made me get dressed and marched me, shame-faced out of the house. Needless to say, I never saw the girl again. For all of you out there whose mobile phones now rule your love lives, Kate’s experience might make you a bit more cautious. “My boyfriend and I have the most sophisticated of mobile phones,” she recalled, “and we were into sex-texting. We still do, but since an incident some nine months ago, we’re more careful.

I’d been transferred from head office to relieve another colleague some 100 kilometres away and the only time we could be together was over the weekend. Naturally, I missed him like crazy, especially our sizzling love life. “During one of our precious times together, Ken, my boyfriend, suggested we took some saucy photographs, with his mobile to remind him of how beautiful I was. how to upgrade jamb score One thing led to the other and we both stripped off and he started snapping recording every steamy second of our love-making. Later in the week, Ken sent the photos to my mobile, with raunchy, explicit captions. It was really a turn-on. I tell you. “After that, we constantly took saucy photos, then sent titillating texts. Our exciting secret certainly kept our love alive. Ken then bought me another sophisticated mobile and my mum wondered if she could have my old one.

I thought of Ken’s naughty messages in the memory and quickly assured mum she could have the phone after I’d cleared the memory. She would flip if she read any of the messages. So I deleted the lot and handed over the phone to her. A week later, my sister who still lived at home called me up. She was laughing hysterically. ‘I think you’d better get your phone back from Mum,’ she said between laughs. ‘You might have deleted all of Ken’s texts, but you forgot about those photographs.’ My heart nearly popped out of my chest. I was horrified. I had completely forgotten to delete the raunchy pictures.

It is difficult to imagine a woman behaving in quite the same way as these insecure men, which begs the question: what is it with men and competition? “Men are genetically programmed to be competitive, whether we like it or not,” says business psychiatrist Nick Kambitisis. “They cannot handle it when the power differential changes and women are cleverer or better paid. They usually end the relationships quite quickly, which can be a problem for successful women who find it difficult to find partners.” He argues further that men are no longer sure what their role is.

According to him: “In earlier years, there were wars to fight, and tough ‘men only’ manufacturing jobs were available to help establish their social identities—their sense of who they were in society. But men are not sure of their social identify and more. They haven’t had long enough to adjust to the changes of the last 20 or 30 years. The only way relationships with a higher-earning female partner can work is if the couple doesn’t value money highly, and the man doesn’t construct his social identity around his earning power.
Politics / Lagos Leaders Laud Launching Of ‘operation Amotekun by Tips1126: 11:34pm On Jan 12, 2020
Some community leaders in Lagos on Sunday lauded the South-West governors’ initiative of launching the “Operation Amotekun” to curb security challenges in the region. They told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that the new security outfit would help to strengthen the operations of regular security outfits.

NAN reports that governors in the region had on Jan. 9 launched the security outfit in Ibadan. Commenting, Mr Bisi Yusuf, a member, Lagos State House of Assembly, said the essence of government was to provide security for the citizenry.

Yusuf, representing Alimosho Constituency 1, said: “Once there is security, there is going to be progress and development in the society. “The establishment of ‘Operation Amotekun’ will help to strengthen national security. “I want the Federal Government to also encourage other geopolitical zones to establish such operations to boost security in the country.”

He said the establishment of the security outfit was not political, adding that it would enhance the protection of lives and property of the citizens. The lawmaker urged residents in the region to cooperate with the security outfit to ensure it achieved its purpose. “Amotekun cannot do it alone, residents must work with them to detect suspected criminals in the community. How to get 2020 jamb expo runs “And when residents see the effectiveness, people, organisations and corporate bodies will not hesitate to contribute toward its progress.

No amount of money is too much for security. “As time goes on, there will also be Amotekun Security Trust Fund where people and corporate bodies will want to contribute to its progress like the Lagos State Security Trust Fund,” Yusuf said. Contributing, Chief Olayinka George, the Baale of Karaole in New Oko-Oba area of Lagos, told NAN that such development would curb security challenges in all the nooks and crannies of the communities.

George, also, the Secretary, Council of Baales, Ojokoro Local Council Development Area (LCDA), urged the individuals to be involved in assisting the security operations for the betterment of the communities. “Amotekun should be well empowered and monitored to allow them perform their duties effectively without complain,” how to upgrade jamb score 2020 the Baale said. Also, Alhaji Tajudeen Quadri, Lagos State Chairman, Community Development Advisory Council (CDAC), told NAN that such development was good for the region.

According to him, both Federal and State Governments are trying their best in terms of securing the citizens, but it seems their best is not enough with our population. “The number of policemen now cannot cover the states and the various communities.

“The police cannot take care of crimes nowadays, and for governors to come together to form the security outfit, it is a welcome development,” he said. According to him, the governors explained that the operation will work with the Police for direction and monitoring to ensure they operate effectively.

He said that the rate of criminal activities within the community would reduce and as well prevent crime from taking place because the residents were now involved in checking crimes and criminals. NAN reports that the new security outfit would assist in tackling kidnapping and criminal activities in the South-West.

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