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Showing posts with label ARTICLES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ARTICLES. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 January 2018

OPEN LETTER TO KOGI STATE GOVERNOR OVER UNPAID SALARIES BY ESTHER OVAIYIOZA JOHN

AN OPEN LETTER TO HIS EXCELLENCY ALHAJI YAHAYA ADOZA BELLO THE EXECUTIVE  GOVERNOR  OF KOGI STATE.

Your Excellency, greetings and top of the day to you, I would have love to talk to you in private but I know I may never have that privilege.
I have carefully thought about this and since there is no better forum of getting an audience  with  you I chose to do this.
My major point is to bring to your knowledge the non-payment of my Dad pension

Thursday, 27 October 2016

OPEN LETTER TO ALL MMM HATERS


Fear has made a lot of people so comfortable with poverty, they are so eager to see MMM crash. Why? Because they want everyone to be on the same poor level.....The govt has never told us the truth about anything, but people choose to believe them about what they said of MMM???.....

Saturday, 1 October 2016

Details about MMM NIGERIA and How to Join





I have come to introduce to you a means of earning that I have been experimenting and I will like to let you know that it has proven its worth to be legit and 99.9% less risk. I know some of you would ask what about the remaining 0.1% well I would simply say if you don't follow the simple rules that govern this platform.



DO YOU NEED A PROFITABLE BUSINESS IDEA YOU CAN START WITH A VERY LITTLE CAPITAL?


Am sure your answer will be YES!!!


Now:



Are You Looking For An Extra Source Of Livelihood?

Do You Need A Legitimate Business You Can Run?

If Your Answer Is Yes To Any Of These Questions!


Then Pay Attention To This Information


With This Unique Business Idea, You Can Realize any month you want to archive and all depends on your willingness and ability In Pure Profits Within 30 Days Or Less If You invest wisely.



Requirement for Running this Business:

1.A working email address preferably gmail account


2.A functional Bank account and by functional i mean, an account that sends you alert each time you have a transaction.

3. And of course internet access otherwise we won’t call it an online Business.



Besides all these; you need to possess a personal attribute which are not limited to;




1. Honesty



2. Integrity



3. Willingness to help others.



4. Flexibility of mind to accept positive change.



5.Focus and any other attribute that successful people requires.



MMM is a Mutual Fund Community which works on the principle of people helping one another. The ideology is premised on the fact that there is so much gap between the rich and the poor and the only way to bridge this, is to look for a common ground where this gap can either be eliminated over time or minimally reduced. MMM stands for Mavrodi Mundial Movement. It’s a system designed in Russia and works in over 115 Countries. The official website for Nigeria is www.nigeria-mmm.net, you can check it out.


In MMM we have two major Terminologies and they are:


1. PH-this means PROVIDE HELP To provide help means to invest but it is seen as a donation and whatever help you provide will have 30% of it added at the end of 30 days. It is guaranteed and it is 99.9% fail proof.



2. GH-this means to GET HELP Getting help is used to imply withdrawal of your money including the interest after 30days in the system. You can only GH if you have PHed before.



Worthy of note is the fact that you are not paying money to any company or me. Like i said MMM is a system and it only attaches member-member that is member that is PHing to another member that is GHing.


Now lets have a quick analogy:


Let say you PH 20,000 on 29th of July; by 28th of August 30% interest on your capital will be 6,000. You can easily calculate your 30% by multiplying whatever amount you want to PH by 0.3 ie 20,000 * 0.3=6000. So at the end of the 30days you will GH 26,000.

PS:

I am using 20,000 because the system gives $20 (about 7000) bonus to new members who are PHing for the first time and if you add it to the 26,000 yo will have 33,000.



Sounds too good to be true right? well i am sorry to disappoint your doubts-its the gospel truth and a lot of people are already enjoying this.

NOW YOU KNOW WHAT MMM NIGERIA IS ABOUT SO LETS GET YOU REGISTERED

STEP 1: click here to Signup

Sunday, 15 May 2016

Social Media And The English Language By Reuben Abati


An article written by Reuben Ababti.
I get confused these days reading many of the posts on social media, and text messages sent through cell phones, because of the kind of new English that young people now write. The English language is without doubt quite dynamic. In the last 200 years, it has lent itself to many innovations, as cultural, religious, and situational codes have transformed the language and extended the dictionary, with new words and idioms.
The kind of new English being written by twitter and what’s app users, particularly young people is however so frightening and lamentable, because it is beginning to creep into regular writing. Texting and tweeting is producing a generation of users of English, (it is worse that they are using English as a second language), who cannot write grammatically successful sentences. I was privileged to go through some applications that some young graduates submitted for job openings recently and I was scared.

This new group of English users does not know the difference between a comma and a colon. They have no regard for punctuation. They mix up pronouns, cannibalize verbs and adverbs, ignore punctuation; and violate all rules of lexis and syntax. They seem to rely more on sound rather than formal meaning. My fear is that a generation being brought on twitter, Facebook, instagram and what’s app English is showing a lack of capacity to write meaningful prose, or communicate properly or even think correctly.

To an older generation who had to go through the rigour of being told to write proper English, and getting punished severely for speaking pidgin or vernacular or for making careless mistakes of grammar and punctuation, the kind of meta-English now being written by young people can be utterly confusing. The irony is that it makes sense to the young ones, and they can conduct long conversations in this strange version of the English language. I’d not be surprised if someday a novel gets written in this new English, which seems like a complete bastardization.

You may have come across the meta-English that I am trying to describe. It is English in sound, but in appearance it has been subjected to the punishment of excessive abbreviation, compression and modification. Hence, in place of the word “for”, you are likely to see “4”, and so the word “forget” becomes “4get”, or “4git”, “fortune” is written as “4tune”, “forever” as “4eva”. The word “see” has been pruned down to a single alphabet “C”, same with “you” now rendered as “u”. In effect, you are likely to read such strange things as “cu” or “cya” meaning “see you.”

Some other words have suffered similar fate: “straight” is now written as “Str8”, “first” as “fess”; “will” as “wee” (I can’t figure out why), “house” is now “haus”; “help” has been reduced to “epp”; (“who have you epped?”) instead of the phrase “kind of”, what you get is “kinda”, “money” is simply “moni.”, the computer sign ”@” has effectively replaced the word “at”; “come” is now “cum”, the conjunction “and” is represented with an “n” or the sign &, “that” is now “dat”, “temporary” is likely to be written as “temp”, “are” as “r”, “your” as “ur” “to” as “2”, “take” as “tk.” In place of “thank you”, you are likely to find “tank u”, “with” is now “wit” or “wif”, and “sorry” is commonly written as “sowie”. I have also seen such expressions as “Hawayu?” (“How are you?”), or “Wia r d u?” (“where are the you?”). The you? The me? The us?

By the time these new words get combined in what is supposed to be a sentence, you’d have a hard time looking for the sense beyond the sound. On many occasions, I have had to call the sender of such messages to explain what he or she is trying to communicate in simple English, and if it is on social media, I still often call for help. In recent times, I have encountered such messages as “This kidney gist is giving me heddik. I wee hold ya hand if you need kidney love you till we find a miraku. It kent happun pass dat.” Try and help translate that into correct English. And how about this:
“As fuel don add moni, everybody don park dem moto for haus.” Pidgin English? Well, may be. Or this: “B/c we d p’pl thought #fuelscarcity was temp. with the fuel hike policy, high cost of living is now a perm cond’n in Ng.”

Oftentimes, this special prose arrives amidst a number of other confusing symbols, emoticons, memes, acronyms and abbreviations, looking like a photographic combination of English and hieroglyphics. Some of the more popular abbreviations include Lmao (“laughing my ass off”) lol (“laughing out loud”), lwkmd (“laughter wan kill man die”), stfu (“shut the fuck up”), omg (“Oh my God”), rofl (“Rolling on the floor with laughter”), uwc (“you are welcome”), smh (“shaking my head”) brb (“be right back”), #tbt (“throw-back Thursday”), #WCW (“Woman Crush Wednesday”), and such new words as “bae”, “boo”, “finz”, “famzing”, “Yaaay”. Not to talk of such expressions as “You should mute me now”; “get wifed-up”, “birthday loading”, “you hammer”, “kwakwakwakwa.”

This paring down of language gets really worse when it is further reduced to mere jargon that is understood only by the young people who are adepts at it. You can take a look at your child’s text messages or BB or what’s app and not be able to make any sense out of the jumble of incorrect English, graphics, memes and pure lingo. The danger is that sexually suggestive conversations can be carried out by two young persons, texting each other, and a dinosaur-parent would have no idea.

What can any parent make out of the following for example: “10Q” (it means, thank you), “1174” (this means nude club), “121” (one to one), “143” (I love you), “182” (I hate you), “1daful” (Wonderful), “2BZ4UQT” (Too busy for you, cutey), “420” (Marijuana), “53X” (Sex); “9” (Parent is watching), “PAW” (Parents are watching); “99” (Parent is no longer watching), “ADIDAS” (All Day I Dream About Sex); “aight” (all right), “AITR” (Adult In The Room); “AML” (All My Love); “B4N” (Bye for now), “BF” (Best Friend) and “BFF” (Best Friend Forever).

This resort to abbreviations, lingo and special English reveals certain things about the growing up generation. There is a fascination with speed- when they get on their phones and other appliances, they want to get the message out of the way as quickly as possible, and they have a lot to say. There is emphasis on secrecy and privacy: that’s why there is so much concern about third party presence.

Many of the children who have become socialized into this new mode of communication are not always able to differentiate between correct and incorrect English, and this is why parents and teachers must be concerned. It is possible to assume that the teaching of morphology and syntax in our various schools is no longer as rigorous as it used to be.

Anyone who was brought up in those days on a compulsory diet of Brighter Grammar By Ogundipe, Eckersley and Macaulay and Practical English by Ogundipe and Tregdigo) would find it difficult to write this new English being made popular on social media. It would feel like an act of murder. Teachers and parents have a responsibility to ensure that their children are able to learn the very minimum of skills: the ability to communicate in decent prose. Some persons may well argue that this may not be the most important of skills required to live in a modern age, or that it doesn’t really matter in the long run, but I really doubt if a time will ever come when the business of communication will be reduced to a mastery of abbreviations and lingo.

The ability to write clearly strengthens a person’s ability to think clearly and to communicate effectively. It should not be surprising that many young persons these days, seem more at home in the world of gadgets and electronic appliances. They are forever texting or playing computer games and trapped in the electronic, virtual, space. They live both online and offline, spending a better part of their day on websites, thus, their emotional development is tied to this reality. Most parents lack the knowledge of what happens in the social media, and while some parents are trying to learn very fast, a knowledge gap still exists between them and their more digitally savvy children. But this should not result in the abdication of responsibility.

The abuse of the English language, and the inability to write well, is certainly not the only risk that an obsession with social media poses for young people. Parents also need to worry about addictiveness, exposure to inappropriate content and liaisons: all kinds of pedophiles and sexual predators operate online looking for innocent victims and luring them with sweet lingo. There are bullies too, harassing and stalking their targets. Under ordinary circumstances, parents have a duty to teach their children basic

Tuesday, 3 May 2016

PRESS RELEASE: ONE Launches “Make Naija Stronger” Health Campaign



• Nigerian Government must keep its promise to address health crises and drastically improve the country’s health systems

• Everyday 2000 Nigerian children and 158 women die because of poor access to basic healthcare

• National Health Act could save the lives of over 3 million mothers, newborns and children under-5 by 2022 if fully implemented

• Campaign launched on 15th anniversary of Abuja Declaration

Monday, 18 April 2016

Saraki: The man who dug his own grave

At the inception of this administration, the president and the ruling party, APC made it known to all that they don’t need a senate president with excess baggage.
They don’t need a senate president with outstanding corruption cases because they want to maintain a neat leadership devoid of personalities with ongoing corruption cases.
Ordinarily, Senator George Akume was supposed to emerge as the senate president in the sense that he was the senate minority leader when his party (APC) was in the opposition.
With his party coming to power, he was supposed to be automatically elevated to the senate presidency.
His ambition was cut short after the president insisted that his number three man must be devoid of any outstanding corruption case .
Akume has an outstanding case with EFCC.
Seeing the danger ahead and also not wanting to go against his party wish, the political field Marshall, the JAGABAN BORGU, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who had supported the Akume candidature, did a political somersault and adviced his friend, Akume to deter his ambition and transfered his support to the party’s preferred choice being Senator Lawan of Yobe State.

Wednesday, 23 March 2016

Adblabla Launch: Get 1000+ websites talking About Your Business from Day One!






Since inception in December 2015 Adblabla.com has grown into Nigeria’s first and biggest Free Online Advertising Network boasting over 1500 sites and delivering over 500,000 impressions of free ads everyday.
Historically, we have allowed website owners to advertise whatever they choose on our network for free.
?
Today we are going beyond website Owners!

we are proud to introduce our latest service
Adblabla Lunch.
Imagine needing to promote your products, services and events and rather than putting your sponsored posts on 1 or 2 sites you are able to put it on up to a thousand sites at the same time.

Adblabla Launch is a service that allows you to place sponsored posts simultaneously across our large network of sites at a heavily discounted rate. Besides placing the sponsored posts, our very flexible setup options allows you to structure your marketing campaign according to specific markets, number of sites and price levels.

The first of its kind in Nigeria, this service is set to change the way in which we consider online digital advertising opportunities in Nigeria.

In addition to the expanded reach you will enjoy because of the huge web presence you start off with, some other benefits you enjoy by using Adblabla Launch includes

Significant visibility on Google. This is almost guaranteed because of the huge number of sites that will talk about your project from day one!
You enjoy a viral effect. Social media algorithms are designed to prioritize contents which are replicated several times. This means your brand will have a higher chance of appearing on as many news feeds as possible.
Possibility to trend on twitter. Depending on what is trending for the day, yours may trend as well
Cost. Our pricing is highly flexible. The more sites you choose, the cheaper it becomes. You could pay
Higher probability of success. Statistically, your chance of finding new customers is higher when you are all over the internet versus just on one site or two sites

In addition to enjoying the aforementioned benefits, by using Adblabla launch to get ahead of the game, you also get two weeks of Free Banner Advertisement on the entire Adblabla Network

So Who is Adblabla Launch For ?

The service is for anyone who may or may not have a website. It is for everyone any business who has something to sell. Some of things you can promote using Adblabla includes

Products or Service Promotions
Musical Video Promotions
Press Release Publications
Get Product reviews from blogs
Get Blogs to run a product promo
Invite people to an event
Public Announcements

What’s Next
Go to  Adblabla.com/lunch to check out more details and to start your campaigns now

Sunday, 14 February 2016

When Love Isn’t Enough- By Reuben Abati


It is that time of the year again in the month of February, when there is so much talk and excitement about romance and love, all in preparation for that special day dedicated to love, romance and dalliance, this very day, Valentine’s Day.  The romantic propaganda can be really oppressive. In the past few days for example, GSM service providers have insisted that the only ring tone that fits this season is the one that forces you to think of romance, just in case you may have forgotten. I didn’t solicit for the ringtone, but I got it all the same and I have had to listen to it, on other people’s lines, and I guess it doesn’t come free.

The GSM companies are making money selling Valentine messages. And that is the point: the frenzy over Valentine’s Day is commercial, capitalistic, and it is of course, global.  In the United States, even the White House is not left out, with the First Lady composing a poem for President Barack Obama on this special occasion. It is all mushy, lovey-dovey stuff. The eventual beneficiaries are the business outfits that produce printing cards, shirts, chocolates, cakes, the restaurants that will probably remain open till Feb. 15, not to talk of the companies that will benefit from the many phone calls, e-mails and text messages.

Sometimes, I find Valentine’s Day a bit suffocating, feminist, and discriminatory. This year’s celebration falls on a Sunday, otherwise it would also have been observed in schools including nursery and kindergarten schools. On a school day, all the pupils would have been instructed to dress up in red colour and to bring gifts for their friends.  The children are innocent but their teachers, especially in the private schools, initiate them into this annual ritual. Last year, there was so much red colour blinding the eyes on the streets. I also saw old men and women, even widows, joining the celebration, refusing to be left out of their share of the love in the air.  And later in the day of course, the restaurants usually take over and the ultimate show of chivalry is for a man to be seen taking his Valentine for candle-lit dinner, or to go on his knees and pop the question, or to exchange wedding vows on this special day.

Sunday, 31 January 2016

'It takes a man who has the fear of God to relinquish power so easily' - former President Jonathan



On the 28th of March, 2015, after a tension filled presidential election, Muhammadu Buhari emerged as the new president of Nigeria and Goodluck Jonathan conceded victory to his successor.

In a dinner organised in his honour in Geneva, Switzerland last week by Cercle Diplomatique, Jonathan poured out his heart concerning a lot of issues ranging from his foray into politics, Nigeria's well being and why he conceded to President Buhari immediately after the election. He talked about why he made that  historic telephone to congratulate Buhari even when the results were still being tallied.

His full statement during the dinner has just been released and its very revealing! Read it after the cut...




He began: “As you can see, I have not come here with a prepared speech, since what I consider appropriate for this occasion is to just thank you all, members and everyone else in attendance, in a few words, for the dinner and the award, in order not to make the evening look boring. But having said that, I am still tempted to note that if I were to present a written speech, the title, would probably have been “Power Tussle in Africa: A Stumbling Block to Economic Growth.” When Mr. Robert Blum, your President, made his very interesting opening remarks, he introduced me as the former President of Nigeria. He was absolutely correct.

"However, I believe that not many of you here know that the story of my foray into politics has a peculiar ring to it. I entered politics in 1998 and, barely one year after, I got elected as the Deputy Governor of Bayelsa, my state. I later became Governor, Vice President and eventually got elected as the President of my country.
I remain the only leader in my country to have travelled that route.

"As the President, I served out my first term but, as Mr. Blum had pointed out earlier, I lost the bid to be re-elected. I am encouraged by the fact that many of you here appreciated my decision not to reject or contest my loss at the polls, not even in the courts as many people had expected.''

"Again, I have to agree with Blum that it was not an easy decision to take. This is because the allure of power and the worries about what would become of you after leaving office constitute an irresistible force. It has an attraction so controlling and powerful that it takes a man who has the fear of God and who loves his people and nation to relinquish power so easily in Africa.

"I was actually in that valley on March 28, 2015. I never knew that the human brain had the capacity for such enhanced rapid thinking. One hundred and one things were going through my mind every second. My country was at the verge of collapse.
 The tension in the land was abysmally high and palpable, in the months leading to the election. The country became more polarised more than ever before, such that the gap between the North and the South and between Christians and Muslims became quite pronounced.

"In fact, it became so disturbing that some interest groups in the United States began to predict indeed, many Nigerians did buy into this doomsday prophesy as they began to brace themselves for the worst.

 As the President, I reminded myself that the Government I led had invested so much effort into building our country. I worked hard with my top officials to encourage Nigerians and non-Nigerians to invest in our country to be able to provide jobs and improve the lives of our people.

"We worked hard to grow our economy and to improve and bring Nigeria up as the biggest economy in Africa, with a GDP of about half a trillion dollars”. “Should I then, for the love of power, watch Nigeria slide into a theatre of war, with my fellow country men and women dying, and many more pouring into other nations in Africa and beyond, as refugees? Should I hang on to power and tussle with my challengers, while the investments of hard working citizens of the world go down the drain? I then said to myself, NO!''

I promised my God that I will not let that fate befall Nigeria under my watch, hence the historic telephone call I put through to congratulate my challenger even when the results were still being tallied. I believe that for a country to be great, both the leaders and the led must be prepared to make sacrifices. This is why, everywhere I go, I always advise that the new generation of African leaders must think differently. We can no longer afford to wilfully sacrifice the blood of our citizens on the altar of dangerous partisan politics. It is not worth it.

This reminds me of one of my campaign statements to the effect that my ambition was not worth the shedding of the blood of any Nigerian. Some people took it then as mere political slogan but I knew that I meant it when I said it. ''We must all fight for the enthronement of political stability in Africa, for in it lies the panacea for sustainable growth and development. For Africa to record the kind of advancement that will be competitive and beneficial to our citizens, we must have stable states supported by strong institutions.
That appears to be the irreducible minimum that is common to all developed societies. Africa’s political odyssey can distinctly be categorised into three eras, and probably another that would later signpost its classification as a developed continent”.

"Some may doubt this, but it is no fluke that Africa is growing and rising. However I will admit before you here that we still have challenges. That is why people like us did all we could to ensure that Nigeria, the biggest black nation on earth, would not drift into anarchy because such a situation would have spelt doom for the rest of the continent. It would have affected not just Nigeria alone, but the GDP and economy of the entire West Africa. And if the economy of West Africa crashes, it would definitely affect the performance of the economy of the whole of Africa.

As you know, the GDP of Africa is less than three trillion dollars, with only six African countries able to boast of nominal GDP above $100 billion. Even for those in this ‘elite’ category, you can’t really say that they are rich countries. Apart from maybe South Africa that has an industrially competitive economy, the rest are still mainly commodity exporting countries. Even the case of that of South Africa is not very encouraging, because we have a situation which we could refer to as a first world economic performance, yet the ordinary people live the life of the people in the so called third world.''

In the case of Nigeria which is even the biggest economy on the continent, the reality is that we have an unenviable per capita GDP of $3,203, which is the World Bank average for a period covering 2011-2015.'' “Even then, I still believe that Africa has a bright future; a promising prognosis that is supported by the fact that the continent remains a very fertile and attractive territory that yields irresistible returns on investments.

 I believe that in the next few years many more big investors will be jostling to come to Africa, if only we will do the right thing. The process of getting it right has already started with a democratic and increasingly democratising Africa. But we have to deepen and strengthen our democratic credentials through regular, free and fair elections. This will in turn bring about the stability necessary to improve the infrastructure that promotes rapid economic growth. These are the guarantees that would lead us into the next period which I would like to call the era of a developed Africa. I have no doubt in my mind that we will get there some day.

"I will be applying myself diligently to two key areas. First, is to work for good governance by promoting credible and transparent elections. This will bring about the strengthening of our institutions and the enthronement of stability. I also believe that there is the urgent need to create jobs for our teeming young population. This is another area that will be receiving my attention.

I recall that the Vice President of your association made reference in his speech to my achievements in that regard through what we called Youth Enterprises with Innovation (YouWin) and the Nagropreneur programme which encouraged young people to go into agriculture. I believe more programmes like that should be established to promote youth entrepreneurship. That way, we reduce their reliance on paid employment. We will not only teach them to become entrepreneurs, they will also acquire the capacity to employ other people. We will be paying special attention to this segment of our society, especially young people and women.

We will develop programmes that will inculcate in them business skills to be able to set up micro, small and medium enterprises. We shall assist them to access take-off grants when they acquire the relevant skills and capacities. There are many areas that they can go into; food processing, light manufacturing and the services sector are just some of them. I can tell you from experience that this works. As we speak, Our Nagropreneur programme, to promote youth involvement in agriculture value chain, is being scaled up by the African Development Bank presently. It is already being replicated in 19 African countries because of the success of the programme in Nigeria.

I invite all of you here today, cabinet ministers, diplomats and private sector people to remain committed to the cause of improving lives, especially those lives in Africa, and making our world a better place. For those of you that will be sharing in this vision for Africa, I assure you that you will not be disappointed. I am very optimistic that if we encourage young men and women in this continent to develop businesses of their own, the story of Africa will change within 10 years”.

Wednesday, 21 October 2015

8 Things That Will Happen If You Break Up With Social Media


Before Mark Zuckerberg thought of Facebook, we were still connecting with our family and friends. Before the era of social media, life was lived, the sky was still blue, and the sun still shone. If you break up with social media, the moon will not fall down, the sun will not stop shinning, every blade of grass will still be different and every snowflake will still be unique, but here are 8 things thatwillhappen if you break up with social media.

1. You will be happier and more content with life.

In the virtual reality of social media, it’s very easy to compare your life with your colleagues and belittle yourself. We want to be like the other person, we like how their body looks, we love the things they have, life seems to be going forward for them while our life seems to be at a standstill. They got that dream job while we are still jobless. They visited the country on our bucket list. They got married and had a beautiful baby and our life pales in comparison.On social media, everyone posts their nicest pictures and best moments. It is highly unlikelythat anyone is going to put their bad moments on display for all to see. If someone travels around the world on holidays, there will probably be a picture of it on social media, but if their landlord should kick them out for not paying rent, they probably won’t mention it online. So, why compare your life to the virtual life you see on social media and feel miserable? It’s like comparing your worst moments with everyone else’s best. Breaking up with social media will make you happier and more content with your life. There will not only be no more pictures and posts to compareyour life to, but you will realize that your life is not actually so bad.

2. You will be more productive.

You will suddenly realize that a lot can be doneinstead of scrolling up and down on social media. You will find ways to make your dreamsmore real. Have you always wanted to learn a new language or play the piano or guitar? Instead of wasting time on social media, you can actually invest that time into your dreams and watch them become reality. At work, you can get a lot done instead of peeping on your phone every now and then. It can be very easy to deceive yourself by trying to limit your socialmedia use, but how many times has a planned 15 minutes on social media turned into 2 hours? You don’t fight temptation, you avoid it.

3. You will be grateful for your life.

Breaking up with social media will let you see the reality of the world. You will be more grateful for your life instead of being jealous and envious of the lives of others on social media. You will realize that your life is awesome, that you don’t need to let the ten things you don’t have that your social media friend does have prevent you from giving thanks for how lucky you’ve been in life.If you have food, clothing, and a roof over your head, you are richer than 75% of the people in the world today. If you have savings in the bank, you are in the top 8% of the world’s wealthy today. If you woke up this morning with your health, you are more blessed than the1 million people who will not survive this week. If you have not experienced the pain of starvation, you are more fortunate than 500 million people in the world today.When you log out of social media and log in to life, it will not be long for you to realize that what you have now and are taking for granted is someone’s prayer request. Whilst you envy your friend’s Ferrari on social media, someone is busily praying and fasting for your Toyota.

4. You will have an improved relationship with your family and friends.

Social media claims to be connecting you with your family and friends, but is it really? How often have you found yourself on social media while the real people around you go unnoticed?How often do you catch yourself scrolling up and down on social media instead of talking to the human next to you? Social media may claim to connect you with family and friends, but in reality it disconnects you from them. When you break up with social media, you will realize that calling, talking, and having dates without social media interruption is a great way to bond and connect with your family and friends.

5. You will see how beautiful the world is.

I bet you think you have seen enough of the world to appreciate its beauty. But, if you can put your phone in your pocket and not distract yourself with notifications, it won’t be long before you see that birds are not always white, some are actually pink. We are only here for a very limited time. Instead of spending most of that time on social media, we can spend it visiting the beach, the forest, and appreciating nature. At least then, if we die and go to the next world and we are asked how the earth looks, we can tell about how beautiful it really is.

6. You will be innovative.

When you are constantly distracted with social media, your brain is shut to real life issues and you become less innovative. When you break up with social media, you will be become more innovative and improve your life. Perhaps you need more money, but merely wishing for it doesn’t earn you any extra cash. If you drop the phone and stop distracting yourself with social media, an idea on how to earn that money might come to you.

7. You will be smarter and wiser.

When you log out of social media and log in to real life, you will spend your time wisely on useful things, like books and great websites that actually improve your life and enrich you with knowledge to make you a better person. You can find time and exercise instead of perusing social media and complaining about how you never find the time to hit the gym. That time spent on Facebook could have been used on a great workout. Whilst others are wasting their lives on social media, you will be reading a life-changing book, hitting the gym, being innovative, and making your dreams come true.

8. Your future self will be grateful.

The future is not bright until you deliberately polish it today. If you do not give up unhealthy habits that get you nowhere, your future is going to be full of regrets about the things you could have done and didn’t do simply because you were too busy on social media. If you give up social media today and invest the time into your dreams, your future self will be happy thatyou had the time to learn Spanish, play the piano, to start that business or write that book.

Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Exposed: How Senator Saraki,Lamido Sanusi, Lai Alabi Fraudulently Acquired Intercontinental Bank Plc

According to THEWILL  A letter written by founder and deposed Group Managing Director of defunct Intercontinental Bank Plc, Dr. Erastus Akingbola, to President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan details how suspended governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Senator Bukola Saraki and Mahmoud Lai Alabi fraudulently took over the bank.

Sunday, 12 July 2015

Abatemi-Usman’s Four-year sojourn in the senate by Michael Jegede

                          https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgFaHB0MgmOg5T_31IEHxcXn4IqYA9CDRUBjXPAo6t6HYsCBw3ZiWaKL-bmnvGmAD_dX_bF9aOuAR4XZaxOqPCZ69UMEc8ZBBQTUeqr7Pp_9rWCQwexanb26fHL9oQQcaI9w-j_MwoMIbc/s640/Sen-Nurudeen-Abatemi-Usman.jpg
 Upon his election as a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in 2011 to represent the good people of Kogi Central Senatorial District, not many thought he was going to make any impact in the Senate, perhaps, because of his relatively young age. He was just about 39 years old then.

Some people had called him a “small boy”, wondering what he would have to say or do in the midst of men who are old enough to be his father when important national issues are being discussed either on the floor of the Senate or at the committee level.

 However, Senator Nurudeen Abatemi-Usman, an aspirant for the forthcoming governorship election in Kogi State on the platform of All Progressives Congress (APC) proved his mettle and did not disappoint his people who gave him the mandate to be their representative at the Upper Chamber of the Federal Legislature.

It was evidently a fruitful outing for a man who discharged his duties and responsibilities as a lawmaker in the Red Chamber with every sense of commitment, dedication and rectitude.

 Notwithstanding the fact that he was the youngest in the seventh Senate,

Friday, 10 July 2015

Six Campaign Promises Buhari Will Never Fulfill


Politicians often try to outdo each other by making promises they can’t keep and do not intend to keep, in order to win votes before an election.

 That is just how politics works around the world. That is what happened this year too when we had the presidential election. Both former president, Goodluck Jonathan and incumbent, Muhammadu Buhari, made outrageous promises as they campaigned round the country.

 A lot of those promises were unrealistic and some even egregious, like when the All Peoples’ Congress (APC) promised to create three million jobs in a year. But at the time people really wanted a change and so they voted for them anyway.

 The president might make things better before his tenure ends in four years, but he’ll probably never fulfil most of the promises he and his party made to the people in the campaigns. Look at these six promises for instance.

1. Create 720,000 jobs in one year. 
Muhammadu Buhari promised to create 20,000 jobs per state in a year for people with basic education. It is obvious now that the government does not have a clear plan as to how they are going to accomplish this ambitious goal.

 It is almost two months already since they took charge and yet they have not rolled out any job program that could whip up 720,000 jobs nationwide. If you want to create nearly a million jobs within a year, you don’t wait half the time before you come up with a program. It is very clear that the government has no serious intention to pursue this jobs goal and that they will not produce 720,000 jobs this year or the next.

2. Pay N5,000 monthly to the 25 million poorest Nigerians.

 Let us do the quick maths first. That’s N125 billion every month and N1.5 trillion for a year. That’s a load of money.

 First up, how does the government intend to determine the 25 million poorest who will be receiving the aid? In a country where records are mostly unreliable and anyone can easily dupe the system, attempting to throw N1.5 trillion around the country is a fantasy program that will never get off the ground, except you fix the system first.

 The money is probably just going to end up in the wrong pockets and not reach the poorest people who really need the money. That is just it.

 3. Provide one meal a day to pupils nationwide. 

Osun state governor, Aregbesola, gave one meal a day to pupils in state schools during his first term and he got a lot popular for it among his people.