Joined July 2019
79 Photos and videos
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
Music no Dey sweet again, football no Dey sweet again. Tinubu well done.
404
2,380
14,698
124,280
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
Omoh, this is the largest crowd I’ve seen so far since this end ins£curity protest started !! Abuja people are serious about this and out massively, both men and women are out !!! 🙌🏼✊🏽🪧
147
2,471
6,028
60,282
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
Jun 13
INSTEAD OF WATCHING AN HOUR OF NETFLIX TONIGHT. This 1 hour Stanford lecture by Joel Peterson will teach you more about negotiation and getting what you want than most people learn in years. Bookmark it and give it an hour, no matter what.
45
1,296
4,599
366,235
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
STAY CLEAR of the people who don’t value the small sacrifices you make… like spending money you barely have, showing up when you’re tired, giving advice, being a listening ear, carrying their problems, or being the one who checks in first.
22
2,761
9,743
133,144
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
In 2012, when I started farming in Kuje Area Council-Abuja, cashew trees were everywhere. Many local landowners planted them as economic trees—not necessarily for commercial production, but because they increased the perceived value of their land. By 2013, the cashew industry had become a thriving rural economy. During harvest season, heavy-duty trucks lined up at Tipper Garage Junction in Kuje, buying cashew kernels for Nuts processing. Farmers earned and the entire communities benefited from the value chain. The boom continued through 2014, 2015, and 2016. Then greed quietly replaced sustainability. Instead of allowing the fruits to mature naturally, many people began harvesting prematurely to extract kernels early. The result was predictable: immature kernels flooded the market, quality dropped, and buyers began rejecting consignments. By 2018, something even more alarming happened. Many of the cashew trees simply refused to fruit. In 2019 and 2020, some produced while others remained barren. By 2021, large numbers of trees appeared diseased and failed to fruit. Today, the trucks are gone. The once-thriving cashew economy has largely disappeared. The trees remain, but many no longer produce. What is most disturbing is that nobody seems to know why. Nigeria has numerous institutions with mandates that should cover issues like this: • Seed Council of Nigeria • Forestry Departments and Agencies • Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development • Research Institutes and Extension Services Yet there appears to be little or no publicly available data explaining what happened to the Kuje cashew ecosystem. A nation that does not invest in research is condemned to repeat its mistakes. We spend billions discussing agriculture, but when an entire economic ecosystem collapses, nobody can explain the cause, measure the impact, or propose a recovery strategy. Agriculture is not sustained by speeches and conferences. It is sustained by data, research, and institutional memory. Until we take research seriously, we will continue harvesting from nature without understanding the consequences—and acting surprised when nature stops giving back.
Have a sweet and blessed weekend
80
1,024
2,062
100,248
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
We want to urge the MILITARY not to panic as we the bloody CIVILIANS are doing our best to ensure that everything is under control. We seriously condemn this act and would ensure the perpetrators are brought to book. May the soul of our General rest in perfect peace.
443
3,805
8,586
206,442
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
“tinubu leave us and RESIGN, I AM 19 AND I LOOK 45 YEARS.
105
1,973
4,768
62,387
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
Train yourself to handle life without ever borrowing money.
826
8,119
51,298
960,601
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
Insecurity: Nigeria Cannot Continue Like This I received with deep shock and sadness the tragic death of retired Major General Rabe Abubakar, who reportedly died while in the custody of kidnappers. Earlier, before this heartbreaking news, I also received disturbing reports of renewed bandit attacks in Sokoto and Kwara States. The armed bandits reportedly blocked a market route in Sokoto and abducted traders, while terrorists invaded communities in Kwara State, kidnapping scores of citizens and killing innocent people, are heartbreaking and alarming. These incidents are not isolated tragedies; they are clear manifestations of the deepening security crisis confronting our nation. But particularly painful is the reported death of Major General Rabe Abubakar, a distinguished military officer who dedicated a significant part of his life to defending Nigeria and protecting its citizens. It is tragic that a man who served his fatherland with honour, rose through the ranks of the Nigerian Armed Forces, and retired after years of meritorious service, would meet such a heartbreaking end at the hands of criminal elements. His death is a national tragedy and a sobering indictment of the insecurity that has engulfed our country. When traders can no longer travel safely to markets, farmers cannot access their farms, communities live under constant fear, and even retired senior military officers are not spared from the menace of kidnapping and violent crime, it becomes evident that our nation is facing a grave security emergency. Security remains the foremost responsibility of any government. Every life lost, every citizen abducted, and every community displaced represent a painful failure of our collective duty to protect the Nigerian people. The recurring attacks in Sokoto, Kwara, and many other parts of the country demonstrate that insecurity is not only persisting but spreading in both scope and intensity. I once again urge the Federal Government and our security agencies to move beyond rhetoric and adopt a more proactive, intelligence-driven, technology-based, and coordinated approach to tackling insecurity. We must strengthen our security architecture, improve intelligence gathering, secure our borders, equip and motivate our security personnel, and ensure that those responsible for these heinous crimes are apprehended and brought to justice. A nation where citizens live in fear cannot prosper. A nation where economic activities are disrupted daily by criminal elements cannot attract investment, create jobs, or guarantee a better future for its people. We must urgently reclaim every part of our country from terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, and all criminal gangs threatening our collective existence. My heartfelt condolences go to the family of Major General Rabe Abubakar, his former colleagues in the Armed Forces, and all Nigerians who have lost loved ones to insecurity. I also sympathise with the families of those killed, those abducted, and the affected communities in Sokoto, Kwara, and across the nation. The recurring tragedies and embarrassing security failures we continue to witness make the quest for a New Nigeria not only necessary but inevitable. We must build a nation where every citizen can live, work, travel, and pursue legitimate economic activities without fear. A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
664
6,556
13,310
165,840
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
“Sheikh Gumi Said The Government Knows The Terrorists, K!dnapp£rs, That's Means Government are the K!dnapp£rs and t£rr0r!st , E Be Like Say We Will Go Oyo State Enter The Bush” - Verydarkman
175
3,956
17,195
349,111
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
"Yesterday, we stepped out to protest against the worsening level of insecurity in the country. To my greatest surprise, President Tinubu and his supporters had rented a crowd of counter-protesters, the majority of whom were women with children at home." — Falz reacts in shock after seeing counter-protesters during yesterday's protest in Lagos State.
"We are not here to joke. The issue of insecurity is long overdue. Too many people have been k!ll£d across several states. We are here to say no to insecurity, and we are demanding the return of all kidn@pped victims." — Falz speaking at the ongoing protest in Lagos.
131
3,770
7,125
304,687
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
How can you rehabilitate 700 terrorists? What if they are pretending to want rehabilitation? Do you know what 700 terrorists with arms can do to a city? 😭😭😭
240
2,487
6,322
84,103
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
If videos like this can trend, there is hope in Nigeria 🇳🇬
107
8,699
15,545
192,448
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
APC Data Boys FC
342
1,042
3,286
50,034
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
You have 3 currencies in life. Knowledge, Time & Money. When you need one, use the other two to get it
110
3,822
15,265
183,745
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
“Elections are rigged in Nigeria because Nigerians want it to be rigged. I will do whatever is possible to protect votes come 2027 election, but it is now left for Nigerians to decide if their votes will count. Because if you vote and stay in your polling unit and insist your votes must count, it will be counted. But some Nigerians would rather vote and go home, then hours later go to night vigil to start praying, because they think they are the only ones God created. The problem of Nigeria is leadership”. -Mr. Peter Obi, NDC presidential candidate on his recent visit to Washington, D.C.
279
4,803
11,285
268,146
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
VeryDarkMan reacts strongly to Tinubu’s speech this morning asking b@nd!ts to surrender He says: “Again this is why I don't have hope in Tinubu ending ins£curity in Nigeria, he sounds like he doesn't know what to do cos how can you be asking them to surrender or they’ll face the law? So until they surrender now, they should keep k!dn@pp!ng and kp@!g us? If you don’t know what to do, this is the time to move in !!!”
140
599
2,294
126,013
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
"All politicians are the same" You mean to tell me that Alex otti and Monday okpobholo are the same?
433
2,806
9,990
131,846
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
Unmasking The Hidden Wealth In Nigeria Where Is Dele Alake? Something happened on August 12th, 2023, that redefined the Tinubu government, which may be the reason for the heightened insecurity spreading like wildfire across the country. And the story continues….
48
563
896
20,110
ALB-ART♀️ retweeted
There’s this love some of you have for money that’s disgusting, but I also understand that it’s rooted in poverty.
46
1,211
3,288
86,859