Joined July 2015
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16 Dec 2025
Wake Up, Nigeria: The Painful Truth We're All Living Listen, Nigerians. This is not some fancy essay or motivational talk. This is the raw, bitter truth staring us in the face every day. We're trapped in a vicious cycle that's been running for decades, and it's designed to keep the average person poor, struggling, and begging for crumbs. No sweet words here -just the pain we all feel but rarely say out loud. You go to school, suffer to get a degree. Back in the day, federal university fees were less than ₦50,000 a session. Now? ₦150,000 or more, plus all the hidden costs. Government says economy is hard, so hike the fees. Then they bring student loans -NELFUND to "help" you pay. Sounds good, right? But think: You graduate, owe money, and repayment starts after NYSC. In a country where jobs are scarce, and when you finally get one years later, your salary can't even cover food and rent. Take a normal federal worker in Abuja, living in Lugbe or Kubwa. Salary maybe ₦180,000 a month after tax. Rent for a small flat: ₦1.5 million upfront every year. Food for family: another ₦200,000 monthly. Transport, light (NEPA plus generator fuel), school for kids, medicine, plus sending money to brothers/sisters/uncles who have no job. Add it up -you're spending way more than you earn. Every month, deficit. No savings. No investment. Just survival. Borrow for rent, pray nothing bad happens. And if you're that graduate with loan? You start the job already in debt. They deduct from your small salary automatically. You're working to pay back school fees while still struggling to eat. Honest life? It leads nowhere but stress and poverty. Look around: The civil servants driving big cars, building houses, sending kids abroad -how many got there by being straight and honest? Very few. The system forbids side business, but salary alone can't give you that life. So people bend rules, take bribes, do "runs." That's the only way to "make it." The honest ones? They stay poor, celebrating Christmas bonus like it's manna from heaven. Our best brains -doctors, engineers, lecturers -run abroad because here, no future. The West takes them happily, while Nigeria stays backward. We train them with our taxes, then lose them. Cycle continues. This is the script: Educate just enough to dream, then crush the dream with no jobs, low pay, debt. Keep the masses busy surviving so they can't question or fight. Poverty passes from parent to child. Inflation eats everything. Corruption swallows billions. Ask yourself honestly: - Can my children have a better life than me if things stay like this? - Why do we accept suffering as normal? - Why celebrate small allowances like big wins? - Is this the Nigeria we want to leave for the next generation? The pain is real. The anger should be too. Our future is already sold -loans, debt, brain drain, endless struggle. If we don't wake up, question everything, demand real change, and fight together.. Nigeria as we know it might not survive. We're heading for collapse, and it's happening right now. Don't just read and scroll. Feel the pain. Ask the hard questions. Talk about it. Something has to give. Or we all keep suffering in silence.
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May 23
The fact that no matter how smart you are, you cannot escape the stupidity of your society, is one thing that deeply pains me.
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After 7 months of hard work across 3 countries, my team and I at @Spearhead_Af are pleased to announce that my new documentary titled 'What Happened On October 29' will premiere in Accra at the WAGMC Auditorium, University of Ghana, Legon. It will also premiere in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on Friday May 29, and in Nairobi, Kenya on Sunday May 31. For the chance to win an exclusive free IV to the premiere (Accra only), kindly comment below and tag @joyfwen
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“If voting make any difference, they wouldn’t let us do it.” - Mark Twain
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They are already doing it. Thy Kenya government (and I believe Ghana also) has labor for export policies. They believe it's not slavery because the victims apply for visas and board planes instead of ships.
So they want to bring back slavery?
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My own nation is trained to mistake distraction for awareness. Full of minds addicted to trends and survival panic, they care less about studying power long enough to challenge it.
"If you want to destroy a nation, destroy the thinking of it's youth." — Vladimir Lenin
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Me: “Africa exports raw materials and imports finished products. That dependency traps economies.” Average Nigerian: “Hmm.” Me:“That’s why local industrialization matters.” Average Nigerian: “True.” Me: “That’s why foreign powers influence African politics.” Average Nigerian: “Bro are you supporting Russia?” Me: “How did we reach there? 😮 ” Average Nigerian: “I no know but your tweet dey somehow.” 😑
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You’ll say: “Foreign economic interests influence African instability.” They’ll reply: “So are you saying Tinubu caused rainfall in Kenya?” No sir -But your village mentality is exactly why bigger powers keep playing chess while You’re arguing over CP.
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There is an unspoken level of scam in the Nigerian space that nobody talks about enough. And it has nothing to do with Yahoo boys. It’s the scam of “manufactured luxury.” A struggling economy convinces people that looking rich is more important than living well. That’s why in Nigeria, somebody can be surrounded by: - bad roads, - unstable electricity, - weak healthcare, - insecurity, - inflation, - depression, - poor governance, - and daily survival stress But once they see a celebrity spray money in a nightclub or pose beside a car, everybody screams: “Success.” “Luxury.” “Soft life.” No. That is not luxury. That is visual escape therapy for a stressed population. Because let’s define things properly. A stable economy is where the average citizen can live with dignity without needing to “blow.” - systems work, - salaries have value, - hospitals function, - security exists, - opportunities are accessible, - and peace of mind is normal. A struggling economy is where survival itself becomes a full-time job. People then start worshipping symbols instead of substance and that’s why materialism becomes louder in poorer societies. The less stable the system, the more people become addicted to visible status. Notice something: In many advanced countries, billionaires dress simple, move quietly and invest heavily into ownership, technology, energy, infrastructure etc. But in many struggling societies, people are pressured to “appear successful” before they are financially stable. So you see people: - owing rent but buying latest iPhones, - depressed but packaging happiness online, - entering debt for designer clothes, - chasing nightclub validation, - and destroying their peace just to maintain “levels.” Celebrity culture made it worse. Many people no longer admire wisdom, intelligence, innovation or discipline. They admire lifestyle presentation. So now the average young Nigerian is mentally trapped in a competition they cannot financially sustain. And social media keeps feeding the illusion: “If your life is not loud, expensive and flashy, you are failing.” Meanwhile the real global elites are quietly buying: lands, companies, AI, data, media influence, energy, and political access. One group is building power. The other group is buying packaging to look powerful. For me, anytime I hear “luxury lifestyle” in a country where millions are one hospital bill away from financial destruction I just laugh. Most of it is not wealth. Na motivational suffering.
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The moment Bruno Fernandes wrote his name into Premier League history 🅰️ 🔴 @ManUtd
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😮‍💨
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Where will AI be in 1, 2 or 3 years?

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A closer look 🔍 🤳 @Snapdragon x #ShotOnSnapdragon
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pattern recognition is the highest form of intelligence
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If the Epstein files was full of black people they would have released them in theaters
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United by what we wear ❤️‍🔥 Get our @adidasFootball 2026/27 home shirt now! 🛒
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This is Manchester United. Always ❤️ Introducing the @adidasFootball x Manchester United 2026/27 home jersey, available now 🔗
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Since critical thinking clearly missed you during distribution, let me break this down slowly to your level because you either think with your ass or you just desperately wanted to tweet something loud. Nobody said the CIA personally logged into Nigerian bank accounts and moved ₦33 billion like internet fraudsters. The point is simple: powerful countries protect systems that benefit them. Corrupt politicians inside weaker countries are part of that system. A country does not need to physically control your government when it can influence the people already inside it. Now ask yourself a very simple question: the billions stolen from Nigeria, where do you think most of that money ends up? You think they stack the billions inside 🇳🇬 Bank and go home? No. The money usually leaves the country through foreign accounts, luxury real estate, shell companies, tax havens, imported contracts, offshore investments and international networks that happily receive stolen wealth from corrupt African leaders while preaching good governance on TV. That is why many corrupt African politicians own properties abroad comfortably while their countries collapse. A minister steals from power sector. Nigeria remains dependent on generators and fuel. Foreign manufacturers profit. Oil interests profit. Loan institutions profit because the country keeps borrowing. Citizens remain poor and distracted. Politicians remain easy to control. Everybody eats from the dysfunction except the average Nigerian. And this is not even some hidden conspiracy. America, France, Britain all protect economic interests globally. That is literally what powerful countries do. MOstly through local politicians willing to sell out cheaply. Read history. The US backed coups across Latin America for decades whenever governments threatened their business interests. France maintained influence over multiple African economies long after colonialism officially “ended.” The Middle East has been destabilized repeatedly over strategic interests and resources. Even social media algorithms today shape political opinions globally. But somehow when it comes to Nigeria, some of you suddenly think corruption exists inside a magical vacuum disconnected from global power structures. That former minister being corrupt does not disprove external influence. He is part of the mechanism. Please read books outside Twitter threads: “The Confessions of an Economic Hitman” “The Divide” “How Europe Underdeveloped Africa” “The Jakarta Method” At least then your arguments will graduate beyond “bad Nigerian man stole money therefore geopolitics is fake.”
The former minister of power stole 33 billion Naira. That's 33 billion reasons why we still don't have 247 electricity in Nigeria. That amount can buy 1,900 mid range transformers for 500 villages. So next time when David Hundeyin and his people tell you to blame the CIA for our issues, point them to the former minister of power who is now doing 75 years in prison for something the CIA did. When Peter Obi becomes president we will uncover the work the CIA is doing in Nigeria through our corrupt politicians right now.
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On liver cancer and what to do; This is very important information: One of the commonest causes of liver cancer is Hepatitis B (which is an infection/inflammation of the liver). You can get hepatitis B through: Unprotected sex, Sharing needles as a drug user, Unsafe blood transfusions, Sharing clippers with others, Getting tattoos at unsafe/unaccredited places, On unprotected sex, The risk is higher with unprotected anal sex, especially with multiple partners, and especially in men who have sex with men, Untreated/undiagnosed hepatitis can lead to liver inflammation, liver damage and liver cancer. What to do: Please avoid unsafe/unprotected sex, Please avoid multiple sex partners, Please avoid sharing needles and clippers, please avoid getting tattoos at medically unsafe/unaccredited centers, Most importantly; PLEASE GO AND GET THE HEPATITIS B VACCINE. This singular action can save your life. The hepatitis B vaccine protects from hepatitis B for a lifetime and prevents liver cancer. You only take 3 doses of the vaccine and you are protected for a lifetime from hepatitis B infection. •1st Shot - At any given time. •2nd Shot - At least one month (or 28 days) after the 1st shot. •3rd Shot - At least 4 months (16 weeks) after the 1st shot and 2 months after the 2nd shot. The hepatitis B vaccine is also known as the first “anti-cancer” vaccine because it prevents hepatitis B infection which is the leading cause of liver cancer worldwide. Please go to any general hospital, reputable private hospital or accredited pharmacy near you and request to get the Hepatitis B vaccine. You can read more here: hepb.org/prevention-and-diag… The most important thing is this: PLS GET HEPATITIS B VACCINE TODAY. The Hepatitis B vaccine protects you from Hepatitis B infection for a lifetime. This is one singular action you can take today to prevent hepatitis B infection and prevent liver cancer for yourself and your loved ones. Please share this information everywhere. Help save someone’s life today.
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Have we actually stopped seeing each other as human beings? Because the way people are quietly suffering now is becoming scary. And this is not even about entitlement or expectations. Most Nigerians are trying. Seriously trying. But the country is hard. Life is hard and many people are one bad situation away from completely losing themselves. You see someone betting every single day and laugh at them. But some people are no longer betting for fun. They genuinely see it as their last possible hope to escape pressure. A young man wakes up already owing people money. Family problems, no stable income, everybody expecting him to “man up.” Slowly his entire happiness becomes tied to odds and virtual games because reality itself has started feeling impossible. That kind of stress is dangerous. Some people are walking around with anxiety, high blood pressure, depression and silent health issues at very young ages because survival has turned into a daily fight. And the painful part is that many people close to them can already see they are losing themselves slowly, but everybody is too busy surviving too. The girl doing things she once said she could never do might simply be trying to feed herself after life stripped away the one person supporting her. The father shouting every day might actually be scared of failing his family. The friend acting distant might be mentally exhausted from carrying problems nobody knows about. Everybody is carrying something now. Yet we have somehow normalized pretending people are okay until something terrible finally happens. That is when the fake love comes. Long captions. Bla bla bla RIP posts. 😔 Check up on your people. 🤗 Life is short. 😢 But deep down many people knew that person was drowning long before the tragedy happened. This world is becoming emotionally cold. We mock struggling people instead of understanding how pressure changes human beings. We have started measuring human value by success, money, clout and appearance while people around us are silently breaking inside. And no, nobody is saying carry the whole world on your head, but sometimes genuine concern, one opportunity, one conversation, one small support or simply noticing somebody is not okay can stop someone from completely losing themselves. People are tired, not lazy, not weak, Just tired and if we continue like this, many people will keep smiling outside while quietly collapsing inside Most people are not collapsing because life defeated them alone. They are collapsing because they fought too long without feeling genuinely seen, understood or supported by anybody around them.
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