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Steeltrust's Posts 1t4ti

Steeltrust's Posts

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steeltrust: 2:17pm On May 13
Expect the next govt who will come in to send them back šŸ˜‚šŸ˜…
steeltrust: 2:12pm On May 13
I’m not a wike fan but truth be told
Atiku killed pdp with his selfishness

If he had allowed a southern candidate there would have been peace in pdp

The reason why wike played the god card was the way atiku did it
You want to be president by all means

1 Like

steeltrust: 11:02pm On May 11
SlavaUkraini:
If you have stayed 5 years in Lagos and have still not made it Big...... Then relocate back to your State, city or village..

Your Breakthrough is definitely not in Lasgidi

Many have relocated and they blew less than a year of Relocating.
bro five years is too much
1year and six month move out

1 Like 1 Share

steeltrust: 3:48am On May 10
I see Boniface as the first Nigerian to play for RM

1 Like

steeltrust: 4:05pm On May 08
Love800:
People are still playing online na!
What's your point exactly?
they’re but it will be limited to an extent

If you ask 10 bettors
6 or 7 out them go to shop to play bet
But if online only the number will reduce cause a lot of people are not cut on the stress to , fund acct, find game etc

I don’t know if you know what I’m saying
steeltrust: 12:52pm On May 08
nnamdi640:
That one won't work in this country, the reason is that the percentage given out by the betting companies will be looted by somebody.
it will be monitored by the betting companies with from each and supervised by the govt and it will work
steeltrust: 2:09am On May 08
The best way is to ban all betting companies to shut all betting store and go online fully with a law in place to give a percentage from all betting companies into a commission with offices all over Nigeria to help those who’re addicted to sport betting and are willing to stop. That how they did it here in yanke
It can be done too in naija

2 Likes 2 Shares

steeltrust: 2:42pm On Apr 30
helinues:


They did. I still this particular photo. Abi is the guy also an Igbo too

Make una work on the interiority complex bikonu
please show us
Cause I know this was the eleganza son

Y’all should treat people better
steeltrust: 4:03pm On Apr 28
You see these black Americans
They do things without thinking

When you tell them
They say I don’t care what ever happens and when done they cry and beg for forgiveness

Even if you slap me as a black American or white
Na me de tell you sorry cause these people no de think before them do something

Na when them do you finish dem de think
steeltrust: 2:47am On Apr 26
I can tell you guys for free that this person knows about the scam and he’s not innocent

America is not Nigeria where you can get away with anything. No consequences for bad actions

When I came to america
I know how many people I know including relatives who ask me countless times to launder money for them with PayPal, cashapp, Venmo, chase bank, capitalone, credit union etc

I decline all and even blocked many
Even if na 1$ and na your mama wan I know wan send I no go receive am

He should go in for it
steeltrust: 11:12am On Apr 25
FameGlory:


You just buttressed my point with the bolden darling😊

Getting a foot into any big organization without a degree is the key.

Something u can't do in Nigeria. Expect u av connections by the way.

Once u are in, all u need is to build relationships and network ur way to the top with additional certifications like u said if possible.
the question is can dangote or any other company in Nigeria employ me without any cert or experience and me to grow within the company?
steeltrust: 6:00pm On Apr 24
FameGlory:


Let's call a spade a spade

Your Geography degree did not get you a job with Amazon.

Anybody abroad even people without degrees can work in a warehouse in Amazon.
it did

I’m an area manager
You think they give out positions because they like you abi I started as an ordinary associate which doesn’t need degree and moved to a pa and they area manager which I applied for with my university degree couple with other certifications

De play
steeltrust: 4:23pm On Apr 24
ChybuzzDD:


Are they doing well in Nigeria or abroad?

The focus here is Nigeria
they’re doing well

I mean my closes pals in school then
Cause I can’t speak for everybody

Two work with ministry of land and survey
One Work work with a private survey company
And the other has he’s own survey company and as an architect too while me I left naija. Although In the beginning it wasn’t easy but we all doing well. Geography is a great course

Without geography a lot of things won’t work in Nigeria and around the world in fact geography is the bed rock of everything there is
steeltrust: 3:40pm On Apr 24
[quote author=Kalatium post=135108060][/quote] like you said na cruise so for that I disagree with this list

The worst part you go add geography am šŸ˜‚
steeltrust: 3:39pm On Apr 24
DonAbba:
Its funny but somehow true.
I studied geography and now I am paying for my life, I graduated since 2019 I am still joblessssssss
oga your village people de follow you

Geography is a good course
I studied geography in delta state university my niche back then was urban planning, transportation and quantity surveyor

There lot of niches on geography that you will always find your way

I’m in yankee now and I used it to work
I’m currently in the warehouse, transportation and logistics department with Amazon
I’ve worked with UPS too

Everyone of my course mate who studied geography are almost doing well too

4 Likes

steeltrust: 3:19pm On Apr 24
I came across a post defending Dr. Stephen Akintayo’s $18,000 (yes, **eighteen thousand US dollars!**) mentorship fee. The argument was simple: *"If you can’t afford it, move on. services are for people."*

At first glance, it makes sense—mentorship is valuable, and experts should be paid for their time. But then I thought: **How many Nigerians can realistically afford this?**

Let’s break it down.

### **$18,000 in Nigerian Reality**
- **Official Exchange Rate:** ~₦1,500/$ → **₦27,000,000**
- **Black Market Rate:** ~₦1,800/$ → **₦32,400,000**

That’s **more than the lifetime savings** of an average Nigerian. According to the World Bank, over **80 million Nigerians live below the poverty line**—earning less than ₦1,000 per day. Even middle-class professionals (doctors, engineers, bankers) would struggle to justify spending **₦27 million** on mentorship.

### **The Argument For High Fees**
Some will say:
- *"He’s a multimillionaire—his knowledge is worth it."*
- *"Real mentorship gives you access to exclusive strategies and networks."*
- *"If you can’t afford it, you’re not the target market."*

Fair points. Warren Buffett once said, *"Price is what you pay. Value is what you get."* If this mentorship can **guarantee** someone a million-dollar business, then ₦27m might be a bargain.

But here’s the problem—**most Nigerians don’t have that kind of money lying around.**

### **A Story of Two Nigerians**
Let me tell you about two people I know:

1. **Emeka** – A brilliant tech guy who built an app but couldn’t scale because he lacked business mentorship. He searched for affordable guidance but found most programs were **₦500k and above**. He couldn’t afford it, so he stayed stuck.

2. **Ade** – A banker who saved for years, then paid ₦5m for a high-profile mentorship. The mentor gave generic advice he could’ve gotten from a book. He felt **cheated**.

Now, imagine if Emeka had access to **affordable** mentorship. Imagine if Ade didn’t have to gamble his life savings.

### **The Bigger Question: Should Knowledge Be This Exclusive?**
I get it—experts deserve to be paid. But when fees are **this high**, we create a system where:
- Only the **already-rich** can afford growth.
- The **struggling but talented** are left behind.
- Mentorship becomes a **luxury**, not a ladder.

Even global icons like **Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, and Tony Elumelu** offer **free** or **low-cost** advice through books, interviews, and foundations. Why? Because **real impact isn’t just about money but it’s about lifting others.

**Final Thought**
I’m not against paid mentorship. But **₦27 million?** In this economy?

Maybe the real question is: **Are we building a society where only the rich get richer, or where talent + hard work can still break barriers?**

What do you think, Nairalanders?

- **Is $18k mentorship fair?**
- **Should knowledge be this expensive?**
- **Have you ever paid for mentorship? Was it worth it?**

Let’s discuss!

steeltrust: 2:31pm On Apr 22
I used to like Obi and I still like him
But since he’s speech o during the ibb book launch I started doubting him

I’ll say this again
Nigeria youth Learn to play politics dirty just like these old rags holding the country ransom if not I’m 30years y’all will regret why y’all come from Nigeria

2 Likes

steeltrust: 9:10pm On Apr 19
RenaissanceGuy:
If you're talking about competent governance, we have/have had it in the past and present in the persons of Akpabio, Ambode, Otti, Soludo, Obi, even Tinubu, etc. I wonder why you even had to mention Soludo and Otti who are currently doing great in their respective states.


you’re right—some leaders have actually performed well in office, and we should give credit where it’s due. But let’s not act like the majority aren’t failing woefully despite their private-sector success.

You mentioned Akpabio, Ambode, Otti, Soludo, Obi, and Tinubu—okay, fair, some of them have done decently (though some will argue about Tinubu’s Lagos vs. his current presidency šŸ˜…). But let’s not forget that for every Obi (who left Anambra with savings) or Fashola (who improved Lagos infrastructure), there are 10 others who were CEOs of big firms but became tragedy in government.

Past & Present Governors Who Did Well in Private Sector Before Office:

Peter Obi (Businessman, Bank Chairman) → Improved Anambra’s economy
Babatunde Fashola (Successful Lawyer) → Transformed Lagos infrastructure
Godwin Obaseki (Investment Banker) → Edo’s education & tech growth
Kayode Fayemi (Policy Expert) → Ekiti reforms (though some will argue)
Nasir El-Rufai (Former DG BPE, Consultant) → Kaduna urban renewal (controversial but impactful)
Private Sector Giants Who Disappointed in Govt:

Donald Duke (Cross River) – Smart guy, but Calabar’s glory faded after him
Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers) – Ex-speaker, ex-minister, but Rivers didn’t become Dubai
Adams Oshiomhole (Edo) – Ex-labour leader, but did he really industrialize Edo?
So yes, some have delivered, but most just switch from "Company Profit" to "Personal Profit" once they enter government. The real question is: Why do only a few perform, while many fail? Is it the system, greed, or just Nigerian politics being a different beast?

1 Like

steeltrust: 3:50pm On Apr 19
owobokiri:
Which of them has performed well even in the private sector?
The 2 examples you gave are doing relatively well based on the realities associated with the Nigerian state.

Why are you’re talking like we don’t have records! Let’s not rewrite history just to make excuses. Yes, Nigeria is tough, but some leaders actually performed well in the private sector AND tried (or succeeded) in public office.

Private Sector Giants Who Performed in Public Office (Past & Present):

Peter Obi – Built Next International (billion-naira business) before becoming Anambra governor and turning the state around (saved billions, improved education, left no debt).
Babatunde Fashola – Successful lawyer before transforming Lagos (roads, BRT, security, even traffic lights worked!).
Donald Duke – Banker & investor who made Cross River a tourism hub (Tinapa, Calabar Carnival).
El-Rufai – Former DG of BPE, privatisation expert who (despite controversies) changed Abuja’s master plan and pushed Kaduna reforms.
Godwin Emefiele – Before CBN mess, he was a top banker at Zenith. (Okay, this one’s 50-50 šŸ˜‚).
The Point?

It’s not that Nigeria is "too hard" to govern—it’s that many leaders choose not to even try. Some (like the ones above) showed that with competence & political will, things can improve.

So no, your "Nigerian state is just too difficult" argument doesn’t hold water. The difference is character & priorities. Some leaders see public office as a chance to serve; others see it as a buffet.

If these ones could make an impact, why can’t others? Are we blaming Nigeria… or the leaders? šŸ˜
steeltrust: 3:46pm On Apr 19
mrvitalis:

There is no leader in nigeria that have done well in the private sector and done badly in government... I dare you to name one

You elect people who have built nothing and expect them To build Nigeria

Soludo is a good governor focused on infrastructure and delivering without borrowing same as Otti

If all Nigerian politicians are like those two we won't have problem

šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚ Bro, you’re talking like someone who was born and breed in Nigeria! "No leader in Nigeria has done well in the private sector and failed in government?" Okay, let’s jog your memory real quick.

Private Sector Giants Who Underperformed in Government

Godwin Emefiele (CBN Governor) – Former Zenith Bank big boy, but as CBN governor, he turned the economy into a rollercoaster with reckless policies, multiple exchange rates, and a cash scarcity that nearly finished Nigerians.
Babatunde Fashola (Former Lagos Governor & Minister of Works) – Brilliant lawyer, did well in Lagos, but as Minister of Works, what exactly changed? Nigeria’s roads remained death traps, and power supply didn’t improve despite his "super minister" title.
Rotimi Amaechi (Former Rivers Governor & Transport Minister) – Ran Rivers like a personal business, but as Transport Minister, what happened to all those fancy rail projects? Billions spent, yet trains still move at snail speed.
Bukola Saraki (Former Kwara Governor & Senate President) – Came from a wealthy banking background, but under his watch, Kwara remained underdeveloped, and as Senate President, he was more famous for political maneuvering than nation-building.
Now, About Soludo & Otti…

Yes, they’re doing relatively well (compared to others), but let’s not act like they’ve turned their states into Dubai overnight. Soludo is trying, but Anambra still has security issues. Otti is making moves, but Abia’s transformation isn’t yet "world-class."

Your argument that "if all politicians were like them, we won’t have problems" is partly true, but let’s be real—even the "good ones" still operate in a broken system where ability is weak and corruption is tempting.

So, are you saying every single private sector leader who entered politics performed excellently? Name them! Because for every Otti & Soludo, there’s an Emefiele & Amaechi who disappointed.
steeltrust: 3:22pm On Apr 19
helinues:
Public sector is complicated to lead
I don’t think so
steeltrust: 3:21pm On Apr 19
immortalcrown:
Their involvement in private sectors is for personal gains, likewise their involvement in public sectors. Their destination remains the same even when they change their means of transportation.

You know what? You just dropped a serious truth bomb! It’s like no matter the sector—private or public—the endgame is the same: personal gain.
can a leader ever truly switch from "me first" to "Nigeria first," or is the system just too corrupt to allow it? šŸ¤”
steeltrust: 2:50pm On Apr 19
I've been observing something very confusing about our political leaders—governors, senators, presidents, and even their deputies. Many of them were top performers in the private sector before ing politics. We have examples like Soludo, Alex Otti, and others who were respected CEOs, bankers, and industrial leaders. These were people who managed billions, built successful businesses, and were known for their intelligence and competence.

But the moment they step into public office, something changes. It’s like their brain resets. The same people who made brilliant decisions in the corporate world suddenly start acting like they’ve never managed anything before. Roads that should take six months to fix drag on for years. Basic amenities like electricity, water, and public transport remain a dream. Meanwhile, these same leaders travel abroad and see how things work—smooth roads, constant power, efficient trains—yet when they return, they do nothing to replicate those systems here.

The irony is even more painful when you see how they behave overseas vs. how they act in Nigeria. Abroad, they’re so humble—no long convoys, no police harassment, no sirens. Some even take public transport like normal humans! But once they land back in Nigeria, their convoy is longer than the American president’s. They beat traffic with intimidation, harass citizens with sirens, and move around like emperors.

So, what’s really going on?
- Is it **wickedness**—they know what’s right but refuse to do it?
- Is it **selfishness**—they only care about their pockets and political survival?
- Or are we just **voting the wrong people** into power?

Some might argue that governance is more complex than the private sector, but is that really the excuse? If you can manage a billion-naira company, why can’t you manage a state’s resources? If you’ve seen working systems abroad, why can’t you replicate even 10% of it here?

Let’s discuss—why do you think our "best" private sector minds turn into mediocre (or even terrible) leaders once they get into government? Are they pretending to be competent before getting into office, or is the system just designed to corrupt even the brightest minds?

Your thoughts, Nairalanders!

1 Like

steeltrust: 2:30am On Apr 16
Let me take you on a journey – one that started in the bustling streets of Lagos, led me to the structured systems of America, and now brings me back to a painful question: **Why can't Nigeria's institutions work for its people?**

I left Nigeria in 2023, filled with the same frustrations many of you feel daily – police harassment, endless NEPA bills without light, and the sinking feeling that justice was only for the highest bidders. But landing in America shattered my understanding of how a country could function. Here, systems *work*. Not because Americans are saints, but because their institutions have been built to survive corruption, to resist manipulation, and most importantly, to serve the people.

### **The Day I Realized Systems Matter More Than Leaders**
I'll never forget my first encounter with American bureaucracy. My neighbor, a single mother, fought a multinational corporation over a wrongful termination – and won. No godfathers. No "long leg." Just facts, evidence, and a system that refused to be bullied. Meanwhile, back home, my uncle spent 3 years in court trying to reclaim his stolen land from a politically-connected thief. The case is still "pending."

This contrast keeps me up at night.

**Nigeria's Institutional Crisis – A Death by 1000 Cuts**
1. **The EFCC Paradox** – We cheer when they arrest big thieves, then watch helplessly as cases disappear into the justice system's black hole.
2. **Police as Predators** – The same officers paid to protect us routinely extort more money than armed robbers.
3. **INEC's Betrayal** – The electoral umpire that should be our pride has become the biggest obstacle to credible elections.

**A Tale of Two Countries**
In America:
- A former president faces 91 felony charges and no one burns down the courthouse
- Government workers actually fear whistleblowers
- Tax evasion can land you in prison regardless of your connections

In Nigeria:
- A minister steals billions and gets a promotion
- Police arrest you for "disturbing the peace" when you demand ability
- INEC officials get caught rigging and receive traditional titles instead of jail time

**The Frightening Future We're Creating**
I've visited countries destroyed by weak institutions – Venezuela with its empty supermarkets, Lebanon with its collapsed currency. The path we're on looks terrifyingly similar. When institutions fail:
- The middle class disappears (like ours is doing now)
- Professionals emigrate (like we're seeing daily)
- The poor resort to desperate measures (kidnapping, Yahoo Yahoo)

**The Way Forward: Lessons From My Journey**
1. **Stop Waiting for Messiahs** – No single leader can fix broken systems. We need institutional reforms.
2. **The Youth Must Get Dirty** – Not just protests, but taking over political parties, running for offices, becoming the system.
3. **Demand Systemic Changes**
- Judicial reforms with strict timelines for cases
- Direct funding for police stations to reduce bribery
- INEC officials should face treason charges for rigging

4. **The Unity We Need** – The North/South divide is our greatest weakness. The corrupt elite laugh when we fight over religion while they steal from all of us.

**A Call to Action**
I'm planning to return to Nigeria next year, not to complain, but to act. I'm looking for serious people who want to:
- Document and expose institutional failures systematically
- Build a database of credible young leaders to
- Create ability scorecards for public institutions

**Your Thoughts?**
- Have you experienced America/UK systems that showed you what's possible?
- Which Nigerian institution hurts you the most?
- Can we realistically fix this without violence?

This isn't just another lamentation post. It's a call to organized action. Who's truly ready to do something different?

1 Like 1 Share

steeltrust: 2:28am On Apr 15
Seun:
Hello Guys,

I'm throwing this question to you because it's very important. Every time I ask, "how is Nairaland?" I'm told that it is fine. If I ask what are the challenges I'm told there are none.

So I need to talk to you guys directly about what you think is going on and what you want us to do. I have not had the confidence to make major changes on Nairaland. I have a little confidence now because of AI.

What are your complaints, your challenges, your issues. What are the things that can drive people away and need to be nipped?

Speak your mind, but don't be rude. Thanks.


Here’s a concise list of potential changes Nairaland could benefit from:

1. **Modern UI/UX Design** – The interface feels outdated.
2. **Better Mobile Experience** – The site isn’t fully mobile-friendly.
3. **Improved Search Functionality** – Current search is weak.
4. **Reduced Spam/Fake s** – More moderation tools needed.
5. **Faster Page Loading** – Optimize server performance.
6. **Threaded Replies** – Easier to follow conversations.
7. **Dark Mode** – Reduce eye strain.
8. ** Block/Mute Features** – Better troll control.
9. **AI-Powered Moderation** – Auto-flag spam/hate speech.
10. **Verified s** – For public figures/brands.
11. **In-App Notifications** – Better than email alerts.
12. **Ad Optimization** – Less intrusive ads.
13. **Categories Cleanup** – Some sections are redundant.
14. **Profile Customization** – More personalization.
15. **Embed Media ** – Easier image/video sharing.
16. **Two-Factor Authentication (2FA)** – Improve security.
17. **Draft Saving** – For posts/comments.
18. **Trending Topics Section** – Highlight hot discussions.
19. **Anonymous Posting Option** – For sensitive topics.
20. **Monetization for Creators** – Incentivize quality content.
21. ** basic DM (Direct Messaging)** - Keeps conversations flowing outside threads. s can chat one-on-one without cluttering forums.
It Could help communities (e.g., business, tech, or hobby groups). Reduces Off-Site Migration – Stops s from moving to WhatsApp/Telegram for private talks.

6 Likes 1 Share

steeltrust: 2:13am On Apr 11
Goodadvice01:


Please was it bag of beans and bag of rice that gave you money sir.. should I do it.. I have in the north that can be supplying it to east
did you read my quote at all
I said my friend who is into the business

I learnt other skill
And yes going into it
It very profitable but make your research very well for example you know how price fluctuate in Nigeria
So make your research or volunteer to work for someone for 6 month to 1year so you learn the in and out
steeltrust: 7:26pm On Apr 10
Love800:
You mean those people that cook meals and sell it?

Was it the business that gave you money to travel abroad?
no mean the raw food
Like back of rice
Beans spaghetti etc
Not me
My friend
I learnt other skill but that not what took me abroad

I came here through k1 visa
steeltrust: 5:53pm On Apr 10
Love800:
Hello

What do you mean by foodstuff business?
normal foodstuffs people sell in the market
steeltrust: 3:19pm On Apr 10
Goodadvice01:
Good morning people. I noticed that majority of s on this site live in Lagos.

Most of my childhood friends have traveled to Lagos.

That aside, I want to relocate to Lagos. I have an uncle that used to stay in orile (2018).

I can camp in his house for the main time.

If I come to Lagos, can I get a job that can pay me like 100k and above every month. I have my waec and neco. I just turned 25.

I feel if I change environment, things will begin to go well for me.. and I heard there are lots of jobs in Lagos.

Here in the east, no work or company. Only Keke bus business that's thriving

Please can I make it in Lagos? I need suggestions. This is a life changing decision please

My brother, let me tell you something straight - about moving to Lagos to make it, because I've been exactly where you are right now, full of that same fire and belief that Lagos equals success, but let me give you the raw truth from my own 5-year war with that city. I landed in Ojodu Berger in 2015 with big dreams but left in 2020 with nothing but regret after employers frustrated me with unpaid salaries, transport broke me with endless traffic and high costs, and even family disappointed me when that uncle who promised help charged me 80k for a closet under his staircase. The day I ran away to Delta State was when my life finally changed - my Igbo friend he’s name is mark moved to Asaba's Ogbogonogo Market to learn how to sell foodstuffs and as we speak has 3 boys he brought from the village to teach them the trade like he learnt it with a second shop while I found peace, cheaper living, and real opportunities that eventually brought me to America today. So before you go, ask yourself hard questions: do you have a solid plan beyond just "hustling", a real place to stay knowing landlords demand 2 years rent upfront, let me don’t scare you, your uncle might show you shege( I might be wrong but plan for the eventuality, cause anything can happen), can you handle extreme mental, financial and spiritual pressure? If not, explore options in the East first - learn a trade in Aba's markets like my friend mark did( that is if you have someone there to accommodate till you finish learning the trade, pick up skills in Onitsha/Asaba, or network in Port Harcourt's oil sector because Lagos is a brutal gamble where only 1 in 10 make it without turning to yahoo, thuggery or becoming some big man's errand boy. Think well my brother, Lagos doesn't give second chances and I'm telling you this not to scare you but because I don't want you learning the hard way like I did - the city works for some but consumes most, so be wise and know that sometimes success is closer to home than you think.

Note: This isn’t to hate on Lagos o! The city works for some people… but not for most. Be wise!

4 Likes 1 Share

steeltrust: 3:01am On Apr 10
Godfullsam:


I have always advocated a radical leader. Someone who can bring something different to the table.

Someone who can fight corruption head on.
I think sowore fits the bill to a large extent.
Even Abdulsalam said in 2023 during the last presidential candidates peace meeting prior to the presidential election that they will all run away from the country if sowore becomes president.
You’re absolutely right my brother! The fact that Abdulsalam, a man who’s seen it all, openly itted they’d run if Sowore won tells you everything. These guys aren’t scared of Tinubu, Atiku, or even Obi because they know how to control them. But Sowore? He’s the wildcard they can’t bully or buy.

I’ve always said Nigeria doesn’t need another ā€œpolishedā€ politician. We need a leader who’ll walk into Aso Rock on Day 1 and start subpoenaing bank records, chasing down NNPC thieves, and telling the judiciary, ā€œDo your job or lose it.ā€ Sowore might not have the ā€œpresidential demeanorā€ people love, but when the house is on fire, you don’t call a decorator—you call a firefighter.

The real question is: Are Nigerians ready for that kind of chaos? Because cleaning this mess will get messy.
steeltrust: 2:58am On Apr 10
Xisnin:

Yes, because that is his job and he has little to nothing to lose.


What club really?


Sowore is the direct opposite of this.
Just check all your write up and what you know about him.
What exactly can you point as his institutional policy or credential?
Absolutely none.
Like other "idealist", every cell in his body makes him think he has some
divine mandate that only him can execute.

In fact, with such character, institutions or any semblance of them will
be completely dead until they are out of office(if they leave peacefully).

You might be right that Sowore has little or nothing to lose but that’s exactly why he’s dangerous to the system. When a man isn’t afraid of jail, intimidation, or even death, he’s not playing by their rules. The "club" I’m talking about is the circle of recycled politicians who’ve been swapping power since the ā€˜90s—IBB, OBJ, Atiku, Tinubu. Sowore isn’t part of that gang, and that’s the point.

As for institutions, his entire struggle has been about forcing them to work—not bying them. EFCC, INEC, the judiciary—they’re supposed to be independent, but we all know who pulls the strings. Sowore’s argument (and track record) is about holding those institutions able, not destroying them.

Is he stubborn? Absolutely. Does he act like he has a divine mandate? Maybe. But after decades of "polished" politicians promising change and delivering nothing, maybe what Nigeria needs is someone who’d rather break a few egos than keep bowing to them.

You think he’d kill institutions—I think he’s the only one willing to clean them. Time would tell, but at least he’s not begging IBB for .

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