Bola Tinubu

Showing posts with label Bola Tinubu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bola Tinubu. Show all posts

2027: Between Politics, Ambition And Country First I — Pro Chris

2027: Between Politics, Ambition And Country First I — Pro Chris

With the flurry of politicians indicating interest to run for the high office of President come 2027, and the incumbency of the Bola Ahmed Tinubu Presidency, one would expect Politicians to prioritize the call to put Country before individual politics and ambition.


If we agree that the present watch has done badly, and continues to lower all known leadership bars. If we agree that Nigerians are poorer and hungrier today than before. If we agree that the present government is spending far more resources with far less impact than previous administrations. If we agree that corruption under the present administration has become intractable and Olympic. If we agree that BAT and his Team are largely uneventful, underwhelming and underperforming. If we agree that Nigeria needs urgent redemptive surgical attention. If we agree that except something drastic and urgent is done to save Nigeria now, we are all in trouble. And if we agree that Statesmen must be concerned about the next generation and not just the next election, then we must rise above individualistic politics and ambition, and put Country First.


In one week I have been inundated with calls and messages about the way forward for our nation. I understand that I should attend to my health for which I'm about 10,712 Kilometres far away, but my Country is also of great importance, and our politics ditto our leadership recruiting protocol equally important. What must we therefore do to salvage Nigeria?


Where are the Patriots, where are the Statesmen, where is the league of well-meaning and public spirited citizens, and where are those who truly want a Nigeria that works for all? Yes, this is a clarion call to Countrymen and women, we must rise up and challenge for the soul of our Country. We must ask politicians to stop trading with our destiny as a people and as a nation. We must decide now to hew out of the present stone of despair a nation that cares for her citizenry. We must call out those seeking the high office of President come 2027, we must insist that they come together, that they work together, and that they all elect to support and work with the most formidable 'candidate' that can trounce Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the Polls come 2027. We must berth a Ballot Based People's Revolution NOT a Bullet Based one which the underperformers are almost making plausible.


The present challenge is more than individual politics and ambition, it is about Nigeria. The challenge is more than ethnicity, geography and or religion, it is about our collective well-being. The challenge calls for strategic engagement, it demands that we cease henceforth to agonize and proceed to organize, for only through concerted deliberateness can we save Nigeria from the rampaging buccaneers and soulless Power-mongers that prey on our collective patrimony.


Do not allow those who prey on our fault lines to determine what happens in 2027. Do not allow those whose god is money play with the future of our Country. Do not side with men and women of ambition whose conscience is dead to our collective humanity to determine our morrow. And do not believe that WE, THE PEOPLE cannot break the chains of wickedness that they have woven over our Dear Nation. Do not forget that the Power of the People is stronger and mightier than the power of those in power.


Folks, because I must have you follow, enjoy, internalize and critique this series, I must make it short and reader friendly, I pray that I am able to do so.


I shall duel on the potential aspirants, their politics, their passion, their ambition, 'the persona' and their humanity, and hope that together we can decide on the best person for the high office of President. And this promises to be a long series surely.


God Bless Nigeria.


Prof Chris Mustapha Nwaokobia Jnr

Convener COUNTRYFIRST MOVEMENT. A Good Governance Advocacy Group.

For Feedback... E-mail: nthmatrix@gmail.com

Whatsapp: 09014873031


Please Share.

With the flurry of politicians indicating interest to run for the high office of President come 2027, and the incumbency of the Bola Ahmed Tinubu Presidency, one would expect Politicians to prioritize the call to put Country before individual politics and ambition.


If we agree that the present watch has done badly, and continues to lower all known leadership bars. If we agree that Nigerians are poorer and hungrier today than before. If we agree that the present government is spending far more resources with far less impact than previous administrations. If we agree that corruption under the present administration has become intractable and Olympic. If we agree that BAT and his Team are largely uneventful, underwhelming and underperforming. If we agree that Nigeria needs urgent redemptive surgical attention. If we agree that except something drastic and urgent is done to save Nigeria now, we are all in trouble. And if we agree that Statesmen must be concerned about the next generation and not just the next election, then we must rise above individualistic politics and ambition, and put Country First.


In one week I have been inundated with calls and messages about the way forward for our nation. I understand that I should attend to my health for which I'm about 10,712 Kilometres far away, but my Country is also of great importance, and our politics ditto our leadership recruiting protocol equally important. What must we therefore do to salvage Nigeria?


Where are the Patriots, where are the Statesmen, where is the league of well-meaning and public spirited citizens, and where are those who truly want a Nigeria that works for all? Yes, this is a clarion call to Countrymen and women, we must rise up and challenge for the soul of our Country. We must ask politicians to stop trading with our destiny as a people and as a nation. We must decide now to hew out of the present stone of despair a nation that cares for her citizenry. We must call out those seeking the high office of President come 2027, we must insist that they come together, that they work together, and that they all elect to support and work with the most formidable 'candidate' that can trounce Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the Polls come 2027. We must berth a Ballot Based People's Revolution NOT a Bullet Based one which the underperformers are almost making plausible.


The present challenge is more than individual politics and ambition, it is about Nigeria. The challenge is more than ethnicity, geography and or religion, it is about our collective well-being. The challenge calls for strategic engagement, it demands that we cease henceforth to agonize and proceed to organize, for only through concerted deliberateness can we save Nigeria from the rampaging buccaneers and soulless Power-mongers that prey on our collective patrimony.


Do not allow those who prey on our fault lines to determine what happens in 2027. Do not allow those whose god is money play with the future of our Country. Do not side with men and women of ambition whose conscience is dead to our collective humanity to determine our morrow. And do not believe that WE, THE PEOPLE cannot break the chains of wickedness that they have woven over our Dear Nation. Do not forget that the Power of the People is stronger and mightier than the power of those in power.


Folks, because I must have you follow, enjoy, internalize and critique this series, I must make it short and reader friendly, I pray that I am able to do so.


I shall duel on the potential aspirants, their politics, their passion, their ambition, 'the persona' and their humanity, and hope that together we can decide on the best person for the high office of President. And this promises to be a long series surely.


God Bless Nigeria.


Prof Chris Mustapha Nwaokobia Jnr

Convener COUNTRYFIRST MOVEMENT. A Good Governance Advocacy Group.

For Feedback... E-mail: nthmatrix@gmail.com

Whatsapp: 09014873031


Please Share.

2027: Timi Frank warns Northern, Southern leaders not to fall for Tinubu’s tricks

2027: Timi Frank warns Northern, Southern leaders not to fall for Tinubu’s tricks


A Former Deputy National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Timi Frank has on Wednesday warned Nigerians not to be fooled by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s tricks to again “grab power and run with it” in 2027. 


Frank who made this call in a statement in Abuja on Wednesday, specifically urged Northern and Southern leaders including opposition parties to resist Tinubu’s desperate 2027 presidential bid.


He revealed that while Tinubu is on one hand blackmailing Southerners, especially opposition Governors on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Labour Party (LP) and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) by playing the ethnic card to gain support, he is on the other hand threatening to deal with them if they fail to support him by declaring a state of emergency in their States over spurious charges of violence and corruption. 


"He has increased the intensity now by blackmailing, intimidating and putting at least five PDP Governors from the South under duress to defect along with their Members in the National Assembly to the APC. 


"To Tinubu, the 2027 election is about him versus the North and that is why he is trying desperately to enlist the support of the South through manipulation and subterfuge. 

He has forgotten so soon that the North helped him to get to power in 2023,” he said.


According to the Bayelsa-born political activist, 2027 should not be about North or South but who would  fix the myriads of challenges confronting the country, including the incessant killings, kidnappings and banditry as well as the harsh economic conditions foisted on the masses by Tinubu through fuel subsidy removal, increased electricity tariff and high cost of food and other essential services. 


He said: “Nigerians are in need of a President who will help Nigeria become better, not 'Northern candidate or Southern candidate' or 'Northern President or Southern President'.


“The country is overcharged already with divisions along ethnic lines. We therefore can't afford to have a President who is setting one region against another for the sake of his own personal ambition.


"For me, Timi Frank, as a Southerner, I don't believe in a tribalistic and divisive President. I believe in a leader that will come and unite rather than divide Nigeria. 


“I advise every Northerner still supporting Tinubu to have a rethink. They should know that the North that apparently ‘assisted’ Tinubu to gain power in 2023 is suffering the most today.


"It is a fact that the North has been grossly sidelined in appointments and other infrastructure development programmes by Tinubu who has prioritised his personal and tribal life-interests over everything else. 


"This is why the North should wake up. They should know this route Tinubu is going in terms of 2027 politics, is not the best for Nigeria. They should rise and speak with one voice in 2027.


"I want the Northern leaders to know that should Tinubu find his way back to power in 2027, the North will suffer untold neglect as Tinubu and the APC don’t have their genuine interest at heart.


"As we speak, at least five opposition Governors are set to defect to APC not because they like Tinubu but due to intense political pressure, intimidation and blackmail, while those who will remain have been made to sign undertakings to deliver their States to Tinubu, otherwise they will be made to lose their second term elections.


"Tinubu does not believe in the power of the people. Tinubu is working to steal the election results, to grab it (power) and run away with it like he did in 2023.


"If the North can't see the omen of imminent regional stagnation and destruction, they will regret it if they do nothing to stop Tinubu in 2027.


“Tinubu does not believe in democracy and that is why he has succeeded in ensuring that PDP, Labour Party and any other opposition parties are enmeshed in intractable internal crisis in order to deny capable and qualified aspirants platforms to challenge him in 2027. 


“His singular aim is to retain power in 2027 by hook or crook. He is doing all he can at the detriment of Nigerians, a complete negation of the oath of office he swore to on assumption of office as President.”


Timi Frank lamented that at the moment, Nigeria is on auto-pilot under Tinubu's watch, yet he (Tinubu) wants to force himself on Nigerians again in 2027. 


Timi Frank added: “Nigerians must on their part, prepare to reject Tinubu. It is the only patriotic thing to do as citizens. As citizens, we have a duty to reject a bad, clueless and rudderless leader and do all that is legally necessary to prevent him from returning to power.”


He urged the opposition leaders in the country to ensure that their coalition succeeds in defeating Tinubu in 2027.


"The coalition is in the best interest of Nigeria and Nigerians. I therefore appeal to the leaders of the coalition to put Nigeria and Nigerians first as their decision would help reshape the country and its future going forward,” he said.



Comrade Timi Frank is currently the ULMWP Ambassador to East Africa and Middle East


A Former Deputy National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Timi Frank has on Wednesday warned Nigerians not to be fooled by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s tricks to again “grab power and run with it” in 2027. 


Frank who made this call in a statement in Abuja on Wednesday, specifically urged Northern and Southern leaders including opposition parties to resist Tinubu’s desperate 2027 presidential bid.


He revealed that while Tinubu is on one hand blackmailing Southerners, especially opposition Governors on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Labour Party (LP) and All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) by playing the ethnic card to gain support, he is on the other hand threatening to deal with them if they fail to support him by declaring a state of emergency in their States over spurious charges of violence and corruption. 


"He has increased the intensity now by blackmailing, intimidating and putting at least five PDP Governors from the South under duress to defect along with their Members in the National Assembly to the APC. 


"To Tinubu, the 2027 election is about him versus the North and that is why he is trying desperately to enlist the support of the South through manipulation and subterfuge. 

He has forgotten so soon that the North helped him to get to power in 2023,” he said.


According to the Bayelsa-born political activist, 2027 should not be about North or South but who would  fix the myriads of challenges confronting the country, including the incessant killings, kidnappings and banditry as well as the harsh economic conditions foisted on the masses by Tinubu through fuel subsidy removal, increased electricity tariff and high cost of food and other essential services. 


He said: “Nigerians are in need of a President who will help Nigeria become better, not 'Northern candidate or Southern candidate' or 'Northern President or Southern President'.


“The country is overcharged already with divisions along ethnic lines. We therefore can't afford to have a President who is setting one region against another for the sake of his own personal ambition.


"For me, Timi Frank, as a Southerner, I don't believe in a tribalistic and divisive President. I believe in a leader that will come and unite rather than divide Nigeria. 


“I advise every Northerner still supporting Tinubu to have a rethink. They should know that the North that apparently ‘assisted’ Tinubu to gain power in 2023 is suffering the most today.


"It is a fact that the North has been grossly sidelined in appointments and other infrastructure development programmes by Tinubu who has prioritised his personal and tribal life-interests over everything else. 


"This is why the North should wake up. They should know this route Tinubu is going in terms of 2027 politics, is not the best for Nigeria. They should rise and speak with one voice in 2027.


"I want the Northern leaders to know that should Tinubu find his way back to power in 2027, the North will suffer untold neglect as Tinubu and the APC don’t have their genuine interest at heart.


"As we speak, at least five opposition Governors are set to defect to APC not because they like Tinubu but due to intense political pressure, intimidation and blackmail, while those who will remain have been made to sign undertakings to deliver their States to Tinubu, otherwise they will be made to lose their second term elections.


"Tinubu does not believe in the power of the people. Tinubu is working to steal the election results, to grab it (power) and run away with it like he did in 2023.


"If the North can't see the omen of imminent regional stagnation and destruction, they will regret it if they do nothing to stop Tinubu in 2027.


“Tinubu does not believe in democracy and that is why he has succeeded in ensuring that PDP, Labour Party and any other opposition parties are enmeshed in intractable internal crisis in order to deny capable and qualified aspirants platforms to challenge him in 2027. 


“His singular aim is to retain power in 2027 by hook or crook. He is doing all he can at the detriment of Nigerians, a complete negation of the oath of office he swore to on assumption of office as President.”


Timi Frank lamented that at the moment, Nigeria is on auto-pilot under Tinubu's watch, yet he (Tinubu) wants to force himself on Nigerians again in 2027. 


Timi Frank added: “Nigerians must on their part, prepare to reject Tinubu. It is the only patriotic thing to do as citizens. As citizens, we have a duty to reject a bad, clueless and rudderless leader and do all that is legally necessary to prevent him from returning to power.”


He urged the opposition leaders in the country to ensure that their coalition succeeds in defeating Tinubu in 2027.


"The coalition is in the best interest of Nigeria and Nigerians. I therefore appeal to the leaders of the coalition to put Nigeria and Nigerians first as their decision would help reshape the country and its future going forward,” he said.



Comrade Timi Frank is currently the ULMWP Ambassador to East Africa and Middle East

Tinubu as yesterday’s rebel and today’s tyrant, By Farooq A. Kperogi

Tinubu as yesterday’s rebel and today’s tyrant, By Farooq A. Kperogi


President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s demonstrably unconstitutional suspension of the elected leaders of Rivers State and his illegal imposition of a retired military lickspittle as sole administrator in the exercise of his otherwise constitutional privilege to declare a state of emergency in any part of the country is the latest addition in a long list of instances of his embrace of the very things he once resented and fought against when he was outside the reins of federal power.


For example, he was brutally censorious of Goodluck Jonathan’s withdrawal of fuel subsidies in 2012. He expressed sentiments in writing and in speeches that resonated with the angst of the masses. He even helped finance a nationwide mass protest that so convulsed the country that Jonathan was compelled to back off his plans.


Yet, one of the first acts Tinubu did as a president in May 2023 was to announce an economically and socially disruptive withdrawal of fuel subsidies that has deepened poverty, annihilated the middle class, and ruptured the very fabric of Nigerian society.


Again, when Olusegun Obasanjo unconstitutionally suspended Plateau State’s Governor Joshua Dariye—along with state legislators— in May 2004 and appointed General Chris Ali as the state’s sole administrator, then Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu of Lagos rightly called the act “illegal.”


“It is unfortunate and illegal,” he said. “This has to be discouraged. It is a bad precedent. What the president of the country has done, I pray it doesn’t stand.”


In fact, when Goodluck Jonathan declared states of emergency in the three northeastern states of Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa without suspending the elected leaders of the states, which I commended in a May 25, 2013, column titled “The Malcolm Xian Logic in Jonathan’s Praiseworthy Boko Haram Offensive,” Tinubu condemned it as unacceptable federal overreach.


“No governor of a state in Nigeria is the chief security officer,” he said. “Putting the blame on the governors, who have been effectively emasculated, for the abysmal performance of the government at the centre which controls all these security agencies, smacks of ignorance and mischief.”


He contended that Jonathan’s action “seeks to abridge or has the potential of totally scuttling the constitutional functions of governors and other elected representatives of the people” and that it would be “counterproductive in the long run.”


Given an opportunity to give materiality to the principles he espoused when he had no access to federal power, he has become indistinguishable from, and in many cases worse than, the objects of his erstwhile censure.


Tinubu now implements the same policies he once condemned and has become the same personality he once reviled. He exemplifies the aphoristic wisdom (often attributed to historian Ariel Durant or her husband Will Durant) that says, “Today’s rebel is tomorrow’s tyrant.” In Tinubu’s case, he was yesterday’s rebel and today’s tyrant.


Why do most people who initially invested symbolic and political capital in fighting against authority or oppression eventually become the very oppressors they once resisted? Why do firebrands and idealists often morph into the very thing they once denounced after assuming power?


The evidence of history shows us that resistance to tyranny can, and often does, end in new tyrannies. Critics of war or corruption frequently adopt those same practices when they find themselves in the circles of power.


So, this is beyond Tinubu as a person, who probably never really had any principles to begin with, whose resistance to past oppressive policies was probably mere calculative opportunism.


But why do previously genuinely adversarial people become the very things they once opposed with such regularity? Observers from psychology, philosophy, and political theory have long studied this phenomenon.


A previous column I wrote (and republished twice) on the psychology of power pointed out that “people under the influence of power are neurologically similar to people who suffer traumatic brain injury” and posited that situational, power-induced brain damage may be responsible for this.


Philosophers have also grappled with the paradox of noble ideals curdling into oppression. Friedrich Nietzsche, for example, famously warned of the moral danger that comes with fighting evil too intensely. “He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster,” Nietzsche wrote, adding, “if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.”


Nietzsche’s metaphor speaks to how the struggle for power or justice can warp people’s souls. Revolutionaries and reformers, in attempting to vanquish a “monster” (e.g. a tyrant or an unjust system), may take on the very methods and mindset of that monster.


His concept of the “will to power” also suggests that the drive to attain power can override other moral constraints, so that once the will to power is unleashed, individuals rationalize actions that serve dominance.


French theorist Michel Foucault provides another lens through which we can make sense of the phenomenon of people taking on the very methods and mindset of the beasts of power they once fought.


He said, “Power is everywhere; not because it embraces everything, but because it comes from everywhere.” By that, he means no one is ever truly outside power relations; even the most vicious critics of the most monstrous regimes operate within a field of power. Once the critics take control, he said, they often reproduce the very power dynamics they once criticized, even if their rhetoric changes.


The line between oppressor and liberator can blur: the roles may switch, but the play remains the same. Foucault’s insight is that systems of power tend to self-perpetuate, regardless of who is at the helm, unless conscious effort is made to dismantle those underlying structures.


In other words, a change in leadership without a change in what Foucault calls the “microphysics of power” is likely to yield similar repressive outcomes. The new boss becomes “same as the old boss,” because the circuitry of power channels them into that role.


That’s why the sadly familiar pattern of “condemning in opposition, then doing in government” is so widespread that it almost seems like a political law of gravity. It’s good to bear this in mind as we read and listen to the pronouncements of current “opposition” politicians who seem like they identify with popular causes and sentiments.


Like Tinubu, today’s opponents of executive overreach may extend their own executive powers once they have the opportunity.


Like Tinubu, they will have a story to tell themselves and the public to justify their U-turn: the situation is different, their actions are for the greater good, their previous stance was based on incomplete information, etc. And indeed, sometimes circumstances do legitimately change.


But when the dust settles, the outcome looks awfully familiar. Pro-democracy activists become a congress of tyrants and justifiers of tyranny; the fierce social critic and human rights activist who once decried abuses now defends them; the liberator who once raged against oppressors now only liberates his stomach. As the Roman philosopher-politician Cicero once wrote, “It is easier to criticize than to do better.”


Fortunately, this cycle is not inevitable. Many thinkers advocate checks and balances, institutional limits, and personal integrity as antidotes, although even those seem to be insufficient.


Nigeria’s National Assembly, as we have seen in the last few years, particularly in the last few days, can neither check nor balance the excesses of the executive. It’s a slavish extension of Aso Rock. The voices of the few honest, conscientious ones among them are drowned out by the cacophony that the rapacious, unprincipled, mercenary self-seekers among them, who constitute the majority, emit. The judiciary is even worse.


It is easy to be disillusioned and to surrender amid this reality. To be frank, I have found myself in that state many times. But power must be continually guarded and checked. Philosopher Hannah Arendt observed that only constant vigilance and a commitment to plurality and law prevent rebels from calcifying into tyrants.


We must all do our part to hold people in power to account, even if we’re not sure we would do better ourselves. At this point, the only check and balance against creeping tyranny is the democratic rebellion of the people.


President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s demonstrably unconstitutional suspension of the elected leaders of Rivers State and his illegal imposition of a retired military lickspittle as sole administrator in the exercise of his otherwise constitutional privilege to declare a state of emergency in any part of the country is the latest addition in a long list of instances of his embrace of the very things he once resented and fought against when he was outside the reins of federal power.


For example, he was brutally censorious of Goodluck Jonathan’s withdrawal of fuel subsidies in 2012. He expressed sentiments in writing and in speeches that resonated with the angst of the masses. He even helped finance a nationwide mass protest that so convulsed the country that Jonathan was compelled to back off his plans.


Yet, one of the first acts Tinubu did as a president in May 2023 was to announce an economically and socially disruptive withdrawal of fuel subsidies that has deepened poverty, annihilated the middle class, and ruptured the very fabric of Nigerian society.


Again, when Olusegun Obasanjo unconstitutionally suspended Plateau State’s Governor Joshua Dariye—along with state legislators— in May 2004 and appointed General Chris Ali as the state’s sole administrator, then Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu of Lagos rightly called the act “illegal.”


“It is unfortunate and illegal,” he said. “This has to be discouraged. It is a bad precedent. What the president of the country has done, I pray it doesn’t stand.”


In fact, when Goodluck Jonathan declared states of emergency in the three northeastern states of Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa without suspending the elected leaders of the states, which I commended in a May 25, 2013, column titled “The Malcolm Xian Logic in Jonathan’s Praiseworthy Boko Haram Offensive,” Tinubu condemned it as unacceptable federal overreach.


“No governor of a state in Nigeria is the chief security officer,” he said. “Putting the blame on the governors, who have been effectively emasculated, for the abysmal performance of the government at the centre which controls all these security agencies, smacks of ignorance and mischief.”


He contended that Jonathan’s action “seeks to abridge or has the potential of totally scuttling the constitutional functions of governors and other elected representatives of the people” and that it would be “counterproductive in the long run.”


Given an opportunity to give materiality to the principles he espoused when he had no access to federal power, he has become indistinguishable from, and in many cases worse than, the objects of his erstwhile censure.


Tinubu now implements the same policies he once condemned and has become the same personality he once reviled. He exemplifies the aphoristic wisdom (often attributed to historian Ariel Durant or her husband Will Durant) that says, “Today’s rebel is tomorrow’s tyrant.” In Tinubu’s case, he was yesterday’s rebel and today’s tyrant.


Why do most people who initially invested symbolic and political capital in fighting against authority or oppression eventually become the very oppressors they once resisted? Why do firebrands and idealists often morph into the very thing they once denounced after assuming power?


The evidence of history shows us that resistance to tyranny can, and often does, end in new tyrannies. Critics of war or corruption frequently adopt those same practices when they find themselves in the circles of power.


So, this is beyond Tinubu as a person, who probably never really had any principles to begin with, whose resistance to past oppressive policies was probably mere calculative opportunism.


But why do previously genuinely adversarial people become the very things they once opposed with such regularity? Observers from psychology, philosophy, and political theory have long studied this phenomenon.


A previous column I wrote (and republished twice) on the psychology of power pointed out that “people under the influence of power are neurologically similar to people who suffer traumatic brain injury” and posited that situational, power-induced brain damage may be responsible for this.


Philosophers have also grappled with the paradox of noble ideals curdling into oppression. Friedrich Nietzsche, for example, famously warned of the moral danger that comes with fighting evil too intensely. “He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster,” Nietzsche wrote, adding, “if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.”


Nietzsche’s metaphor speaks to how the struggle for power or justice can warp people’s souls. Revolutionaries and reformers, in attempting to vanquish a “monster” (e.g. a tyrant or an unjust system), may take on the very methods and mindset of that monster.


His concept of the “will to power” also suggests that the drive to attain power can override other moral constraints, so that once the will to power is unleashed, individuals rationalize actions that serve dominance.


French theorist Michel Foucault provides another lens through which we can make sense of the phenomenon of people taking on the very methods and mindset of the beasts of power they once fought.


He said, “Power is everywhere; not because it embraces everything, but because it comes from everywhere.” By that, he means no one is ever truly outside power relations; even the most vicious critics of the most monstrous regimes operate within a field of power. Once the critics take control, he said, they often reproduce the very power dynamics they once criticized, even if their rhetoric changes.


The line between oppressor and liberator can blur: the roles may switch, but the play remains the same. Foucault’s insight is that systems of power tend to self-perpetuate, regardless of who is at the helm, unless conscious effort is made to dismantle those underlying structures.


In other words, a change in leadership without a change in what Foucault calls the “microphysics of power” is likely to yield similar repressive outcomes. The new boss becomes “same as the old boss,” because the circuitry of power channels them into that role.


That’s why the sadly familiar pattern of “condemning in opposition, then doing in government” is so widespread that it almost seems like a political law of gravity. It’s good to bear this in mind as we read and listen to the pronouncements of current “opposition” politicians who seem like they identify with popular causes and sentiments.


Like Tinubu, today’s opponents of executive overreach may extend their own executive powers once they have the opportunity.


Like Tinubu, they will have a story to tell themselves and the public to justify their U-turn: the situation is different, their actions are for the greater good, their previous stance was based on incomplete information, etc. And indeed, sometimes circumstances do legitimately change.


But when the dust settles, the outcome looks awfully familiar. Pro-democracy activists become a congress of tyrants and justifiers of tyranny; the fierce social critic and human rights activist who once decried abuses now defends them; the liberator who once raged against oppressors now only liberates his stomach. As the Roman philosopher-politician Cicero once wrote, “It is easier to criticize than to do better.”


Fortunately, this cycle is not inevitable. Many thinkers advocate checks and balances, institutional limits, and personal integrity as antidotes, although even those seem to be insufficient.


Nigeria’s National Assembly, as we have seen in the last few years, particularly in the last few days, can neither check nor balance the excesses of the executive. It’s a slavish extension of Aso Rock. The voices of the few honest, conscientious ones among them are drowned out by the cacophony that the rapacious, unprincipled, mercenary self-seekers among them, who constitute the majority, emit. The judiciary is even worse.


It is easy to be disillusioned and to surrender amid this reality. To be frank, I have found myself in that state many times. But power must be continually guarded and checked. Philosopher Hannah Arendt observed that only constant vigilance and a commitment to plurality and law prevent rebels from calcifying into tyrants.


We must all do our part to hold people in power to account, even if we’re not sure we would do better ourselves. At this point, the only check and balance against creeping tyranny is the democratic rebellion of the people.

Tinubu: A Squirrel That Climbed The Tree, Left Nigerians Hopeless

Tinubu: A Squirrel That Climbed The Tree, Left Nigerians Hopeless

 By Buhari Olanrewaju Ahmed 


The lawlessness in Nigeria today is not accidental; it has been nurtured by those entrusted with leadership. 



Before assuming power, they weep before the masses, rolling on the ground, making empty promises to the oppressed. But once they seize power, they transform into ruthless predators, sacrificing the very people they swore to serve. This vicious cycle has crippled the nation for decades.


The impunity orchestrated by these power-hungry elites is unimaginable. 


They exploit the people's trust, manipulate institutions, and prioritise their personal ambitions over national stability. Even when the country teeters on the brink of collapse, their only concern is retaining control at all costs.


President Bola Ahmed Tinubu's recent declaration of a state of emergency in Rivers State is nothing more than a calculated political maneuver.


 It is a strategic attempt to wrest control of the state from the opposition ahead of the 2027 general elections. By imposing direct federal control, Tinubu and his allies seek to dominate the state's vast resources, leaving the people of Rivers and the entire Niger Delta region at their mercy.


If Tinubu were genuinely concerned about national security, why has he failed to declare a state of emergency in states plagued by relentless violence?


 Thousands have been massacred in the North by terrorists, yet no such measure has been taken. This year alone, hundreds of innocent lives have been lost to herdsmen attacks in Ondo, Benue, and Enugu. Yet, Tinubu has not only refused to declare a state of emergency in these areas but has also remained silent, failing even to issue a formal condemnation.


The political crisis in Rivers State is largely fueled by the power-drunk Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike. His obsession with control, coupled with his belief that he wields influence over the president, has exacerbated the situation.


 Despite overwhelming evidence pointing to Wike as the architect of the crisis, Tinubu has spared him—perhaps as a reward for his role in the election manipulations that helped secure Tinubu’s presidency.


Declaring a state of emergency in a region where there is no war, conflict, or oppression is an outright abuse of power.


 Tinubu, who once touted himself as a champion of democracy, is now rewriting the constitution to impose military-style governance. His actions expose the hypocrisy of his administration, revealing a dangerous shift toward authoritarian rule.


Before Tinubu's ascension to power, I warned Nigerians against voting for him. He is not the leader he claims to be.


 Unfortunately, many fell victim to the "Yoruba Ronu" propaganda, a narrative that has only served to erode their dignity and well-being.


With figures like Senate President Godswill Akpabio and Speaker of the House of Representatives Tajudeen Abbas serving as rubber-stamp legislators, Nigeria remains trapped in a cycle of stagnation.


 Those who elected incompetent representatives should not expect progress or meaningful change. These self-serving politiciansprioritizse personal enrichment over national development, betraying the trust of the electorate at every turn.


Tinubu and his cohorts are writing a history of infamy, one that future generations will neither forget nor forgive. 


One day, their descendants may find themselves cursed for the sins of their forefathers, just as former military ruler Ibrahim Babangida now seeks forgiveness for his past misdeeds—only to be met with rejection.


Nigerian history has been shaped by great leaders like Obafemi Awolowo, M.K.O. Abiola, Gani Fawehinmi, Tafawa Balewa, Ahmadu Bello, and Fela Anikulapo Kuti, whose legacies inspire pride among their descendants. In contrast, Tinubu and his allies are inscribing a legacy of betrayal and oppression.


For those who support impunity, continue to do so at your own peril. History has a way of catching up with even the most powerful. One day, the hunter will become the hunted.

 By Buhari Olanrewaju Ahmed 


The lawlessness in Nigeria today is not accidental; it has been nurtured by those entrusted with leadership. 



Before assuming power, they weep before the masses, rolling on the ground, making empty promises to the oppressed. But once they seize power, they transform into ruthless predators, sacrificing the very people they swore to serve. This vicious cycle has crippled the nation for decades.


The impunity orchestrated by these power-hungry elites is unimaginable. 


They exploit the people's trust, manipulate institutions, and prioritise their personal ambitions over national stability. Even when the country teeters on the brink of collapse, their only concern is retaining control at all costs.


President Bola Ahmed Tinubu's recent declaration of a state of emergency in Rivers State is nothing more than a calculated political maneuver.


 It is a strategic attempt to wrest control of the state from the opposition ahead of the 2027 general elections. By imposing direct federal control, Tinubu and his allies seek to dominate the state's vast resources, leaving the people of Rivers and the entire Niger Delta region at their mercy.


If Tinubu were genuinely concerned about national security, why has he failed to declare a state of emergency in states plagued by relentless violence?


 Thousands have been massacred in the North by terrorists, yet no such measure has been taken. This year alone, hundreds of innocent lives have been lost to herdsmen attacks in Ondo, Benue, and Enugu. Yet, Tinubu has not only refused to declare a state of emergency in these areas but has also remained silent, failing even to issue a formal condemnation.


The political crisis in Rivers State is largely fueled by the power-drunk Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike. His obsession with control, coupled with his belief that he wields influence over the president, has exacerbated the situation.


 Despite overwhelming evidence pointing to Wike as the architect of the crisis, Tinubu has spared him—perhaps as a reward for his role in the election manipulations that helped secure Tinubu’s presidency.


Declaring a state of emergency in a region where there is no war, conflict, or oppression is an outright abuse of power.


 Tinubu, who once touted himself as a champion of democracy, is now rewriting the constitution to impose military-style governance. His actions expose the hypocrisy of his administration, revealing a dangerous shift toward authoritarian rule.


Before Tinubu's ascension to power, I warned Nigerians against voting for him. He is not the leader he claims to be.


 Unfortunately, many fell victim to the "Yoruba Ronu" propaganda, a narrative that has only served to erode their dignity and well-being.


With figures like Senate President Godswill Akpabio and Speaker of the House of Representatives Tajudeen Abbas serving as rubber-stamp legislators, Nigeria remains trapped in a cycle of stagnation.


 Those who elected incompetent representatives should not expect progress or meaningful change. These self-serving politiciansprioritizse personal enrichment over national development, betraying the trust of the electorate at every turn.


Tinubu and his cohorts are writing a history of infamy, one that future generations will neither forget nor forgive. 


One day, their descendants may find themselves cursed for the sins of their forefathers, just as former military ruler Ibrahim Babangida now seeks forgiveness for his past misdeeds—only to be met with rejection.


Nigerian history has been shaped by great leaders like Obafemi Awolowo, M.K.O. Abiola, Gani Fawehinmi, Tafawa Balewa, Ahmadu Bello, and Fela Anikulapo Kuti, whose legacies inspire pride among their descendants. In contrast, Tinubu and his allies are inscribing a legacy of betrayal and oppression.


For those who support impunity, continue to do so at your own peril. History has a way of catching up with even the most powerful. One day, the hunter will become the hunted.

State of Emergency in Rivers, Tinubu Led Presidency behind Pipeline Vandalism

State of Emergency in Rivers, Tinubu Led Presidency behind Pipeline Vandalism


There's full blown terrorism in the middle belt, zamfara, katsina, sokoto, the North East yet no state of emergency but as soon as two pipelines where blown up Tinubu imposed State of emergency in Rivers State. 


The speed with which they moved to make the declaration when they have not considered the same thing in states facing real security threats is obvious that this move was pre-meditated. 


How come Wike the trouble maker didn't get suspended or sacked but only the governor who's only crime is refusing to be a puppet. 


And as soon as Tinubu illegally suspended the governor he appoints Wike & Akpabio's friend as administrator. 


Are you still wondering who actually blew up those pipelines? 


Okay ask yourself who benefits the most from all these madness. BAT & Wike of course. 

Wike gets to do whatever he wants in Rivers State with the administrator and may yet force Fubara to cower to him. 


Tinubu gets to make more money by Nigeria depending more on his Malta refinery driving up the price of petrol and sabotaging Dangote's refinery in Nigeria and causing more hardship for Nigerian's.


Also this will please his Western masters who see Dangote's refinery as a threat to their operations in the Nigerian oil industry.


Now you should know who was behind the bombing of those pipelines. Yes it's the same people who imposed the state of emergency in Rivers State. 


They don't even care about the security and economic implications of all these which may yet backfire on them. We have security challenges and our armed forces are spread thing already now they want to open a new war front in the Niger Delta which they know very well they can't handle and when Nigerian's decide to revolt they'll not be enough military men to protect them. 


Only a generational change in leadership will end the country's woes 


Source: Social media


There's full blown terrorism in the middle belt, zamfara, katsina, sokoto, the North East yet no state of emergency but as soon as two pipelines where blown up Tinubu imposed State of emergency in Rivers State. 


The speed with which they moved to make the declaration when they have not considered the same thing in states facing real security threats is obvious that this move was pre-meditated. 


How come Wike the trouble maker didn't get suspended or sacked but only the governor who's only crime is refusing to be a puppet. 


And as soon as Tinubu illegally suspended the governor he appoints Wike & Akpabio's friend as administrator. 


Are you still wondering who actually blew up those pipelines? 


Okay ask yourself who benefits the most from all these madness. BAT & Wike of course. 

Wike gets to do whatever he wants in Rivers State with the administrator and may yet force Fubara to cower to him. 


Tinubu gets to make more money by Nigeria depending more on his Malta refinery driving up the price of petrol and sabotaging Dangote's refinery in Nigeria and causing more hardship for Nigerian's.


Also this will please his Western masters who see Dangote's refinery as a threat to their operations in the Nigerian oil industry.


Now you should know who was behind the bombing of those pipelines. Yes it's the same people who imposed the state of emergency in Rivers State. 


They don't even care about the security and economic implications of all these which may yet backfire on them. We have security challenges and our armed forces are spread thing already now they want to open a new war front in the Niger Delta which they know very well they can't handle and when Nigerian's decide to revolt they'll not be enough military men to protect them. 


Only a generational change in leadership will end the country's woes 


Source: Social media

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