What is quite unfortunate about Nigeria?
How low quality our problems actually are, we are stuck in a cycle of solving low-quality problems like light, roads and food.
it's quite sad that as a whole we don't realize how low quality our problems are;
How low quality our problems actually are, we are stuck in a cycle of solving low-quality problems like light, roads and food.
it's quite sad that as a whole we don't realize how low quality our problems are;
We have intellectuals arguing for/against allocation of paper(USD) or whether we should focus on farming or not.
We are debating low-quality problems in a fast-changing global village, where at one of the spectrum, issues like inequality and morality are fast becoming the focus
We are debating low-quality problems in a fast-changing global village, where at one of the spectrum, issues like inequality and morality are fast becoming the focus
In a world where we have countries largely focused on solving inequality, representation and then advancing into AI, the metauniverse, space etc etc.
My own is focused on allocating fertilizer and also taking over 50-page newspapers to celebrate a politician.
it's not fair
My own is focused on allocating fertilizer and also taking over 50-page newspapers to celebrate a politician.
it's not fair
We need more long term thinkers and policy drivers does Nigeria plan to be here in another 50, 100 years? What active decisions are we making today to make sure we are going to be there in 200.
Nothing remains static in life, it either evolves(grows) or wanes(dies)
Nothing remains static in life, it either evolves(grows) or wanes(dies)
Every time I see our short-termism with debating things that won't matter - exchange rates or comparing this govt to the previous ones, a part of me dies.
Are we looking to compare failures or better our country for the future generations that we seem to like procreating
Are we looking to compare failures or better our country for the future generations that we seem to like procreating
Can we confidently say what a Nigeria in 50 years will look like? data, factual driven assumptions? do we think this far out?
or we just rely on 31st December church services and sing the same hope song every year?
My people wake up
or we just rely on 31st December church services and sing the same hope song every year?
My people wake up
What we young Nigerians don't realise is that there is a vacuum, believe it or not, experience matters whether it's in leading an org or a country, we are lacking in the quality of young people that have the vision and willpower to fill this vacuum...
which means when the post-civil war military politicians finally drop the reigns, we are going to have another two or three decades of test and trials,
we have a leadership vacuum and we are not even raising a generation of people to solve it.
We are lacking
we have a leadership vacuum and we are not even raising a generation of people to solve it.
We are lacking
We are also not documenting the failures of our current protectionist measures, we don't know the costs, the media doesn't help either which is why we have these conversations every time oil prices decides not to sing
It's low quality, it's a wretched cycle and we are losing
It's low quality, it's a wretched cycle and we are losing
We all know the saying "give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime"
I'll do you one better
Don't give a man a fish, allow him to hope and hope and all he can grasp in his infinite man is fish, no progress, no hope
I'll do you one better
Don't give a man a fish, allow him to hope and hope and all he can grasp in his infinite man is fish, no progress, no hope
"It is futile for good people to go into the Nigerian political system and try to fix it. The system isn’t broken. The system is doing exactly what it was made to do” https://medium.com/@samlogic_/referees-on-governance-and-change-1f50ea0f6985