Monday 5 December 2016

IS THIS RIGHT ABOUT A COMPANY LIKE GOOGLE?????

WHAT I AM TO POST MIGHT BE GRAPHICALLY OFFENSIVE BUT AT THE END OF IT I GUESS A WHOLE LOT OF THINGS WILL BE MADE KNOWN.......

I WAS SURFING THROUGH THE INTERNET AND CAME UPON THIS...QUITE SHOCKING TO FIND OUT HOW AND WHAT GOOGLE THINKS ABOUT BLACKS IN GENERAL....

I WILL POST THE RESULTS OF MY SHOCKING DISCOVERY AND ALSO ADVICE YOU ALL TO GIVE IT A GO

OPEN GOOGLE AND TYPE " SEXY WHITE MUM " AND AFTERWARDS TRY " SEXY BLACK MOM " CLICK ON IMAGES AND YOU WILL SEE WHAT GOOGLE THINKS OF BLACK WOMEN.

I SEE IT AS A SLAP ON THE BLACK RACE AND WILL BE GLAD IF WE CAN COME AS ONE AND STAND AGAINST THIS...

SEXY WHITE MOM























SEXY BLACK MOM

THIS IS THE MOST DECENT PICTURE UNDER IMAGES















THESE ARE A FEW OF

THE IMAGES FOR SEXY BLACK MOM

IS THIS HOW GOOGLE SEES US, SHOULD WE JUST ALLOW THIS GO WITHOUT TALKING ABOUT IT

Monday 4 January 2016

Kanu, Dasuki: NBA Disagrees With Buhari, Says Rule of Law Must Come First

Image result for augustine alegeh

President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Augustine Alegeh has said that the federal government must respect the rule of law in the case of former National Security Adviser, NSA, Col. Sambo Dasuki and the leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu who are facing separate criminal charges.
During the Maiden Presidential Media Chat, President Muhammadu Buhari explained why Kanu and Dasuki will not be granted bail despite court orders.
Professor Itse Sagay led anti-corruption committee also submitted that the government is not violating the rule of law in any way because any bail granted an accused is completely related to the offence which he is charged before the court.
While speaking to Vanguard, Alegeh explained that “Government has a need to respect the rule of law. As a matter of fact, there is need for government to be in the front burner in the respect for the rule of law.
“Whoever is unhappy, including government with a pronouncement of the court, has the opportunity of still going back to that court, for the court’s decision to be vacated or appeal to a higher court, but not to undertake to ignore it or carrying on as though nothing has happened or that the court’s order is not binding. That is an unacceptable principle in the rule of law.
“An agenda for the respect of rule of law is a must for the government. For specific cases in court, it’s not the business of the Nigerian Bar Association to make comments on them, because we have our members on both side and they can decide to speak on the matter, but on the general principle of rule of law, as an association, it is one area we are passionate about, which we feel is very essential.
“So, both government and citizens must subscribe to the principles of rule of law and doing otherwise is not an option. You cannot pick and choose which court order to obey, if you try to do that, you are clearly undermining the principle of rule of law and the obvious consequence will not help the society in anyway.
“We believe that from our interaction with the government of President Muhammadu Buhari, they do not have an option but to obey court orders. You must bear in mind that the courts are there to settle disputes between individuals as well as between government and individuals, so it is important that all parties respect the rule of law and judgments and decision of courts as that is one area we will not compromise.”

Sunday 27 December 2015

WHEN WILL THIS SAGA END

While we have received the announcement of the  from the Nigerian government on the Christmas eve, we are obligated to advice Nigerian citizens to not release their breath yet and risk their lives in the known Boko Haram territories. Keep your guards up and be fully security-conscious as the end is near and approachable but not quite here.
We highly appreciate the work of the altruistic and truly patriotic civilian JTF, which has always remained the last line of defense, and the most reliable and consistent hope of the communities plagued by Boko Haram. Your vigilance in intercepting those food-flask bombs cannot be overestimated. The sacrifice you make, and those who have passed will never be forgotten.

Boko Haram “moneybags” are still free

While Boko Haram has been “technically” defeated, the danger is still here. If the public was not notified, not a single sponsor of Boko Haram has yet been arrested by the Nigerian security services and army. This is the root of the deadly tree, and until the root is killed, the tree will not be dead.
We would like to remind the Nigerian security services that the governor of Borno state and the head of the Northern States Governors Forum, Kashim Shettima, knows the sponsors of Boko Haram. He has mentioned on several occasions that he is keeping mute to protect them. We want the Nigerian army to make Kashim Shettima and others who know the sponsors talk. Dasuki has  that he knows the sponsors; so has the former president, Goodluck Jonathan. We all do believe they have handed over this information to the security services, and we also expect the top-level arrests before the December deadline.
It is time to put a lasting and permanent end to the menace that has affected all of us including the army, and turned some of us into beasts and walking dead. The stress has taken a permanent toll on our army; it needs counselors and medical therapy. The soldiers should not keep laying their lives down for us, and testing their physical and mental capacities while some people who have paid for this carnage still live happily.

The war against Boko Haram sponsors must start now

As important as the war against corruption are prosecuting the chief looters, and the war against Boko Haram and its main financiers and political sponsors, both Nigerian and foreign. Nigeria must urgently get to the bottom of it via identifying and executing its backers, not only to truly end the reign of terror and prevent its reoccurrence, but also to identify the reasons towards preventing similar situations in the future. The sponsors of Boko Haram must no longer be covered, and all those implicated in concealing their identities must be punished equally to the full extent of the law.
The military chiefs suspected in directly and indirectly supporting Boko Haram and its pogrom agenda along with the former NSA, Dasuki, must also be brought to book. We should have pity for the 100,000 dead and three million displaced suffering in the Borno winter right now. The Chibok girls and their families deserve justice; without justice there can never be peace.
It is another Christmas without our girls. Only God knows whether they will ever come back. But they are in the best hands – His. May He have mercy on them.
We thank the sacrifice of the soldiers in the battlefield. May the Good Lord bless you and reward you in the ways man cannot.
God bless Nigeria.

Tuesday 22 December 2015

Five Major Mistakes Of PDP and Jonathan


2015 is a year best forgotten for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). For the first time in 16 years, the self-acclaimed biggest political party in Africa lost its hold on the presidency after it had produced three presidents since the country returned to the democratic rule in 1999. For the first time in Nigeria’s democratic history, an incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan, was defeated by the candidate of the opposition party, the All Progressives Congress (APC).
It does not rain but pours. The PDP in 2011 had 23 governors while their closest rival, the Action Congress of Nigeria won in 6 states. Fast forward to 2015, the party lost its hold in 11 states and could only win in 12 states.
The PDP’s inability to win the presidential election and also losing its 11 states to its opponents was dues to some mistakes the party made in 2015. While the APC deserves credit for its effort in defeating the PDP, the latter made a lot of political errors that cost the party its top position in the country’s political landscape.
Here are things the PDP did wrong in 2015, naij.com’s edition:

1. Presenting Goodluck Jonathan As Its Presidential Candidate.

The power of incumbency is a strong one when it comes to participating in an election as so as expected, the then president, Jonathan automatically got the presidential ticket of the PDP to run for presidency in 2015. While on a plain level it looked like the normal things to have done, a critical political review would have shown that presenting Jonathan as its candidate was a wrong move.
Firstly, The former president Olusegun Obasanjo made it known that he would not support Jonathan’s bid for a second term as he had broken a gentleman’s agreement.
Secondly, it was becoming obvious that the people had lost faith in Jonathan and wanted change, a mantra the APC adopted. The growing number of Boko Haram’s attacks, especially the abduction of the over 200 Chibok girls, were still fresh in the memory of Nigerians. They also got concerned by the removal of subsidy and the increment in the price of petrol. The last straw was the prevalence of corruption which Jonathan did not seem to manage properly.

2. Smear Campaign


The PDP, during the presidential election, employed a dirty tactic that shocked a lot of Nigerians. Its campaigns, rather than focus on what the party and its candidate had done to warrant the re-election, spent its energy trying to defame its main rival, the APC, and its candidate, Buhari.
The tactic did not work, as while the then ruling party tried to convince (or confuse) Nigerians that Buhari did not have a higher education certificate and was a murderer, the APC was focused on glorifying its candidate as an experienced incorruptible, no-nonsense leader.
Nigerians were left to make a choice between the two candidates: a good Buhari or a bad one while the PDP neglected its candidate, the height of its smear campaign was a newspaper advert sponsored by the governor of Ekiti state, Ayodele Fayose in which he warned Nigerians not to vote for Buhari as he might likely die the same way some northern heads of state died in office.

3. Defending Corrupt Officials

It is in the interest of political parties to stand by their members, especially during trying periods. However, there are some situations where the party should either dissociate itself or keep mute. The PDP in a bid to stand by its members has portrayed itself as a party that supports and represents corruption. The party’s publicity secretary, Olisa Metuh, was quick to berate the current president and the APC for the arrest of Sambo Dasuki, the former national security adviser to Jonathan.  The PDP in 2015 has portrayed every investigation that concerned its members as a witch hunt without being able to convince Nigerians that the allegations against the suspects are false.

4. Losing Obasanjo

The marriage between the former president Olusegun Obasano and the PDP came to an end in 2015 although the strain in their relationship had started before then.
It is not doubt that Obasano is one of the most powerful political figures in Nigeria and a respected figure in the PDP. He was elected the president on the platform of the party and became the first one to successfully hand over to another elected president in Nigeria. That was why it came as a surprise when in February 2015 Obasanjo dramatically tore his PDP membership card and declared that he was an elder statesman and therefore not supporting any political party.
 Their rival, the APC, immediately paid Obasanjo a visit to solicit for his support. His numerous supporters switched their allegiance from the PDP to the APC.

5. Fani Kayode And Doyin Okupe

Doyin Okupe and Fani Kayode became (in)famous in 2015, especially during the period before the general elections. The duo, who were the mouth piece of Jonathan and also his with their brand of campaign and criticism. The duo introduced a brand of campaign that did more harm than good to Jonathan. They spoke more about Buhari not having a certificate than what Jonathan did with his PhD.
In the long run, Nigerians grew used to the insults they were spewing and were swayed by the candidate who seemed to be more represented in the media by his publicity team than the one whose campaign team spent more time on the candidate of the rival party.

2015 and Jonathan

Looking through the almost ended year, here are some the major achievements which set GEJ apart and has endeared him to people both in his fatherland Nigeria and the world at large.
1. Conceding Defeat
The 2015 general elections was tension filled and packed with a lot of surprises. One great surprise was the unseating of the incumbent PDP-led administration. It was the first time in the history of the nation, to have a sitting president defeated, and so it was in March 2015 that the APC with Buhari as its front runner, defeated the Jonathan administration.
President Muhammadu Buhari and Goodluck Ebele Jonathan

Many did not expect what followed the announcement of the poll results, as many argued that it would be difficult to see a smooth transition between opposing parties, especially in a very tensed country as Nigeria. Thus, the world watched on in anticipation of ethnic clashes, and party feuds, but nothing of such nature came to light.
One singular act many claim saved the day, and that was the point at which Goodluck Jonathan conceded defeat by calling his opponent to congratulate him. and political analyst say Jonathan’s speech put out the flames of war. At some point, people began to term Jonathan the saviour of the time, .
Some reports have it that , and others are of the believe that making Jonathan’s concession a heroic feature is a . However, Jonathan said he needed to check his ambition, as  not only for Nigeria, but for Africa.
2. Leading The Commonwealth Observer Team
With the fame of his famous conceding act spreading sporadically, . Jonathan led the commonwealth team to the election which was billed for Sunday, October 25, while the former president of Mozambique, Armando Guebuza led the African Union (AU) team.
Jonathan led the Commonwealth observer team to Tanzania.
At a press conference in Tanzania, the ex-Nigerian president, called on the Tanzanian National Electoral Commission, political parties and civil society is the country to ensure a  He made allusions to his concession of defeat in the March 28 presidential election, urging aspirants to hope for the best but .
3. Jonathan Gets Clinton’s Position
Just about a week ago, Jonathan was assigned a new task in the United States of America. The former Bayelsa state governor was chosen to present the keynote address at the 2016 Hope Global Forums conference, billed to hold in the second week of January in Atlanta.
Ex-president Goodluck Jonathan, during a recent visit to the United States of America
Jonathan is to take over the mantle from Bill Clinton, America’s former president who had handle the 2015 edition of the event which attracted over 3, 000 leaders from 40 countries.
4. Diplomatic Circle Award
Former-President-Goodluck-Jonathan
Goodluck  and won numerous awards in 2015, however, one very outstanding award was the honour bestowed on him by .The award affirmed that the former president had indeed become a global icon.  He was selected to be honoured for his democratic credentials and upholding human rights in Africa.
It will be recalled that GEJ was nominated by many as a potential candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize, he was also seen as a strong contender for the Mo Ibrahim Prize- which is the world’s richest prize worth $ 5million plus additional annual $200,000 pension for life.
5. Numerous Roads Constructed
Owing to a recent statement by the minister of power, works and housing, Goodluck Jonathan is credited as the Nigerian head-of-state with the most amount of roads constructed.
GEJ constructed more roads that any other Nigerian Head of state, say Babatunde Fashola (SAN).
While revealing the agenda for his ministry, the former governor of Lagos in his first news conference tagged , said Jonathan did very well in constructing roads, he also note that there was transformation in the power sector, noting that he would try to build on it.
Goodluck Jonathan might not be the man who calls the shots anymore, however he still maintains his relevance in Nigeria and global politics. The PDP leader is well respected, regardless of certain claims that tend to dent his administration.
Many are of the opinion that though there were flaws in the GEJ regime, still Nigerians need not focus only on the ill-side, but must also note  and members of his cabinet.

Is this the change we want

With the recent and continued killing of innocent, harmless, armless, hapless and helpless by the Buhari administration, Nigerians are beginning to wonder if there was any real meaning in the change mantra of the ruling party, the APC. This is in addition to the regular invasion of homes, both private and official, and the relentless flagrant disobedience of court orders just to satisfy the whims and caprices of a dictator we have as president who takes pleasure in looking away while his agents rain official terror on powerless citizens.
Nigerians had a glimpse of what was to come when on Thursday, September 3, 2015, the DSS gleefully invaded the Akwa Ibom State Government House and ransacked it alongside the guest houses where it claimed it found a stockpile of arms and ammunition and stacks of the United States dollars without showing any evidence to prove its findings. Except for the PDP officials and members, every other person saw this unholy invasion as normal and even got the approval of agents of change. But those blessed with the uncommon gift of clairvoyance cried out against this as they saw that it could spell doom for our nation if such occurrence is not checked. Rather than prevail on government and its agents to tread softly, restrainedly and wisely, those who dared raise their voice were called all manner of names thereby giving such illegality a backing.
Expectedly, this emboldened the DSS as they went ahead to not only stop Col Sambo Dasuki (rtd) from travelling abroad to seek medical attention as ordered by a competent court of law before whom the same DSS charged him, they also laid siege to his house for one full month thereby effectively placing him under house arrest.
As if that was not bad enough, the DSS and the military treated us to a double-barrelled macabre dance when on December 2, 2015, the DSS were busy forcefully evicting Col Kayode Are (rtd), former DG of the same DSS, from his house on the orders of the Emperor’s lackey, Lawal Daura, the current director general of the DSS, once again, in defiance of a subsisting court order. The manner in which the DSS executed the eviction was not only shameful but disgraceful and iniquitous as Are’s wife was even reportedly bitten during a fracas that involved gunshots against Are’s family. As that was going on in Lagos, the military were busy mowing down peaceful IPOB/MASSOB protesters in Onitsha, killing nine persons in the process.
It was shocking that in spite of all these atrocities perpetrated by security forces and alien to thriving modern democracies, our traditional watchdogs suddenly went into hibernation pretending as if all was well. In the past, and with little provocation not anything near what we experience today, the Nigeria Labour Congress/ Trade Union Congress would have declared war on government especially with the current fuel scarcity making matters worse. They would have called Nigerians out to occupy landmark places, they would have called for civil disobedience and in some cases, a strike action to force back the hand of government. The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) would have put up strong protests by boycotting the courts as a result of the obvious intimidation of judges by security forces who work to stampede the judiciary to give blanket judgements that would favour the Emperor and his party even if such judgements are against common sense and the constitution.
The NBA would have organised protests to drive home the point that never would they allow the executive to keep disobeying court orders and defying judges to the detriment of the fundamental human rights of citizens and dealing great injuries to basic democratic principles and the rule of law. The religious leaders would have given stern warnings against such wickedness in the land. The civil rights groups would have marched down on Aso Rock or the National Assembly to register their displeasure at the way things are going. But no one seems to be interested because Buhari is the president and the APC is the ruling party. It does not matter if they both drag our nation into the abyss, and into the abyss they are both dragging us unless we lay aside our political, ethnic and religious differences and confront headlong what has become our common enemy, the determination of a small cabal with dictatorial mentality to kill the citizens and our institutions.
The recent massacre of Zaria where Shia Muslims were killed in their hundreds simply because they barricaded the way of the chief of army staff is the climax of the needless hounding and killing of citizens but is certainly not going to be the last. What would have been wrong if the COAS avoided that confrontation and took another route to his engagement that day? What would have been wrong for him to even cancel the engagement and send words that someone else should represent him at the occasions since he was being barricaded while he turned back home? Were the occasions for which he was travelling more important than the hundreds of human lives wasted?
The former President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan while he was the commander-in-chief had his own convoy stoned twice and some of his security details hospitalised as a result of attacks in Katsina and Bauchi. The miscreants went beyond just barricading his way to actually stoning him, yet, no single shot was fired. Nobody was injured not to talk of being killed. And here we have a mere COAS who would prefer to have Nigerians killed just for him to attend some mundane ceremonies.
It would have been bearable if the massacre ended on the spot, but for the military to have the effrontery to go to El Zakzaky’s house to have him shot, his wife arrested and got him humiliated by pushing him in a wheelbarrow while he was drenched in a pool of his own blood is the height of man’s inhumanity to man and some of us cannot afford to keep quiet in the face of this growing danger even if those affected are not related to us in any way. The principle is to speak and fight against such reckless executive impunity while it is still far away from one because if you do not, the possibility that it would come near you is very high.
This is why I blame those who are now shouting today against the massacre of Zaria, including the Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs (SCIA). Where were they when Akwa Ibom State Government House was illegally invaded? Where were they when in defiance of a court order, the DSS laid siege to Dasuki’s house and effectively placed him under house arrest? Where were they when the military shot and killed innocent Biafra protesters in Onitsha in similar manners they shot and killed our Shia Muslim brothers in Zaria? Where were they when Kayode Are and his family were forcefully evicted from their building in such a disgraceful and humiliating manner in spite of a court order restraining them from doing so? Where were they when after the courts granted bail to Patrick Akpobolokemi, security agents forcefully rearrested him around the same court premises in a manner reminiscent of a fight between street urchins and literally threw him into a waiting van in full public glare? Why did it have to take the horrendous murder of Nigerians in their hundreds by state agents for people to start talking?
Even the international community has betrayed us. The ambassadors of the USA, France, and high commissioners of Britain, Canada, etc that used to be very ferocious in speaking out and acting against such incidents in the past have suddenly gone dumb! What has Nigerians done to deserve to be left to the wicked machinations of evil and wicked men? For how long are we going to continue to suffer this mishap?
Is this the “change” they promised us? Is this how idiotic “change” can be? What about the change agents, where are they? Why are they hiding their heads in shame? Is this the depth of deceit they sold to Nigerians as campaign promises? What is the conspiracy of silence among civil rights groups about? Is it still part of the change to keep quiet in the face of gross injustice and oppression? With the way things are going and unless something drastic is done, we are walking speedily into a state of self-destruct. May God help Nigeria!
Author, Jude Ndukwe

Compliments of the season

Good morning my dear readers, i know you have all been wondering why i was away for a while. 
I had to be away for a very good reason but really apologize for the time out......
I am back now and will definitely fill you all in on all you have missed..
STAY TUNED PPL......

COMPLIMENTS OF THE SEASON