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Why Political Outrage Barely Lasts in Nigeria
Continue Reading →: Why Political Outrage Barely Lasts in NigeriaWhen the streets are empty, there is rarely a clear body left to articulate demands, track promises, or apply pressure through legal, legislative, or electoral channels. Without continuity, governments can afford to wait out the storm.
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The Real Cost of Being Young in Nigeria: Dreams, Debts, and Delayed Adulthood
Continue Reading →: The Real Cost of Being Young in Nigeria: Dreams, Debts, and Delayed AdulthoodFor many young Nigerians, adulthood creeps in slowly, weighed down by debt, uncertainty, and postponed milestones. The cost of being young is no longer measured only in Naira, but in delayed dreams, strained mental health, and the quiet recalibration of timelines for expected success.
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The Untouchable Business of Religious Capitalism in Nigeria
Continue Reading →: The Untouchable Business of Religious Capitalism in NigeriaIn the end, a healthy religious ecosystem should enrich souls without impoverishing citizens, serve communities without exploiting vulnerabilities, and participate in the economy without escaping accountability. That’s the challenge for Nigeria and the conversation starts with honesty.
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Super Eagles Class of ’94 and the Weight of a Golden Generation
Continue Reading →: Super Eagles Class of ’94 and the Weight of a Golden GenerationThe Class of ’94 will always matter. The question is whether Nigerian football can honour them without being trapped by them.
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AFCON 2025: How Africa Got It Right and Wrong at The Same Time
Continue Reading →: AFCON 2025: How Africa Got It Right and Wrong at The Same TimeIf African football is serious about progress, AFCON 2025 must be treated as a lesson, not a footnote. CAF must introduce clear accountability mechanisms for host nations. Stadium officials and stewards must answer to CAF, not local organisers alone.
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What’s The Actual Cost of Global Sympathy?
Continue Reading →: What’s The Actual Cost of Global Sympathy?While Nigerians are killed by bandits, insurgents, and criminal networks, dollars are being wired abroad to “manage perception.” The dead do not get justice; their stories get monetised. Each massacre becomes a data point in a briefing memo. Each tragedy becomes content for a lobbying…
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Is KPMG Confused About Nigeria’s New Tax Law?
Continue Reading →: Is KPMG Confused About Nigeria’s New Tax Law?Nigerians are more willing to pay taxes when they believe the taxes will be used to better their lives. But first, the rules must be fair, understandable, and consistently applied.
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Governor Radda, The Stress of Governance, and Why He ‘Deserves’ Our Pity
Continue Reading →: Governor Radda, The Stress of Governance, and Why He ‘Deserves’ Our PityNigeria in 2026 is not a country emotionally available to comfort its leaders. The public mood is hardened. Patience is exhausted. Empathy has become a scarce resource because people are using all of it on themselves and their families.




