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Friday, July 29, 2022
37 comments:
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I only understand the first paragraph
ReplyDeleteI meant to say the second paragraph
ReplyDeleteI don’t understand. Is he for us or against us? Speak English rotimi!
ReplyDeleteππππ
DeleteI think he's for us
Lol. My confuse is confused.
DeleteBianca Bruno
This is a very privileged take and I don't advise anyone to take advice on japa from someone who has the citizenship, blue pali and the convenience of moving in and out of the U.S. as they please. If naija ain't working for him he can decide to pack his things freely and move back to US
DeleteMy brother, people wanna experience it themselves.
ReplyDeleteI don't even understand this kind English he wrote up there. Odiegwu really!
ReplyDeleteπππ
DeleteWetin Rotimi dey yarnπ₯΄
ReplyDeleteWhy is this guy giving me headache?
ReplyDeleteLet us experience it and make our choices ourselves. Thank You
ReplyDeleteAbi o
DeleteRotimi talk say if you get money for Africa,u no get wahala,but for yanki you get money you still get eahala plus anxiety.
ReplyDeleteRotimi your supplier is good. I can't make head or tail of your message.
ReplyDeleteRotimi, you will never understand until you're here with bad governance. Where you are is far better please. Ogbeni, write well jor. What's with all these I wanna gonna?
ReplyDeleteLol... I thought I was the only one who couldn't make out anything from what he said
ReplyDeleteWhat in God’s name is he saying? How difficult is it to write clear statements?! Ogaa gan oo! You just type & post to make us cringe habi?
ReplyDeleteHe didnt type and post anything! It was transcribed from an interview, the video is everywhere. Dunno what's so hard for y'all to understand in what he said
DeleteEven at that Shooter, except he was quoted/transcribed wrongly, this right here make no sense. Don’t come here sounding all smart. I don’t care what you think of my comment, you could have just written a stand alone comment stating your knowledge of the interview & whatever else.
DeleteK
Deletena you get time dey explain give this werey
DeleteSuch confusion in one post. Is it Africa that has anxiety or America? Why can’t he just type straight? Abeg I’m done stretching my brain πΆ♀️ πΆ♀️
ReplyDeleteRotimi, na your own you dey talk o. Most Nigerians want to japa, me included. The air that is crisp in Africa is also crisp in Europe biko.
ReplyDeleteHahahahahahahaha! Dude!
DeleteIt's easy for him to say. He's speaking for himself, from his celebrity status. Notice he's talking about wealthy people?
ReplyDeleteYa ya mhen I feel yo bruh. That's why many of us just wanna make money and gonna enjoy our life here, but our politicians wey God go punish wella nor wan let this country sweet for we wey wan stay.
ReplyDeleteHe is for Nigeria. I always feel the same way whenever I visit. No place like home.
ReplyDeleteAnd his song come on radio immediately. This guy never near to die o. True talk jor
ReplyDeleteWhat he said is quite easy to understand and I’m sure a lot of the people writing that they don’t really do understand,we are just too delved in this culture of following the bandwagon irrespective of how obviously wrong the direction it is going is.
ReplyDeleteOld man..You can't even write good English
ReplyDeleteRotimi my guy, I understand your point, no place like home but Naija is not for the faint hearted. Where do you want to start from? Is it the bad roads, healthcare, insecurity, epileptic eduction or electricity problems?
ReplyDeleteIf we fix our country, a lot of people will go back home.
Life is structured abroad, If you live by the rules and you are reasonable, you will be absolutely fine.
Ms Abroadian, God bless you for always saying it as it is.
Delete'Divinley'
Ms Abroadian, have a drink on me! You are absolutely correct!
DeleteIgnore his comment unless you are in his shoes. Do not be deceived if you have a choice. As a dual citizen I used to feel that way but after two weeks in Naija I usually feel like returning here. The chaos, lawlessness, endless Owanbes, the way they pamper you, etc appeal to you when you are in a very structured nobody-gives-a-damn-society. It seems to give less anxiety and stress until you get to Naija, enjoy it for a couple of weeks, then your heart begins to long for the predictable, largely sane life here. Now that I’m older and read about kidnappings anyhow, I can’t even think of the chaotic fun again as armed robberies in the 90s/early 2000s chased some of us here. Thumbs upππΎ to everyone living in Nigeria, you are the real MVPs. Many would have been seeing therapists for PTSD here if they went through what many Nigerians endure in just a day. Yes, Naija is a vibe but have a plan B if you can.
ReplyDeleteI read about someone who begged God not to send him to hell as he was a Nigerian and had lived in hell all his life already. It was meant to be a joke but it’s a sad summary of what the incompetent, corrupt government has turned Nigeria into.
ReplyDeleteWhich crisp air? The air in Nigeria is so polluted with generator fumes; those of us in Rivers state are suffering from the effect of black soot. I was in Germany for a year with my family as a visiting scholar. My son that has allergies that reflect through respiratory illnesses like constant cough and catarrh, for one day because of the clean air did not cough or bring out catarrh because their air is crisp and clean. They do everything to prevent pollution this one is scatter yarning here. Living in Nigeria is hell. If you go to a good country and return, you will realise that we are pretty much living like animals here. The only people that enjoy Nigeria are the super, super rich. Someone is building a house beside mine and it is at 3am that they supplied chippings to the site. Disturbing the whole estate. Where is that done in a sane society. When I was in Germany, I added so much weight not from food but peace of mind. That's how my body works. After the programme I went for ended, I really wanted to stay or move to any western European country. But all the lecturing jobs I applied for, I didn't get and the only option was to apply for asylum in Germany or Netherlands which I felt I was too big for. If i had known i would have just humbled myself and done so since while i was a visiting scholar i was paid so well and i had saved up a lot of money that would have supported me and my kids for about a year even without the stipend given in the camps.
ReplyDelete