Dkrytic

Dkrytic an advocate for genuine change in character, habits, conscience and a lover of principles which is the universal law observed worldwide...I am DKRYTIC

They used to use urine to tan animal skins, so families used to all p*e in a pot & then once a day it was taken & sold t...
05/04/2024

They used to use urine to tan animal skins, so families used to all p*e in a pot & then once a day it was taken & sold to the tannery. If you had to do this to survive you were “p**s poor.”
But worse than that were the really poor folk who couldn’t even afford to buy a pot; they “didn’t have a pot to p**s in” & were the lowest of the low.

The next time you are washing your hands & complain because the water temperature isn’t just how you like it, think about how things used to be. Here are some facts about the 1500s.

Most people got married in June because they took their yearly bath in May, and they still smelled pretty good by June. Since they were starting to smell, however, brides carried a bouquet of flowers to hide the body odor. Hence the custom today of carrying a bouquet when getting married.

Baths consisted of a big tub filled with hot water. The man of the house had the privilege of the nice clean water, then all the other sons and men, then the women, and finally the children. Last of all the babies. By then the water was so dirty you could actually lose someone in it … hence the saying, “Don’t throw the baby out with the Bath water!”

Houses had thatched roofs-thick straw-piled high, with no wood underneath. It was the only place for animals to get warm, so all the cats and other small animals (mice, bugs) lived in the roof. When it rained it became slippery and sometimes the animals would slip and fall off the roof, resulting in the idiom, “It’s raining cats and dogs.”

There was nothing to stop things from falling into the house. This posed a real problem in the bedroom where bugs and other droppings could mess up your nice clean bed, therefore, a bed with big posts and a sheet hung over the top afforded some protection. That’s how canopy beds came into existence.

The floor was dirt. Only the wealthy had something other than dirt, leading folks to coin the phrase “dirt poor.”

The wealthy had slate floors that would get slippery in the winter when

The History And Mystery of Bilikisu Sungbo Shrine In Ijebu Ode, Ogun State, South West Nigeria 🇳🇬  Bilikisu Sungbo, was ...
05/04/2024

The History And Mystery of Bilikisu Sungbo Shrine In Ijebu Ode, Ogun State, South West Nigeria 🇳🇬

Bilikisu Sungbo, was said to have traveled all the way from Ethiopia 🇪🇹 down to Ijebu-Ode where she d.ied and was buried. The natives of Ijebu-Ode hold strong and popular claims about the identity of the controversial Bilikisu Sungbo. They claimed that she was the Queen of Sheba mentioned in the bible to have visited the wise king Solomon at height of his powers. They also claimed that Bilikisu Sungbo was the Quranic Queen Baliqs of Ethopia (from which the name Bilikisu was derived) who visited king Sulaiman. Another source has it that Bilikisu Sungbo was a wealthy woman and the leader of a group of women potters who traveled to far away places. Also, she was believed to possess supernatural powers with which she dug ditches around villages in Ijebu-Ode.

Howbeit, the tradition of the Ijebu people forbid women and dogs to visit the spot where Bilikisu Sungbo was buried. At the shrine, there is a small open ground with no grass growing on it. This place is said to be the place where the ancient queen was washed before being buried, and because of her supernatural powers, no plant or grass can ever grow on the spot.
In 1995, Bilikisu Sungbo’s shrine was added to the cultural category of UNESCO World Heritage Site. The Bilikisu Sungbo ‘grave-shrine’ will forever remain a pride of Ijebu-Ode people.

Truth or dare
07/02/2024

Truth or dare

What Church is this. Is it in your area
01/02/2024

What Church is this. Is it in your area

She was  walking and chatting on her phone at the same time... I don't know if I should tell her sorry or serves her rig...
28/01/2024

She was walking and chatting on her phone at the same time... I don't know if I should tell her sorry or serves her right. . .😆😆😁😂

Doing it right
28/01/2024

Doing it right

Justina Aniefiok is a fast-rising female photo-journalist. In just six years since venturing into photography, she has e...
28/01/2024

Justina Aniefiok is a fast-rising female photo-journalist. In just six years since venturing into photography, she has earned numerous national recognitions.

Aniefiok’s biggest breakthrough as a photojournalist came when she got the chance to cover the TotalEnergies CAF AFCON 2021 in Cameroon. In June 2021, she was awarded the Sport Photographer of the Year by the prestigious The Ballers Award.

At the ongoing TotalEnergies CAF AFCON Côte d’ivoire 2023, she has been spotlighted and celebrated by CAF as one of the outstanding young female photographers at the tournament. She is accredited FIFA and CAF photojournalist.

We celebrate Aniefiok’s resilience, determination and breakthrough!

I Don tell you this year no gree for anybody...
08/01/2024

I Don tell you this year no gree for anybody...

Now you know
02/06/2023

Now you know

1) Largest country in Africa by land mass - Algeria 🇩🇿
2) Largest country in Africa by population - Nigeria 🇳🇬
3) Largest movie industry in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
4) Largest democracy in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
5) Richest Black man - Nigerian 🇳🇬
6) Richest African woman - Nigerian 🇳🇬
7) largest single solar power plant in Africa - Morocco 🇲🇦
8) Largest Museum in Africa - Egypt 🇪🇬
9) Tallest building in Africa - Egypt 🇪🇬
10) Largest rice mill in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
11) Largest fertilizer plant in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
12) largest oil refinery in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
13) largest fish farm in Africa - Egypt 🇪🇬
14) largest cement plant in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
15) largest tea farm in Africa - Kenya 🇰🇪
16) largest music industry in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
17) largest stadium in Africa - South Africa 🇿🇦
18) Fastest train in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
19) longest subsea gas pipeline in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
20) largest city by population - Nigeria 🇳🇬
21) Largest news network in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
22) largest car race arena in Africa - South Africa 🇿🇦
23) largest pharmaceutical industry in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
24) Fastest woman in Africa - Nigerian 🇳🇬
25) Fastest man in Africa - Kenyan 🇰🇪
26) largest stock exchange by market capitalization in Africa - South Africa 🇿🇦
27) largest stock exchange by number of listings - south Africa 🇿🇦
28) longest concrete road in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
29) largest airline in Africa - Ethiopia 🇪🇹
30) most streamed musicians in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
31) most awarded artist in Africa - Nigerian 🇳🇬
32) largest mall in Africa by structure - Morocco 🇲🇦
33) most valuable tech startup in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
34) most valuable company in Africa - South Africa 🇿🇦
35) largest economy in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
36) Most tribes in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
37) most languages in Africa - Nigeria 🇳🇬
39) largest seaport In Africa by size - Morocco 🇲🇦
40) largest university in Africa by area - Nigeria 🇳🇬

28/05/2023

In 1958, Chinua Achebe wrote his first novel book "Things Fall Apart" at the age of 28, which has sold over 20 million copies and has been translated to over 50 languages.

• It was ranked as one of the Greatest Books Ever Written in a list by Encyclopedia Brittanica in 2018.

• It was on number 5 on BBC's 100 Stories That Shaped The World.

• It was also among the 100 books that were featured on the TV series, The Great American Read.

• In 2011, Chinua Achebe forced 50 Cent to rename his forthcoming new movie "Things Fall Apart". He was contacted by Achebe's legal team that he couldn't use the title. Even when he offered Achebe $1 million dollars, Achebe felt insulted and rejected the money. 50 Cent later re-named his movie "All Things Fall Apart".

Knowledge in Nigeria history
08/05/2023

Knowledge in Nigeria history

This is Iyake lake, one of only two suspended lakes on top of a mountain in the world. It is situated in Ado Awaiye Iseyin, Oyó state, Nigeria.

The lake is believed to be bottomless and no one enters it and survives.

History has it that beneath the lake lies another world, a parallel existence ruled over by a goddess of fertility who lives inside the lake.

It’s rumored that if one puts their foot in the hole near the lake known as Agbómofúnyàké (Yoruba for “collects child and gives to iyake”) when it’s filled with water, the person will be dragged to the bottom.

The History behind it is intriguing.

Its name, Iyake, means “woman cry.”

It is said by the locals that, a barren woman from Ota, Ogun State, migrated to Oyó during the ancient Oyó Empire. She was loved by many but her barrenness was mocked by some of the locals. Because she couldn't handle the mockery, she committed su***de by falling into the lake. Hence the name 'Iyake lake'.

Since then, according to sources, the lake was believed to cure barrenness ever since the said woman fell and died inside it.

Also, locals in that area believed that if you pray with the water from the lake, bathe with it or drink it you won’t be barren; it will cure your barrenness if you are woman who is barren.

AFRICAN COUNTRIES AND THEIR OLD NAMES:🇧🇯Benin (Dahomey)🇧🇼Botswana (Bechuanaland)🇧🇫Burkina Faso (Upper Volta)🇧🇮Burundi (R...
25/04/2023

AFRICAN COUNTRIES AND THEIR OLD NAMES:
🇧🇯Benin (Dahomey)
🇧🇼Botswana (Bechuanaland)
🇧🇫Burkina Faso (Upper Volta)
🇧🇮Burundi (Rwanda-Urundi)
🇨🇫Central African Republic (Ubangi-Shari)
🇨🇬Congo Brazzaville (Middle Congo, French Congo)
🇨🇲 Cameroon ( German Cameroon)
🇨🇩DR Congo (Congo Free State, Belgian Congo, Léopodville, Republic of Zaire,)
🇩🇯Djibouti (French Somaliland, Afars and Issas)
🇸🇿Eswatini (Swaziland)
🇪🇹Ethiopia (Damot, Abyssinia)
🇬🇲 The Gambia (Senegambia, Kaabu, British Gambia)
🇬🇭Ghana (Gold Coast)
🇬🇳Guinea (Conarky, French Guinea, French Guinea)
🇬🇼Guinea-Bissau (Portuguese Guinea)
🇰🇪Kenya (British East Africa)
🇱🇸Lesotho (Basutoland)
🇲🇼Malawi (Nyasaland)
🇲🇱Mali (French Sudan)
🇲🇺Mauritius (Prins Mauritius van Nassaueiland)
🇲🇦Morocco (Al-Maghrib)
🇳🇦Namibia (Island Nawodo, Onawero)
🇷🇼Rwanda (Kinyarwanda)
🇸🇳 Senegal ( Senegambia)
🇹🇿Tanzania (Tanganyika)
🇺🇬Uganda (Buganda)
🇿🇲Zambia (Northern Rhodesia)
🇿🇼Zimbabwe (Rhodesian

Giving You Update From Around Africa

23/04/2023

Billionaire’ Femi Otedola in a telephone interview, was asked by the radio presenter, "Sir what can you remember made you a happy man in life?"

Femi said: “I have gone through four stages of happiness in life and finally I understood the meaning of true happiness.

The first stage was to accumulate wealth and means. But at this stage I did not get the happiness I wanted.

Then came the second stage of collecting valuables and items. But I realized that the effect of this thing is also temporary and the lustre of valuable things does not last long.

Then came the third stage of getting big projects. That was when I was holding 95% of diesel supply in Nigeria and Africa. I was also the largest vessel owner in Africa and Asia. But even here I did not get the happiness I had imagined.

The fourth stage was the time a friend of mine asked me to buy wheelchair for some disabled children. Just about 200 kids.

At the friend's request, I immediately bought the wheelchairs. But the friend insisted that I go with him and hand over the wheelchairs to the children. I got ready and went with him.

There I gave these wheel chairs to these children with my own hands. I saw the strange glow of happiness on the faces of these children. I saw them all sitting on the wheelchairs, moving around and having fun.

It was as if they had arrived at a picnic spot where they are sharing a jackpot wining.

I felt real joy inside me. When I decided to leave one of the kids grabbed my legs. I tried to free my legs gently but the child stared at my face and held my legs tightly.

I bent down and asked the child: Do you need something else? The answer this child gave me not only made me happy but also changed my attitude to life completely.

This child said: “I want to remember your face so that when I meet you in heaven, I will be able to recognize you and thank you once again.

13/04/2023

The Story Of Killi-We" Nwachukwu, The “Nigerian Super man”

Nwozuzu Nwachukwu popularly known as 'Killwee', is an icon of strength from the Imo state, who was born He was born in 1931 and died October 31, 1992. in Nigeria, you can't talk about strength/manpower without mentioning Killwee, Power Mike Okpara and Ben Lion-Heart. These are true icons of strength and wrestling in Nigeria and Igboland.

"Killi-We" Nwachukwu, was for more than two decades celebrated as a homegrown Nigerian “superman.” Some of his legendary feats of strength included lifting buses, having cement blocks crushed on his head, and allowing cars to drive over his body.

An extraordinary characteristic Superman! Nwozuzu Nwachukwu. Story has it that Killwee was an epithet he got after a battle with an obstinate man who wouldn't pay him for a truck heap of products he passed on from the market to the man's home.

He used to push a wooden two wheel truck with which he conveyed merchandise for individuals. In those days lorries and get trucks were not many and costly to enlist.

So subsequent to dropping off the merchandise, the man wouldn't pay what Nwachukwu charged asserting it was excessively high. He attempted to leave and Nwachukwu got him by the hand demanding he should pay.

A battle resulted and he lifted, hammered and stuck the man to the ground. The man's wife ran into the house and came out with a wooden pestle to safeguard her husband. Nwachukwu grabbed it from her, lifted the lady up and nailed her to top of her husband on the ground.

she began shouting, Killi we o! Nwachukwu, You should Killi we o!" which means, Nwachukwu, kill us! That’s how he got his name, Back then 80s Killiwe Nwachukwu was highly respected by numerous individuals of his generation for his power.

Some people has this to say about him: He existed. Back in eighties, he came to our school, we paid 50 Kobo to watch him. He carried 10 bags of cement on his stomach and toyed a 504 peugeot SR with a rope on his teeth.

Story had it that when he died, his body was deposited in Aladinma mortuary, he in the night, will carry don all other corpses and Strech himself on them. He continued this till he was rejected by the morgue. He was real.

16/09/2022

Lest we forget !!!

Historical perspective of the hatred between the Igbos and the Yorubas

I had the privilege of attending some meetings of the Yoruba and Igbo Leaders. I was not a Leader but a Youth who knew how to wash his hands.

At one of those meetings in Owerri, I think in 1989 I think, I listened to Uncle Bola Ige and other Yoruba Leaders take the likes of Mbakwe, R. B. Okafor and others to the Cleaners when the Igbo said the Yoruba were betrayers, citing that Chief Obafemi Awolowo led them into secession with a promise that if the Igbo left Nigeria, the Yoruba would follow suit.

They accused him of not following up on his promise. Trust Uncle Bola Ige ! He pointed to Chief Mbakwe and said, "you were there in the meeting between Awolowo and Ojukwu as I was. Is that statement correct ?"

He turned to two other Igbo and two Yoruba Leaders who were at that meeting and asked the same question, saying he had transcripts of the meeting between Awolowo and Ojukwu.

They kept quiet while the Yoruba Leaders affirmed that Awolowo never promised to follow the East into secession. What he said was that if the Igbo were "driven" out of Nigeria the Yoruba would take it seriously and reassess their own position. Igbo Leaders DID NOT CONTEST this version.

Then Chief Bola Ige threw in the clincher ! "Who are you to accuse the Yoruba of betrayal ?" he roared, and continued:

1. At Independence Awolowo offered a joint Government between the NCNC and AG, with Zik as Prime Minister and Awo as Finance Minister. Awo and Zik "were still negotiating" when it was announced that Zik would be President in a coalition with NPC of the North.

The East then collaborated in destroying the West and sending Awolowo and his Lieutenants to Jail !

2. What of the 1965 elections which the West and the East agreed to boycott ? We met all night and reached agreement about 3 am on the day of the election.

In the morning, while the Yoruba boycotted the election, the Igbo went to vote

3. After the 1979 elections Yoruba (UPN) and Igbo (APP ?) Leaders were still at the negotiating Table for a coalition when to their surprise, an announcement was heard that the Igbo (APP) had agreed to a coalition with the North (NPN).

4. After the 1983 elections, 1979 repeated itself.

Not giving up, Awolowo reached out to Azikiwe again for cooperation.

Talks started and they met in Benin where Awo pleaded passionately that only a collaboration between The Igbo and the Yoruba could save Nigeria.

They didn't reach agreement but promised to meet again. Before the next meeting, the Igbo had again teamed up with the North.

Uncle Bola paused and then continued "we can go on and on. So how dare you accuse the Yoruba of betrayal ?

How many Igbo have been killed in Lagos, Ibadan, Akure, Oshogbo (he mentioned other Yoruba towns)? You have your Businesses in the West and went to Western Schools.

Yet you count the Yoruba as your Enemy. You get killed in Kaduna, Kano, Bauchi, Zaria etc and have your Goods looted yet you consider the Hausa/ Fulani your Friends.

It's your choice. If you want to be Slaves for ever, we can't help you"

I had never been so scared in my life. I thought the Roof was going to fall. There was a pin drop silence and no Igbo dared interrupt Uncle Bola Ige because he was telling the truth.

The Yoruba Leaders ended the meeting at that point and left. I hope Chief C. O. Adebayo's memoirs will give more details of those exchanges.

Copied from "FRIENDS IKOYI CLUB 1938" Forum posted by Adenike Marinho, a Medical Doctor.

Courtesy: Ayoade Ojeniyi

Nigeria Youth Movement

Shared  Nigeria in history
03/08/2022

Shared Nigeria in history

Hello Everyone,
Thank you for keeping faith and staying with Nigeria In History.

As promised, we are beginning the History of Nigeria from as far back as we go...with the hopes of bringing everyone to the same page as to our current TIMELINE.

So...here goes...

Brief history of Nigeria

Compiled by Gyang J Botsha

The arrival of the British
The Sokoto jihad and the Yoruba wars stimulated the slave trade at a time when the British were actively trying to stop it. Slaves formerly had been traded for European goods, especially guns and gunpowder, but now the British encouraged trade in palm oil in the Niger delta states, ostensibly to replace the trade in slaves. They later discovered that the demand for palm oil was in fact stimulating an internal slave trade, because slaves were largely responsible for collecting palm fruits, manufacturing palm oil, and transporting it to the coast, whether by canoe or by human porterage. The palm oil trade was also linked to the Sokoto jihad and the Yoruba wars, because many warriors recognized the importance of slaves not only as soldiers and producers of food to feed soldiers but additionally as producers of palm oil to trade for European Dane guns and other goods.
Many of the slaves exported in the 1820s and '30s were intercepted by the ships of the Royal Navy, emancipated, and deposited in Sierra Leone under missionary tutelage. Some of them began to migrate back from Sierra Leone in search of home and trade. They invited missionaries to follow them and, in the 1840s, made themselves available as agents who allowed missionaries and British traders to gain access to such places as Lagos, Abeokuta, Calabar, Lokoja, Onitsha, Brass, and Bonny.
In 1841 the British tried to settle some Egba on a model farm in Lokoja, but the plan was aborted because the mortality rate among European officials was so high. It was also partly to protect the Egba that the British shelled Lagos in 1851, expelled Kosoko, the reigning Oba, and restored his uncle, Akitoye, who appeared more willing to join in a campaign to abolish the slave trade. The British annexed Lagos in 1861 in order to protect Akitoye's son and successor, foil Kosoko's bid to return, and secure a base for further activities.
The British were not yet willing to assume the expense of maintaining an administration in Nigeria. To reduce costs, Lagos was administered first from Freetown in Sierra Leone, along with Gold Coast forts such as Elmina, and later from Accra (in present-day Ghana); only in 1886 did Lagos become a separate colony. A consul was maintained at Fernando Po to oversee the lucrative palm oil trade in the region called the Oil Rivers.
Missionaries were active: Presbyterians in Calabar and the Church Missionary Society (CMS), Methodists, and Baptists in Lagos, Abeokuta, Ibadan, Oyo, and Ogbomosho.
The CMS pioneered trade on the Niger by encouraging Scottish explorer and merchant Macgregor Laird to run a monthly steamboat, which provided transportation for missionary agents and Sierra Leonean traders going up the Niger. In this way Bishop Samuel Ajayi Crowther—born in the Yoruba-inhabited area of Oshogbo and the first African ordained by the CMS—was able to establish mission stations at Onitsha, Lokoja, and Eggan and later at Brass and Bonny.
By the 1870s the Niger trade was becoming profitable, and a few French companies took notice. French Roman Catholic missionaries, established in Ouidah (Whydah), arrived in Lagos and considered missionary work on the Niger.
The British responded to such evidence of rivalry by defending their right to free navigation on the river at the Berlin West Africa Conference of 1884–85. At the same time, George Dashwood Goldie, a British businessman, bought out all French rivals and created the Royal Niger Company (chartered 1886) in order to control trade on the Niger and administer the immense territories of the Sokoto caliphate and Borno. In addition, two other protectorates were declared, one over the Oil Rivers and the other over the hinterland of Lagos, to establish a claim that these areas were also British “spheres of interest.”
The boundaries of the two protectorates and the territories of the Royal Niger Company were difficult to define, but the tension was eased in 1894 when both entities were merged into the Niger Coast Protectorate. Rivalry between the Royal Niger Company and the Lagos Protectorate over the boundary between the emirate of Ilorin and the empire of Ibadan was resolved with the abrogation of the charter of the Royal Niger Company on Jan. 1, 1900, in return for wide mineral concessions.
In the north Frederick Lugard, the first high commissioner of Northern Nigeria, was instrumental in subjugating the Fulani emirs. Some were deposed, some were defeated in battle, and others collaborated.
By 1903 the conquest of the emirates was complete. The mud-walled city of Kano was captured in February, and, after a vigorous skirmish at Kotorkwashi, the sultan's capital, Sokoto, fell the next month. All the territories were now under British control, and the search for an identity began, first as Northern and Southern Nigeria and then with eventual amalgamation.
The British pe*******on of Nigeria met with various forms of resistance throughout the country. In the south the British had to fight many wars, in particular the wars against the Ijebu (a Yoruba group) in 1892, the Aro of eastern Igboland, and, until 1914, the Aniocha of western Igboland.
In the north many emirates did not take military action, but the deposed caliph, Atahiru I, rebelled in 1903. Many Muslims resorted to migration as a form of resistance, a tactic known as the hejira, in which those perceived as infidels are avoided.
Resistance was strong in western Igboland, where a series of wars were waged against the British. The Ekumeku, who were well organized and whose leaders were joined in secrecy oaths, effectively utilized guerrilla tactics to attack the British. Their forces, which were drawn from hundreds of Igbo youth from all parts of the region, created many problems for the British, but the British used forceful tactics and heavy armaments (destroying homes, farms, and roads) to prevail. The Ekumeku, however, became a great source of Igbo nationalism.

J.F. Ade Ajayi Toyin O. Falola

s

New stocks....dm for update
31/01/2022

New stocks....dm for update

03/01/2022

Feel free to drop your reviews, best reviews get a cash gift

The scam between the the federal government of Nigeria, the  NIGERIA electricity  regulatory commission(NERC), and the d...
31/12/2021

The scam between the the federal government of Nigeria, the NIGERIA electricity regulatory commission(NERC), and the distribution company's (DISCOS).IS IT A SCAM OR BREACH IN NIGERIA?

You Bought Pole, You Bought The Cable & You Bought The Meter. And You Contributed Money To Buy Or Replace The Community Transformer.

As Soon As You Have Done All These, They Automatically Become Their Property.

Then The Fraudster Electricity Distribution Companies Will, Without Taking The Meter Reading, Send Outrageous Estimated Bills To You For Power Never Consumed. And If You Dare Raise A Question Against Their Barefaced Robbery, They Will Come And Remove The Cable You Bought With Your Money As Their Property.

Then You Will Be Charged What They Call Re-connection Fee To Get Your Cable Fixed Back.

And You Will Have To Bribe Their Personnel To replace A melted Fuse Or You Will Remain Perpetually In Darkness And Still Pay The Bill At The End Of The Month.

The Most Heinous Part Of Their Corporate Crime Against The People Is The Revenue Target They Set For Their Personnel As To How Much They Intend To Rob Nigerians Every Month.

Let this post go round, make it viral, this daylight robbery from Electricity Distribution Companies Must Stop.

JOHN D. ROCKEFELLERHe was once the richest man in the world. The first billionaire in the world.By age 25 he controlled ...
30/12/2021

JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER
He was once the richest man in the world. The first billionaire in the world.

By age 25 he controlled one of the largest oil refineries in the nation. By age 31 he had become the world’s largest oil refiner. By age 38 he commanded 90% of the oil refined in the U.S. By the time of his retirement at age 58, he was the richest man in the country. By the time he died, he had become the richest man in the world.

As a young man, every decision, attitude, and relationship was tailored to create his personal power and wealth. But at the age of 53 he became ill. His entire body became racked with pain and he lost all of his hair. In complete agony, the world’s only billionaire could buy anything he wanted, but he could only digest milk and crackers. An associate wrote, "He could not sleep, would not smile and nothing in life meant anything to him." His personal, highly skilled physicians predicted he would die within a year. That year passed agonizingly slow.

As he approached death he awoke one morning with the vague remembrances of a dream about not being able to take any of his successes with him into the next world. The man who could control the business world suddenly realized he was not in control of his own life. He was left with a choice. He called his attorneys, accountants, and managers and announced that he wanted to channel his assets to hospitals, research, and mission work. On that day John D. Rockefeller established his foundation.

This new direction eventually led to the discovery of penicillin, cures for malaria, tuberculosis and diphtheria. But perhaps the most amazing part of Rockefeller’s story is that the moment he began to give back a portion of all that he had earned, his body’s chemistry was altered so significantly that he got better. It looked as if he would die at 53 but he lived to be 98.

Rockefeller learned gratitude and gave back the vast majority of his wealth. Doing so made him whole. It is one thing to be healed. It is another to be made

Before his death, he wrote this in his dairy:
"I was early taught to work as well as play,
My life has been one long, happy holiday;
Full of work and full of play
I dropped the worry on the way
And God was good to me everyday"

I hope the true story of the life of this man, who happens to be the first billionaire, will make many wealthy ones or those chasing wealth have a rethink to show more LOVE to mankind.

Moral Lesson Be Tolerant:A 50 year old white woman arrived at her seat on a crowded flight and immediately didn't want t...
28/12/2021

Moral Lesson Be Tolerant:

A 50 year old white woman arrived at her seat on a crowded flight and immediately didn't want the seat. The seat was next to a black man.

Disgusted, the woman immediately summoned the flight attendant and demanded a new seat. The woman said "I cannot sit here next to this black man."

The fight attendant said "Let me see if I can find another seat."

After checking,the flight attendant returned and stated "Ma'am, there are no more seats in economy, but I will check with the captain and see if there is something in first class."

About 10 minutes went by and the flight attendant returned and stated"The captain has confirmed that there are no more seats in economy, but there is one in first class.

It is our company policy to never move a person from economy to first class, but being that it would be some sort of scandal to force a person to sit next to an UNPLEASANT person, the captain agreed to make the switch to first class.

" Before the woman could say anything, the attendant gestured to the black man and said, "Therefore sir, if you would so kindly retrieve your personal items, we would like to move you to the comfort of first class as the captain doesn't want you to sit next to an unpleasant person."

Passengers in the seats nearby began to applause while some gave a standing ovation!!!

*For the rest of your life, may your disgrace turn to blessing...

Gov. Amaechi's Statement on 2015 Foreign Reserve: Setting the Records StraightI read with surprise and disappointment co...
28/12/2021

Gov. Amaechi's Statement on 2015 Foreign Reserve: Setting the Records Straight

I read with surprise and disappointment comments made by the Minister of Transportation, Mr Rotimi Amaechi, during an appearance on Channels Television wherein he said:
"As former chairman of the governors' forum, I was told by the security in a meeting chaired by the former President, including the former minister of finance, that at every point in time, the government must leave money behind in case Nigeria goes to war that would last for six months. By the time we came, they didn't leave money behind that could last us for three weeks. And I was speaking at that time as the chairman of the governors' forum."

The Minister's comment is rather unfortunate and not supported by facts readily available in the public domain. As a member of the Federal Executive Council that handed over to the current administration, I am disturbed that this urban myth of "empty treasury" is still the subject of conversation by a senior government member.

Also, I am confused about what the Honourable Minister means when he says, "By the time we came in", as he was not appointed Minister until six months after the May 29 Handover. Since he was not a Minister on the handover date, it may be pertinent to present him with the facts again.

On May 29, 2015, President Buhari inherited a foreign reserve of $28.6 billion, according to official data still present on the website of the Central Bank of Nigeria, as well as $5.6 billion Nigeria Liquified Natural Gas Limited dividends. Also, a 2015 budget of over 4 trillion Naira was handed over to the incoming administration by the outgoing Jonathan government.

Furthermore, the Jonathan administration left a total of $2.2 billion in the Excess Crude Account on May 29, 2015. (As verified by the Ministry of Finance both by the immediate past minister and the incumbent).

To further create context, I would like the Minister of Transport to note the country's economic indices after 1849 days of President Jonathan's Presidency from May 06 2010, the date he took over from President Umaru Yar'Adua to the Handover date of May 29, 2015.

On May 29, 2015, President Muhammadu Buhari inherited an economy that, by the testimony of the World Investment Report, prepared by the Geneva-based United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), was the number one destination for foreign direct investment in Africa. In the five years of President Jonathan, Direct Foreign Investment stood at about 35.25 Billion Dollars. You can compare this to the 11.55 Billion Dollars Direct Foreign Investment received from 2016 to 2020.

The Jonathan administration handed over a $550 billion economy (largest in Africa and 26th globally) and a diversified economy.
On May 29, 2015, President Jonathan left behind an economy with a stable currency, where the Naira exchanged for ₦199 to $1, and Nigeria had a single-digit inflation rate. Today, after 2406 days of the current administration headline inflation rate hovers above 15%.

Under President Jonathan, the unemployment rate stood at 7.5% (better than European Union) today. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, six and half years after Governor Amaechi's government came in, unemployment is 33%.

Before the government came in, Nigeria's poverty rate was 32% as of May 2015. We need not compare it against 71% today after 78 months of President Buhari's administration.

Our External debt as of May 2015 stood at $7.3 billion, the Gini coefficient (degree of inequality) was not different from China's as of 2015. In 343 weeks and four days of the current administration, our external debt has ballooned to $37.9 billion as of September 2021. It is important to point out that over 48% are bilateral and commercial loans.

With the facts above, I am sure that the Minister of Transport will rethink his fixation on the past and focus on the clear and present danger of an economy on the path to Argentina – sovereign debt default.

In the face of declining revenues, available public data revealed that external debt servicing gulped $1.82 billion between January and September 2021; this is 43.9% higher than the $1.27 billion spent in the corresponding period of 2020.

In the same period of January to September 2021, Domestic debt servicing rose to N1.74 trillion from N1.53 trillion recorded in the same period of 2020.

These issues should worry the Honourable Minister, coupled with unlocking the asphyxiating gridlock that Apapa port has created in the economy.

2406 days after, a clear 557 days (1 year five months) more than President Jonathan governed Nigeria; this administration's economic policies and heightened insecurity have left the country comatose.

Minister Amaechi and the APC government should stop this perennial blame game and focus on redeeming its tattered image by signing the electoral bill passed by a legislature it controls.

Osita Chidoka
December 2021

Address


Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Dkrytic posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Shortcuts

  • Address
  • Alerts
  • Claim ownership or report listing
  • Want your business to be the top-listed Media Company?

Share