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Showing posts from July, 2025

How Vibes, Not Just Hustle, Shape The Reality You Attract

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How Vibes, Not Just Hustle, Shape the Reality You Attract Ants don’t chase after explanations. They go straight to the sugar. That’s how life works too. The good things—wealth, opportunities, admiration, even people of value—are drawn to certain kinds of energy. Life is wired to respond to what we might call “vibes”, and these vibes aren’t random. They’re built, step by step, from the inside out. Luxury, enjoyment, power, pleasure—these aren't just experiences. They’re external expressions of internal architecture. Someone somewhere constructed them—brick by brick, bolt by bolt. Take a Lamborghini, for instance. To a regular person, the tyre might look like just another round rubber, but to someone who knows cars, it signals something special. Now, put the whole machine together—sleek curves, roaring engine, polished frame—and you’ve created a vibe that turns heads, regardless of whether someone knows engines or not. Even kids who don’t understand horsepower will stop and stare. Wh...

Coalitions, Crossovers & The Cost Of Choice In Nigerian Politics

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Coalitions, Crossovers, and the Cost of Choice in Nigerian Politics Since 1999 , the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) held the reins of Nigeria’s political space, dominating both the presidency and most state governments as well as legislative houses. At the time, democracy was a fresh wind blowing across a land previously ruled with military iron fists. Unsurprisingly, early democratic governments were often assessed against their military predecessors—a comparison that spilled well into the 21st century. The emergence of President Olusegun Obasanjo at the dawn of this democratic era did more than just restore civilian governance. It also sought to heal old wounds, especially the lingering resentment from the annulment of the June 12 elections. In what many perceived as a symbolic apology to the Yorubas, a Yoruba man was handed the mantle of leadership. This gesture, among other factors, gave the PDP an unearned upper hand—not because of ideological strength, but because of a shared ...