Of leadership and apprenticeship, by Muyiwa Adetiba
Locking the back door of the soul, by Muyiwa Adetiba
The dead and the living
What is in your refridgerator?
Incubators of poverty
The green passport
The opposite of love is not hate
Rich country, poor people
We voted for change didn’t we?
The best job in the world
Mutually assured destruction (MAD)
Should we envy or pity Kachikwu?
With our today…we distorted their tomorrow
One healing story
Releasing the book inside you
Let our children marry
Seizing the momentum
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SubscribeThe more things change, the more they remain the same
There was a hit song in the 80s that had a refrain which went something like this: ‘Now that we’ve found love what are we going to do with it?’ This song came to my consciousness each time the APC members went from one comedy of error to another in their quest to acquire or consolidate power. Substitute the word love with power and you will have the APC scenario which has found power but is fumbling so terribly with it.
The power of choice
If you get up in the morning expecting a bad day, you’ll rarely disappoint yourself. It’s about me. I was always quacking and complaining, so I decided to change my attitude and become an eagle. I looked around at the other cabs and their drivers. The cabs were dirty, the drivers were unfriendly and the customers were unhappy.
A hungry man can be an angry man
People who know Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, the Governor of Osun State say he is a brilliant man. I have never met him despite my close ties with Osun State but have watched him on the soap box a couple of times and I can attest to his oratorical prowess. But there was nothing brilliant or oratorical about him last week when he appeared on TV trying to defend his inability to pay salaries. He looked incoherent and pathetic.
Is change coming to the beautiful game at last?
Last Saturday was the kind of day you’d want to stay at home.
Apart from the fact that it was wet, cool and therefore cosy, there were two major sporting events lined up for the day, not to mention the Canadian Grand Prix for the growing number of Formula One fans.
President Buhari, you own the sheets now
Three years ago in far-away America, a General like our General Buhari who found himself in politics at the highest level, wrote an interesting book on leadership. His name is Colin Powel, a four-star general of the US army, a former Secretary of State and a one-time aspirant to the world’s most coveted seat. Titled: ‘It Worked for Me’, this best seller is a compilation of the experiences and lessons learnt during his illustrious public life, especially the ‘The thirteen Rules’ which had shaped his life and career.
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