JAMB’s N15.6 billion profit after tax
Vote-Buying taken to the limits
Climbing a tree from the top
As we approach the 2015 war
Homosexuality: This new Western religion
Fish Import: Fishing in troubled waters
Igue, the Ultimate Thanksgiving
Policy somersault, inconsistencies
Too corrupt to fight corruption
Who wants to defend Kidnappers?
Hypocrisy in the eye of Mandela
This politics of confrontation
Budget scare and NASS phobia
As casualisation kills Nigeria
Governor’s wife in Government House
A nation in search of itself
Local govts beyond oil
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SubscribeStill on the shame of our pensions
IT is barely two months now since we wrote the article, “Pension: Waiting for the Dead man’s Shoes”. The reaction to that work has been absolutely overwhelming; hence we are impelled to return so soon to the issue, as an up-date to our readers. In our type of situation, salient points cannot escape being repeated.
Charity does not begin in Russia
Even before the Nigerian civil war, my father had always advised that if anyone offended us, we should resist the temptation to invite a soldier to fight for us, maintaining that if we invited a soldier to fight for us, he would beat up all those we wanted beaten up but when there were no more people to beat, he would pounce on us.
Paralysis of the Judiciary
Even without all the niceties that normally accompany major policy shifts, the Nigerian Judiciary was quietly sentenced to death some four years ago, when President Goodluck Jonathan was yet functioning in an acting capacity.
Ostentation and reward of corruption
President Goodluck Jonathan should have realised that because he wears this big crown, there are many people out there wanting to do things his way, particularly because our society remains largely one of monkey see, monkey do.
Who is now the President?
Last month, this column dealt exhaustively on the case of the screening of primary school teachers in Edo State. At the peak of an encounter between one of the teachers and the State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the latter asked: “Who is now the teacher?” The former responded: “You are the one, sir”.
PDP crisis: The messier it comes
Our readers deserve to know that their Column is interested in silent revolutionaries who are unsung and uncelebrated largely because of society’s default and its apparent preference for rabble-rousers who only succeed in heating up the world around them.
Stop the blames game
THIS column today is dedicated to two Nigerians – Master Daniel Ohikhena, that wizkid who flew from Benin City to Lagos without paying a kobo; and Alhaji Danbaba Suntai, the Executive Governor of Taraba State, who travelled to hell and back.
When a teacher cannot read
EVIDENTLY, we are not listening enough to Albert Einstein (1879-1955): “Life is like a bicycle. To keep your balance, you must keep moving”. We keep increasing the level of rationalisation in our society, in the process of which we get fixated at offering excuses for our failure.
Pension: Waiting for the dead-man’s shoes
WITH the virtual collapse of the African welfare system, it was thought that the pension scheme would cater for the welfare needs of the worker at old age.
Benin Airport saga: The delusion of impunity
UNDER normal circumstances, reasonable people would not expect to be pressurised to remit the money they have collected on behalf of others to their rightful owners.
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