In the nostalgic tapestry of Nigerian childhood, few phrases carry the rhythmic joy of "Papa Oyoyoo!" It is the ecstatic cry of children who hear the turn of a key or the rumble of a Peugeot engine. It signals the return of the provider, the protector, and, most importantly, the bearer of gifts. But in the theatre of modern Nigerian politics, this innocent greeting has been weaponized and perverted. We are currently witnessing the era of the "Papa Oyoyoo Government"; a systemic tragedy where the "children" are middle-aged governors, and the "gifts" are the hollow spoils of a dying economy. A Study in Sycophancy The recent state visit of the President to London provided a masterclass in this dysfunction. The optics were staggering. Before the presidential jet even taxied onto the runway in Abuja, a "beehive" of high-ranking officials: senators, ministers, and state governors had already abandoned their constitutional duties to fo...
Human beings have always wrestled with the moral weight of wrongdoing. Across cultures, religions, and legal systems, three actions repeatedly surface when harm is done: confession, apology, and remorse . These three form what we might call the C.A.R. , the vehicle through which a person attempts to return to moral alignment. But not every vehicle moves in the same direction. Some journeys lead to contrition , a sincere turning of the heart. Others lead only to attrition , a reluctant admission driven by fear, pressure, or consequences. This article explores how confession, apology, and remorse differ, how they interact, and how they reveal the deeper moral posture of the one who speaks. Confession: Naming the Truth A confession is the act of acknowledging wrongdoing. It is fundamentally an act of truth-telling, a disclosure that something wrong has occurred and that the speaker is responsible. Key features of confession It is factual : “I did this.” It is d...