In the contemporary Nigerian landscape, the word "rebel" is often weaponized by those in power. To the state, a rebel is a transgressor of the Cybercrimes Act, a "disturber of the peace," or an agent of destabilization. However, if we look through the eyes of Albert Camus, the 20th-century philosopher of the absurd, we find a different definition; one that validates the citizen’s cry for good governance not as an act of subversion, but as an act of profound affirmation. The Camusian "No": An Act of "Yes" Camus begins his treatise with a startlingly simple observation: "What is a rebel? A man who says no." But this "no" is not a denial of order. When a Nigerian citizen takes to social media to demand transparency or decry the absence of the rule of law, they are saying "no" to a specific limit that has been breached. Camus argues that in saying no, the rebel is simultaneously saying "yes" to the existen...
In the contemporary landscape of Nigerian socio-politics; a domain we might call the NigeriaSphere; a profound tectonic shift is occurring. It is no longer a simple contest between political parties or ethnic blocs. Instead, it has evolved into a fundamental philosophical war between two diametrically opposed modes of existence: the Jeun Soke legacy and the Soro Soke awakening. This is the struggle between the politics of consumption and the politics of accountability; between the shadows of the past and the "noumenal" light of a functional future. The Anatomy of Jeun Soke: The Politics of the Belly For decades, the NigeriaSphere was governed by the ethos of Jeun Soke . Literally meaning "Eat High" or "Eat Up," it represents a system of extractive patronage . The Philosophy: In the Jeun Soke framework, power is not a responsibility; it is a meal. The state is viewed as a "national cake" to be sliced and distribut...