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The Lord’s Prayer Situation or RAM’s State? Nigeria - Going! Going! GONE!

In the heart of West Africa lies a vast experiment in human endurance. To observe the Nigerian citizen is to observe a life lived entirely in the "buffer" of existence. While other nations build on the solid state of history and the "hard drives" of long-term policy, Nigeria has become a nation functioning in Volatile Memory. The Nigerian exists in a state of RAM (Random Access Memory), a fast, frantic, and temporary space where data is held only as long as the power stays on. The moment the sun sets, or the "system" flickers, the memory is wiped clean. Tomorrow is not a continuation of today; it is a terrifying "Reboot." The Theology of the "Daily" The average Nigerian lives by a literal, desperate interpretation of the Lord’s Prayer: “Give us this day our daily bread.” For most, the prayer ends there. There is no request for a weekly grain reserve or a yearly pension plan. The economic environment has conditioned the citizenry ...
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Activism in Nigeria: A Dilettantism for Action

Activism in Nigeria lives in a paradox. It is loud yet fragile, passionate yet inconsistent, courageous yet often unstructured. It rises in waves: brilliant, intense, and emotionally charged only to recede before it reshapes the shoreline. The phrase “a dilettantism for action” captures this tension: a civic culture where many flirt with activism, taste its aesthetics, speak its language, but rarely commit to its long-haul demands. This is not a condemnation of Nigerians. It is a reflection on the ecosystem that shapes their engagement. To understand the present, one must look at the long lineage of dilettantes across history, figures who embraced the performance of activism without embracing its discipline . Their stories illuminate Nigeria’s current moment and reveal what it takes to move from momentary action to sustained transformation. The Anatomy of a Dilettante A dilettante is not simply an amateur. A dilettante is someone who: Participates in activism as an emo...

Duel Thematic: A Sanctuary for Sanity, a Study of the Split Self, and a New Frontier in Accessible Game Design

Every human being carries two selves within them: the self that seeks order and the self that slips into disorder. Literature has long expressed this duality through figures like Jekyll and Hyde, but the emotional truth behind it is universal. We are all, at different moments, calm and chaotic, disciplined and impulsive, grounded and overwhelmed. Duel Thematic , a game within the Resona app, transforms this inner tension into a playable metaphor; one that is not only psychologically resonant but also radically accessible. The game began with a simple question: How can digital interactions be made easier for people who cannot drag and drop? Dragging is one of the most common gestures in modern interfaces, yet it remains one of the most exclusionary. Many people with disabilities: those using screen readers, speech recognition tools like Dragon or Voice Access, or those relying on keyboard navigation struggle with drag‑and‑drop mechanics. The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG...

Renewed Hope or Recycled Misery? An Empirical Audit of the APC End Game

In the grand theatre of Nigerian geopolitics, power is often pursued as an end, divorced from the sociological contract that justifies its existence. As the 2027 electoral cycle begins to cast its long shadow over the nation, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) finds itself at a crossroads of its own making. To understand the current Nigerian condition, one must look beyond the press releases of the Ministry of Information and apply a rigorous philosophical triad: A Priori, A Posteriori , and A Fortiori . This framework reveals not just a government in struggle, but a "handwriting on the wall" that spans from the creeks of the Delta to the borders of the Sahel. The Theoretical Mandate In epistemology, a priori knowledge is that which is independent of experience. It is based on theoretical deduction. In 2015, and again in 2023, the APC sold Nigeria an a priori dream. The argument was simple: because the leadership consisted of "progressives," and becaus...

The Government of Papa Oyoyoo: The Incorrigible vs. The Incorruptible

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...

Confession, Apology, Remorse (CAR): The Vehicle of Contrition or Attrition

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...

The Myth of Mmamu (River) and Ajanị Uvume (Deity): Benevolence and Malevolence in One

Every community carries a set of stories that function as its spiritual DNA. They are not merely tales; they are frameworks for understanding the world, the land, and the unseen forces that govern both. In Ufuma, originally Uvume, one such story has endured across generations: the myth of Mmamu River and  Ajanị ‑Uvume , the principal deity of the land. I grew up with this myth. It was not taught formally; it lived in the pauses between conversations, in the warnings of elders, in the hushed tones of mothers telling children not to wander too close to the riverbank. It was a story that explained danger, reverence, and the consequences of communal choices. It was also a story that revealed the complexity of the spiritual world our ancestors inhabited. A River Seeking Belonging The myth begins with a river in search of a home.  Mmamu, like many rivers in Igbo cosmology, is not simply water flowing through land. She is a being: feminine, conscious, capable of desire and em...