Connect with us

Opinion

What No One Will Tell You

Published

on

By Sir Kuli Kuli

This is the time to wake our Youths from our ‘slumbering paralysis’. Understand that everything you’ll post on social media wont change our condition. Elections are not won and running of government is not done on Twitter, facebook or Instagram!.

In 1999 General Election, ‘we’ voted Obasanjo of PDP that won with 18,738,154 votes while Olu Falae of AD-APP got 11,110,287 votes.

 

In the 2003 General Election, majority voted Muhammadu Buhari of ANNP that got 12,710,022 votes while OBJ of PDP won with 24,456,140 votes.

In 2007 General Election, majority voted Muhammadu Buhari of ANPP that got 6,605,299 votes while Umaru Musa Yar’aduwa of PDP won with 24,638,063 votes.

In 2011 General Election, ‘we’ voted for Muhammadu Buhari of CPC that got 12,214,853 votes while Goodluck Ebele Jonathan of PDP won with 22,495,187 votes.

In 2015 General Election, ‘we’ voted for Muhammadu Buhari of APC that won with 15,424,921 votes while Goodluck Ebele Jonathan got 12,853,162 votes.

In 2019 General Election, ‘we’ voted for Muhammadu Buhari of APC that won with 15,191,847 while Alh. Atiku Abubakar got 11,262,978 votes.

Now, the youths should flash back and quietly ponder about what they have achieved through out these years politically. While analyzing 1999-2019 elections. The questions to ask: Is there any personal benefit or collective progress to your family and especially the society at large from your political participation or comradeship?.

What are you currently doing toward 2023 election?. Would you just sit waiting for the time and be the usual Campaign guy/lady or even the brainwashed supporter that argue and post on social media for politicians through out the campaigning/electioneering period; only for election to come and go without having any relevance or influence on either the policy making process or the makers of the policy?.

Are you among those that still believe joining politics or politicians is corruption? Or you still believing that politics of money, religious sentiment, party extremism, regional choice, tribal, ethnocentrism and other affiliation will ever favor the Youths?.

Do you still understand why the youths are yet to have any reasonable value in governance? or why we are never considered any important in the budget, or respected in decision making, or given any capacity, or our voices be heared and treated as a critical stakeholders?.

Advert

Mr Man wake up!. Miss Lady wise up!. ‘Sitdon dey luk, na so you go dey old with no added value after every 4 years’. Your activism, integrity, calculations, religion, consciousness, hopes and aspirations are limited if you are not part of the decision making process or the “Clique!”.

Yes!, you either be part of the makers of the ‘National Decision’ or be part of who they know and respect; if not you’re wasting your time, energy, resources and even your life may be meaningless or wasted as time goes. It is not about ‘Not Too Young to Run’, it is about ‘Not Too Rich and Unconnected to Contest!’.

Weather we like it or not, elections are what bring those that make the laws and the ones to execute them. What are we doing toward contesting, joining party politics, forming structures or working to influence our electoral process massively?.

We are still either shy or afraid to associate with politics and politicians yet we want to see change!. We claim to be ‘Comrades’ or ‘Men of Integrity’ but allowing the ones we call ‘dirty’ to be contesting and associating with politics. Do ‘Activists’ make laws and policies more than the ‘Partisan Politicians’?.

Do ‘Comrades’ decide the prizes of commodity in our markets?. Do imams or pastors decide when ASUU strikes are suspended?. Do your refusal to participate in politics in order to be called ‘good guy’ stops the politicians and their kids from their foreign medical and educational trips?.

Nigeria confident of eradicating HIV/AIDS before 2030 target

I remembered in February 2013, together with friends like Shamo in Zaria, we made plans about 2015, 2019, 2023, 2027, 2031, 2035, 2039, 2043, 2047, 2051, 2055 and 2059 elections..Exactly 48 years of pure calculations and ‘working the Plan’.

This foresight is not because we are Mad or over ambitious, but because we’re planning to be among the Nigeria’s most conscious citizens that wont just sit and watch things happening, but to be part or even make them happen.

Remember, if you don’t participate in the political process of your nation, you’re a part of the ‘National Problem’-more of a liability and a threat!. I am one of the youth to be part of politics and will continue to be.

I challenge our youths to start making plans, taking steps, mobilizing all resources, forming cliques, acting hard and working toward becoming ‘Cabals’ in the process, DON’T ALLOW 2023 TO PICK YOU BY SURPRISE. Choose any realistic political party that share similar ideology with you wisely.

If you’re an activist, ensure to be an ‘Activist for social and political change’. Even the richest business men, respected religious clerics, traditional rulers, and even the so called stubborn comrades participate in political processes; directly or indirectly.

The bitter truth is, politics breeds government, while the government controls everything and everyone, including our religions and livelihood. Don’t be fooled by speculations and ‘dustbin theories’. Work with realities to define relevance for yourself and the society.

This is just my sincere advise from me, to me and to every Nigerian Youth. I am optimistic that we would talk about this again after the 2023 election; if there’s ‘life and luck’.

Zaid Ayuba Alhaji write from Kano.
08069835881, comradezaid6@gmail.com

Opinion

The Rise of AI Delusion: A Student’s Perspective on How AI is Reshaping Relationships, Mentorship, and Counselling

Published

on

 

 

 

Modern campus life is undergoing a quiet but profound psychological shift. If you walk into any university hostel or library late at night, you will see students intensely staring at their screens. They are not just scrolling through social media or typing out assignments; many are having deep, highly personal conversations with artificial intelligence. Faced with intense academic pressure, social isolation, and a volatile job market, students are increasingly treating generative AI chatbots not just as functional engines, but as emotional lifelines.

This emerging phenomenon highlights what can be called the “AI Delusion”—the psychological tendency for users to attribute real human consciousness, genuine empathy, and authentic wisdom to automated language models that are simply predicting words based on statistical data. From a student’s perspective, this reliance is quietly reshaping the three foundational pillars of the higher education experience: interpersonal relationships, academic mentorship, and mental health counselling.

First, AI is radically changing the landscape of campus relationships. Loneliness remains a massive hurdle in student environments, prompting many undergraduates to turn to AI companion applications for immediate interaction.

These applications are available 24/7, never judge, and offer a simulated space of comfort. However, the delusion occurs when a student confuses this simulated, one-sided validation with a real, reciprocal relationship. While data on conversational AI shows these tools can temporarily lower perceived feelings of isolation, psychologists confirm they do not resolve structural clinical symptoms. Human relationships are naturally messy. They require conflict resolution, compromise, and mutual vulnerability. By retreating into digital relationships with chatbots, students risk letting their real-world social skills atrophy, making genuine human interaction feel too exhausting to pursue.

Advert

Second, the delusion is altering the nature of academic and career mentorship. Guidance traditionally came from professors, older peers, or university alumni who shared lived experiences, industry networks, and personal failures. Today, students frequently bypass this human network entirely, asking AI to evaluate their skills and map out their professional futures. While generative AI tools excel at formatting resumes or providing structured career advice, they carry a high risk of user over-reliance.

Educators confirm that automated tools fundamentally lack the nuanced relational, situational, and developmental depth that defines authentic human mentorship. Students who depend solely on automated advisors miss out on the critical “hidden curriculum” of professional networking and human intuition that an algorithm simply cannot simulate.

Third, and perhaps most critically, AI is transforming mental health counselling on campus. University wellness centres globally face extreme backlogs, high costs, and institutional bottlenecks, forcing students to look for alternative solutions. Consequently, an increasing number of youth now utilize AI chatbots as standalone “pocket therapists” to process anxiety and trauma. The delusion of the digital counsellor poses serious psychological risks. Large language models do not possess clinical judgment or genuine empathy. Medical experts warn that while evidence-based digital therapy apps can serve as helpful administrative or basic self-help scaffolds between sessions, they cannot substitute for a qualified human therapist. Relying on pattern-recognition robots during a severe psychological crisis can result in superficial coping mechanisms or dangerously isolated coping loops.

Ultimately, analyzing this trend from a student’s perspective reveals that technology must have strict emotional and practical boundaries. AI is an incredible tool for brainstorming, accelerating research, and enhancing productivity, but it becomes a delusion the moment we allow it to replace human depth. If our generation is to thrive in a digital future, we must treat AI as a bicycle for the mind rather than a replacement for the human heart. True growth, emotional resilience, and professional success will always require real human connections, authentic mentors, and real human empathy.

Adeyemi Ige Taiwo Oluwatosin
200-level student, Department of Development and Strategic Communication, University of Abuja.

Continue Reading

Opinion

Question Over Killings, Kidnappings, and Bandit Attacks: What Exactly Will Homeland Security Change?

Published

on

Abraham Victory

 

By Abraham Victory

When more than forty schoolchildren were abducted during coordinated attacks on schools in Borno in May, Nigerians were reminded of one of the country’s darkest security nightmares: the return of large-scale school kidnappings.

Only weeks later, reports emerged of fresh bandit attacks in Zamfara, where farmers were killed while working on their farmlands. Across parts of Benue and the Middle Belt, communities continued to mourn victims of deadly attacks that left many families displaced and fearful about what tomorrow might bring.

For ordinary Nigerians, these incidents are no longer isolated headlines. They have become symbols of a broader security crisis that has persisted despite the presence of numerous security agencies and repeated government reforms.

It is against this backdrop that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s creation of the office of Special Adviser on Homeland Security deserves serious public scrutiny.

The appointment has generated debate among security experts, policymakers, and citizens alike. Supporters argue that Nigeria’s growing internal security challenges require specialised attention. Critics worry that the country may be creating another layer of bureaucracy without addressing the real problem.

The question Nigerians should be asking is straightforward: Would another office have prevented these attacks?

The answer depends on how one understands Nigeria’s security challenge.

Advert

Take the recent school abductions. The issue was not the absence of security institutions. Nigeria already has the military, police, DSS, civil defence, intelligence agencies, and the Office of the National Security Adviser. The challenge was whether intelligence was gathered early enough, shared effectively, and acted upon before the attacks occurred.

The same question applies to the recurring attacks in Benue and the resurgence of bandit activities across the North-West. In many cases, local communities claim warning signs existed before attacks occurred. Yet security responses often arrived after lives had already been lost.

This suggests that Nigeria’s greatest security challenge may not be a shortage of institutions but a shortage of coordination.

The Office of the National Security Adviser was created precisely to address this problem. The NSA coordinates intelligence activities, advises the President on security matters, and facilitates cooperation among agencies. If Homeland Security is established as a parallel structure with overlapping responsibilities, the risk is that coordination problems could become even more complicated rather than less.

Who receives intelligence first? Who coordinates domestic threat responses? Who bears responsibility when security failures occur?

These questions matter because effective security management depends on clear authority and accountability.

None of this means Homeland Security is unnecessary. The recent wave of kidnappings, bandit attacks, and mass killings demonstrates that Nigeria’s internal security challenges require specialised attention. However, specialisation should strengthen coordination, not weaken it.

A Homeland Security structure can add value if it operates under the strategic framework of the National Security Adviser, focusing specifically on domestic threat management, emergency preparedness, critical infrastructure protection, and internal intelligence integration.

What Nigerians need today is not another competition among security institutions. They need a system capable of preventing the next school abduction, stopping the next bandit attack, and protecting the next vulnerable community before tragedy occurs.

The success of Homeland Security will therefore not be measured by the title of the office or the prestige of the appointment.

It will be measured by a far simpler standard: whether fewer children are kidnapped, fewer communities are attacked, and fewer Nigerians lose their lives to insecurity.

That is the question the government must answer, and it is the result Nigerians deserve.

Abraham Victory
Department of Development and Strategic Communication
200 Level
Abuja, Nigeria

Continue Reading

Opinion

The Prophet’s Mosque, Al-Rawdah, and the Inner Peace of the Visitor’s Mind

Published

on

 

By Abubakar Dangambo

Madinah Al-Munawwarah, the radiant city of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), occupies a unique place in the hearts of Muslims across the world. Located about 450 kilometers from Makkah, it is a city of peace, spirituality, and immense historical significance. For millions of believers, visiting Madinah is not merely a journey; it is the fulfillment of a lifelong dream.

Unlike many great cities of the world that are known for their skyscrapers, industries, or commercial activities, Madinah is known for something far more precious—tranquility. The moment a visitor enters the city, he is greeted by an atmosphere of calmness and serenity that is difficult to describe in words. The city seems to embrace every visitor with a sense of comfort, reminding them that they are walking on land blessed by the presence of the Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him).

At the heart of Madinah stands the magnificent Prophet’s Mosque (Al-Masjid An-Nabawi), one of the holiest sites in Islam. Within its sacred boundaries lies the house of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), where he spent much of his life and where he is buried alongside his beloved companions, Abu Bakr As-Siddiq (RA) and Umar ibn Al-Khattab (RA).

The first time I entered Madinah and subsequently stepped into the Prophet’s Mosque to observe the Maghrib and Isha prayers, I was overwhelmed with emotion. Words failed me. My eyes filled with tears of joy and gratitude. For years, I had dreamed of visiting this sacred place, and suddenly I found myself standing within its walls.

As I joined thousands of worshippers in prayer, an indescribable feeling settled over me. My mind became calm, my heart found rest, and my entire body felt a comfort unlike anything I had ever experienced. It was as though every burden and worry had been lifted away. The peaceful atmosphere of the mosque, combined with the spiritual presence of the place, created a feeling that remains unforgettable.

Although we arrived in Madinah late at night from Jeddah, I could hardly wait for dawn. Immediately after the Fajr prayer the following morning, I hurried back to the Prophet’s Mosque to visit the resting place of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and his noble companions.

Advert

Standing before the sacred chamber was one of the most emotional moments of my life. Tears flowed freely as I thanked Allah Almighty for granting me the opportunity to fulfill a dream I had cherished for many years. I offered my greetings and salutations to the Prophet (peace be upon him), Abu Bakr (RA), and Umar (RA), praying that Allah would count me among those who sincerely love and follow their noble example.

Another unforgettable experience was praying in Al-Rawdah, the blessed area between the Prophet’s pulpit and his house. The Prophet (peace be upon him) described it as a garden from the gardens of Paradise. Every Muslim who enters Al-Rawdah feels a special connection to history, faith, and spirituality. Being in that sacred space filled me with gratitude and humility. I spent those precious moments in prayer, reflection, and remembrance of Allah, thanking Him for His countless blessings.

What makes Madinah even more remarkable is not only its sacred sites but also the character of its people. The residents of Madinah are widely known for their kindness, hospitality, and respect for visitors. Whether in the streets, markets, hotels, or around the mosque, one encounters smiles, warm greetings, and genuine willingness to help.

The hospitality of the people reflects the legacy of the Ansar—the noble residents of Madinah who welcomed the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and his companions during the Hijrah. That spirit of generosity and care continues to live on in the city today. Visitors from every race, language, and nationality are treated with respect and dignity, making them feel at home despite being far from their own countries.

Walking through the streets of Madinah is itself a memorable experience. The city is remarkably clean, organized, and peaceful. Around the Prophet’s Mosque, worshippers from every corner of the world gather in unity, demonstrating the universal brotherhood of Islam. Despite the diversity of cultures and languages, everyone is united by the same faith and love for Allah and His Messenger.

My stay in Madinah lasted only two days before I departed for Makkah to commence the rites of pilgrimage. Yet those two days remain among the most cherished moments of my life. The joy, comfort, spiritual fulfillment, and inner peace I experienced are memories that can never be erased.

Even now, whenever I reflect on those blessed days, my heart longs to return. Madinah is not simply a city one visits; it is a city that captures the soul. Its beauty lies not only in its buildings or landmarks but in the tranquility it offers, the history it preserves, and the spiritual connection it nurtures.

As I conclude this reflection, I pray that Allah, the Most Merciful, grants me another opportunity to visit Madinah and the Prophet’s Mosque. I also pray that every Muslim who desires to visit the blessed city will one day be granted that privilege.

May Allah continue to shower His peace and blessings upon our beloved Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), his family, his companions, and all those who follow his guidance until the Day of Judgment.

Ameen.

Continue Reading

Trending