This Yoruba Civil War Will Never End!

16 Feb 2009| By Dr SC Spinoza

“It does not matter who you are and what you claim to be. During the civil war some of us fought for the area which you are claiming today. I got wounded there. Five soldiers who were guarding me died on the spot. Where were you? If you are going to behave the way you are behaving, the government, under my own leadership, will not be overawed. You alone cannot overawe the decisions of government.”
~~ General Olusegun Obasanjo (27 October 2006)

“I have dealt with people like you in the past. I was the Adjutant General of the Nigerian army that thoroughly defeated your ragtag Biafran army.”
~~ General Oluwole Rotimi (14 February 2009)

The above two quotes speak volumes about the mindset of the Yoruba man. This mindset will never end so long as the Yoruba man continues to live as the only deadly parasite destroying the rest of the ethnic groups in Nigeria. It can be proved beyond any shadow of doubt that every Yoruba man or woman is still fighting the Nigeria Civil War against the rest of the other ethnic groups in the Southern part of Nigeria. The evidence is littered all over the public domain to establish this claim. 

According to King David, “in your light, we see light” (Psalm 36:9). Before I engage King David in the context of this Yoruba eternal war with the rest of us, consider the following:

Obasanjo repeatedly used the same line of thinking as quoted above in many occasions when he talked to the poverty-stricken children of Niger Delta. He often reminded them that he fought the Civil War to safeguard Nigeria and that many of his friends died trying to safeguard the nation.

In fact, on one occasion, when he was in London drinking tea with the Queen of England, Obasanjo was quoted in the press as saying that the Niger Delta children were terrorists that needed to be dealt with as terrorists in Iraq. There were also many other instances like these (in the public domain) to show that the Yoruba man is still fighting his war of extermination to save Nigeria from the enemies of Nigeria.

An average Yoruba man or woman is like Warlords Olusegun Obasanjo and Oluwole Rotimi. The relationship between the human eyes and the Sun’s light is the same relationship the Yoruba Mind ascribes to his love for Nigeria

According to King David, the eyes can never see the Sun except in the Sun’s light because what enables the eyes to see the Sun comes from the Sun. Note carefully that, although what allows the eyes to see the Sun (the light) comes from the Sun, it still remains in the Sun; it only comes from it to manifest the Sun’s eternal quality without depleting the Sun.

Similarly, like the eyes, the Yoruba understanding beholds the true love for Nigeria only through the Yoruba Love, so that the Yoruba understanding is not able to behold this love for the state outside the Yoruba Love.

Because all love for Nigeria comes from and must come from this Yoruba Love, this same Yoruba Love manifests the Nigeria love and still remains eternally in Yoruba Love.

Therefore, an ultimate crime or evil, punishable by eternal death or by eternal excommunication from political participation, is to show the absence of this Yoruba Love, since other people’s existence outside Yoruba Nigeria would be more evil than the prevailing, constant death and destruction created by the same Yoruba Love.

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Supporting Articles


Treat Niger Deltans As Humans, Obasanjo Urges Shell, Others

Nigerian Ambassador to US, Oluwole Rotimi, Sacked


Reader Comments

Post # 1 | By  PapiLa | 16 Feb 2009 @ 12:13 PM
The Yoruba man often equates his drunk for power with the sum of his essence. The longer he is present in the corridors of power without producing any result, the more elevated and fulfilled he feels. The more he remains dependent on public funds, the more he becomes oblivious to discretion, to critical thinking, and to growth and the more he deceives and abuses and murders his kind. Even when you tie him up and throw him into a smelly dungeon of his own self-created hip of human waste and carcasses, he is still oblivious to the rot and smell coming from his mouth and surroundings so long as he believes he is in control.
Post # 2 | By  Guesto | 16 Feb 2009 @ 12:20 PM
Obasanjo is a typical Yoruba. Do not mind their attempts to hide this fact. Rotimi, Soyinka, Gani, Abati and the rest of them are like him too. They know they cannot survive on their own, so that they want one nigeria by any means possible. They have already failed because the show is on their doorsteps.
Post # 3 | By  Oscar | 16 Feb 2009 @ 12:33 PM
To an average Yoruba man, leadership is about impulsive self-fulfillment, undisciplined self-indulgence and rationalized backwardness. This is the result of his arrested development and egocentric tendencies. He is forever childish, dependent, tribalistic and without direction or common sense. Even when he is 100 years old, the Yoruba man still remains psychologically and mentally a child, devoid of common sense and incapable of differentiating his right hand from his left hand. Even if he has been exposed to other civilized peoples and cultures, the Yoruba man still remains developmentally retarded and lacks a sense of age and self and meaning beyond satisfying his narrow, enslaving needs.
Post # 4 | By  Guesto | 16 Feb 2009 @ 12:43 PM
Yeaah. It is certainly and empirically true that Rotimi defeated the Igbos in the Nigeria Civil War. Nobody should challenge him on that. He won the war and he also won the control of Nigeria. So is Obasanjo, and his egotistical mind. They are in control, but they have ruined the nation. Today Nigeria has no electricity, no water, no roads, and no peace. Even Ghana is now better than Nigeria after the Yoruba mind gets into the control seat. Before him, Nigeria was good. Under the Hausa man Nigeria had some respect. Nigeria has been blessed for the Yoruba love and control!
Post # 5 | By  Toyola | 16 Feb 2009 @ 12:47 PM
Please allow them to continue to give Nigeria more of their eternal love and wars because it has been good for them. What the Igbos could not achieve in Biafra war have been achieved by the Yoruba without the same war. Therefore let them continue to fight Nigeria with their belief they are fighting the Igbos.
Post # 6 | By  Guesto | 16 Feb 2009 @ 12:58 PM
I agree that they are still fighting the war that ended about 37 years ago and that the battleground for their eternal war is in their soul because there is no other rational way to describe their narcissistic destruction of that which they risked their lives to defend and protect. How else can anybody explain their love for Nigeria other than it is an egocentric and narcissistic love; love rejected or ignored or bifurcated and turned backward towards the self. Who desires such a love, especially when all the Yoruba elderly men and women kill and mutilate and destroy for it at the expense of self-development and development of the nation?
Post # 7 | By  Guesto | 16 Feb 2009 @ 8:12 PM
The talk of love and defending Nigeria is easy until you go deeper into the motivations and mind of a Yoruba man. Read on:
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How OBJ’s govt abandoned £1m silos in Lagos Taiwo Adisa, Abuja 17 February 2009

THE Senate ad-hoc Committee on Food Crisis was on Monday told that the government of President Olusegun Obasanjo abandoned a silos contract in Ikorodu, Lagos after paying over £1 million to the contractors.

The ad-hoc committee, headed by Idris Umar, is investigating the threat of a food crisis in the country and the collapse of the agricultural sector from 1999 to 2007.

The committee was also told that the existence of a cabal within the Ministry of Agriculture was responsible for the crisis in the distribution of fertilisers to farmers in the country.

One of the contractors, Chief Olufemi Akande, told the committee that notwithstanding the payment of £1 million as off-shore component and another N16 million on-shore, the Ikorodu contract was abandoned.

He said that though the government did not give any reason for abandoning the project, it was learnt that the government dumped the project because Lagos State was under the control of an opposition party, the Alliance for Democracy (AD).

A Deputy Director (Operations) in the Ministry of Agriculture, Alebode Isedu, also told the committee that the silos projects were funded through extra-budgetary spending, adding that the projects were first terminated in 1993 by previous governments, while they were re-instated in 2005.

Another contractor who handled the Port Harcourt silos, Mr. Gboyega Akinpelu, told the committee that the contract was reviewed from N16 million to N21 million, but that his company was paid 1.9 million pounds for off-shore and another N12.15 million on-shore payment.

He said that the payment was made to the company after the contract was reviewed from N16 million to N21 million. He, however, stated that the company performed less than 50 per cent of the contract.



Source:
http://www.tribune.com.ng/17022009/news/news3.html