Things however got interesting when three youths – two young men and a lady boarded the bus. From their impressive diction and literary proficiency, it wasn't hard to infer that they are university graduates. And from the heavy Bagco super sacks that made their cubital veins more prominent, soothsayers aren't needed to accurately conclude that they are marketers.
Just like their contemporaries who know no one in government, nor have parents or uncles with businesses, companies or empires they could inherit, the only guaranteed way that they can practice their profession is by marketing goods for indigenous corporate companies or foreign (usually Chinese) technology manufacturers.
Without even asking any question, the three youths said all that was needed to know about how they make ends meet.
"I really tried today, I was able to drop four product samples at a shopping complex in Iwo road and another two at that new generation bank near the roundabout," said the lady.
Before she could enjoy her "success", one of the young men literarily clipped her wings when he said he was able to sell more products although he was told to come the following week for the money.
They went back and forth arguing over whose method is better while the third (and eldest) sat motionless, quiet and apparently sad.
In my mind, I wanted to ask what was wrong but I took a closer look at the fourth finger on his left hand.
"Oh he's married," I said to myself.
There and then I understood his dilemma. He has bigger responsibilities but with limited resources.
At first, you'd want to criticize him for walking a lady down the aisle when he obviously couldn't boast of a reliable, stable and consistent source of income with which he could make ends meet.
You can even blame the parents of the bride for lowering the bride price (typical of Yorubas you may say) or even vent your anger on the wife who was blinded by love, future potentials or the man's dexterity at inguinal explorations. But you cannot blame the young man whose white shirt had the collar region stained from sweat and wore a facial expression that depicted a man doing his best but with little or nothing to show.
The only time he talked was when he reminisced about the promotion a company had the previous year in which every marketer got a product for every product sold in addition to the usual 10 percent commission.
According to him, that was the best moment unlike today when companies are so stingy, reluctant to increase their marketers' bonuses or reward their hard work, not minding the harsh weather.
The field of marketing, according to the course curriculum being used at Olabisi Onabanjo University Ago Iwoye (school where the three had their undergraduate training) is a highly promising field that has churned out successful individuals across the globe. The curriculum also recognised the highly competitive nature of the profession, especially the fact that unlike medicine, law and other professional courses that require special training, you don't have to hold a degree in marketing before you can market a product. Mary Kay didn't study marketing; neither did the able-bodied young men at Aba market.
However, a degree in marketing is expected to expose the student to latest ideas and marketing innovations and solutions that would allow the student to stand out in the field that is currently filled with an unlettered demography. But it is quite disheartening that none of the institutional faculties offering marketing as a course that were contacted expose students to Google Trader, GNBO's cheap websites and other latest tools which could improve their packaging and connect them to the corporate world.
For instance, instead of dashing from one point to another like the illiterate septuagenarian selling Wonder Rat Killer at the market square, the three marketers could have obtained or compiled a list of potential target customers who would be thoroughly studied and they would have prepared presentations that would peak the interest of their customers in the product they are trying to market.
Furthermore, they were three in number, and the lady hinted that her boyfriend is also a marketer. So, how come they couldn't come together and go as a team, instead of the one-man-for-himself business model that I saw?
The answer is simple; they acted like typical Nigerians who believe in popular on-your-own slogan. And it isn't restricted to marketing alone. No. As a matter of fact, the situation is the same across every demography, age group, social class and religious delineations. One would have expected the educational institutions to properly tackle this aberrant misdemeanour. But it is also groaning under the impacts of a myriad of problems that had characterised this nation.
The dwindling fortune of the education system here in Nigeria is obviously an issue of utmost concern (forget online JAMB examinations, all na wash) but it's not as strong as the pusillanimous attitudes of the graduates.
While there is the need for the course curricula of Nigerian institutions to be revised to equip students with knowledge required to combat contemporary challenges, sticking to false stereotypes, running away from risks, jumping into hasty conclusions, taking illogical actions, serial wrong steps, and the sheer desperation to start fending for themselves are issues that are squarely on the shoulders of the students themselves vis-à-vis the society in general.
The current status of the economy and the non-availability of well paying jobs make every graduate – over baked or half baked – to grab whatever offer comes their way. But it's expected that in the middle of the crisis, education ought to empower the educated with the necessary information to hijack the situation, ideate solutions and become successful through their innovations, even in the midst of the innuendos that abound.
While this is not an attempt to belittle marketing, or any course for that matter, it has become expedient to re-echo the general rule that career counsellors do give students who are undecided about career path – do what you love!
But how many students of marketing are studying the course just because they love it? Few I must say.
A larger proportion belongs to the demography whose destiny is extensively altered, battered and reshaped by the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) through its UTME examination. These students are the ones that will fill Medicine and Surgery (University of Ibadan) as first choice and Dentistry (Obafemi Awolowo University) as second choice during their first UME attempt.
After getting 'JAMBed', they often change their first choice to Physiology (University of Lagos) and Anatomy (Ladoke Akintola University Ogbomosho).
If they still fail at the second attempt, they often go drastic with their choices because desperation would have set in. Hence it is not unusual to see choices such as Yoruba Education (JABU) and Sign Language (TASUED).
Through the stress-laden labyrinthine process of getting admission into universities, very few Nigerian youths often get what they desired in the first place. The rest are often compensated with something entirely different. But as typical Nigerians that they are, they are often optimistic and take solace in the popular notion that "degree is degree, success is what is different."
They start such programmes and endure longer-than-usual educational sessions where they are further oppressed, suppressed, embittered and frustrated. It is therefore not unexpected to note that when such students graduate from their respective Ivory Towers, there might not be much difference between them and those that didn't get in in the first place because they are the ones that studied marketing, but know nothing about what marketing actually entails.
Sent via my Blackberry device from MTN.
In her short speech, she thanked all Nigerians that supported her with prayers and enjoined every Nigerian to continue to support the incumbent administration.
(Pictures courtesy saharareporters.com)
In a emotion-laden interview with the World Have Your Host of the World Service of the BBC, the fathers of two out of the 4 slain students of University of Portharcourt narrated their ordeals since the incidence.
They also talked about their dead sons, ALUU community in Rivers state, the roles of the Joint Task Force (JTF) and their hope for the country.
The parents are in unison in their call for the full wrath of the law on the perpetrators of the act.
Listen to the interview by clicking this link http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/whys/whys_20121009-1900a.mp3
The pilgrims were among the thousands currently undergoing the hajj operation in Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia and comprise a male and female.
The two pilgrims could face death penalty for carrying banned drugs. In Saudi Arabia, the punishment for carrying banned drugs is death when convicted by the laws of the land.
P.M.NEWS gathered from a source currently undergoing the hajj operation in Saudi Arabia that the two pilgrims were from Lagos State, but the Lagos State Government said the pilgrims were from Kwara and Ekiti states. The banned drugs were said to be hidden in garri. This has made the Saudi authorities to ban carrying of foodstuff to the holy land by Nigerian pilgrims.
The Nigerian female was said to have been nabbed by vigilant Saudi security operatives at the King Abdullaziz International Airport on Thursday for being in possession of banned drugs. The other culprit was reported to have been arrested on Sunday after being found with substance suspected to be cocaine.
The names of the pilgrims could not be ascertained by our source as at press time. It was gathered that the pilgrims, if found guilty according to Saudi law, would be executed.
Chairman, Lagos Hajj Ad-hoc Committee, Alhaji Abdullateef Abdulhakeem, confirmed that two pilgrims were arrested by the Saudi Authorities but denied that the arrested pilgrims were from Lagos, saying they were from Kwara and Ekiti States.
As a result of the development, the Lagos State Government has barred the remaining pilgrims going to Saudi Arabia from carrying foodstuffs.
Over 3, 000 Lagos pilgrims have so far been airlifted to Saudi Arabia out of the 3,885 pilgrims from the state, while airlifting of the pilgrims may be concluded this week.
The Lagos State Government has vowed to deal with any pilgrim who misbehaved in Saudi Arabia during next month's hajj. To ensure hitch-free hajj, the Lagos State Government said it had set up a special taskforce made up of officials of the Rapid Response Squad, RRS, Chief Security Officer, CSO of the state and Governor's Monitoring Team officials, among others to monitor Lagos pilgrims in Saudi Arabia and deal with erring ones.
Commissioner for Home Affairs and Culture, Alhaji Oyinlomo Danmole said government would not tolerate any form of indiscipline from any Lagos pilgrim.
"Any pilgrim who misbehaves will be dealt with. We also have a tribunal in place to try erring pilgrims in Saudi Arabia," he said, adding that during the last hajj, a pilgrim who misbehaved was prosecuted after the hajj in Lagos."
Chairman, Hajj Ad-hoc Committee, Abdulhakeem said government had adequately prepared to ensure hitch-free hajj as it had organised seminar to enlighten the intending pilgrims on the basic rules of hajj. "We have engaged the services of a separate airline to convey our pilgrims to Saudi Arabia. We will not be using the same airline with other pilgrims in the Southwest. We have also decided not to keep our pilgrims longer in Saudi Arabia after the hajj.
SOURCE: P.M. NEWS
This is not the first case of jungle justice that got national attention, and it may not even be the last because setting captured suspected criminals on fire seems to have become an acceptable norm in Nigeria. Those in support of the action often state the pusillanimous attitude of the law enforcement agencies coupled with complacencies and attending bureaucratic bottlenecks as discouraging people from taking suspected criminals to police stations.
It is rather saddening that having "connections" to those that control state power or at the helms of affairs at any level of government portend superiority to the rule of law, hence aggrieved citizens often decide to adjudicate on their own. It didn't just start, it's been a while; possibly with the introduction of night watch groups popularly known as 'vigilante'.
Vigilante groups have come to stay in Nigeria although its constitution is unconstitutional, yet they are seen as complimenting the efforts of the police in keeping the streets safe. Sanely speaking, it would be expected that when the vigilante groups notice any unusual movements in the neighborhood at odd times, they would alert the police. This however is no longer the case. I've heard cases where a doctor was forced to hawk bean cakes made out of stones because he was going home at 1am; an undergraduate student going for night class in the south east was mistakenly shot; and a man whose wife was in labor got detained overnight by the overambitious vigilante operatives who despite finding shawls, gloves, baby products and other harmless things on him failed to allow him to dash to the hospital before the woman delivered the bundle of joy.
Following the societal acceptance of the arrest, detention and punishment of night crawlers by the vigilante groups, groups like OPC sprung up. Now we've lost count of the number of local security operatives in the various communities which obviously seem to have given citizens the notion that they can do as they like to perpetrators of dastard acts.
I remember the first case of public burning of criminals that I heard; it was so ridiculous to be true, and shame on any learned fellow who believed and participated in it. It was during the period when rumors spread about people losing their penises after being merely touched by someone. During this period, you couldn't talk to strangers who might say you are responsible for the loss of their manhood. In some areas in the south west, residents made several arrests and the unlucky manhood thieves were dragged to the middle of the express road, stripped naked and torched. Similar incidence repeated itself during the period when kidnapping was rampant. Many people were also set on fire.
Throughout these periods of national insanity, law enforcement officers rarely made arrests of perpetrators of such dastard acts especially the illegal executioners, a silence that also suggested the force is not actively against the act.
The jungle judiciary system still went on with allegations of criminals shot dead by the police officers. I remember serving in a secondary hospital. Almost on a daily basis, police vans brought corpses of suspected criminals who were caught and shot by the police. Yet no one raised eyebrows. It has even reached a celebrated crescendo since it is now acceptable for state police commissioners and district police officers to parade corpses of suspected criminals who were shot during gun duels with officers of the force.
This act could also be said to be the origin of the series of killings being made by the Boko Haram sect after their leader was arrested and reportedly killed while in the detention of security operatives. It is therefore not a strange incidence in Nigeria.
What is disheartening is that while illiteracy or non-comprehension of law statutes by police recruits, thugs and miscreants in the society could be said to be responsible for previous jungle justice and killings, the murder of the four students of UNIPORT in the full glare of hundreds of the so-called leaders of tomorrow is an attestation to the fact that the future of this great nation is so doomed. Pardon my cynicism.
The incidence would have taken a minimum of one hour because a larger part of the footage I saw was when the perpetrators went to get petrol. If this was the case, how come no one in the neighborhood that saw what was going on was able to call the police to intervene? What I found more disheartening were the onlookers, especially the young students who would be in their teens and early twenties and were delighted to watch human beings like them being maimed and killed over an ordinary, maybe fairly used ipad.
It brought to mind an almost similar experience I had about two years ago in Owerri. I was in the city to make arrangements for my credentials so I decided to stay with a friend who had a room in one of the private hostels. Around four in the evening, two ladies knocked on the door severally. When they entered the room, they said one of their boyfriends was angry and wanted to beat them up. So they begged to stay in the room. We agreed but few minutes later, pandemonium ensued in the hostel; it was so strong that we had to ask them to leave. Thank God we did that.
Less than 5 minutes later, a room-to-room search for the ladies was conducted. When they got to our room, the door was almost pulled down. Then I asked the angriest guy in the search team what was happening? He said the ladies stole his phone and money. He suspected they were hiding in one of the guys' rooms and he'll decisively deal with any guy in whose room the ladies were found. My heart skipped as they searched the wardrobe, bathroom….everywhere.
Then I asked myself "what if we didn't ask the ladies to leave?" We would have been well beaten, maybe set on fire just like the unlucky four UNIPORT students. This is therefore not a UNIPORT or Rivers state issue, it's a national tragedy; a colossal travesty that should be addressed right from the top to the bottom. This case is so simple to solve and may God, Sango, Obatala, Amadioha and other gods decisively deal with anyone who tries to meddle with this particular case or sweep it under the carpet.
Unlike hunger, poor health system and other conditions that exclusively affect the poor and down trodden Nigerians, jungle justice is not a respecter of anyone, the angry mobs could set anyone on fire. I learned the hard way.
Despite the fact that I was Vanguard Newspaper's Young Nigerian Making The Difference, had El-Rufai write the foreword for my book, and, for Christ sakes, I was even on national TV! Yet my fate rested in the hands of hope and hos.
While it will be difficult for the Nigerian Police Force to solve all the various cases of jungle justice, the one in Aluu is too simple to miss. Let the perpetrators be fished out and made to face the full course of law. It is only when this is done that future cases could be prevented since angry mobs would be aware of the fact that jungle justice is unacceptable. I also believe that the presidency should also be interested in this case.
It is now simple to get people killed in this country, all you need is someone shouting "thief, thief" and a dozen of gullible angry fools running in pursuit. They know how to get fuel and tires for that cause and are never feel remorse because as far they are concerned, there is nothing wrong with what they are doing.
The response to this case is also disheartening. A lady wrote "this will be a lesson to other thieves" another said "I hope these thieves go to hell". These show there are lots of people with like criminal minds. And if we don't tackle this issue now, I pity the children of Nigerian politician who knowingly or unknowingly find themselves in the midst of such bloodthirsty insane vanguards of jungle justice.
PS: Think you are man (or woman) enough? Check the video here http://t.co/xPN3Rie
If you've not seen the video that showed how four male students of the University of Portharcourt were killed for stealing an iPad, don't bother because you will never remain the same again after watching it. This is the summary of what happened. The boys were caught with the electronic device, stripped naked, beaten severally with logs of wood and sticks, a hefty guy mashed the head of one of the suspected thieves with a rocky stone. At a particular point, one of the guys wanted to roll out of the tire on his neck but an evidently heftier aggrieved onlooker prevented him. Petrol was brought, and the young men were set on fire alive, right in the presence of hundreds of residents of Aluu in the beautiful city of Portharcourt.
This is not the first case of jungle justice that got national attention, and it may not even be the last because setting captured suspected criminals on fire seems to have become an acceptable norm in Nigeria. Those in support of the action often state the pusillanimous attitude of the law enforcement agencies coupled with complacencies and attending bureaucratic bottlenecks as discouraging people from taking suspected criminals to police stations.
It is rather saddening that having "connections" to those that control state power or at the helms of affairs at any level of government portend superiority to the rule of law, hence aggrieved citizens often decide to adjudicate on their own. It didn't just start, it's been a while; possibly with the introduction of night watch groups popularly known as 'vigilante'.
Vigilante groups have come to stay in Nigeria although its constitution is unconstitutional, yet they are seen as complimenting the efforts of the police in keeping the streets safe. Sanely speaking, it would be expected that when the vigilante groups notice any unusual movements in the neighborhood at odd times, they would alert the police. This however is no longer the case. I've heard cases where a doctor was forced to hawk bean cakes made out of stones because he was going home at 1am; an undergraduate student going for night class in the south east was mistakenly shot; and a man whose wife was in labor got detained overnight by the overambitious vigilante operatives who despite finding shawls, gloves, baby products and other harmless things on him failed to allow him to dash to the hospital before the woman delivered the bundle of joy.
Following the societal acceptance of the arrest, detention and punishment of night crawlers by the vigilante groups, groups like OPC sprung up. Now we've lost count of the number of local security operatives in the various communities which obviously seem to have given citizens the notion that they can do as they like to perpetrators of dastard acts.
I remember the first case of public burning of criminals that I heard; it was so ridiculous to be true, and shame on any learned fellow who believed and participated in it. It was during the period when rumors spread about people losing their penises after being merely touched by someone. During this period, you couldn't talk to strangers who might say you are responsible for the loss of their manhood. In some areas in the south west, residents made several arrests and the unlucky manhood thieves were dragged to the middle of the express road, stripped naked and torched. Similar incidence repeated itself during the period when kidnapping was rampant. Many people were also set on fire.
Throughout these periods of national insanity, law enforcement officers rarely made arrests of perpetrators of such dastard acts especially the illegal executioners, a silence that also suggested the force is not actively against the act.
The jungle judiciary system still went on with allegations of criminals shot dead by the police officers. I remember serving in a secondary hospital. Almost on a daily basis, police vans brought corpses of suspected criminals who were caught and shot by the police. Yet no one raised eyebrows. It has even reached a celebrated crescendo since it is now acceptable for state police commissioners and district police officers to parade corpses of suspected criminals who were shot during gun duels with officers of the force.
This act could also be said to be the origin of the series of killings being made by the Boko Haram sect after their leader was arrested and reportedly killed while in the detention of security operatives. It is therefore not a strange incidence in Nigeria.
What is disheartening is that while illiteracy or non-comprehension of law statutes by police recruits, thugs and miscreants in the society could be said to be responsible for previous jungle justice and killings, the murder of the four students of UNIPORT in the full glare of hundreds of the so-called leaders of tomorrow is an attestation to the fact that the future of this great nation is so doomed. Pardon my cynicism.
The incidence would have taken a minimum of one hour because a larger part of the footage I saw was when the perpetrators went to get petrol. If this was the case, how come no one in the neighborhood that saw what was going on was able to call the police to intervene? What I found more disheartening were the onlookers, especially the young students who would be in their teens and early twenties and were delighted to watch human beings like them being maimed and killed over an ordinary, maybe fairly used ipad.
It brought to mind an almost similar experience I had about two years ago in Owerri. I was in the city to make arrangements for my credentials so I decided to stay with a friend who had a room in one of the private hostels. Around four in the evening, two ladies knocked on the door severally. When they entered the room, they said one of their boyfriends was angry and wanted to beat them up. So they begged to stay in the room. We agreed but few minutes later, pandemonium ensued in the hostel; it was so strong that we had to ask them to leave. Thank God we did that.
Less than 5 minutes later, a room-to-room search for the ladies was conducted. When they got to our room, the door was almost pulled down. Then I asked the angriest guy in the search team what was happening? He said the ladies stole his phone and money. He suspected they were hiding in one of the guys' rooms and he'll decisively deal with any guy in whose room the ladies were found. My heart skipped as they searched the wardrobe, bathroom….everywhere.
Then I asked myself "what if we didn't ask the ladies to leave?" We would have been well beaten, maybe set on fire just like the unlucky four UNIPORT students. This is therefore not a UNIPORT or Rivers state issue, it's a national tragedy; a colossal travesty that should be addressed right from the top to the bottom. This case is so simple to solve and may God, Sango, Obatala, Amadioha and other gods decisively deal with anyone who tries to meddle with this particular case or sweep it under the carpet.
Unlike hunger, poor health system and other conditions that exclusively affect the poor and down trodden Nigerians, jungle justice is not a respecter of anyone, the angry mobs could set anyone on fire. I learned the hard way.
Despite the fact that I was Vanguard Newspaper's Young Nigerian Making The Difference, had El-Rufai write the foreword for my book, and, for Christ sakes, I was even on national TV! Yet my fate rested in the hands of hope and hos.
While it will be difficult for the Nigerian Police Force to solve all the various cases of jungle justice, the one in Aluu is too simple to miss. Let the perpetrators be fished out and made to face the full course of law. It is only when this is done that future cases could be prevented since angry mobs would be aware of the fact that jungle justice is unacceptable. I also believe that the presidency should also be interested in this case.
It is now simple to get people killed in this country, all you need is someone shouting "thief, thief" and a dozen of gullible angry fools running in pursuit. They know how to get fuel and tires for that cause and are never feel remorse because as far they are concerned, there is nothing wrong with what they are doing.
The response to this case is also disheartening. A lady wrote "this will be a lesson to other thieves" another said "I hope these thieves go to hell". These show there are lots of people with like criminal minds. And if we don't tackle this issue now, I pity the children of Nigerian politician who knowingly or unknowingly find themselves in the midst of such bloodthirsty insane vanguards of jungle justice.
PS: Think you are man (or woman) enough? Check the video here http://t.co/xPN3Rie
According to the results of a ten-year study conducted in New Zealand and involving more than 1,000 volunteers, researchers found that adolescents who smoked marijuana at least four days per week lost an average of eight IQ points between the ages of 13 and 38, a pattern not seen among people who began smoking heavily only in adulthood.
"Heavy pot smokers tend to show deficits in memory, concentration, and overall brainpower in relation to their peers, but these problems were more pronounced - and seemingly more lasting - among those who picked up the habit as teens," said the researchers in the study report.
According to the study, individuals who smoked heavily in adolescence had consistently lower IQs at age 38, even if they'd cut back in the previous year. By contrast, the IQ of the relative latecomers to marijuana was more closely linked with how much pot they'd smoked recently.
"The effect of persistent cannabis use on intellectual functioning is really confined to adolescents, (which) suggests that adolescents, in particular, are vulnerable to the effect of cannabis," says lead author Madeline H. Meier, a psychologist and postdoctoral researcher at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.
An eight-point decline in IQ isn't negligible, the authors say. Previous research suggests a drop in intelligence of that magnitude could, for instance, affect a person's long-term career prospects, job performance and income.
It's reasonable to suspect that still-growing teen brains might be especially sensitive to the cumulative effects of marijuana, says Dr. Jeffrey Brosco, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine.
"In the developing brain, neurons are growing and changing, synapses are forming," says Brosco, who was not involved in the study. "When there's a lot of change in any part of the body, particularly the brain, that usually means it's more vulnerable to environmental influences."
(CNN)
The report shows that about one in four Nigerians are currently unemployed. It also added that Nigeria has one of the worst youth unemployment rates in sub-Saharan Africa as two in five (about 38 per cent) of Nigerian youths are unemployed.
These were stated in a 291-page publication titled 'The African Economic Outlook 2012', and jointly published by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, UNECA; the United Nations Development Population, UNDP; the African Development Bank Group; and the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development.
The publication, launched on Thursday in Addis Ababa, was presented by the Director, Economic Department, NEPAD division of UNECA, Emmanuel Nnadozie. The publication, which is the 11th edition, however, described Nigeria's economic growth in 2011 as "robust."
The robust growth recorded in Nigeria's economy, according to the publication, was driven mainly by the non-oil sector, and in particular, telecommunications, construction, wholesale/retail trade, hotel and restaurant services, manufacturing, and agriculture. (Via Premium Times)
"God told me to marry again because it is not good for a man to be alone," said Pastor Chris Okotie.
Concerning his last marriage to Stephanie which hit stumbling blocks just after four years, he said he fell for her beauty without considering other important virtues.
It would be recalled that he had earlier parted ways with his first wife after 17 years of marriage thus making it his second divorce in 6 years.
But despite widespread criticism about his break-ups, the pastor is confident he heard clearly from God.
Critics are also alluding to the fact that he told everyone during the 2003 general elections that God told him he'll be Nigeria's next president. He however lost the election to the late president Umar Musa Yar'adua.
At the time of going to press, no official press statement has been released on the matter but experts are of the opinion that details about the pastor's newly found love will soon appear in tabloids.
Sent from my BlackBerry wireless device from MTN
Here is RNC candidate Mitt Romney's speech at the RNC Convention held in Tampa
I just got the link to download the latest work from Kanye West and his G.O.O.D. Music gang free of charge. Click here
Kanye is still the master of bringing unique sounds and samples to hip-hop’s musical soundscape. On ‘Cruel Summer,’ he co-produces a handful of head-nodding beats with Hit-Boy, Pop & Oak, Lifted, IllMind, Mannie Fresh, Young Chop and others. Standout tracks on the album include ‘To the World,’ ‘The One,’ ‘Higher, ‘Bliss’ and ‘I Don’t Like’ (Remix).
The only downside is that five of the 12 tracks on ‘Cruel Summer’ have been already released (‘Mercy,’ ‘Cold,’ ‘New God Flow’ and ‘Clique’ all have graced the Billboard Singles chart). While the newer songs are indeed good, they are not great. Simply put, there album lacks that “Wow” factor.
But that’s not to say ‘Cruel Summer’ isn’t an enjoyable listen. It’s starts off grandiose and loses steam near the latter half of the album. Overall, ‘Cruel Summer’ is dope, but we’d suggest you go to iTunes and pick out your favorite rewindable tracks.
1. ‘To The World’ (Feat. Kanye West and R. Kelly)
Kanye West kicks the album off with a triumphant song that will make the most-depressed person in the world break out of their slumber and put their middle fingers up in the air. Over marching drums, plucking violins and a charging piano, R. Kelly’s yearning vocals is the big stand out here. Oh, and it includes Kanye’s political shout-out of the year: “Mitt Romney don’t pay no tax! Mitt Romney don’t pay no tax!” [Listen Here]
2. ‘Clique’ (Feat. Big Sean, Kanye West and Jay-Z)
Produced by Hit-Boy, this is another infectious track that features an incredible verse from Hova. “Yeah, I’m talking ‘Ye / Yeah, I’m talking Rih / Yeah, I’m talking B / Nigga, I’m talking me / Yeah, I’m talking bossy, I ain’t talking Kelis / Your money too short, you can’t be talking to me,” he spits. Big Sean is right, no one is f—ing with this clique. [Listen Here]
3. ‘Mercy’ (Feat. Big Sean, Pusha T, Kanye West and 2 Chainz)
Everyone should be familiar with this song so there’s nothing much to say about it. Undoubtedly, ‘Mercy’ is one of the hottest songs of the summer along with the equally impressive video. Serve. [Watch the 'Mercy' Video]
4. ‘New God Flow’ (Feat. Pusha T, Kanye West and Ghostface Killah)
Another previously released track, but this one features a guest verse from Ghostface Killah, which, ironically, the song samples his 2000 track ‘Mighty Healthy.’ It’s a mean track with a menacing piano groove and sampled breakbeat. Pusha T had the standout verse on the original, but Ghostface bodies this song at the end. Call the police, this is a murder rap. [Listen Here]
5. ‘The Morning’ (Feat. Raekwon, Common, Pusha T, 2 Chainz, CyHi da Prynce, Kid Cudi, Kanye West and D’banj)
Over a minimalist, computer-blipping beat, the posse track features Raekwon detailing a picturesque drug tale, while Com, Pusha, Deuce, CyHi, and Yeezy spit gritty one-liners of black excellence. It’s a big standout on the album with Kanye providing the best verses on the track. “I treat the label like money from my shows / G.O.O.D. would’ve been G.O.D. except I added more o’s,” he raps. [Listen Here]
6. ‘Cold’ (Feat. Kanye West and DJ Khaled)
The infamous track in which Kanye professed his love for Kim Kardashian and threw Kris Humphries under the bus. There’s some extras on the track (sound effects, echoes, screams) and DJ Pharris shouting out Chicago street blocks. [Watch the Video]
7. ‘Higher’ (Featuring Pusha T, The-Dream, Ma$e and Cocaine 80s)
Produced by Hit-Boy, this haunting song features a surprise appearance from former Bad Boy rapper Ma$e. Although he’s been absent from the rap game for a couple of years, his monotone flow is still intact. “Uh, one-two one-two guess who back again / Harlem in this — what? Yeezy let Manhattan in,” he spits, adding, “I’m like a drug overlord, my jewelry’s overboard / It’s hard to believe dollar-sign E even know the Lord.” It looks like Ma$e is making a comeback …again? [Listen Here]
8. ‘Sin City’ (Feat. John Legend, Teyana Taylor, CyHi The Prynce, Malik Yusef and Travi$ Scott)
This is where the album takes a detour. This is not our favorite song, as it sounds like a throwaway track from Kanye’s ’808s & Heartbreak’ album. It’s a cautionary tale about the dangers of engaging in the street life. “Sex, drugs, and playin’ dices, those are our favorite vices,” raps CyHi. “But this life will take a toll on ya / Well I guess you gotta pay the prices.” We are not going to gamble on this — skip. [Listen Here]
9. ‘The One’ (Feat. Kanye West, Big Sean, 2 Chainz, Marsha Ambrosius and Cocaine 80s)
A standout on the album — Kanye, Big Sean and 2 Chainz rap celebratory rhymes about being rich and mindful of the “snakes in the grass.” Yeezy has the best verse on the song: “I’m the one, baby / Yeah, I’m the one, baby / Since God gave his only begotten son, baby / It’s hard preachin’ the gospel to the slums lately / So I had to put the church on the drums, baby.” [Listen Here]
10. ‘Creepers’ (Feat. Kid Cudi)
This dark song is tailor-made for Kid Cudi, as he is the only one who could deliver lyrics bemoaning about depression, drugs and paranoia. A creepy song, indeed. [Listen Here]
11. ‘Bliss’ (Feat. John Legend & Teyana Taylor)
The only R&B-flavored tune on the album. It’s an empowering song about overcoming obstacles to achieve your dreams. Legend and Teyana sound great together. Hopefully, we will hear more soulful duets from these two artists. [Listen Here]
12. ‘Don’t Like (Remix)’ (Feat. Pusha T, Kanye West, Big Sean, Chief Keef and Jadakiss)
The album ends with a “bang-bang” — a remix of Chicago spitfire Chief Keef’s ‘I Don’t Like.’ The sextet of rappers each offer a laundry list of things that they don’t including, two-faced n—as, copycats, snitches, clingy b—-es and fake Gucci. “They ain’t about that life, they ain’t about that life / We hanging out that window it’s about to be a Suge night,” raps Kanye. [Listen Here]
The song is hot, fresh and nice. Awesome hook by Akon. This song lived to its expectations after all.
Bruno Mars hits the stage during the 2012 Grammy Awards held at Staples Center on Sunday (February 12) in Los Angeles.The 26-year-old singer performed his song “Runaway” during the show. Bruno and his band all suited up in Dolce&Gabbana! Watch his performance below:
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Chris Brown struts his stuff at the 2012 Grammy Awards held at Staples Center on Sunday (February 12) in Los Angeles.
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Rihanna dons a sheer top on stage at the 2012 Grammy Awards held at Staples Center on Sunday (February 12) in Los Angeles. The 23-year-old singer (in Norma Kamali) kicked off her performance with “We Found Love” before joining Coldplay for their track “Princess of China.”
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grassroots across the nation. Out of the millions of Nigerian youths, hundreds of thousands of them are teenagers and underage who are sexually active. They've already eaten the forbidden apple yet the government is claiming that they shouldn't use condoms since they are too young to have sex, but old enough to contract HIV/AIDS.
exploit the religious dimension and preach total abstinence which is morally and spiritually right, and happens to be the best prevention method for HIV/AIDS.
policies in Nigeria should realize that as long as there is increasing incidence of underage pregnancies, the school students aren't immune against contracting HIV/AIDS.
religious machineries militating against the project are claiming that with this kind of condoms readily, freely or cheaply available, sexual promiscuity will go unabated. They have a strong point, but they've totally digressed away from the major reason why the nanocondoms are needed which is to fight HIV/AIDS.
"What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared
to what lies within us." - Ralph Waldo Emerson
Paul Adepoju | +2348060887107
Without gainsaying, the need for a safer protocol when it comes to civil unrests, strikes and protests cannot be overemphasized especially at a time when there is so much tension in the nation. With numerous trigger-happy security officers and insecurity instances around us, Nigerians need to protect themselves before protecting their rights and much cherished fuel subsidy. It is a popular saying that it is only the man that is alive that gets the plate number of the hit-and-run driver.
Since Monday, the nation has recorded several protests dotted across the nation. From the well paved Abuja roads to the hinterlands, many Nigerians are grumbling and are already on the streets burning tires, chanting, singing songs and clamouring for the return of the much loved subsidy. And as usual, not every one of these protests is going on smoothly. At the Eagle Square rally for instance, the crowd was dispersed with tear gas. And in Ilorin, a protester was allegedly shot dead.
There are basic things we can do to prevent fatal outcomes, curtail dangerous incidences and take care of victims; even while making our voices heard. The first thing we need to know about is tear gas.
Tear gas is used by law enforcement officials for crowd control and by individuals for personal protection (pepper spray). Though considered as a mild agent, medical history has shown that tear gas could be weaponized as terrorists could use it for attacks. Tear gas could be released in the air as a mist of fine droplets or particles. If tear gas was released into the air, people could be exposed through skin contact, eye contact, or breathing it in.
Tear gas causes burning sensation and irritation to the area of contact within seconds of exposure. The extent of harm caused by tear gas depends on the amount a person is exposed to, how the person was exposed (skin contact, eye contact, or breathing), and the length of time of the exposure. The effects of exposure to tear gas are usually short-lived (30-60 minutes) after the person has been removed from the source and cleaned off (decontaminated).
However, long term exposure (for about an hour or to higher concentration) can lead to blindness, glaucoma (potential cause of blindness), respiratory failure due to difficulty in breathing, and death as a result of serious chemical burns to the throat and lungs. It is worthy to note that these deadly effects of tear gas will only occur when individuals are overexposed or higher than normal concentrations are formulated and used. Nigerian protesters should be prepared for both.
After getting exposed to tear gas, usually via breathing, the first thing to do is to quickly leave the area. This sounds so simple but in a protest, the people tend to challenge the law enforcement officers. In a nation like Nigeria, it is during this period that big grammars are spoken and the already exposed individuals are further exposed. Simply moving to an area where fresh air is available is a highly effective method of protection., and let’s keep in mind the fact that tear gas will form a heavy vapor cloud that will settle close to the ground. Hence just staying there increases the exposure rate.
In case of burning eyes or blurred vision, the eyes should be rinsed with plain water for 10-15 minutes hence protest organizers should ensure that water is readily and freely available. Eye symptoms are treated by rinsing the eyes with water until the stinging starts to go away. Treatment for breathing difficulties involves helping the affected person get more oxygen in his or her blood. Medications that are used to treat asthma (such as bronchodilators and steroids) may be used to help the person breathe. Burn injuries to the skin are treated with standard burn management techniques, such as medicated bandages. Hence first aid kits should be readily available in addition to placards and signs.
Gunshots
Another issue that protests organizers should be prepared for is how to handle gunshot wounds. Unlike teargas, gunshots at rallies are unexpected. Normally, rationally, sensibly and logically, guns aren’t expected at civil rallies; but in a nation where police officers frequently shoot helpless citizens behind the wheels at checking points for refusing to pay twenty naira illegal dues, gunshots at protests should be expected and well prepared for. The Ilorin incidence attests to the fact that it will be unwise not to expect gunshots although preparedness can reduce its impact.
The severity of a gunshot wound is dependent on the location of the injury, the size and speed of the projectile. By and large, ten minutes should be allotted to each gunshot victim before ambulance transport.
The victim should not be moved unless the safety is in jeopardy. If the victim is unconscious, keep the airway open and clear. But if the victim is not breathing, someone should begin CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation). The process is simple.
Place the heel of your hand in the middle of the victim’s chest and put the other hand on top of the first with your fingers interlaced. Compress the chest at least 2 inches (4 – 5 cm). Allow the chest to completely recoil before the next compression. Compress the chest at a rate of at least 100 pushes per minute. Continue to do chest compressions until the victim wakes up, or a trained person takes over the CPR process to perform the rescue breath.
The bleeding should be controlled by applying pressure on gauze or cloth placed on the wound site. Gunshot to the chest should be sealed with some type of plastic to keep air from being sucked into the wound thus preventing the collapse of the lung. But if the victim complains of worsened shortness of breath, gently remove the seal.
Conscious victims should sit or lie in positions most comfortable to them, while unconscious victims should be placed in the recovery position. To put the victim in recovery position, grab his or her leg and shoulder and roll him or towards you. Continue to roll the victim until he is on his side. Adjust the top leg so that both the hip and knee are bent at right angles; gently tilt the head back to keep the airway open. If breathing or circulation stops at any point in time, roll the person back and begin chest compression.
In a broad sense, ensuring breathing and stopping bleeding are the major issues that determine whether a gunshot victim will survive or not. Hence organizers of protests should make adequate provisions and have a medical team on stand by plus an ambulance on speed dial.
Panic and Stampede
Although teargases are often used at rallies and protests, few things cause more harm than panicked protesters. This is what the law enforcement officers in this part of the world often capitalize on. They chase protesters and threaten to shoot. In return, the protesters often scamper for safety in the process of which collisions and stampedes tend to occur depending on the number of those in attendance and the location of the venue.
The victims most affected are often children and the aged. This is why it is not advisable for kids and grannies to be at rallies that are not well planned. However, the simple solution is to use a widely open location, not the end of a closed arena. Also, the organizers can plan the rally such that participants are organized into groups and each group could have a safety instructor guiding them and should show the way when there is commotion.
The panic button is the easily pushed button hence Nigerian protests organizers should be prepared to handle such and ensure the safety of those in attendance by providing adequate medical, psychological and aesthetic provisions that are necessary to make rallies and protests delights to be.
While the law enforcement officers are expected to be at their best behavior, the Nigerian civil group should learn from past occurrences. They should take note of the issues raised in this article and ensure that while protesters are clamoring for the return of subsidy, all of them live to see their wishes come through.