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Torah: thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour
May the Lord have mercy on Kperogi’s soul if indeed that is what Kperogi is doing (bearing false witness against presidential Brother and neighbour Muhammadu Buhari.
Things should be called and called out by their proper names : Do we have to read some more Buhari-phobia and hatred of Brother Buhari by one Don Farooq Kperogi on steroids, steroids on overdrive and once again dear friends, a very agitated Kperogi doing his overtime for the pittance he is or is not being rewarded or recompensed with for this his outrageous latest epistolary outrage posted on what he calls his “ column”, his column in his unending series, this latest like some of his earlier diatribes once again to be found, as he says, “on the back page of the Nigerian Tribune on Saturday”. And indeed, where else would they tolerate his trademark hyperbolic bombast and his crass highfalutin iconoclastic verbiage, if not “on the back page of the Nigerian Tribune on Saturday”?
There’s always the back page, even the back pages or the toilet tissue to be contrasted with the more revolutionary extreme right-wing “Front page”. The back page is of course the behind, the buttocks, anal crevice from which the excrement, faeces once dropped are usually pasted. The back page/ toilet tissue as you know cleans the backside of the anal character, one of whose characteristics is a fastidious obsession with cleanliness, not necessarily the cleanliness that is next to Godliness…
Lacking self-respect is one thing, writing the way that Kperogi does so consistently, about Brother Buhari, the President of Nigeria, is something else, is not praiseworthy.
How dare you write about the President of Nigeria in such lowly, denigrated terms?
In the final analysis, the pompous “evidentiary grounding” which is only presumed and of which Kperogi boasts in sum total only amounts to conjecture and premature or unsubstantiated conclusions based on hearsay, rumour, rumours and unconfirmed rumours from the usual rumour mill and of course Kperogi’s own malicious wishful thinking, the figments of his own overheated, lurid & putrid imagination ( from Kperogi’s febrile, fertile, overheated brain) and the putrefaction of some other anti-Buhari imagination/s.
To know x, x must be true.
I challenge anyone to scour Kperogi’s latest prevarications do a close textual anal-ysis of the crap - just as I have done most carefully, and to answer the question:
Where is the evidence that could even be admissible or be able to stand on one leg in a court of law?
ON the other hand, there is usually no smoke without fire. All of the above is not gainsaying what occurred in the latter part of Reagan's presidency. To all intents and purposes, a reliable medical assessment would settle the score.
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Is "conundrum" the only philosophical and praxis challenge of the day, or is an additional challenge of the day, what appears to have become the tranquilization (probably through economic penury) of a Nigerian populace that used to be able to assert itself, ask pertinent questions of its political leaders (despite the backdrop of ethno-religious divisions), and call a spade a spade? Calling a spade, a spade is becoming or has become, an endangered species as we succumb, consciously and unconsciously, to the expediency of political correctness (in both its Nigerian and Diasporic contexts) or to the New Age Double-Consciousness malaise of the post-colonial African-Diasporic population. That is to say, W.E.B. DuBois’ famous Double Consciousness doctrine does not apply only to the African descendants whose forebears were brutally uprooted and transplanted to the New World and then subjected to a hegemonic and culturally-subjugating educational regime, that doctrine also applies to both contemporary voluntary African migrants and to the descendants of Africans who had voluntarily migrated to the New World in the earliest phases of the post-colonial era.
Forgive me for that brief historical digression, but in momentarily getting back to the never-ending Nigerian conundrum, it needs to be also noted that even during the military interregna of Nigeria’s political history, public affairs journalism was generally vibrant and interrogative as opposed to the slavishness that contemporaneously and generally dominates the day, with due and notable courageous exceptions.
Well, I also know that Nigeria's civic political culture is one that, generally-speaking, tends to speak in glorious terms about the powers-that-be of the present moment (though the people will endlessly complain about them in omnipresent beer parlors), but instantly jumps onto the streets in condemnation when the same regime is dislodged either by the bullet or by the ballot-box though the latter is becoming more of a dream than a tool for a realistic expression of political will. Political sycophancy Is, of course, to be naturally expected when the political powers-that-be constitute the main providers of jobs and other means of individual-level economic wellbeing—as opposed to political environments whereby the private sector is the main provider of life’s sustenance and opportunities. In blunt terms, money/political power speaks! And, political power (through its plethora of machineries) speaks even more because political power eventually determines the fate of economic power. While I concede that by virtue of our African traditional cultural upbringing, we ought to respect our elders and, by implication, our political leaders, when such political leaders evolve to become terrors of humankind and agent provocateurs of neo-colonialism (as opposed to upholders of justice and fair play for humankind), should we still remain in obedience or should we seek for and canvas for a drastic change in the structures, foundational or governing principles, rules of engagement, values and memberships of the extant political systems?
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/VI1PR04MB4493725F62E2A9BEF8BD1D99A6570%40VI1PR04MB4493.eurprd04.prod.outlook.com.
It is one of the ten commandments: thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour
Once again, we are called upon to hit the proverbial nail on its head – the head of professor gossipmonger, the talebearer, a professional the talebearer. Some people do it for a living. In Islam this type of backbiting is referred to as “eating your brother’s flesh”. Sadly, it is the type of gossip that is the palm oil of that type of big grammar journalese, the kind of gossip on which such unsubstantiated “evidence” and other ad hominem thrive as “journalism” and, sadly, some of them indeed profess to be “professor of journalism”, people without substance.
More bombast than substance. May God save their students!
Gossip is a much stronger word than rumour which The Devil’s Dictionary appropriately defines ( Americanised spelling) , thus :
http://www.thedevilsdictionary.com/?r=#RUMO_
RUMOR, n. A favorite weapon of the assassins of character.
Sharp, irresistible by mail or shield,
By guard unparried as by flight unstayed,
O serviceable Rumor, let me wield
Against my enemy no other blade.
His be the terror of a foe unseen,
His the inutile hand upon the hilt,
And mine the deadly tongue, long, slender, keen,
Hinting a rumor of some ancient guilt.
So shall I slay the wretch without a blow,
Spare me to celebrate his overthrow,
And nurse my valor for another foe.
—Joel Buxter
Gossip:
“a doctor who has met Buhari during a personal, non-medical visit told me…” (nameless /unnamed doctor)
“A friend whose dad has dementia and who has also met Buhari in the recent past had earlier told me…” (another suitably unidentified “friend”, it could have even been someone/ an evil spirit impersonating lucifer)
A concise epithet made famous by Spiro Agnew and henceforth known as “the barnyard epithet” is the all-purpose expletive, bullshit , of the type that Kperogi usually composes over there in Georgia.
It’s a big problem because irresponsible journalism can mislead whole nations, especially nations for whom the printed word is god/ divine/revelation, most especially when the printed word is in big grammar English...
Is "conundrum" the only philosophical and praxis challenge of the day, or is an additional challenge of the day, what appears to have become the tranquilization (probably through economic penury) of a Nigerian populace that used to be able to assert itself, ask pertinent questions of its political leaders (despite the backdrop of ethno-religious divisions), and call a spade a spade? Calling a spade, a spade is becoming or has become, an endangered species as we succumb, consciously and unconsciously, to the expediency of political correctness (in both its Nigerian and Diasporic contexts) or to the New Age Double-Consciousness malaise of the post-colonial African-Diasporic population. That is to say, W.E.B. DuBois’ famous Double Consciousness doctrine does not apply only to the African descendants whose forebears were brutally uprooted and transplanted to the New World and then subjected to a hegemonic and culturally-subjugating educational regime, that doctrine also applies to both contemporary voluntary African migrants and to the descendants of Africans who had voluntarily migrated to the New World in the earliest phases of the post-colonial era.
Forgive me for that brief historical digression, but in momentarily getting back to the never-ending Nigerian conundrum, it needs to be also noted that even during the military interregna of Nigeria’s political history, public affairs journalism was generally vibrant and interrogative as opposed to the slavishness that contemporaneously and generally dominates the day, with due and notable courageous exceptions.
Well, I also know that Nigeria's civic political culture is one that, generally-speaking, tends to speak in glorious terms about the powers-that-be of the present moment (though the people will endlessly complain about them in omnipresent beer parlors), but instantly jumps onto the streets in condemnation when the same regime is dislodged either by the bullet or by the ballot-box though the latter is becoming more of a dream than a tool for a realistic expression of political will. Political sycophancy Is, of course, to be naturally expected when the political powers-that-be constitute the main providers of jobs and other means of individual-level economic wellbeing—as opposed to political environments whereby the private sector is the main provider of life’s sustenance and opportunities. In blunt terms, money/political power speaks! And, political power (through its plethora of machineries) speaks even more because political power eventually determines the fate of economic power. While I concede that by virtue of our African traditional cultural upbringing, we ought to respect our elders and, by implication, our political leaders, when such political leaders evolve to become terrors of humankind and agent provocateurs of neo-colonialism (as opposed to upholders of justice and fair play for humankind), should we still remain in obedience or should we seek for and canvas for a drastic change in the structures, foundational or governing principles, rules of engagement, values and memberships of the extant political systems?
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/VI1PR04MB4493725F62E2A9BEF8BD1D99A6570%40VI1PR04MB4493.eurprd04.prod.outlook.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM6PR07MB50201814875B0538F172243CAE500%40DM6PR07MB5020.namprd07.prod.outlook.com.

To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/usaafricadialogue/DM6PR07MB50201814875B0538F172243CAE500%40DM6PR07MB5020.namprd07.prod.outlook.com.
Baba Kadiri,
Don't mind them. In 2017 and 2018 didn’t we read these God-forsaken rumours put out by the same malicious, good-for-nothing rumour mill?
This year, we (most of us, the people) have wished President Muhammadu Buhari a Happy Birthday, good health, long life and guidance from the Almighty in fighting corruption and running the country.
Which does not mean that great men, kings and prophets have not faced many difficulties in fighting corruption, even when guided by the Almighty.
I should like to quote these memorable, poetic words from the wisdom from Dr Ben Carson , akin to the situation of the haters of Brother Buhari:
“Haters will see you walking on water and say it’s because you can't swim.
Even if you dance on water, your enemies will accuse you of raising dust. “
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Thanks a million for sharing Ukechukwu.
Now Farooq Kperogi is well and truly rumbled ..and humbled!
OAA
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Okechukwu Ukaga <ukag...@umn.edu>Date: 18/12/2019 19:27 (GMT+00:00)Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Happy Birthday to Buhari
--Happy birthday to President BuhariPhoto Credit: Aisha Buhari
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