The Pundit

The Pundit Civil Rights Advocacy
Social Commentary
Political Activism
Religious and Moral Conversations

A Kleptocratic Nepotocracy is a system of government in which power is concentrated among a ruling family or network of ...
29/10/2025

A Kleptocratic Nepotocracy is a system of government in which power is concentrated among a ruling family or network of relatives who use their positions to enrich themselves and their allies through corruption, embezzlement, and misuse of public resources.

Since the formation and corporate organisation of the Association of Pure Criminals (APC), they have been testing and consolidating at each stage in their game plans to consolidate power within their cronies and to protect and enhance their corruption.

They are consolidating at each stage, because they have succeeded in conquering the Nigerian people through the entrenchment and normalisation of ethnic and religious bigotry.

The culture of kleptocracy was successfully tested and consolidated at the Buhari regime, Pablo escoba emilokan has advanced it further to kleptocratic nepotocracy using his gangs of emilocrooks. His son Seyi now has an office in the Nigerian government.

The picture below are the Minister of FCT Wike and his two sons attending official functions in Dubai, sponsored by state funds.

The game plan is simple;

They are strategically preparing their children for leadership and positioning them to take over from them when they can't continue.
In other words, they are legitimising and consolidating the cycle of oppression so that, after they finish pressing your necks, their children will protect their evils and still press the necks of your children.

As you worship and chant for them today, your children must worship and chant for theirs. Nobody gives a damn about your misery darling.

Rev Can Noah T. Eneh

MORNING QUIZGot into the bus this morning, saw a man who looks so elderly, having tatoos and different kinds of drawings...
17/09/2025

MORNING QUIZ

Got into the bus this morning, saw a man who looks so elderly, having tatoos and different kinds of drawings all over his body, with his 3 children - obviously taking them to school.

Of course it was no big deal to me because many old people here have all sorts of tattoos and drawings all over their bodies.

But then I heard him speaking a Nigerian language to his his children and looked at him and the tatoos again, this time I became irritated to see elderly Nigerian man on such kinds of drawings all over his body.

Question: Why did it seem normal at first seeing the elderly man on tattoos, but disgusted on realisation that he is a Nigerian?

A. Culture Shock
B. Prejudice
C. Sentiment

17/09/2025

Yesterday, I went to see a man who, unfortunately, had been confined to his home due to a health condition. This man's closest companion are the ma*****na and ci******es he smokes every minute in his home, where he stays alone - yes he's a ju**ie, he smokes every kind of w**d that the law forbids.

We got talking and he said to me,

"Noah, since God gave me a brain tumour, I have since stopped believing in Him."

I looked at him and asked, "If I cause you harm or damages, would it be fair to go after an innocent man and hold him responsible for it?"

He replied, "No."

So I asked, "Then how do you blame God for your mishap so much as to no longer believe in Him?"

The man became speechless.

That moment stayed with me. Because I realized how often we humans create what I call

“The mental scapegoat and the amnesia effect.”

When life deals us a heavy blow, many of us are quick to make God the scapegoat, we blame Him, distance ourselves, and even stop believing.

I told this my new friend that it is understandably a natural instinct in man to seek out a psychological scapegoat when we face frustrations and the vicissitudes of life, because of the quest for succour,

but what I'm struggling to understand is the speed at which we make God that scapegoat and blame Him for our woes.

I said to him again,

"But in that very moment, something else happens: we suffer from a strange kind of amnesia.

We forget the countless privileges and blessings that carried us up to this point—good health that lasted for years, the jobs we didn’t qualify for but still got, the journeys we traveled safely, the family and friends who loved us, the laughter, the provision, the little miracles we didn’t even notice at the time".

Yes, pain is real. Suffering is real. But so is grace. And no hardship can erase the evidence of God’s goodness in our past.

So the next time you’re tempted to make God your scapegoat, pause and remember: the same God you’re blaming is the One who carried you through every good thing you’ve ever enjoyed.

✨ Sometimes gratitude is the cure for spiritual amnesia.

Rev Can. Noah T. Eneh

14/09/2025
14/09/2025
Finnish Court concludes Simon Ekpa's case and sentences passed,Where as in Nigeria, MNK has been held ransome by the Nig...
01/09/2025

Finnish Court concludes Simon Ekpa's case and sentences passed,

Where as in Nigeria, MNK has been held ransome by the Nigerian government, and his case yet to be decided after ten years.

The difference between a failed system, and a system that works.

There are countries that don't deserve the habitation of humans

SUFFOCATION OR GOVERNANCE?The data below speaks volumes,  it says a lot about the intents and dispositions of the APC le...
01/09/2025

SUFFOCATION OR GOVERNANCE?

The data below speaks volumes, it says a lot about the intents and dispositions of the APC led administration of Mr Tinubu the Bulaba icon.

All over the world, responsible governments understand that Passport is just a means of National identity for it's citizens, hence they make it affordable for their populace,

For countries, especially greedy African countries where the rate is relatively high, they still made sure the price of acquiring the Passport does not equal or surpass their Minimum wage,

But in Nigeria, the price of acquiring a Passport is far above the minimum wage of the country,

What this reveals is that the current administration of Tinubu Bulaba is not interested in the welfare of Nigerians as much as he is of squeezing life out of citizens,

They refuse to fix the country and have made it a living hell for the people, when the people take to the streets to simply demand to be allowed to breathe, they unleash AKs on them with battalions of trigger hungry Khaki boys,

Yet when the people, especially the younger generations decide to stick out their heads elsewhere to have a breathe of clean air, the same government shut the windows and the doors against them, imposing exorbitant rates on everything that is connected to the international travel s ecosystem, such as the exorbitant rate of Passport to take effect today.

When a man keeps you in a room and starves you, we say he is wicked, but when a man keeps you in the room, starves, locks up the doors and windows and blocks off every ventilation holes, what do we call the man?

The Bible says that the devil came to k!ll, steal and to destroy, our leaders in this country, particularly the APC regime have demonstrated their intents beyond every reasonable doubts.

Nigerian youths, your leaders are telling you that they intend to suffocate you to de@th,

The ball is now in your court

*Minimum wage vs passport fee,by country*

Top Economies

United States:
Minimum wage: USD 1,160
Passport Fee: USD 165 (14%)

China (Shanghai):
Minimum wage: CNY 2,690
Passport Fee: CNY 120 (4.5%)

Japan:
Minimum wage: JPY 178,880
Passport Fee: JPY 16,000 (8.9%)

Germany:
Minimum wage: EUR 1,986
Passport Fee: EUR 70 (3.5%)

India:
Minimum wage: INR 3,560
Passport Fee: INR 1,500 (42%)

United Kingdom:
Minimum wage: GBP 1,954
Passport Fee: GBP 94.50 (4.8%)

France:
Minimum wage: EUR 1,766.92
Passport Fee: EUR 88 (5.0%)

Canada:
Minimum wage: CAD 2,840
Passport Fee: CAD 260 (9.2%)

Brazil:
Minimum wage: BRL 1,518
Passport Fee: BRL 257.25 (17%)

============================

African Countries:

------------------------------------------------------
Nigeria (from Sept 1, 2025):
Minimum wage: NGN 70,000
Passport Fee: NGN 100,000 (143%)
-------------------------------------------------------

South Africa:
Minimum wage: ZAR 4,606
Passport Fee: ZAR 600 (13%)

Egypt:
Minimum wage: EGP 7,000
Passport Fee: EGP 450 (6.4%)

Algeria:
Minimum wage: DZD 20,000
Passport Fee: DZD 6,000 (30%)

Morocco:
Minimum wage: MAD 3,269
Passport Fee: MAD 500 (15.3%)

Kenya:
Minimum wage: KES 15,201
Passport Fee: KES 7,500 (49%)

Ghana:
Minimum wage: GHS 544.50
Passport Fee: GHS 350 (64%)

Address

Anglican Diocese Of Gwagwalada, Gwagwalada
Gwagwalada
902101

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when The Pundit posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category