Look at the paid crowd yet he couldn't win lagos despite his rigging.God forbid.president that was rigged in.he should also test his popularity in the southern part of the country not his country home
the camera man is the real mvp.......places were people wanted to complain he quickly shifted then the places they were cheering he stopped momentarily
😂😂😂...and repeated the same cheering video as if it was continuous. Watch the video again, you'll see the video was repeated severally to make it look like people were actually cheering. It was on rewind😂😂😂
This is an opportunity for the people to talk to the president directly that they are suffering. But guest what, they all hailing him. What a fearful people.
They didn’t forget their sufferings but at the same time they know he’s working on it…that’s why they are cheering him. They are not fearful but happy people in case you don’t understand
let's see, you are privileged, enjoying yourself with 3 sequare meals, you have a car, probably in bed with some politicians, you are definitely an elite, you have money. continue being insensitive, don't stop please, the president is the best president Nigeria has ever had, he has performed excellently, top of the bar. let's continue praising him please.@@onomeonota23
You clearly are naïve to make this claim. If you had said majority of Lagosians didn't vote him, you'd have been correct. To claim that those people didn't vote for him shows how poorly people like you have a grasp of electoral matters.
There is inflation world-wide. Why is our own different. Some people are thinking the president will come and feed them and their families, don't go and work or look for something to do 😢😅
And worldwide their money is 1250 to a dollar. By the way how did you know that there is inflation worldwide, our inflation rate is 29% within few months, where else if that hapenng?
@@festusduruchukwu4188 Even people that has no business with dollars will still want to complain. My friend, go and soak garri drink and leave my comment section. I know where you are coming from, it's from a session of sentiments and pains*
What I have noticed in this life is that the people who cannot defend themselves are the gullible people who see their problems but won't ask questions. If the way they gathered is how the economy will exponentially incline, I would have applauded their courage. But here we are, "hungry neva weaken them naw" till they start throwing stones😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@umoruamodu1254 I am not disputing that he is not your president. Wasn't he one of the campaigners that asked Jonathan shouldn't remove the fuel subsidy? I know the country is filled with gullible people.😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@muhammedmuniru9840 it means ur entire family and the coming generation of URS are all cow that why you reply bcos if not I didn't message or mention ur name 🤣🤣🤣🤣thief tinubu nation
Lmao! The same Tinubu that doesn’t know his father. All you hear him say is “my mummy said…. my mummy said” lmao! If he is a real man tell him to stand up and wave to his people or just shake hands or chat with them
Ava, far inland up the Irrawaddy River. We do not know what the path of economic and political development of Southeast Asian states would have been without Dutch aggression. They may have developed their own brand of absolutism, they may have remained in the same state they were in at the end of the sixteenth century, or they may have continued their commercialization by gradually adopting more and more inclusive institutions. But as in the Moluccas, Dutch colonialism fundamentally changed their economic and political development. The people in Southeast Asia stopped trading, turned inward, and became more absolutist. In the next two centuries, they would be in no position to take advantage of the innovations that would spring up in the Industrial Revolution. And ultimately their retreat from trade would not save them from Europeans; by the end of the eighteenth century, nearly all were part of European colonial empires. WE SAW IN CHAPTER 7 how European expansion into the Atlantic fueled the rise of inclusive institutions in Britain. But as illustrated by the experience of the Moluccas under the Dutch, this expansion sowed the seeds of underdevelopment in many diverse corners of the world by imposing, or further strengthening existing, extractive institutions. These either directly or indirectly destroyed nascent commercial and industrial activity throughout the globe or they perpetuated institutions that stopped industrialization. As a result, as industrialization was spreading in some parts of the world, places that were part of European colonial empires stood no chance of benefiting from these new technologies. THE ALL-TOO-USUAL INSTITUTION In Southeast Asia the spread of European naval and commercial power in the early modern period curtailed a promising period of economic expansion and institutional change. In the same period as the Dutch East India Company was expanding, a very different sort of trade was intensifying in Africa: the slave trade. In the United States, southern slavery was often referred to as the “peculiar institution.” But historically, as the great classical scholar Moses Finlay pointed out, slavery was anything but peculiar, it was present in almost every society. It was, as we saw earlier, endemic in Ancient Rome and in Africa, long a source of slaves for Europe, though not the only one. In the Roman period slaves came from Slavic peoples around the Black Sea, from the Middle East, and also from Northern Europe. But by 1400, Europeans had stopped enslaving each other. Africa, however, as we saw in chapter 6, did not undergo the transition from slavery to serfdom as did medieval Europe. Before the early modern period, there was a vibrant slave trade in East Africa, and large numbers of slaves were transported across the Sahara to the Arabian Peninsula. Moreover, the large medieval West African states of Mali, Ghana, and Songhai made heavy use of slaves in the government, the army, and agriculture, adopting organizational models from the Muslim North African states with whom they traded. politically It was the development of the sugar plantation colonies of the Caribbean beginning in the early seventeenth century that led to a dramatic escalation of the international slave trade and to an unprecedented increase in the importance of slavery within Africa itself. In the sixteenth century, probably about 300,000 slaves were traded in the Atlantic. They came mostly from Central Africa, with heavy involvement of Kongo and the Portuguese based farther south in Luanda, now the capital of Angola. During this time, the transSaharan slave trade was still larger, with probably about 550,000 Africans moving north as slaves. In the seventeenth century, the situation reversed. About 1,350,000 Africans were sold as slaves in the Atlantic trade, the majority now being shipped to the Americas. The numbers involved in the Saharan trade were relatively unchanged. The eighteenth century saw another dramatic increase, with about 6,000,000 slaves being shipped across the Atlantic and maybe 700,000 across the Sahara. Adding the figures up over periods and parts of Africa, well over 10,000,000 Africans were shipped out
I just assume that na some few people they allow other people to join in this oppression cos why on earth 🌍 will you all be hailing him? They all thinking he would spray money 💵
What are you jubilating? Poverty striken people, may the theif has bribe them with small money, what a big shame on you that are hailing this useless man
This people don't have sense, so after all the suffer your going true because of him still you guys are happy jumping up and welcomed him with happiness, hmm the yuruba's your suffer just started
This vidéo made m'y Day
Oh my God! Person wey dem suppose dey stone!!! 🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️
My brother 😂😂 make we da watch
like your papa!!!!!
The best way to make sure the prisoners never escape is to make sure they never realize they are in prison.
To your best of knowledge
Better than it is in the South East …go home now
@@oscarlagoke8920you be ode
Divide and counquer tinubu is so good that
Suffering and smiling 😂😂😂😂
The people deserves the kind of leaders they get.
Nigerians deserve Tinubu.
My brother, the same people who are crying for hardships 😂😂 Nigerians deserve their leaders
Yes indeed, Prophet Mohammed said Allah gives the people their leader according who they (the people) are.
We know with JAGABAN things go better
@@kayodebanjo my brother is already better enjoy
Look at the paid crowd yet he couldn't win lagos despite his rigging.God forbid.president that was rigged in.he should also test his popularity in the southern part of the country not his country home
Jagaban is the man, the city boy!!!!
🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️🤦🏽♂️
See Poverty speaking...He really built Lagos to his taste
The oppressed will continue to be oppressed by their oppressors as long as they don't know that they are being oppressed
Are you not a Nigerian, you get to contest and set people free. Talking like a snake with one intestine.
the camera man is the real mvp.......places were people wanted to complain he quickly shifted then the places they were cheering he stopped momentarily
But this is TVC . Are you surprised. What a nation
😂😂😂...and repeated the same cheering video as if it was continuous. Watch the video again, you'll see the video was repeated severally to make it look like people were actually cheering. It was on rewind😂😂😂
@@feekode5864
What a shame
This is an opportunity for the people to talk to the president directly that they are suffering. But guest what, they all hailing him. What a fearful people.
They didn’t forget their sufferings but at the same time they know he’s working on it…that’s why they are cheering him. They are not fearful but happy people in case you don’t understand
As if u know my mind exactly what came into my mind immediately I saw this video
😂😂😂😂Hungry neva weaken them naw😂😂😂😂😂
Shameful people.. seriously
I mean I'm speechless
Alhaji Adekunle Bola Ahmed Tinibu Jagaba.We love you Sir.
I love my President ❤❤❤❤
Shame on you...oloshi
There’s nothing to be ashamed of. You are the one who should be ashamed for not respecting your fellow human’s freedom of choice.
@@Usmanilemona 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Shame on your father....Ewu!!!
let's see, you are privileged, enjoying yourself with 3 sequare meals, you have a car, probably in bed with some politicians, you are definitely an elite, you have money. continue being insensitive, don't stop please, the president is the best president Nigeria has ever had, he has performed excellently, top of the bar. let's continue praising him please.@@onomeonota23
The love is not enough, go and build altar to worship him, make him your lord and master.
UP SUPER BAT PRESIDENT OF.FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA 🇳🇬 GOD.BLESS NIGERIA
suffering and smiling yuroba fuuls 😢
Nigerians are happy people.
You are talking well 😵💫😵💫
What about the ones shouting there's hunger in the land😢
Come and see people wen dey cheer their oppressor
Bad belle. If Yu are not happy Yu are one individual. Let other do as they wish. Yu can not control other ppl life.
@@hakeemhamzah3361
And I guess you are one very poor person😂
I don't know what to say bcos I would not understand yur line. I don't wanted to guess what Yu are trying to say.
I could not understand yur line
This people are not suffering if they are they should have block the road
With the police snd soldiers on ground 😅😊😊
Tinubu Propaganda Channel, you call this cheering? In his own home state, and he got this kind of passive cheer 🤣 .it says a lot😅😂.
I never see any country that mumu like Nigeria 🇳🇬,look the way they are hailing their oppresors,like they have an oat with suffering.
Yorubas are de number one mumu people in Nigeria
Not all Nigerians but these set of people.
suffering and smiling
All that i see around there is poverty 😢😢😢
The C-in-C!
Is that how people cheer ?
Suffering and smiling, suffer never do una
The criminals don go rent crowd 😂😂😂
Suffering and smiling, how do you want President Tinubu to know that you are suffering .
Just a spectacle. Remember in Lagos, this crowd didn't vote for him.
You clearly are naïve to make this claim. If you had said majority of Lagosians didn't vote him, you'd have been correct. To claim that those people didn't vote for him shows how poorly people like you have a grasp of electoral matters.
Mumu..... The over 500k votes BAT got from Lagos, was the votes from aliens?
Mumu
And finally we northerner's votes him in to power
MASHAALLAHU ALLAHUMMA AMIN 🤲🕋🕌🕋🕌🤲 and Congratulations sir 🙏🇳🇬🙏 💚⭐🤍⭐💚🌺💚⭐🤍⭐💚🌺💚🤍💚
The real face of Poverty!
TV News you are Nigeria problem
Yoruba people's suffering and smiling
Awon oloriburuku oniya. Dem like sufferings too much
This is not cheering but calling him oleee
ALL I HEAR IS OLE.. THIEF OOH WHAT A SHAM
There is inflation world-wide. Why is our own different. Some people are thinking the president will come and feed them and their families, don't go and work or look for something to do 😢😅
And worldwide their money is 1250 to a dollar. By the way how did you know that there is inflation worldwide, our inflation rate is 29% within few months, where else if that hapenng?
@@festusduruchukwu4188 Even people that has no business with dollars will still want to complain. My friend, go and soak garri drink and leave my comment section. I know where you are coming from, it's from a session of sentiments and pains*
@@festusduruchukwu4188 is dollars your currency, do you spend dollars in Nigeria?
@@tractorfriday5711
Those that call truths lies and lies truth. You know, the world knows the truth. Keep deceiving yourself
Na only TVC get these video ooo…
Nigeria are suffering and smiling
What I have noticed in this life is that the people who cannot defend themselves are the gullible people who see their problems but won't ask questions. If the way they gathered is how the economy will exponentially incline, I would have applauded their courage. But here we are, "hungry neva weaken them naw" till they start throwing stones😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
You will explain tire . Jagaban is our president
@@umoruamodu1254 I am not disputing that he is not your president. Wasn't he one of the campaigners that asked Jonathan shouldn't remove the fuel subsidy? I know the country is filled with gullible people.😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Nice video ❤❤
Now i undertand why the civil war and coup happen. And the are right.
tunubu the governor of lagos for 23years now
King maker for 16yrs
Abi o. The god of Lagos na
God have mercy, people are suffering, insecurity everywhere snd yet the people are happy what a disgrace.
Tvc... you looped the video to make it seem long 😆 🤣 😂 🤐
Cheering hunger is a sign of empty skull
Nonsense
Is tvc part of presidential media ?
❤Egan kope koyin madun.
Prisoners are celebrating😂😂😂
six❤
am confused
Why are they cheering?
What is this , abeg we no get sense for this country , na now I observe am
Suffering and smiling 😡😡
Our own, weather u like it not.
Shame to Nigerian that are cheering people that are disstroying Nigeria, hunger is coming continue cheering tinubu
The biggest of shame to people who are cheering suffering what a disgrace
May Almighty ALLAH continue to bless president Bola Ahmed Tinubu and May God bless federal republic of Nigeria ❤
Mumu crowd.
See those Imam,they we not say what God send them to tell Tinubu and his cabinet that they should like Nigerian as they like their self
Mumu blind emilokan wailers while hunger is killing them Mumu people
They've never thought there could be a better life. If not na stone Dem go carry
See how all the maalu dey make noise🤔
Ur papa and mama na cow😅😅😅
@@muhammedmuniru9840 it means ur entire family and the coming generation of URS are all cow that why you reply bcos if not I didn't message or mention ur name 🤣🤣🤣🤣thief tinubu nation
Afi muniru nan🤣
@@hammedadeyemo4722 Oruko nla
@@muhammedmuniru9840 pele muniru anbali nko
TVC, this is your version of the Event...the real version says "" Ebi npa wa ooo"' we are hungry, let us continue to fool ourselves...
Lmao! The same Tinubu that doesn’t know his father. All you hear him say is “my mummy said…. my mummy said” lmao! If he is a real man tell him to stand up and wave to his people or just shake hands or chat with them
Look at the economy situation of people you are governing on... your people.....Sad
TVC is a station or corn people. Tinubu has failed Nigerians
The oppressed
TVC 😅😅😅
What you call crowd is it by restraining peoples' movement and getting them stuck in a place?
even people wey dey hawk because of poverty even follow dey jubiliate,,,,spits
U visit mosques while 90% of your appointments go to Christians. Jonathan is more just to Muslim than this yeye Tinubu.
Protect him at all cost.
Really!!
@@Usmanilemona what would you rather do?
You wan kill us oh some are shouting Ole (thief)
With the happening in jos, I think president take his time to mourn the deads
Ava, far inland up the Irrawaddy River.
We do not know what the path of economic and political
development of Southeast Asian states would have been without
Dutch aggression. They may have developed their own brand of
absolutism, they may have remained in the same state they were in at
the end of the sixteenth century, or they may have continued their
commercialization by gradually adopting more and more inclusive
institutions. But as in the Moluccas, Dutch colonialism fundamentally
changed their economic and political development. The people in
Southeast Asia stopped trading, turned inward, and became more
absolutist. In the next two centuries, they would be in no position to
take advantage of the innovations that would spring up in the
Industrial Revolution. And ultimately their retreat from trade would
not save them from Europeans; by the end of the eighteenth century,
nearly all were part of European colonial empires.
WE SAW IN CHAPTER 7 how European expansion into the Atlantic fueled
the rise of inclusive institutions in Britain. But as illustrated by the
experience of the Moluccas under the Dutch, this expansion sowed
the seeds of underdevelopment in many diverse corners of the world
by imposing, or further strengthening existing, extractive institutions.
These either directly or indirectly destroyed nascent commercial and
industrial activity throughout the globe or they perpetuated
institutions that stopped industrialization. As a result, as
industrialization was spreading in some parts of the world, places that
were part of European colonial empires stood no chance of benefiting
from these new technologies.
THE ALL-TOO-USUAL INSTITUTION
In Southeast Asia the spread of European naval and commercial
power in the early modern period curtailed a promising period of
economic expansion and institutional change. In the same period as
the Dutch East India Company was expanding, a very different sort of trade was intensifying in Africa: the slave trade.
In the United States, southern slavery was often referred to as the
“peculiar institution.” But historically, as the great classical scholar
Moses Finlay pointed out, slavery was anything but peculiar, it was
present in almost every society. It was, as we saw earlier, endemic in
Ancient Rome and in Africa, long a source of slaves for Europe,
though not the only one.
In the Roman period slaves came from Slavic peoples around the
Black Sea, from the Middle East, and also from Northern Europe. But
by 1400, Europeans had stopped enslaving each other. Africa,
however, as we saw in chapter 6, did not undergo the transition from
slavery to serfdom as did medieval Europe. Before the early modern
period, there was a vibrant slave trade in East Africa, and large
numbers of slaves were transported across the Sahara to the Arabian
Peninsula. Moreover, the large medieval West African states of Mali,
Ghana, and Songhai made heavy use of slaves in the government, the
army, and agriculture, adopting organizational models from the
Muslim North African states with whom they traded. politically
It was the development of the sugar plantation colonies of the
Caribbean beginning in the early seventeenth century that led to a
dramatic escalation of the international slave trade and to an
unprecedented increase in the importance of slavery within Africa
itself. In the sixteenth century, probably about 300,000 slaves were
traded in the Atlantic. They came mostly from Central Africa, with
heavy involvement of Kongo and the Portuguese based farther south
in Luanda, now the capital of Angola. During this time, the transSaharan slave trade was still larger, with probably about 550,000
Africans moving north as slaves. In the seventeenth century, the
situation reversed. About 1,350,000 Africans were sold as slaves in
the Atlantic trade, the majority now being shipped to the Americas.
The numbers involved in the Saharan trade were relatively
unchanged. The eighteenth century saw another dramatic increase,
with about 6,000,000 slaves being shipped across the Atlantic and
maybe 700,000 across the Sahara. Adding the figures up over periods
and parts of Africa, well over 10,000,000 Africans were shipped out
I just assume that na some few people they allow other people to join in this oppression cos why on earth 🌍 will you all be hailing him? They all thinking he would spray money 💵
Yoruba ppl never think that way. They just love one of their own as the northerner love one of their own. Yu could stone yur when the tym comes
The Crowd are not Really Happy at all, is like they are be Force to do dat small shouting at of fustration
Suffering and smiling crowd of fools.
Our people just too fool for this country
Very unnecessary
Waste of data.....what a shame
Jagaban for a reason❤❤❤i know obidiotes wished it was Peteru 😂😂😂 but Peteru can't reach this level😂😂😂
You are a foooooooooooooooooooool
@@festusduruchukwu4188 ur fada is a foooooooooooooooooool
As long as you're bias and not ready for the right system, may surfferness and hardship never leave your household
Ur stupid people are de ones suffering go anywhere in Lagos ND other part of Yoruba land make u see ur stupid brothes like u bastard fool
What a backward and retrogressive person you are. You mean you're proud of the present Nigeria? This a new Yoruba people are beginning to understand
Hmm, opium of the people, religion 😢
What are you jubilating? Poverty striken people, may the theif has bribe them with small money, what a big shame on you that are hailing this useless man
This people don't have sense, so after all the suffer your going true because of him still you guys are happy jumping up and welcomed him with happiness, hmm the yuruba's your suffer just started
I swear me my self am shocked 😂
Is this what you call "cheers?" Eeeeh!!!! Egba waooooo!! Is that cheers or tears. Na waoo Sycophancy on the highest level.
Yeye dey smell
In a free and fair election. he will still lose Lagos
All i see is poverty suffering and smiling
Fake video
This video is an absolute waste of time and data, how can you just post something as empty as this. You just wasted my prescious data
This is a lie. This is Tinubu TV channel. What do you expect. Shameful on our journalists.
Nonsense