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Civility on Health Matters and That First (Nigeria) Presidential Debate

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Young People, it is not progressive to attack health conditions for any reason. I challenge all of you to avoid that path. Mocking Senator Bola Tinubu on health reasons diminishes your mission. Those videos have to stop. Focus on the policies and avoid looking lost in a modern world.

I always want to challenge Senator Tinubu to tell his wife, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, to stop  her attacks on Igbos.  Statistically, she is 1/3 of being the next First Lady of Nigeria. 

I lived and worked in Lagos. My house at Alade Avenue was close to Fela’s family house in Ikeja. Everyone was a Nigerian. Dividing in the name of politics takes us backward. I call on the National Orientation Agency (NOA) to do its work. 

On the records, APC is a failed party and those records must be used to take power out of APC. Senator Tinubu’s health is not necessary; use his party’s failed policies and prosecute the campaigns. He represents the ruling party and that means you have data to make your case. We can show civility even as we debate the future of Nigeria. Health status should not be used as a vehicle to mock. But voters can consider it as they make decisions to vote.

I am still waiting for the first presidential debate; I have offered to moderate it (lol). We can also fund it if the top 3 candidates will show up. We will provide a blackboard and ask them to design a flowchart on how to fix Nigeria. The start will have “a broken nation [current state]” and the end “emerging nation” [desired in 4 years]. They have to fit in policies, actions, initiatives, etc within the chart. People, we need to see how these men think, on the fly.

#Respect even as we #debate Obi, Atiku and Tinubu.

“prof. Said let discuss basic issues disturbing us and not health of a candidate, he will be on the ballot whether you like it or not, why wasting precious time on what you can’t change.” – Salam Ahmed in Facebook comment of this post

Comment on LinkedIn Feed

Comment #1: Ndubuisi Ekekwe why shouldn’t we address health conditions? In the West where you live and thrive, would any political party be brazen enough to pick and try to sell a heavily flawed candidate crying Emi Lokan to the voting public without consequences? You know as well as I do that these bunch of clowns get their way because of our age long deference to seniority and respect. We must get rid of that rubbish, and seek accountability from whomsoever puts themselves out there.

My Response #1: Just like Republicans attacked Joe Biden with nursery home photos, when you do that, you remind the biggest and most reliable voting block that age is a “sin”. They will despise that message. I am not aware of any debate anyone has called that BAT has not shown up due to health. So, if he can do what others are doing and you have not designed a way to make him make excuses, innuendos should be off.

Until we have a required component that presidential aspirants must submit an independent doctor’s report, these videos of candidates may not help. Tinubu representing APC and promising to continue the current policy is a poor candidate; I can make that call without mocking his health or whatever.

Comment 1b: Ndubuisi Ekekwe it’s not even about his age, it’s about his health, it’s about his entitled spirit. He has guts to think that you can pass down Nigeria, just because he enthroned the catastrophy called Buhari. You can buy the APC nomination, because the caucus was clearly a den of thieves, but the wider Nigerian population? Are we such cowards? I am irreverent without doubt, but this candidate’s identity and health condition has to be called to question.

My Response 1b: Like I noted, it is all innuendos until you have a medical report. The governor of Texas who is certain to win re-election is in a wheelchair. To most Texans, he is a very competent dude.  Tinubu is not on a wheelchair. I am not defending him. I am defending those with health cases just as I defend people of color, minorities, women, etc who most times are denied opportunities due to perception. Make the points on policies and vote based on that capacity but do not mock on health. You can include that health perception as you vote.

Comment #2: Prof.Ndubuisi Ekekwe. That’s all there’s. “We’ll provide a blackboard and ask them to design a flowchart on how to fix Nigeria.” ???

This puts every argument to sleep.

Because if you can’t design the flowchart, it means among other things:

  1. You don’t even know and understand the problem.
  2. You don’t have a modicum of appreciation of the bigness of the problem.
  3. You can’t assemble the best team.
  4. You won’t understand and spot faults in it in a timely manner even if you hire some expert to design it.
  5. You’ll create clashes in your administration because everyone would think what they bring to the table is feasible and thereby unhealthily jostle for undeserved positions.
  6. Your administration will be anchored on a quicksand— the revered Chenua Achebe’s book comes to mind.
  7. You cannnot be a rallying point for inspiration to weather storms should any arise, because you’d have lost your bearing from the blast of the whistle.
  8. You can’t articulate what needs done.

Comment 3: Greetings my Prof. Excellent perspective as always sir. Usually, People don’t go about mocking every random old person’s health and age. Here is the exception, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu wants to become Nigeria’s next president come 2023. That’s gives Nigerians the exclusive right to subject this candidate to scrutiny and that includes his family, health, education, age and others…..

A presidential debate anchored by the Prof. himself, I believe, will be many Nigerians delight which will be part of the right pathway for the #EmergingNigeria. God bless our country #nigeria . #respect #presidentialDebate

My Response 3: You can make a point on the health matter. You can include that as you vote. But you do not mock someone for his health condition. That is not progressive. I am not saying that you cannot include physical health capacity as a consideration to elect a leader. I am saying it is not cool mocking someone over it. If we believe in civility, we need to live it.

Comment 3b: His supporters will always see any comment on health as making a mockery

My Response 3b: I am not a supporter and will NEVER vote for anyone who promised to continue the current disastrous APC policies. But that does not mean I cannot show civility.

Comment : “I guess you’re not trying to say his state of health shouldn’t be considered but it shouldn’t be a point for campaign. His state of health should be left to individual persons to decide on.”

My Response: “I guess you’re not trying to say his state of health shouldn’t be considered but it shouldn’t be a point for campaign. His state of health should be left to individual persons to decide on.” – that is my point. Health state should not be used as a vehicle to mock. But voters must consider that as part of making decisions to vote.

Building Category-King Companies and Winners – Ndubuisi Ekekwe

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Nigeria Projects To Generate N136.3 Billion Revenue From Electronic Money Transfers

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FIRS signpost

Recall that the Electronic Money Transfer levy was introduced in Nigeria through the Finance Act in 2020, replacing the previous stamp duty on electronic receipts or Electronic transfers.

The Electronic Money transfer levy is a singular one-off charge of N50 on electronic receipt or transfer of money deposited in any bank or financial institution on any type of account on the sum of N10,000 or more.

Just recently, the federal government of Nigeria disclosed its projection to generate the sum of N136.3 billion as revenue from Electronic Money transfers to be paid by bank customers in 2023. This is based on a projected 2.7 billion volume of eligible online transfers in the year.

The government disclosed that Electronic Money transfer charges generated N97.3 billion for the government in April 2022, which was the highest amount generated from Electronic Money transfers in the country since its adoption in 2020.Revenue generated from electronic money transfers made up 14.29% of the total N680.78 billion generated by the federal government in the month of April.

The budget office of the federation which disclosed its projections in its 2023-2025 medium-term expenditure framework and fiscal strategy paper released on Friday, stated that the recently approved regulations given by the administration of the electronic money transfer levy, is expected to boost collections of the revenue.

To ensure that it meets its projected target revenue from Electronic Money Transfer, the federal government disclosed that it would ensure proper monitoring of banks and other financial institutions to conduct reconciliation and to ensure deduction and remittance of the levy.

Although the government did not realize its projected revenue of 500 million naira in 2021, as it only realized the sum of N111.84 billion at the end of the year. It might interest you to know that since the introduction of Electronic Money Transfer levy, Nigeria has generated not less than N129.62 billion.

One might ask why the government is imposing a levy on Electronic Money transfers. Well, the revenue derived from the EMT levy is shared based on the derivation and distributed at 15% to the federal government and the federal capital territory (FCT), 50% is also allocated to the state governments, and 35% to the 774 local governments in the country.

Electronic Money Transfer levy is a source of revenue for most countries in Africa, as it is used to boost the nation’s economy. In Africa, East African country Uganda, was the first to impose this levy in Africa in July 2018, followed by Zimbabwe in October 2018.

The Electronic mobile transfer levy has been termed “lazy tax” due to the fact that the federal government does nothing to learn it. After its adoption in Nigeria in 2020, it was followed by widespread criticism.

Some individuals and experts disclosed that people who use transfer channels are over-levied, as they have to pay a maintenance fee, and transfer fee, which will discourage a lot of individuals from using electronic channels.

Also, they cited that this levy will impose too much burden on the citizens as they are already faced with a myriad of problems. With the EMT levy, it has been disclosed to discourage more people from using banks and their services which will deepen the financial exclusion of many Nigerians.

On the flip side, with the influx of Fintech startups in the country, a lot of people will not hesitate to embrace the digital mode of payments due to its ease of use and convenience, which will no doubt still generate money for the federal government.

Knowledge rules – We Produce Knowledge at Tekedia Institute

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If you are the Chief Learning Officer (CLO) of your organization, we want to have a conversation with you. The empires of the future would be built on Knowledge. The Latin aphorism’s “scientia potentia est” [knowledge is power], Francis Bacon’s “ipsa scientia potestas est” [knowledge itself is power], Proverbs 24.5’s “..a man of knowledge increases strength…” and the Igbo Nation’s “a man of knowledge dines with kings” validate one thesis: knowledge rules!

“50 years ago, more than 80% of the value reflected on the balance sheets of Fortune 500 companies was physical stuff—plant, equipment, oil in the ground, inventory on the shelves. Today, more than 85% of the value on the balance sheets of Fortune 500 companies is “intangibles”—intellectual property, brand value, and a host of things more closely tied to human capital than to physical and financial capital. People are today’s value drivers.” – Fortune

Aristotle wrote centuries ago “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.” Interestingly, you can bring new habits (i.e. culture) in your firm. Connect with us at Tekedia Institute – and together we will help to design that business future.

It is epistêmê [knowledge in Greek]. CLO, put Knowledge into that firm; we’re here to help. At Tekedia Institute, our output is KNOWLEDGE. And you can validate using Plato’s three necessary and sufficient conditions: believable proposition, true proposition and good-reasons proposition, just like my professor in FUTO (Rev Ashiegbu) explained many years ago in my first year of university education.

Comment on LinkedIn Feed

Comment: ipsa scientia potestas est, knowledge and power are inseparable, sharing direct proportionality.

My Response: Yes indeed,  knowledge = power. It has been like that since Ancient Egypt when Pharaohs ruled the world because they had the best thinkers and “schools”. Take it to Al-Khw?rizm? , the father of algebra and the head of the House of Wisdom in Baghdad, connecting to even the modern superpowers of America and China, it is about knowledge. And that knowledge gives power. No nation can advance faster than its capacity to create and apply knowledge. And when a nation can allow its universities to close due to strikes, you get the idea!

Four African Countries with Rapid Media Convergence for Audience Capturing

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When information and communication technology experts sneeze and release new products, people and organizations must catch the ‘cold’ by incorporating the products into their value creation and capturing processes. Emerging technologies have continued to shape how media companies create and distribute value over time. The concept of carrying a radio box in order to listen to radio stations has been rendered obsolete by the introduction of various smart devices with radio capabilities.

The emergence of similar devices has effectively ended the era of viewing a television box as a “collective box” for viewers. Going to vendors’ stands in neighborhoods or waiting for them to deliver a copy of one’s favorite newspaper brand has completely changed because one only needs access to the Internet to read the content of various newspapers.

These scenarios can be found all over the world. Africa, also known as the emerging continent, is catching up in all aspects of integrating new media with traditional media systems. Media entrepreneurs and professionals from the continent’s east, west, north, and south are constantly innovating in terms of using emerging technologies for value creation and delivery.

In this piece, our analyst examines the media convergence patterns of 63 African media organizations. According to several independent research sources, these organizations have been the leading brands in South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, and Egypt since 2019. The brands are Mail and Guardian, Time Live, News24, Daily Maverick, IOL, The South African, Citizen, The Punch, Premium Times, The Guardian, The Nation, ThisDay, Daily Trust, Leadership, The Star, The Standard, Nation, The East African, Egypt Today, Araham Online, Egypt Independent, NTA, Channels TV, TVC, Arise TV, ONTV, LTV, OGTV, Sound City TV, Kenya Broadcasting Corporation, Citizen TV, Family TV, NTV, South African Broadcasting Corporation, CNBC Africa, Ezekiel TV, Cape Town TV, Soweto TV, M-Net, MY TV, RSG, Metro FM, Radio 702, Umhlobo Wenene FM, Ukhozi FM, Lesedi FM, Radio Citizen, Classic 105, Radio Maisha, Kiss FM, Milele FM, Nile FM, Egyptian Radio, Robinson FM, Nogoum FM, Goal FM, Rehab FM, Wazobia FM, Nigeria Info, Raypower FM 100.5, Brila FM, FRCN FM and Freedom FM.

The majority of the top media outlets, from Egypt to Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa, are combining social media with their current traditional or conventional methods of reaching audiences in their local areas and beyond. Our analyst found that the main reason media organizations use social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube is to get around the limited radio and television frequencies that relevant local and international organizations have given them permission to use. Analyzed African traditional newspapers are also using the sites to expand their readership beyond their immediate area and increase their revenue from online advertising.

Despite their close use of social media, these organizations differ in how they display the platform icons (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube) on their websites. According to our data, many of them have the icons at the top of the home page, while others have them at the bottom. This has a number of implications for gaining an audience through social media. Our analyst notes that brands with icons at the top of the page have a better chance of attracting audience than those with icons at the bottom of the page. This is because online readers usually pay attention to the top of a website before considering the bottom.

According to a country-by-country analysis, media brands in Nigeria, South Africa, and Kenya fare better in terms of incorporating many emerging technologies than those in Egypt (see Exhibit 1 to Exhibit 3). Egyptian brands, on the other hand, are better at integrating books and movies. The use of Live FM Television Channel on radio station websites is one of the most surprising insights from the selected brands’ convergence with new media. In this regard, one Egyptian radio station was successful in establishing a Live FM Television Channel on its website. This also applies to one Nigerian station and two South African stations. With the strategic placement of podcast and Live TV on websites, radio and television stations are embracing the duo.

Exhibit 1: Select African Countries and Categories of New Media Newspapers Are Converging With

Source: Media Organisations, 2022; Infoprations Analysis, 2022

Exhibit 2: Select African Countries and Categories of New Media Television Stations Are Converging With

Source: Media Organisations, 2022; Infoprations Analysis, 2022

Exhibit 3: Select African Countries and Categories of New Media Radio Stations Are Converging With

Source: Media Organisations, 2022; Infoprations Analysis, 2022