JONATHAN vs. BUHARI: WHO'S BETTER
FOR NIGERIANS AS A WHOLE?
(A Short Piece, And Also One In
Response To Temple Chima Ubochi's Online Article ubochit@hotmail.de Bonn, Germany:
http://nigeriaworld.com/feature/publication/ubochi/0320015.html)
by
Bankole Christopher Smart-cole
(BSc)
Developed: 24 March 2015/ Researched
Online: March 2015
© CC Publishers 2015
If the Law of Averages states in a nutshell that a
particular group’s effort will surely have a relatively greater effect on the
other group’s effort in question. And if the Power of Synergism also states in
a nutshell that “Mr X” merged with “Mrs Y” will produce a greater effect or
effort for “sibling Z”. Then why shouldn’t/ wouldn’t the counter argument to Temple
Chima Ubochi's piece, be that “Why should
one leader out of the two, blindly and solely focus on the stratification of
the age group in Nigeria; just the youths, when he, the leader, should also futuristically
be focusing on the seniors as well?” “And
in fact, how can one leader out of the two focus on the betterment of just the stratified
youth, when the two out of the two leaders, couldn’t help the youth when he and
he were both youths, so why/ how then can he and he (if even he and he were combined
together) try to help a contemporary youth now, when they couldn’t do that
historically?”
Shouldn’t the one rational topic be that because
people live more these days, then that signifies that we should respect/ still
respect both the seniors and the youths collectively, instead of choosing sides
individually? Shouldn’t the one rational literature be that because both
JONATHAN vs. BUHARI already let the seniors down, that they (the former,
individually), still owe them (the latter, collectively) some form of moral and
financial compensation in practice? But because
Temple Chima Ubochi is obviously in theory, an irrational stick in the mud,
then he or she or intersex, still decides to be choosing sides, instead of
looking for the painter (and not even at the bigger picture) when he or she or
intersex speaks about the youth topic in Nigeria. My point? We should be respecting/
wanting to respect the sanctity of ALL human beings collectively found in
Nigeria as a whole.