 Alright, you're still watching Waze World Lupus Day, established to take place on the 10th of May every year at World Lupus Federation, was meant to unite Lupus Group around the world during Lupus Awareness Month and call attention to the impact that the disease has on the more than 5 million people globally affected by Lupus. And this year, May 10th, for World Lupus Day, the World Lupus Federation is urging the public, the global public, including those living with Lupus, their friends and family members to raise awareness, share facts about the disease on social media in their, what's it called, communities. Do we know what Lupus is? So I hear it's an inflammatory disease that is when the immune system attacks its own tissues. So I know it can affect the joints, the kidneys, blood vessels, sorry, blood cells, skin, brain, heart. Wow, mouth. This is deadly. Yeah. I don't, I want to show how to help us break it down and let's even see, you know, is how prevalent it is, especially in our own clime, right? Yeah, it's a, I can see that the symptoms vary from fatigue, joint pain, rash, fever. So it's, well, it'll be nice to actually have someone put us through. It's ringing bells in your head. No, no, no, it's not the same thing. But I would just say that this is another call for, for individuals to be conscious of their health. And you don't have to wait till you're way older or you get past 40, 50 before you start caring about your health is very, very important for us as individuals to go for regular medical checkups so that when you, you can, you know, actually discover some of these things early enough for you to be able to treat it for those, for the ones that can be treated. And for you to be able to, you know, manage for those ones that cannot, you know, that would just need you to manage it for the rest of your life. Absolutely. All right. So let me get easy. What did you find for us in the news? Okay. In the news today, what caught my attention was something good. I didn't want to take anything on politics. I didn't want to take anything that had to do with, you know, the transitioning of the government. So I, I, you know, went browsing and I saw something on a teenager called Faber Agha. Faber Agha is a young man who is a Gregorian, he, he actually did something so interesting. He's a teenager. He's about 15 years of age and he smashed his VTME with the highest score in physics and chemistry in Lagos State, with an aggregate score of 355. That is almost 400, actually. Let me just give you a total breakdown of what he actually scored. You know, he scored 94 in math, 98 in physics, 98 in chemistry and 65 in English. You know, people like these, they don't really know English, but they can fast it down. No, don't say that. Easy. Don't say that. No. Okay. No. Let me, let me break it down. So my son. I'm telling you, I'm telling you. I get jam results. I just don't want to talk about it in public. My son had a very fantastic score in jam. He had 98 in math. He had, I think 97 in one other subject. Every single student, they are all complained. So even me, Seth, now I'm looking for jam official. I want to ask them what happens to English in jam, because guess what? Three students that made fantastic scores, you know, scoring 300 and something, 340, 350. Most of them, what brought their scores down was English language. It was English. And I'm telling you, it's impossible for somebody to do excellently well in all of this subject and all of a sudden 60. This is somebody that has never got seen 60 or 70 in his, what's he called, regular schoolwork. Go and check his history in school. He's always in the 90s when it comes to English. So how come jam is just giving all the students 60 something in English? It's not possible. So we have to ask them what happened because I don't, I don't get the result. I wouldn't, I wouldn't generalize it basically, but what I would say is that there is something actually wrong with the way we actually teach English in Nigeria. I have to tell you this because what we do is we tell them to do it. We don't actually put them into a system where they actually put it into practice. And when you're actually practicing it, some people are, like Osayu Wame, will now start teasing you for saying it right. No, no, no. Don't say that. So, okay now. So for a child, no wait now. I'm coming. I'm coming. Osayu Wame. You see, you are looking for my trouble this night too. Continue. When you write it, basically when you write it, there is a, there is a particular style of writing. You know this. You know Jam is objective. Yeah, Jam is actually objective. That's clear. Jam is objective for a child that wrote IELTS and got a, what's it called, an 8.59. That child is not an average English, is an, is a fantastic English student. Advanced. You understand? So you cannot tell me that Jam English is tougher than the IELTS exams at the right. You do listening skills. You do comprehension. You do what's it called, what's it called, the writing and all of that. You can't complain. You can't complain. So we need to ask Jam, right? Because it's because we don't ask questions. What I saw the result. All his classmates, everybody 60-something. Why? You are getting 90-something, 90-something, 90-something. You just get to English 60-something. Look at this voice result, the same thing. It doesn't make sense to me. Yeah, I was about to say. So I actually really wanted to write Jam, but because it's not using the result, that's why I just, I didn't bother. It doesn't make any sense. Because it's funny for you to have high scores in physics, chemistry, and then you have a 65. So that's like a little above average. That's quite strange. I will own up to you because I'm not Jam. But however, the reason I took the story is because we have glorified individuals who haven't performed remarkably intelligently in the education field. But we have given them what you call them now. We have given them an avenue where people who, in the society today, people who do not have the know-how are actually being glorified or giving that recognition. Here we have a young man who has a promising future. If the government really wants to work hand in hand with this young man who is practically a genius, if I must say. It is high time that the legal state government also acknowledges individuals or young teenagers who perform very well in the exams and giving that recognition to fly high or giving a scholarship of some sort so that they can be encouraged in the society that they found themselves. To be like the situation where I would say, oh, Nigeria has failed us again. That is the sole reason why I'm taking this part. Absolutely. You are taking the story. I get you, we should always celebrate competence and all of that. NG, but we'll still look for Jam. So unlike EC, I'm still within the politics environment. So my story is about the president-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu who on Wednesday left Nigeria for Europe on a walking visit two weeks after returning to the country from a trip to London, Saudi Arabia and Paris. In a statement signed by his media aide, Tunde Rahman, Tinubu would use this opportunity, the opportunity of the trip to fine-tune the transition plans and programs and his policy options with some of his key aids without unnecessary pressures and distractions. So he's supposed to engage investors and other key allies with the goal of marketing investment opportunities for Nigeria and his administration's readiness to enable a business-friendly climate through policies and regulations. And for me, this was, I think what caught my attention about this story was actually the comment section of what people had to say is funny how Nigerians always have a comment for anything that happens apart from things that affect them directly. So yeah, we always have a comment for everything. There was someone who went on all out, he's a lawyer, and he went all out to say that at this point in time, he's of the opinion that Tinubu, his next line of action should be declaring his assets and swearing his oath of allegiance and all that and all that rather than travelling and touring the country that he should just tell us that he's not feeling well and he's going for another medical. This is just Nigerians' backlash of elections and everything that has happened. It's not that, you know, one's between one's shy. That's where we are because we are just coming out from a presidency that spent practically nine months in the UK with government funds. So it doesn't make any sense for us to have another leader that would be going on regular health checks abroad. It doesn't make any sense, but you see, it's Nigeria matter. It should be well. So Pastor Ia Adigboi had said that Tinubu would prosper in... No, Nigeria would prosper in Tinubu's hands if God helps him. Of course, he had mentioned this during, I think, a service or something. A monthly thanksgiving at Lagos State, right? I think there was a quote. So he prayed for the incoming government. So of course Nigerians, like you rightly said, we know they... We are not spare anything that has to do with it. The youth are really angry. So they came out and there was a lot of backlash on the general overseer. So Peter Obi has come out to condemn all the social media attacks on Adigboi. He said that the obedience are lower by against citizens, noting that the opposition parties deploy such method to gain on due advantage and create confusion and bad blood. So Obi made this known in a statement on Twitter. He said the use of subterfuge, I think that's the word, subterfuge by people masquerading as obedience to abuse and insult eminent personalities like most reverent Pastor Ia Adigboi or anyone else is most unacceptable. So obedience are very largely lower by against citizens. While the difference of opinion are normal, calculated efforts to create ethnic or religious chaos in the name of politics should in any way not be tolerated. So I mean, he is really coming out, which is good because again, you know, I've heard this thing in different quotas. Everybody wants to, once there's an attack on anyone at the city, I want obedience. Hell, they've come again. Of course, everybody now, they're just pushing it. If you come against any person in leadership or a prominent person, they just put it under the guise of these obedient people. They are so stubborn, they are this, they are that. So it's good that he's the one coming out to condemn it so that everybody would at least take a chill pill. On that note, let's take a break and when we come back from the break, we will discuss communication. Stay with us, we'll be right back.