 Now, you're still watching where World Population Day, which seeks to focus attention on the urgency and importance of population issues, was established in 1989 by the UNFPA that brings its data experience and stories to support women and girls around the world. Now, World Population Day gives us an opportunity to highlight the needs to advance gender quality to help realize the dreams of all eight billion of us on this planet. Hi, eight billion. There's a lot of people, men. And they say we would triple our population, especially Nigeria by 2050, but help us. I hope our leaders are planning for the kind of infrastructure that would require that number of population. They didn't plan before you hit 200 million. I mean, I mean, it is a valid point. There are a lot of things that need to go into planning. I think, what was it, we're having a conversation. I think the other day we're talking about how the assumption actually for me was an assumption at the time that there were more women in the world than men. But it turns out there are more men. It's a very slim. So that eight billion is like four billion, four billion plus. But I think in the millions that follow, I think the men are like 86 million. Men are like 12 million. So maybe about 70 million difference. I think it's something like that. Yeah, actually, for the longest time, I thought there were more women than men. And because that's what they always tell us, they justify the same thing. Yeah, they justify the many men. I mean, a man having like multiple women. Yeah, more women. That was exactly my thought process. And then, you know, we were again, another conversation like this and we had to check and I was like, oh, actually, they're more men than women. So I like that the day focuses on the female gender and we have a lot of things rooting against us. So anything that sheds light on the gender within the larger population. Great thing. Good day. All right, so what did we find in his mind? I think I'll start because it was rather sad. You know, when I see this kind of stories, I keep on wondering, you already know that things like this happen, right? Why do you why do we just make same errors like it doesn't it never stop? So this is a report that Las Vegas toddler dies after accidentally shooting himself. Oh, it is just so sad, right? This young man is two is a two year old. His name is J. DeAngus Stevenson, right? He shot himself in the bedroom of the house close to Nellie's F was based. According to the news source, the boy was rushed to the university medical center where doctors had declared him dead and arrived on the lake. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police is investigating this incident for possible abuse and neglect. His aunt, Paris Boggs, disclosed that he was being watched by a family member while his mother was working when this shooting occurred. We would actually call him blue. That's what I call him to her. She said because of his eyes, he she recalled that about about the youngster is just sad. Right? It's sad because I remember many, many years ago, because my father's brother is a soldier. So he's in the military and all of that. I think at some point in our very, very early teens or maybe early things or late adolescence or whatever, we had encountered a pistol. I saw a pistol, like, you know, and for some strange reason, I think when my father realized that we're all growing up and all that, so he had to but I think he was keeping it for his brother or something. He's a soldier. So at some point, they had to move that weapon to, you know, a proper place where there were no children because it was out of curiosity. I saw the pistol. I saw bullets in the back and all of that. It was it was eating, you know, eating. Well, you see, children are curious to go and do one check or so. That's where man is just racing. Just imagine if, you know, we were like curious, you know, a little curious to that side. But now this young boy is dead, a very, very cute boy. It's a very sad story because I really say that some deaths, they are really avoidable, right? I mean, if you know that you're having a when children are coming to my house, like my antenna is on a lot, like anything that would cause any formal even as old as my children. I still, you know, worry about some things, not to talk of a toddler. You know, so for him to have been able to access that gun, first of all, it's possible that it is within reach. It's not something that he had to really climb to get a lot of that. It's just really sad. My heart goes out to their family, right? It's really devastating. It's such a young life, you know, just cut short. And I believe that in cases like this, you know, whether you like it or not, negligence, even dope, you will see that. But there's some level of negligence. You can't you can't equate a toddler's death in a stand to nothing else because it's because somebody wasn't watching. And that's why it didn't happen. Very sad. Welcome to you, Jennifer. That's such a sad news. So the chairman of NDLEA, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency has ordered nationwide clamp down on illegal sale and use of laughing gas. So laughing gas contains natural oxide. It's a colorless gas that is commonly used for sedation and pain relief, mostly used by dentists and the medical professionals to sedate their patients undergoing operation or undergoing any minor medical procedure. Right. So what has been identified or noticed is that a lot of youths and even adults have been using the laughing gas. So basically what they do is that they transfer the gas from the container into a balloon, which they tend to put in their mouth and inhale for euphoric effects. So basically it makes them high, just takes them to a certain level where they just feel some some level of highness, right. But then with all of these comes a side side effect like headache, lightheadedness, hallucination, being unconscious, disorientation, fainting spells and even suffocating. So now the agency is saying that measures have been have been put in place to make sure that anyone who is caught taking this taking this gas or even selling it. We prosecuted and even looking at this, right? I've seen a lot of pictures going online where youths or teenagers are in parties and you can see them just holding the balloon close to their mouths, even in clubs, you see them posting it on Snapchat, where they're actually taking it in clubs. I think yesterday, was it yesterday or two days ago, if a picture surfaced by Olamide where he had the balloon beside him, he took a picture with himself and a girl, a white bib and they were both holding the balloon. So if you look down close to his leg, you would see the can that was used. And I'm like, OK, this is bad. So this is the illegal sale of a legal substance? Yeah, because it's not essentially a drug in that sense, right? Would you make the Olamide abuse? No, I know. So essentially what I was trying to understand is what the laws are surrounding is, right? Because so you're essentially clamping down on the sellers, not necessarily because there'd be no basis, I guess, if it's not an illegal substance for you to arrest someone like in that picture. So basically it should only be used for medical purposes and not recreational. So if you are selling, you should sell to medical. So I'm trying to understand where the enforcement side of it comes in. So you're not going after the end users because no basis or premise for that. You're going after the sellers. Yeah. OK. OK, I think we have Issy now. Issy, you. How are you? Can we hear you? Hi, how are you? Good evening. I trust you've been good. Yes, we are. OK, my story is a Lagos airport runway light stolen, seven something. It was quite hilarious to see this news and it actually caught my attention because I can't understand why the International Airport is not like it's a local airport. An international airport has its runway lights stolen. And it was actually perpetrated by the group of individuals who are also working in the airport. So I'm going to keep my story as short as possible. And I'm going to get around to what it says. It says the punch in the store was actually coming from the punch. And it they got that the disappearance of the of the approach lighting systems had raised security concerns in Nigeria's easiest airports, according to a source who spoke on condition of anonymity. Those who carted away, the license systems took advantage of the fact that the license system or the runway had been closed for three months. That's actually caught my attention. And it's it's sad that the the lights that have been stolen will be sold back to the airport because there is no other way that the lights will be used. It's not going to be used on the roads of Nigeria. It's going to be used in an airport. So I hope that the the government and the the authorities at the airport were able to put this into the right perspective for individuals who have been caught. They should answer to the law and also any other individual who actually perpetrates this evil can also answer to the authorities. Do I have anything to say to this? I don't actually a lot be with them. I mean, it's not even so much the people that stole. I mean, that's a problem. But it's the fact that the theft could happen where it happens. And everybody is supposed to be a secure location. I mean, I know they said this is stuff, but for you to these are not bulbs that you just go and unscrew. But anyway, let's precisely move on. So my headline says Nigerian based HR tech startup propel raises two point seven four million dollars in seed funding to scale its community platform. So the the company or a no propel has raised two point seven four million dollars to accelerate the adoption and rollout of his community as a service platform now founded in twenty twenty. The startup helps multinational corporations reduce the risk of hiring remote workers from emerging markets, particularly in Africa. This one just stood out for me, you know, as future tech founder, we monitor the space. We shall monitor. Yeah. When you see these kind of things, I think it just shows you the amount of opportunity that is out there. It's so great to see that Africa, Nigeria is playing in that space. So it's very exciting when I see news like this. Ha, there's so much. They send me the adopt technology for effort. It's a banner. Now they go the teeth like, like I don't want to see the things that I have in my mind. Me, I don't think we start to argue about this and that matter. So when I saw this story, I just had a laugh. And today I'm not going to say anything. So we argue, but there's nothing to argue about. I mean, the problems are new. No, what are you talking about? You will say? No, what's the normal thing? Oh, I will say the government should have you say the people. And look, everybody has a responsibility. It's new about the people I have. Yeah, so the people are there, but there is a responsibility. Like I said, in this situation, this is a secure and I have you with two people that is not about the people. Because let me tell you, we're not arguing with you. You see what I said? We're not arguing with you. That's what I'm trying to tell you. You don't even need to argue today. The fact is there are responsibilities. It's not your house. It's not the streets that it's not guarded. It is the international airport. It is a secure. It's supposed to be. It is. Thank you. It is supposed to be a secure location where people have the responsibility to safeguard it, safeguard every single content, whether living or whatever in there. And it is not being done. So with full chest, you can blame whatever you want to blame. You don't have to. You need to see airports globally, all over the world. Like we are still joking in this country. Even the ultra-modern airport that they claim to build. What are we talking? Like are you people joking? And you go and you use other people's airports. I said I was going to be quiet because this sleeper want to sleep it. I don't want anything to erase this sleep from my eyes today. I'm leaving here. I'm going to my bed. All right, we'll take a break. Let's discuss this main matter because if I continue this one, we will not leave here. Stay with us, we'll be right back.