 Now, the vice president, Yamio Shiba-Ju, has raised the alarm that Niger will fail completely if the leaders do not accept and implement what he described as ethical revolution. Abbas and Joe stated this while they live in a lecture titled, Values the Difference Between Success and Failure are the 100th anniversary of the Old Boys Association of the Baptist Boys High School, La Belgota, Oregon State. He insisted that the government must lead the ethical revolution by rewarding good behaviors and ensuring speedy punishment from his conduct. He called on educational institutions to inculcate the value of honesty, diligence, hard work, respect, trustworthiness, discipline, and integrity in their students so as to raise the youth with the right sink in. We must be able to demonstrate that it is not that well good order that building institutions don't come by just miraculous accord. They come by building hard work step-by-step, line-by-line, precept by Christian. That's what our religious leaders must teach. The religious elite must also reject and ostracize public officers and persons whose words cannot be explained, or is clearly from shady or social sources. Every modern society, everyone modern society has had to deal with corruption. Corruption is not a Nigerian thing. It's not. Sometimes we deceive ourselves, telling ourselves, oh, it is Nigerian. No. Many countries, in fact most countries of the world, had more corruption than us, but their elites sat down and decided we have to deal with this thing. If we don't deal with it, it will deal with us. There is no modern society today. And I challenge anyone to demonstrate to make any modern society that has not had to deal with corruption. And they deal with it by their elites sitting down and saying, we have to agree. This is the way forward.