 All right, you are still watching Waze. Now, aged care employee day is observed annually on August 7 to honor those who provide care for the elderly. It requires an extraordinary quality of skills, patience, and compassion to care for the elderly people in their twilight years. Thus, the day functions as an expression of gratitude for nurses and care workers, drivers, chef cleaners, and all volunteers who are always available to ensure that our senior citizens receive the necessary companionship and assistance. This is a very special day to my heart. Yeah, kid gives it. I had the opportunity to care for my grandfather before he passed. And, oh boy, you know how you see someone that is always very agile and everything and all of a sudden, you know, he had partial stroke. And I remember the day that we were trying to get him to, I've shared this story several times, but every time I shared, it's almost like bringing tears to my eyes, like, you know, we were trying to get him to full, because he had not, he hadn't had full movement for a while. So my mom had sent some recipes, some cardinal that we should make for him. So eventually, you know, I remember by, I have a cousin that she's quite huge. So she held him, we held, you know, all of us graced, it was all his grandchildren taking care of him, actually. And I remember just seeing him, he couldn't talk at that point, but tears just came down his cheek. I just knew, when I went back to school, I mean, I've got to think a few weeks later that he had passed, because he had always said that he didn't want to be a burden to his children, so that if he becomes, in that state of, you know, like helplessness, in that state of becoming like a vegetable or whatever, that he would rather let go, take his life, than to do his wishes, you know. So when I saw that tear down his cheek, I just knew that, ah, this man is not used to fight this thing. You know, so, and recently, my father went to visit his older sister, oh my God, he was so cute. He put her in a care home, in Benin. I didn't even know they had a care home. Interestingly, they pay about, I think 700, 800,000 every year, annually to care for them. And if you see the room she was in, very neat, in Nero State, in Benin, yeah, very neat, so she's so petty. Comedian is quite petty. Oh, now she has shrunken, she's so tidy. I said, for my dad to be, because my dad was looking like a giant beside her. For my dad that is petty, to be looking at me, she must be really, really tiny. Whether they're taking good care of her and all of that, you know, so he is, you know, he went to Benin recently and went to check on her, and he was so happy to see that they were taking care of her. So do you have any old question around you? Incidentally, you know, just as you were talking about your grandfather, I remember my grandfather as well. I was literally the last person with him when he passed, you know, and it's a memory for me because it was just crazy. In the last minutes, like, I mean, you know, someone who is so agile, who is so in control, you know, suddenly losing that control, you know, for them, a lot of them can deal well with that, especially if they are very independent, you know. So like him, to my father as well, you know, weeks to when he was going to pass, he always said, oh, I don't ever want to be a burden. I don't want to, you know. I want to stay in the state of England. Yeah, so even I prayed. I prayed about I didn't want my dad to suffer. I didn't want him to get into a state where, you know, we taking care of him were even tired because that's also a burden on the caregivers, people taking care of the sequence. So for me, I would just say that caregiving is sometimes a tankless job, but we have to acknowledge the sacrifice. It's a lot of sacrifice. And I hope that it exists and I thank you to every caregiver, especially for the aged people, every employee out there. We say thank you. Thank you so much. God bless you. Yeah. Keep doing the job. For that job, trust me, the link is on your screen. All right, we'll see you later. Quickly, let's run through our news. What did you find for us in the news? Reeds, Namdi Kanu, a bullish status from in Southeast, introduces EED. So I had seen this letter, I believe it was last week, the handwritten letter by the detained leader of the pro-Biafra group, the Indigenous people of Biafra, I.P.O., stating that all forms of status, status form has been abolished in the Southeast, which of course occurs every Monday. Now I remember then it was being debated. So this story sort of caught my attention where there's been a follow-up to that to say that every Monday has now been declared EED, which stands for Economic Empowerment Day. And this has been disclosed in a statement by the I.P.O. media and publicity secretary, Imar Powerful. So to explain what the EED means, it connotes a day set aside for mass mobilization of Biafrans to devote their resources and means towards reversing the sharp and unprecedented decline in the economic, educational and social needs of Biafrans, occasioned by the prolonged status form. So people of Biafra are encouraged to embark on deploying their resources to the empowerment of educationally disadvantaged and poverty-ridden population of people. So this is a huge turnaround, of course, from a situation that has been ongoing. In fact, it has become the norm in the Southeast for everything to grind to a halt on Mondays. So this is really a welcome development in that situation. And of course, now trying to turn that around for the positive to say that they now need to start to work and focus on reversing the effects of that situation. Now what it truly means in terms of actual activity, I'm not sure what that looks like, because I mean, if you look at the things that we're talking about, education, healthcare. So are we talking about feeding people on that day? Are you paying school fees? Like just again, further insights into what is needed because it says through education, employment, health services, sense of identity and community are people and indeed the Eastern region can begin to thrive and grow. So that just further gives insights into the areas that should be focused on so that people can improve their lives and improve the situation in the region. So welcome development hoping that it is indeed adhered to as much as it was adhered to so that the entire region can recover from that, the impact of that experience. I hope they recover, honestly, I hope so. So Jella, quickly, what you try for a second? Okay, so this is a sad one. A mob beat Lagos policeman's stupor for pushing man crushed by DRT. An eyewitness account stated that a young man today was a victim of this and this happened because a policeman and his colleagues were trying to, were attempting to dispossess him of his vehicle and in that process, they pushed him and unfortunately, they pushed him into the DRT lane. Meanwhile, there was an incoming DRT boss on that lane. So he crushed the guy. Well, fortunately, he didn't at the time, this report came out where you were said that he sustained very serious degrees of injury and it has been taken to the hospital. It is our hope that he survives this and gets back to good health. But again, we must say that jungle justice, it's never the way forward because this policeman that was beaten by the mob, like he was beaten to a point where he literally fainted and nobody knew if, nobody knows if that he could have sustained an internal injury. Again, it's easy to say that, well, serves him right, but I mean, that's exactly. My story is quite disturbing because I've been seeing the videos over the weekend so I'd like to just bring it up. It's been happening in the United States of America. Shop Heist has become a pandemic across the United States of America. I mean, there are a series of videos, like it is countless and a lot of mobs going to different stores, going to designer stores, just going and looting things. Like it's so ridiculous. Like, I mean, you see in the shopping malls, security personnel struggling to pull back the, what's it called, not even the mob. This one, single people who just enter the store to and just pack like a bunch of things. So like it's safe, it's a fight. So I don't know where this is coming from. Is it as a result of maybe economic hardship or whatever because one of the guys took a rack. I don't know if they have videos, they can play them as SF. One of the guys had a rack and he was just pulling out those racks from the stores. So this has become a pandemic in the US. Like a lot of people are just going into stores, looting, there was a Gucci store that was just completely raided. And you know, people cannot even do anything. You can't really go there to say you want to try to stop them. They've gone to jewelry stores, they've gone to both shops. Like they break the, they come with some metals. And there was one, I saw, I think this was Walmart. The staff kind of like struggled. Those guys had two, they had few two shopping carts and they were already going with it. So the security, the staff at Walmart, you toss all the things because that's what's been happening. So if the staff are not ready to fight them off, then they let them go. But some stores, you see the staff struggling to pull back those shopping carts. I really don't know where it's going from. But you see why I am really worried, right, is I pray that we don't get to this state in Nigeria. Again, when we talk about excessive hardship or whatever, these people are not even seeing half of what we're seeing. And they're already acting like this. So like literally, I want the government to understand that there's a bit of a threshold to where people can take, you understand? You know, these people are not even used to suffering. Somehow, because the government is always giving you one thing or the other to just, you know, like pallet and so on and so forth. We are used to it. So if, if, if, if we cross all that, we are always beyond what people can take. I don't know how, you know, it will be managed because trust me, what's the repeat of that? Sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry. What we all heard during the aftermath of the NSW test where people went into different stores to go and loot and all of that, that would just be the tip. Because to be like, we would just be going to your house. It's almost like they are right. You can't drive your cars anymore. They will smash your windows and take whatever they want to. So we need to really understand that, you know, hardship can bring out the craziness in people. And let's try as much as possible to see how we can, you know, keep it. I'm saying for everyone. Let's just try. Let it be manageable. All right, we'll take a break now when we come back from that break. Hopefully we'll have our guests and we'll discuss this ministerial screen with Dr., what's his name? Boston. He's here with us, we'll be right back.