 All right, you're still watching. Oh, I love this day. World smile day. It's observed every first Friday of October to focus on smiles and acts of kindness, leasing out good chairs and good works. The iconic smiley face we all know and love was created by Harvey Ball, a commercial artist from Rochester, and has today become the most recognizable symbol of goodwill and happiness worldwide. Now, the first World Smile Day was celebrated in Rochester in 1999, and since then it has continued to inspire positive actions and smiles around the world. Hello. But you know what, let me tell you my story. So I don't know what happened throughout my young teenage, no, not teenage, I don't even know when I started smiling, but every picture that I had was like this. So one day I can't remember what year it was. I just decided, you know what, let me even try and smile in the picture. Ever since then, I did not stop smiling because like literally, I just realized that the picture was nice, I would have smiled. Because my mom said, you're always crazy of it, you're always crazy of it. So I just go like, I was like, I keep a straight face, I take the picture. As soon as I took one particular picture, I can't remember what year it was, and I had a smile on, I looked really nice, I said no. There was so many, so many compliments that came with that picture. My picture makes you look more beautiful and receptive. Because really, if I keep a straight face, right, I'm not angry, but if I just... Your resting face is an angry face. My rest...my darling, when you have to remind yourself, like, look... My resting face, like, literally my resting face is a don't come near me face. Don't come near me. That's exactly me. So people say to me, oh, sometimes I want to come here and talk to you when I'm sure. Yes, I always like to...let me just break it down for you. It doesn't matter what you see. As soon as you call me, you're going to get... Exactly, that's what people don't understand. So I try to convince people all the time, but the truth is I know that my resting face is scary, so that's why the phrase...I didn't need to think about it. My resting face is trying to... Ah, it's like, don't come near me face. So I intentionally try not to keep my resting face, because even sometimes when I'm like, you know, people just feel like, wow, she's angry or I'm not angry. I just don't...when I leave my resting face, you can't... Don't come near me face. My deep thoughts. It was a good day to celebrate smile. I've seen some people really...they have very beautiful smiles. Oh, good. My darling. That's the main thing. This is our mission going to be accomplished. Oh my God, don't remind me. I want to give opinions actually. So I've been talking about it for so long, that's why it's calling my name. But every time I go and watch it, YouTube is just with them. Because when you then see the process, you're like, I'm not sure I want to go through all of this. Because when you just bang my head, I'm the teacher. Since I saw the process, but I know that at some point, yeah, I probably won't get opinions. But it's just such a scary process. Yeah, it is a scary process. When I manage my colored tits like that. My tits are actually quite sensitive. So once a few years ago, she woke up one day and said she wanted to whitey her tits. As the laser kind. So I went to the dentist. And I sat in the chair. And I'm not afraid of needles, I'm not afraid of needles. But I know my teeth are sensitive. So the dentist then said to me, oh yeah, so they put the thing in your mouth. And then they go to position the light. And they put everything. And I was fine. And I was lying down there, maybe for about the first five to seven minutes. Then they just took live wire and put it in my teeth. I held on because I think they did it in bursts of, if I remember correctly, 15 minutes. They take a break, they do another 15 minutes. I made it through the first 15 minutes. By the second 15 minutes, halfway through, I said I'm not doing it again. I almost felt like afterwards my teeth now, because they couldn't complete the process, now stained even more. And I tell you, it was agony. For the next four to six weeks, my teeth were shocking me randomly. Some people were laughing at me at work, like, maybe he wanted to. So it was never again. When I think about my teeth now, I know that I have serious... Sensitivity. If I don't use it, like I run out and I say for two days, let me just use regular toothpaste. Once I drink Ota. I don't have feelings. So I have to use it. So what did we find in the news? Who's going to go first? Who's going to go first? There was a bit that you wouldn't say that. So that I would have to... But my story is a very short one. I'm looking on the wrong place for my story. Is yours open? Take care of that. Okay. So my story is a seemingly sad one. I mean, there was this lady that died in Abuja, I think last week or earlier this week. So in an interview with the father, Reverend Joseph Olon-Femi, the father of the late greatness Olon-Femi, a victim of one chance robots in Abuja, said his daughter planned to travel to the United States of America to commence her PhD in microbiology before her death. Olon-Femi was reportedly stabbed and thrown out of a moving vehicle on the 26th of September 2023 along Mitama-Kubua Highway. It was alleged in a viral video that the medical team at the Mitama District Hospital, Abuja requested a police report and denied her treatment. So first of all, I think I have an issue with the way the entire death went about. I mean, I know that we have a very lackadaisical attitude in Nigeria, especially in the medical field. And I'm not sure why. I mean, I get the procedures. Yeah, when you bring in... Gone short and start. No accident victims into the hospital. You don't need police report. But is there not supposed to be a case of maybe first aid? Because even if the person is a criminal, I believe that they would like to have the criminal alive instead of dead. So whether or not the person is a criminal, I think that there should be a provision for first aid, at least to keep the person alive while they do all the running around for police report. But when someone who was stabbed, losing so much blood and then you just leave the person there and we are waiting for police report. So did you really take the oath during your medical school that you would protect lives and save lives if you are seeing a life die? And now in this case, the father had already said she had plans to go to the United States for her PhD. This is how so many youths' lives in Nigeria has been caught short. And even their dreams have been caught short because of all this laxity on professional side. And it's really, really appalling and sad. When I saw that story, I actually felt very pained. First of all, I don't understand. When did one chance enter Abuja? Do you understand? Because the thing with one chance used to be very, very, it's a legless thing. So when did one chance enter Abuja? The level of insecurity, the way it's getting very heightened is really frightening. These days, I'm so afraid to go into a car. I don't even want to go into a car. I'd rather just be if there's no car to stay, I will not go anywhere because there are just so many things. Because even outside of even buses now, you hear cases of cab drivers. The other day, I took a picture, I mean, sorry, a story of a go-cat, sorry, a what's it called? Dispatch Logistics Rider that went into an SUV to steal the black... So this one, by day, is both an armed robber and a what's it called? Dispatch Rider. So it's crazy. I think that sad to say that none of this is surprising because with our reality being what it is right now, the times are tough. It doesn't make it right, but that's what always happens when this happens anywhere in the world, the rate of crime. So we are just seeing the dividends of our current reality. If people can't eat, they turn to crime. If people can't survive, they turn to crime. So a lot of the crimes that we see, they're opportunistic, right? So you see somebody at a vulnerable moment and you can quickly grab their phone. On Wednesday, I went to the mainland. So when I was driving back to the island just around that Bagada, just as you're coming towards to get on 3rd mainland from Mouro, I saw three boys just fighting. So if you know that area of Bagada, you know there's a football page and then on the other side there's some space. And these three boys were literally fighting on that edge of where the bridge splits to go to 3rd mainland or to go towards Madodo and the rest. Yes, and they were fighting. And you know it took a second because it seemed like an odd place for them to be standing and fighting. And then my eyes focused and I realized what was happening. They had obviously robbed somebody. They had the bag, it was a nice leather-red ladies bag. And they were fighting about the contents inside. So one boy was holding the bag and the other two were beating the hell out of each other. And it was the contents of the bag. And these are things that you realize that petty theft, armed robbery, all of these things. I think I saw a meme or a video on Instagram the other day and the guy was saying how there's a particular setting so that on your phone, so they can't get into your phone or whatever. And I was shocked by the comments. People were like, what a setting got to do with it? Phone that they would have possessed for parts. They actually told me to sign out of my iCloud. And I always want to sign out of his iCloud. So the thing is because I think those guys, they had stolen a lot of iPhones enough to know that if you don't sign out of iCloud, so they will tell you there and they sign out of iCloud. They will not do factory research. So what is the issue of about that? It doesn't cost so much. Even just for me seeing the comments to say, even you, average Jew, knows. You know, it's just sad. A friend of mine went to Kenya with her family and she left her phone inside. I think it was an Uber, one of those ride companies. And the phone was, they held the phone ransom more. So they even thought, because of course, find my device. They knew where it was. The police said, ah, this is gang territory, man. We can't even go in there. And then they called the phone and the person picked up and said, ah, they paid $200 to collect. Yes, sir. Oh, to collect the phone, man. So let's not think that this is a Nigerian phone. I left a brand new phone. And it showed on what is not even, it doesn't pass what it is. The brand new iPhone I just bought when I went to the US. I forgot it where I sat there. So when he finally saw me, he said, ah, I ran after you, you're gone, you're gone. I said, hey, brand new iPhone. It can happen anywhere, right? When all these crimes are in prison. I mean, the people that are supposed to be maybe safeguarding us or protecting us. That's even the sad part. Let me even tell you how bad it is now. So my sister was telling me that, you know that before, you know the O3 dollar area. It used to be, they first cleared it up and all of it. If you know what is happening now. So my sister was telling me now, now when she's going to work coming back, you know, it is like speed it up because it was a constant thing. And the sad part about some of these robberies is that there are constant spots where people are constantly being robbed. So if you truly want to fight the whatever, you can stop it. You can stop it. It's sad. It's opportunity. I think that even if you put people there, they will just move somewhere else. But I get what you mean in terms of the crime. But just to speak to the part of your story around the medical side of it. I mean, this is a problem that we see repeatedly where police report. And you are very right. Hypocraticality. I mean, you have to treat people. But I think that to flip that on its side as well, if you speak to medical professionals, you hear all sorts of horror stories. What they've been through with the police. But they said that the police had reversed that law. So who do we believe? Because when we still go to the hospitals today, they still ask for police reports. Police will come up and say, no, they have stopped police reports. Exactly. So here's what I was going to say that even if I think that in having that information, case by case basis now, there has to be repercussions. Because if you don't do that, to be fair, that law was around for a long time. And some people, if you've been burnt before, you know, in your mind, you're like, no matter what happens, I'm going to behave in a certain way. But if you think about how you can change things, that change management, how do we make sure there has to be, it's the characteristic approach, right? So in this kind of situation where somebody has lost their life, if it was clear that you didn't treat this person because of police reports and that is no longer the law, then those people should face the consequences. Absolutely. It is well. Anyway. But to your story, my story is simple though. My own is to debunk the myth. Obviously it comes out to say that petrol prices are not going to go up. Of course, I don't know if you guys have noticed there have been queues in certain places. Yes. It's about to be full capacity. And really that's because people have been speculating because in truth, and I don't know if you've seen other stories that are sort of talking about subsidy and that, but the landing cost of petrol today is significantly higher than what we are paying right now. So any right-thinking person, any logical person who says there's no subsidy, you won't be out of place to think that, yes, an increase in prices is coming. I think people that own tank farms, you know, if you even pay attention, if you notice a lot of independent petrol stations, you will see that they started closing down. So the big ones are still open. There is a particular fuel station that I was so sure that I always get fuel around my house. Since this, was it the second increment of something? They've not sold one drop. Yes. So it's now almost like a lost business. So the idea is I drove past the petrol station on Sunday. I hadn't been to church physically for a while and I drove past and I was like, if somebody didn't tell you that there used to be a petrol station there, like they had cleared it, they had smashed even the platforms where they had been standing on, right? And it was just gone, right? So the fact is that business, let's just take it that, because NNPC are the ones, the only ones important right now. And if you are landing at a certain price and selling less than that, there's subsidy. Yes, no. You see this NNPC matter and this fuel matter? I will talk about it when we talk about taxation. Let me take my story. It says legal, luminary, AREA, AFEBA BABALOLA, SCN on Thursday, taxed President Bola Mehtun able to ensure that local government areas in the country receive their allocations directly from the federal, federation account to revive agriculture and boost the economy. BABALOLA said this while declaring open the eighth edition of the AFEBA BALOLA agricultural expo and annual gathering of farmers where they would be empowered by the, that's the, his foundation. It says that the local council have remained ineffective over the years in bringing development to the people due to the activities of the governors who allegedly hijacked allocation. I think this local government autonomy has been a, what's it called, a conversation that's been going around in circles. But the truth is, if we really want to transform our country, we must really empower the local government to be able to handle things. But then again, some people will come and they will argue with you that, ah, if you know the kind of allocation that goes with that, even that little one that comes to them, what are they even using it for? What are the things that they can point to say that this is what they are doing? I know one particular local government, I think Fouad at Underworld, the one that is a noble lady, I see his work. I think maybe because he's done, he does a lot of social media to take people along. You know, why is Uti looking at me? Okay, I'll take a break. I shall take a break. Uti's not letting me go. My eyes were moving. Really? Let's take a break. We'll be right back.