 Welcome to The Advocate, your Sunday reminder that important conversations are among the necessary tools for a saner society. My myth today is on the standard of beauty amongst women. Is it really beauty or obsession? Victor is saying today that passion is not enough for success. Juliet labels helplessness as the evil genius in our mind. And finally, Elijah talks about realigning the educational system for global relevance. As always, your panellists are here to share ideas aimed at provoking thoughts with no holds barred. Stay with us. Beauty standard. Is it really beauty? Today I'm going to sound like an old person, yeah. The topic I want to bring to light is the current warped standard of beauty. The reigning thing is to see women in all kinds of wigs, with makeup attuned to drag queens, face colour very different to the skin tone of the rest of the body, and in practical nails that are more like claws. Who sets these standards? Why are women obsessed with them? Who is this all for? Let's look at the hair. Weaves and wigs are far from new and even go back as far as antiquity. However, in this current day we see all kinds of wigs on ladies heads that look nothing like what comes out from the head naturally. I understand the functionality of wigs as a protective style, as a fashion item for convenience, but what I don't understand is putting something on your head that looks clearly fake. I am not against wigs as a practical necessity, but why put something so fake on the head that would never grow naturally from a black person's head? Then let's talk face. Studio production makeup it seems has become standard for everyday wear. Foundation colour that is shades lighter so that the woman's face is phanta and her arms are coca-cola. Eyebrows that I'm still confused about. Is it one eyebrow or two? What are the whites around the brow? White lines and highlights are on the nose and cheek that make me think of battle marks of war. The overall appearance is similar to a drag queen. In fact, our standard of beauty today as women is actually a man. But brisky when I think of it seems to be the aesthetic most women are going for these days here in Nigeria. Then add the skin bleaching on top and you know we have a problem with who we are. Whilst this topic can be amusing on the surface to discuss, it actually goes to the root of how deep our disdain for ourselves is. Something that the colonial master did a good job of doing. Beauty was that of a blonde, fair skinned, blue-eyed European woman. And we are still dealing with the ramifications of that as the antithesis was the dark-skinned African woman. And this was shamelessly directly used in advertising. Use this soap and you'll go from a dark negro to a fair Caucasian. This narrative is absolutely and completely false. Think of the beauty in the versatility of our hair, the beauty in our unique features, and the beauty in the many shades of our brown skin. There's nothing wrong with enhancing what we have. But why are so many women going to the extreme? If you ask men, they prefer a more natural woman. Is it that we women are doing this to compete with other women? All I know is that those of us with daughters need to instill in them from an early age that they are beautiful as they are. Teach them to love their natural hair, to love their features and to love the color of their skin. Decolonize the mind and we can decolonize our bodies. Very sensitive topic. Very sensitive. It's age long. And the decolonization you're talking about should start from the home. However, the home is just a tiny fraction of the entire world. And the cosmetic industry, the mindset passed down by the colonial masters is so, so big in our hearts and in our minds that it's difficult to actually override this natural beauty thing. But what we know is that there are some upsides of these artificial beauty enhancers, if you like. They help some women's confidence. Some people actually would actually hate themselves if not for these hair aesthetics, facial aesthetics, skin aesthetics. But you're right. We don't need these things to be beautiful. Beauty is supposed to come from within and shine out. And men claim they like us natural. But when we see the kind of girls they hang around with, it's the other kind of girls. And it puts pressure on us women. I don't think if the world was populated by women alone, we would bother. I don't think. Maybe we would, but I don't think we would. So we do it for you guys. And you guys, we see the choices you make when you go out. And there's pressure for us to be accepted by you guys, just the way you guys go around and do stuff about money so we can accept it. So it's a good one to decolonize, but it's going to be a long one. What do you think, Victor? Yeah, I think we're struggling with self-identity and self-esteem, but it starts with self-identity. I mean, the essence of life begins out identifying who you really are. And then get a bit neurological. There was a certain horse that was tied to a very strong iron. It was blue in color. So the owner took the horse after like one year and then took the horse home and then tied it to a blue chair, like a very weightless chair. Maybe a plastic blue chair. Plastic blue chair. And the horse couldn't leave that location for another year. It's called Lend Herplessness. I'm going to talk about that today. That's what it means. Because it's what smart people are doing to do this. Lend Herplessness is in the mind. So this, it's a very, it looks like a funny thought, but it's a very interesting topic. Very deep. Beauty begins in the mind. Why do we ascribe whites good? Black. The lighter the rider. You get so. Naturally, people just believe that if something is white or if something is fair, you know, that is how, that's it's good. It's beauty. Then if it's dark, if it's black, it is. It's imperial. If you do the data, I don't have the data. If you do the data, lots of people want to change from becoming black to becoming, and I don't have an issue with people wanting to look. Yeah, look better and enhance their thing. If you make some money, you want to enhance, you know, and all of that. But again, at the basics of that, why are you, why do you want to change your skin? Because of you guys. No, no, no. So I actually disagree with that. But Elijah Felix as a man, please let's get your opinion because I disagree with Juliette on that. Oh yes, I actually do it to some extent. Because if, not because of me, because even if the men were out of the equation, some women will still do it. Because of jealousy, among some... Competition, I think. Competition, jealousy. Now let me give you a practical scenario. I was, I told you earlier, when we were sitting at the lounge, that two or five years ago, there was this Chinese journalist, a journalist from China. She hails from China in the US and she was bullied online, mostly by chauvinists. I guess white chauvinists in the US. And they were telling her that she looks quite ugly. She doesn't fit into the system also. She had to go for a cosmetic surgery to look like one of them. And it went south. I'll give you another situation. There's another one that's been trending on social media. If it's not, if I'm not mistaken, two years ago, a woman that went there to go for is it booty enhancement or something? Yeah, we don't know, tell us. It went south. That's how what I mean. Eventually she got one of my... Enhancing the gluteus. I saw it. So a woman is as beautiful as what she thinks she is. So I don't think we need enhancement. You cannot be busy in your beauty and confident of something that is temporal. So let's tell women the truth. Let me interrupt. But don't be busy on beauty or something that is temporal. Thank you. Thank you so much. We see your choices and it influences us. I'm speaking for most women. I've gotten to a level of awareness as a person. You tell us our choices. We're talking about women. No, I'm telling you. Because we see. That's what I was describing. I'm not going to describe, but you get what I mean. So if you guys start a campaign and make the natural ones look beautiful, what do you think will happen to us? No, no. But if you do that, that's a responsibility. No, so this is... What I said that was, you've got to accept yourself by yourself. I agree. I don't need to accept you. I agree. You're putting pressure on the man. No, no, I'm not saying that. I agree with you, Juliette. I'm not saying that. I'm just saying that. It takes a lot of level of awareness to accept yourself for who you are. So that's why a lot of you do stop to make money. No, no. I'm actually about to try that. So no dealing with the women's action. Fair point in that it also does actually seep into the male psyche because you are told what a beautiful woman is, right? Exactly. So if I... And I had an argument with a friend. Unfortunately, she's passed away now. And we always used to debate these funny things. And she never understood when I explained to her that there's something that I have an advantage of in this country just like in America's white skin privilege or white privilege. Here, I have light skin privilege. And I was explaining to her that... And explaining scenarios that it exists. And I'm very conscious of it. I don't feel it's right. And I really feel, for me, I think dark skin, brown skin is beautiful. My husband is dark. Fair skin is beautiful. There's a variety of aesthetic in our advertising, in our media. And stop pushing this just one form of beauty. Beauty has many forms. But it does... For example, I'm just picking the light skin thing because I'm light skinned. And everybody who's watching this will see that. It does exist. I can look absolutely terrible, right? And be standing next to a darker-sink skinned young lady and she's dressed nicely. And the guy will always pick me. Because you're... Because he's not even seeing what I... He's not even seeing me. He's just seeing the colour of my skin. It has to be better for you to be lighter skinned. And it doesn't mean that he doesn't find that other one attractive. It's just we've been programmed so deeply by colonisation that anything that is closer to the white man, it's better. Tonya, let me even tell you something. Now that I'm dark skinned, let me start to... You're not dark skinned. What are you talking about? You're not dark skinned. Compared to Tonya... I'm darker than you. Now that I'm not so-so light, if I start to tone... If I start to bleach my skin... You will see the line of... Okay, bleach. You see the line of men. Say, if I was having two men interested in me, and I'm like this, once I start to use the right colour of hair, I mean those colours of hair, those make-up, the queue extends. I'm not saying this is one of the influencers. But if you check some of those men, their wives and their sisters... It's just that when you guys have money, you'll see that the queue of women increases. It puts pressure on you guys to have money and buy fancy cars. If you don't care about the cars and the watches you buy. Look, I think you bring up something really important because you go to the supermarket and you see is toning cream. Brighten your skin. So I have to be really conscious about what I'm talking about. It's business. But I think in this case, this is where advocacy comes in. The relevant government authority. I'm going to go back. I want to say something. The relevant government agencies should make sure those people that are building cosmetics, cosmetology or whatever, they should make sure they do things that are real. So maybe put something on social media. I think I forgot in the country where the person's edited image says better than this. I think the government has to force that particular point. They have to force the person to take it off social media because we are going to put pressure on people. That's not what you are. Why are you projecting? Why are you not? So that's where regulation comes in. You bring up good points about regulation. But I think it's something that we just also have to be conscious as citizens. Some people don't are not conscious. They just spark a deal with the consciousness. I don't have a deal with that consciousness. All right. I think that was a lively discussion. I wish we could go on and on because I really enjoyed it. So after the break, Victor talks to us about passion and success. Passion is not enough. We may be already used to the popular cliché. Follow your passion. This is not entirely wrong advice when applied in the right context. From my interaction with career professionals and business entrepreneurs, I can confidently say passion has been taken to the extreme and lost its true essence. The easiest way for a subject or a concept to lose its meaning and essence is when we go extreme with it. Passion is very important when starting out your business but it's not going to be enough. If you think about it, cars don't come from passion. If you're passionate about driving but don't have the skill and knowledge required to drive, then you can passionately kill yourself while trying to drive it. Passion may get you started but you soon run out of it if you don't add the required knowledge and skill to passion. So a combination of passion, knowledge and skill is required to succeed in business and subsequently in anything. Passion, the interesting thing with passion is that you can passionately kill yourself. We need to follow passion however with a huge dose of skill and accurate knowledge. This is too life-rich. This is too life-rich. Too life-rich. Too life-rich. Passion is a start point because you need that enthusiasm to master or master the stress of business or any skill or any issue but it is not enough because besides just doing something you need to think of how to excel at it then passion doesn't help you with that. You need the skill now. So you summarize everything about everything not just business, even relationships even health, career, everything life generally is beyond passion. Passion is a good way to start but to progress, to sustain you need knowledge and skill. So one of them was self-effective. One should be the datum point, the datum level let me say entry level you are passionate about something fine, good enough you are passionate about that stuff add the necessary skill, add relevant network ideas and knowledge and go from there so passion is not enough it's very, very true so I agree with that. Passion is killing me now Passion is Passion is important actually it's painful passion is stressful be careful of that thing you ask for because you might get it right? So I definitely go with passion just in my experience I tend to throw myself into things and then try and just float I'm like a dog still on the top but I'm feverishly working on the bottom so I think you bring up something very important especially for young people out there when you're young you have a lot of passion you have a lot of dreams you have a lot of energy and you have time yes exactly so it's easy to kind of run away with that but at the same time yes you need the skill yes you need all this blah blah blah without the passion it's not going anywhere so when we work on productions when you're going through the creative process there has to be someone with that vision there has to be someone with that passion if it's not there all the reading all the skills it doesn't matter it falls very flat so the key element is that passion yes you need the skills but it's not always it's a rebroad thing it's often an organic thing so yes passion kills it's killing me but at the same time it is the major ingredient needed the other things are like sides when you order your food and you order it sides the other things are the sides that's why I said it's not enough I talked to a bunch of entrepreneurs who had a business here and I was speaking to one he was going to be a social entrepreneur he just got out of school I'm passionate I want to impact 10,000 lives I just want to start an NGO so what do you have currently do you have a personal financial economics what sustains you why you do this well I don't have a job I don't have anyone I believe that when I put it out there who will support you give me the books the bags to go and share in the schools what you need now is to take that passion keep it somewhere go and get a job learn, serve, work, get some money and then sustain because again you can't be a beneficiary of the NGO that you're supposed to be serving when you're serving marginalized community but you are marginalized yourself you've not been able to take care of your personal economy so you get a job and with the right timing then you can now have bringing the passion it's key you really can't even move anything the vision, the knowledge again, using the analogy of Okara I may know how to drive I may be a good driver a good drifter but if I don't have the passion to go drive I would not drive the car would be there but I think it's an interesting position and I have the passion to drive and you can't drive and I can't drive and then I try to drive the first time I tried it I bashed my doubts because that's the result of that so you can pass to I rather stay alive with knowledge and then work on my passion oh I don't know about that then let passion be that I'm sorry I'm just saying that I disagree with that I agree with energy, passion wait I wouldn't call it passion for my passion than the mechanics so what I'm doing I think what Victor is trying to say is we have to have both because life is hard business is hard without passion you are going to give up without the knowledge and everything use that knowledge even when you had passion you are going to run out of fuel so we have to find our center our inn our shackles we can drive Juliet is next after the break do stay with us the evil genius in our subconscious mind let's talk about learned helplessness today I want to tell you a short story about how learned helplessness can hold us back from being more, having more and doing more I will talk about learned helplessness in a bit but back to my story once upon a time a man was walking through the circles with his son when they noticed something very interesting in the elephant area all the elephants were secured a tiny rope this rope was tied around one of their foot the rope was so tiny that all the elephants had to do was just move that foot with some effort and they would break free these are elephants that weigh anywhere from 2,000 kg to 6,000 kg let's put their weight in perspective that's like 40 to 120 bags of cement or rice they were huge elephants why then did they not attempt to break free was it jazz so the father and son went ahead to look for the elephant master trainer I mean the guy has to disclose the source of his powers right the jazz man that he was using and the trainer told them something very profound when the elephants very young and much smaller they used these same ropes these same tiny ropes to tie them up and at that age the rope is strong enough to hold them down so initially these elephants these young elephants they try to break free but they quickly learn that they are powerless to do so so eventually they believe it is impossible to break free and they grow older with this same belief so they never bother to break free again even though now they are bigger and it's possible without much effort I think there is an important lesson we can all learn from this story what the elephants are experiencing is called learned helplessness learned helplessness occurs after a person has experienced a painful a stressful situation repeatedly that they come to believe that they are unable to control or change the situation so they do not bother to try even when opportunities for change becomes available are you experiencing this in your life at the moment did you for example repeatedly fail math in secondary school and now believe that you can never enjoy the subject let's look at your finances have you been experiencing financial difficulty for a very long time that you now think or believe that you are not destined for wealth or have you had your heart broken by so many scully works over these years that you now believe that no one can love you or value you what is that learned helplessness or limiting belief that is preventing you from living a fulfilled and a happy life this is the first time I'm hearing the term but I'm very familiar with the because I think it explains a lot of voter apathy in Nigeria if we put it towards governments and society people are just like why go out to vote now we know it's not real we know our vote doesn't count etc etc and yes that may have been in the case in the past but it shouldn't stop us from trying and that's why in this example that I picked is really really important that we engage the youth because the youth are going to come out fully in 2023 so it's for to catch those ones that are in that state of learned helplessness to say hey look at the other half of your youth they're really on it already but they need you your time is worth it if you want change if you want to get out of this helplessness all you need to do is take off that rope and walk so I think it's a great point and it's a great analogy and I've just never heard the term before thank you I said on this show before that man at bat is a tabula raza and the man is so elastic so elastic that it can go to any length that you can stretch it because humans humans on earth are it's great treasure now let me tell you something that this story I also had let me talk about my one animal story horse was stuck in a mud and the owner tried to pull it out but he couldn't after all said and done he thought about something let me bring all that horses around to move swiftly around the horse and he played the battle song that the horse was used to hear in the war drums and suddenly the horse was able to jump out of it and heading towards war front but that's how it works you know when you are just used to who is like this it has always been let's do my father could not do it so how can I achieve it nobody in my family was able to achieve it maybe me too I won't be able to achieve I can't get there that's where you will stop but the mind is so elastic and it works like a software so you put the right applications and you can break free so Victor you are a life coach the way to break part is it creates a similar pattern so I remember somewhere in the Bible where Jacob and Laban's story and it was almost looking like he cheated Laban because those goods that were brown sported were probably brown sported what he did was just simple when they were meeting he was showing the animals brown sported trees and they meted after what they were seeing so that means your perception, your vision can override your DNA so in your DNA they were supposed to meet after the black sported offspring but what they were seeing overrode their DNA so one way to do with the story what we can do is to bring another elephant tied to the same tree and make the elephant move once the old one sees that oh boy this guy moved so I think turning back to what Tonya said we need to show you that the economy can work if you're telling me that if I go out and vote it's going to count you need to show me something it has to be very organic and strategic it's going to be a journey okay you know what the local government is working now very soon the next level will work you can't say that by 2023 that's always the mistake Nigeria is going to become better and everything is going to work no let's say a local country is going to start working and then from there the federal so I think we need to start showing young people results showing young people a different image those things that people play out because what you're looking at as a belief system you play out in your behavioural patterns and you get that as results so we're going to call up the program change the image and language is really really important in that there's a time that's currently used in a lot of tech space edtech, fintech, all that and it's the unicorn and I really dislike the use of that I get why they're saying it but what it then puts in the mind's eye that these are rare that these are far between so it then removes that hope it's far reaching because it's a unicorn it's myth it's mystical and what we should be saying is that yes this has happened let's keep trying let's keep going this isn't a unicorn this is just the beginning it's the beginning these are the first ones there's more to come rather than using terms like unicorn so anytime I see that feed I'm just like stop using this term I get why you're using it but it's not really helpful to the nature of what we're trying to do for this country and what that space is trying to do for this country so I think language is really really important and key is is realizing that if you are have this learned helplessness that does it equate to hopelessness it doesn't so it's also to kind of realize they feel helpless but are you hopeless is it that far? I think hopelessness is even worse than learned helplessness just let me just add something just like in the world of financial it's when you are trying to grow your equity your accounts you grow up with your strategy there comes a time that you have draw dance the account is going to fall back to a certain level and then you're going to rise again the curve is not usually smooth it's always up draw dance up draw dance draw dance leaks draw dance so draw dance draw dance is the job of the trader to maintain a positive mind okay my strategy is going to work probabilistically the edge is in my side if you think your strategy is not going to work the moment you try to help yourself and blow up your accounts so that's how it works if evil keeps winning I think would be so excellently used to allow evil to thrive so I think if you start projecting when we're talking about Nigeria some things that are working the more we keep talking about things that are not working because that is so true all these things the country is not working and we're seeing this thing as a very subconscious level one fulfilling prophecy once we're seeing these things guess what the universe speaks to we're back to that we're back to this again so what we've gotten here guys is that Nigerians our lives are fraught we've learned helplessness in everything but there's a solution and there's a way to break this habit it starts by you checking and asking yourself if that statement, that thing is true if there is an alternative if it is possible to break it and if it is helping you if that belief is not helping you you should think of changing it because like Tonya said there is hope after this break Felix is going to end the show and we'll be right back Felix is associated with the usage of different perfumes in Nigeria then I went through her books and I saw that in one of her subjects she was also taught that it is the duty of the mother to cook and clean and the duty of the father to provide I became disappointed and disgusted at such level of parochialism in our educational curriculum school curriculum ought to evolve continually and should be in tandem with understanding issues of local concern this will enable our children to grow with the right kind of mindset, relevant skills knowledge to challenge the status school and change the world for educational system or curriculum to be relevant for a fast evolving world where globalization is at the center and fostered by technology the following should be considered by relevant authorities while planning for the educational system appreciating globalization exposure to global issues ranging from learning about history culture and contemporary issues understanding technology we are now in the era of connectivity metaverse, virtual reality automation and robotics skill acquisition soft skills like enhancing cognitive ability effective communication empathy and enforcing positive values fostering creativity children should be guided to discover their potentials innovation and intelligence should be refined education is beyond schooling but we must ensure that our schools should be the right environment where our children can get quality education so let's decide your thoughts you are talking primary and secondary schools primary specifically so hmm well the fact that we don't teach history is a problem so I think it also starts with that is that we need to know who we are who we were to know where we're going we need to know ourselves and then place ourselves into the context of the modern world and so we have an issue of the identity right off the bat we need to completely change our educational system I'm sure everybody here will agree with me it's absolute nonsense and what really taught a lot of parents that is when we were on lockdown in Covid and we were all teaching our own children and I totally revamped their curriculum and understood that look it's not all about open book learn this learn this they had to learn how to take care of themselves they had to learn how to cook and clean and not just the girls the boys they had to learn to garden to plant things to imagine to draw it's not about your skill it's not about the ability at that point it's about exposing children to all the things of life and allowing them to find their direction within a framework of course and we in Nigeria we have a tent to just say you will do this you will do that girl does this boy does that and not realizing that we're changing our entire society in the long run in our future because what you segment or partition one child in and put another in is what you're doing for the entire future and the nation and we need to think in larger terms when we're thinking about the education of our children but I can go on and on because I have special needs child and that's another subject the thing is shortly before I get to Juliet I can feel your pain look at this issue you teach your child you're trying to teach your children to learn about how to be responsible and then when they get back to school imagine this curriculum where they have to tell them that the father's job is just to provide and the mother is to cook and clean and then they come back to tell you that this particular tribe I won't mention the name they are used to using different performance has that got to do with the reality on grand and then they're messing with your children's mind so curriculum our curriculum should be devoid of sentiment on tribal or gender sentiment so your thoughts can carry along young people because they need to grow these children they need to learn skills from small how to build themselves so firstly since you're asking this question my first answer is the home is a primary educator so that's what I'll say for that but let's look at the educational system as a whole you see I think the main work should be done by the ministry this is me because before now we went to sleep when we saw that there was a huge it was huge huge improvement in the private sector so we all focused and put our children in the private sector and the government sector suffered so maybe the ministry was not governing the private sector apart from when they're giving licenses and the likes but now like Tonya said with the COVID we saw that the entire system locally is crap so now it's biting everybody it's really biting people so the ministry has to have like a blueprint they have to have an agenda like a goal what do they want for what kind of end game do they want for our children what do they want our children to know to like to do at the end I mean by passing through the educational system and create that curriculum that will sink that it has to be done at a national level because now the entire system is messed up and people are thinking of sending their children abroad now at very young age because we're waiting for university and masters before now people are doing secondary school at grade 9 and they're sending their kids abroad because they're structured their curriculum is in sync with the time because they're doing research they are implementing and we are just there with the same textbooks we use I'm still doing computer science using book using binary code this is what I used like 20 years ago so we're not even involving I think the sector, the ministry but is there even the will to involve is the will there because you bring up that point the private sector the private school everybody sends the children private school whether it's the low one or the high one because unless you have any choice unless you don't have any choice you will send your child to private school otherwise you're forced to send your child to government school and I don't really know what value government school is giving apart from maybe getting the free meal for the child for the day so it's so messed up and it's so frustrating and just on top of the kegs of powder kegs of explosives that we're just putting on top to explode this country this is a major one because this is the foundational years and these are the important years and these are the impressive years and children eventually will wake up to the fact that what they're learning is nonsense that why should they even bother to do yau yau let me just link you to currency and started trading and school is a scam and to be honest university is a scam in my opinion but we're just talking about primary and secondary school Victor what does this all mean Victor you have to speak now so I mean I've got two things to say first I think that what we have consciously or subconsciously trained to become from cradle is to be literate and not to be educated so you can know stuff and you are not educated how many first class really that we produce are really educated education changes you as a person you're able to use that knowledge I love the fact that Tonya said take her children on creative thinking imagination doing stuff when someone made a joke I mean I've been learning x, y, x, dy, dx I came into life and life was not asking me x, y, x I was looking for x I was looking for money and nobody taught me financial intelligence and I was learning x plus y equals to o and life doesn't care about that so secondly I believe like Gillette said where your heart where your treasure is where your heart is where your treasure is going to be where is the heart of our leaders where is the treasure where are they putting the treasure where is all the money going into how much funding goes into education so like she said do they really care about education I mean when it's election we start eating with young people that's normal it's such a good thing you don't nail this there's something we've been doing recently like Wimbies, some organizations Wimbies just did one of the big sister the big sister program they went to different public schools but secondary school children it was amazing because even though they think the school system is a fraud but by seeing us otherwise successful I think it gives them that aspiration because it was like some form of mentorship I mean I really respected the health of schools six cities there was Calabar, there was Potacot, Abudia, Lagos and somewhere else and they shared over 80 of us to those schools we went to all the classes we did some mentoring, it was really really nice maybe we can also do that while we're waiting for the Minister of Education to do that I'm going to chip this in I hope they will listen to us I remember several times we've been in convocation ceremony where they will say the best student in accounting so to get 5000 or 50,000 and then somebody will do something not soon necessary entertainment and gets 10 million error I hope you know that the country and the economy will not only be built on entertainment we need quality education indeed, society challenges are never ending hence they need to keep advocating in our private spaces we hope that it all coalesces into improved humanity existing join us again next week for the continuation of The Advocate The Advocate continues on our social media platforms on Facebook plus TV Africa hashtag The Advocate NG and Instagram at plus TV Africa hashtag The Advocate NG to catch up with previous brokers go to plustvafrica.com forward slash The Advocate NG don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel plus TV Africa let's keep advocating for a better society bye for now