 Alright, you're still watching Waze Now World Tuna Day 2022, Rich in Omega 3, Minerals, Protein and Vitamin B12, tuna has various other advantages, but the Superfish is a victim of its own amazing qualities and nutritional properties threatened as it is by the overwhelming demand from the human population. Now according to the United Nations, latest data shows that 33.3% of the stock among the seven principal tuna species are estimated to be fished at biologically unsustainable levels. Now to underline the importance of its conservation, source systems can be put in place to prevent tuna stock from crashing. The UN General Assembly in December of 2016 voted to officially observe a world tuna day and the date was chosen to be May the 2nd. Do you love tuna? I do. Not so much. Well I don't eat it so much now. We don't really have a, would I not say a culture, you know when we talk about canned fish in Nigeria, we talk about sardines, that's more readily accessible than tuna, but I mean the chicken of the sea right, it's delicious, it's healthy, it's chunky, well depending on how you bite it can be chunky, it can be flaky, but I mean it's just the fish that I've always known to be like canned fish and it's there, it's always on the cupboard. I'm also a fan of tuna like that, so the fish I like, I like my sardines, I like the titers, you know I like the sardines. I also like salmon, so those are the two real, so I mean sardines I can't eat it anywhere, if it's in the can I eat it, if it's fresh I eat it. So I think tuna fresh is a lot better than canned, but canned is what is more readily available. Available. But that combination for me of tuna with mayonnaise and sweet corn, like we grew up on it too. I mean it's still good. No, you care. But I'm on London here, but yeah I mean at one point it was really bad in terms of crisis, the way it was being fished and I think now, I can't remember if it's illegal to fish it and it's farmed, but yeah most of what we consume now is farmed, so it's more sustainable. Absolutely. Okay, so what do you find embarrassing in yours? Sadly, sadly, sadly, I wish this was not a story that we were taking today, but as we were celebrating workers day yesterday my headline reads death toll rises to eight in Lagos building collapse. So on Sunday in the epitometer area of Lagos State, Ibadon Street, a building collapsed sadly and as of this story is going out, eight bodies had been recovered. Thankfully about 23 more had been rescued and taken to the various hospitals for treatment in various states of health. Apparently the key thing for me was that the building was a three-story building that had actually been marked for demolition, so it was due for demolition but the residents were still in there just in the same way another three-story building on a different street also scheduled for demolition but still had the residents living in there so that building apparently has also now been evacuated but it's just sad to, I mean the Lagos State, Nema and Lesema have done what they're supposed to do in terms of being there quickly to manage the process, you know, evacuations and retrieve the bodies and all of that but I mean for me what is more sad like I said is the fact that one lives were lost and two that we see, you know, repeat occurrences of this happening all the time and it takes me back to the question that says look on an average what's the average lifespan of a building? 30 years, 50 years, 100 years, they're buildings that have been standing in other parts of the world for 200 years maybe, so the fact is, why do we have these buildings that seem not to be able to withstand the test of time, is it the building materials, is it the building process, is it that it's not taking into account the various factors we deal with like you know the wind, the weather, there's so many things but I can tell you for free in such areas, right, Uti, so I remember when we were building the bungalow, my dad the foundation when you know, someone saw the foundation and said this is too much, it's just a bungalow, why are you building a foundation that is this heavy that can actually take two floors, and my dad says you know how people get tired of property, yeah, people get tired on the street and say they want to upgrade their building and automatically just add floors without testing the foundation, so I can tell you for free that buildings like this were probably like a bungalow or something that just had a deck in, then over time they kept on raising the building to the floors, number of floors that it had, you know so for me it's just tired that we see this, and again so if an official comes to mark the building, are they marking the building to collect bribe, or they are actually marking buildings too for the safety of the occupants of those buildings, because what I see happen all the time is that I see all these people come with a big paint or whatever to mark the X, then you go behind, you paint them some bribe and they you know that's what happens, so you're not really you're not really marking that building, you say you know what, this is not safe for you, I need you to evacuate this place now, but if I mark the building for demolition there's responsibility, so clearly there's a flaw in the process because there is the fact that it's marked, is there a time frame within which a marked building should be demolished, is there, I mean we already know that we have corruption problems, so the whole bribing and going behind, but the fact is the people who have died in this, right, if you had the opportunity to save your life, because also they are ignorant, they don't believe that these things would fall. That's the thing, so the fact is there's a responsibility on every side, right, that even when the building, so it would have been worse if the building wasn't marked for demolition, so we've even identified that this building is a problem, now the minute a building is marked for demolition, would you be in the building, but there are various factors, right, that go into this conversation, exactly, that's what I'm saying, there are various factors, because if I have nowhere else to go and this is the only roof I have over my head then, perhaps that's what I'll say, look, I'll take my chances. I think there should be consequences, right, who are the legal state officials that mark that building, why did they not report it when they was looking for a solution. Well it depends on what the process is, so I'm just saying that it may not necessarily be consequences, in this case, right, it may be a review of the process, because if the building, for example, if your process says, look, once a building is marked, you have six months to demolish it, and it falls within six months, it means that nobody will work, right, but it's about, so it's about understanding what the process is, what actually happened in this situation, but more importantly for me, even if you're punishing somebody, it doesn't bring back the debt, what is more important is to find a process that works, that protects people and tells lies. Absolutely, and when they mark a building, please for goodness sake, just leave, I know people will say there's poverty, where would they go to on all of that, but now, you'd rather be alive than, you know, be dead, so talking about consequences, so fans that vandalize the stadium in Abuja, after the failure of the square, it goes to qualify the 2022, what's it called, World Cup, right, the World Football Buddy FIFA on Monday, fined Nigeria about 63.9 million following the violence that occurred at the Moschuda Biola National Stadium in Abuja, so I'm happy about this. Yes, to just teach us to have sense. Well, again, I don't know that this will teach us to have sense, because the football is a game of emotions, who legalize it, don't come for me, but I mean, that's what it is, but there was no rhyme or reason to this violence that occurred, for me, in fact, I thought the fine was low, I thought it would be a lot. Funny thing, they're even giving them room for an appeal. Yeah, exactly. So I thought that the fine was low, but of course it was a specific violation, so the fact that they couldn't provide security, they couldn't prevent the fans from getting onto the pitch. So I think that it highlights the things and the processes that they need to fix or the changes that they need to make. But what was key for me, and this is why I said football is a game of full organism. At the end of the story, it just says about 45 countries have been fined, it throughout this process of World Cup qualifiers. So no, it's not just us. It's not us. Of course, I mean, you know, just so you know that we just like to flog our own down. But it's not a Nigerian thing. Exactly, that's football. In Manchester, there was one time I was in London, e-commerce, e-fight at this place. So you look for your life. I'm just trying to give context. That is what Winigan is. But the reality of it is... Oh my God, I don't know what is with, what is the fever behind football down? Somebody will be running with ball and all your energy, your ginger, your adrenaline. The first part of it for me is very rich men. Running around chasing a ball, then four men, like, excuse me. I don't understand this. All right. Well, no, let's take a break. When we come back from the break, we want to be disgusted, looking beyond presidency for the 2023 elections. Stay with us. We'll be right back.