Well, ACOP will cause a mighty "hiccup" in Nigeria's politics if only the
actors therein can get their acts together.
Moving on...
I enjoyed your contribution immensely, despite its being orthogonal to mine
in some respects - but there is nothing more difficult to predict than the
future. For example, there is still a distinct possibility that before the
primaries, GEJ will just say "No Maas" - and walk away.
No?
Oh, well there you have it.
Bolaji Aluko
On Wed, Nov 24, 2010 at 4:01 PM, Adebayo Adejuwon <adeadejuwon@yahoo.com>wrote:
>
>
> Prof:
>
> Yours below is politico-arithmetic at best. Truly these are interesting
> times indeed.
>
> Maybe I need to quickly caution here that I do not subscribe to the
> fallacies of the lineal Northern-Southern divide in a straight jacketed
> manner. I am not too sure we have such thing again. What I can see,
> especially with the success of the Ciroma-led consesus committee is that one
> can still assume that there is a semblance of a monolithic North. Nothing of
> such exist in the geographical south.I will recommend all to read through
> the recently posted piece by Prince Asagwara which, with respect to our dear
> prince, I will call "Igbo Ronu"
>
> All the permutations and combinations listed below are far fetched
> probabilities. What is certain is that GEJ is right there in the open and an
> average person can postulate on what GEJ had based on his strategies onin
> the anticipation of the outcome of the Ciroma group :the emergence of IBB
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