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Adams Oshiomhole And The Politics Of Remembering
Adams Oshiomhole And The Politics Of Remembering....KINDLY READ THE FULL STORY HERE▶
In every political season, Nigeria returns to a familiar ritual: noise grows louder than substance, repetition competes with truth, and memory becomes negotiable. Conviction is recast as aggression, experience as baggage, and history as an inconvenience. Yet leadership, properly understood, is shaped by confrontation with reality, not comfort.
Adams Oshiomhole’s image doesn’t plead for relevance or seek rehabilitation. It insists on remembrance, asserting that leadership isn’t erased by controversy, and records don’t disappear simply because they unsettle convenient narratives.
”People-first leadership” is often spoken but rarely understood. Politics distinguishes between those who discover the people as a strategy and those whose identity is formed through genuine engagement, resistance, and consequence. That distinction matters.
Edo North represents responsibility, not a slogan or geographic ornament. Regional focus, when sincere, is accountability brought close – leadership willing to be measured where results are visible and excuses are harder to hide.
The image tells a disciplined story: a raised hand recalling moments of firm engagement, and a reflective posture acknowledging leadership’s cost – decisions weighed, conflicts endured, consequences owned. Together, they challenge the illusion that governance is gentle and effortless.
Nigeria has suffered from this illusion, rewarding performance over policy and calm language over outcomes. We’ve mistaken politeness for competence and volume for courage. Governance isn’t entertainment; it’s the difficult work of choosing, acting, and standing by those choices.
Oshiomhole’s journey is open to scrutiny – scrutiny isn’t persecution, it’s the price of relevance. What scrutiny doesn’t justify is selective memory, reducing a history of confrontation, reform, and consistency to caricature.
This image doesn’t ask for blind loyalty; it demands intellectual honesty. Judge leadership by its record, not repeated narratives. Politics without memory is spectacle, not governance. Noise is temporary; history isn’t.
When public excitement fades, what remains are those who understood power and placed it deliberately in service of people – and absorbed the cost. That’s why this image unsettles, provokes conversation, and refuses to disappear.
Osigwe Omo-Ikirodah is the Principal and CEO of Bush Radio Academy
