Friday, September 16, 2016

MUST READ: Stop Bathing! Medical Science



It is common believe that the more we shower, the cleaner 
we get. That may be the case, but little did we know that frequent bathing, does way beyond “just cleaning”, but it strips the body of natural oils, and weakens the immune system. We vigorously lather up our bodies with soap, to kill any germs lingering on our skin, but rinsing off everyday, could lead to more bacteria than we started with.

Did Nigeria's Pesident Say His Minister Are ‘Incompetent’?


President Muhammadu Buhari, ‎has on Thursday, September 15, maintained that his Ministers are not doing enough to manage Nigeria’s economy, advising all Ministries, Departments and Agencies, MDAs, to sit up and think outside the box in fixing the current economic challenges.
The President made this known, ‎while speaking at a Ministerial Retreat on the Economy and the Budget, at the State House Banquet Hall in Abuja.

Looking For A Job? Checkout This Small Town.



Cape Breton is a small island at the eastern end of Nova Scotia. It features all four seasons, the population (as at 2001) is just under 150,000 and the community is true to its small town roots.
The Farmer's Daughter Country Market, a bakery and general store, is a staple of this hidden paradise and it is looking to expand. They have everything they need, except people.
After hiring all the qualified locals in need of a job, the business put out a nearly too-good-to-be-true call for help on Facebook.

North Carolina Couple of 59 Years Die Holding Hands:




After 59 years of marriage, family and friends weren't surprised things ended the bittersweet way they did for Margaret and Don Livengood
The couple – inseparable since the day they met – spent their last few days holding hands, side by side in a single hospital room, and died within hours of each other.

"It was normal for them to be holding hands, their love was so precious," the couple's daughter, Pattie Beaver, tells PEOPLE. "But it was the sweetest, most precious thing you can imagine to see them holding hands in the hospital."

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Nollywood And The Nigeria's Ebola Story

Two years after Nigeria fended off what could have been a devastating Ebola epidemic, the 12-week ordeal is playing out again — only this time, on a movie screen.
The Nigerian docudrama "93 Days," which premiered in Lagos on Tuesday, chronicles the harrowing weeks in the summer of 2014 when a man ill with the Ebola virus arrived in the city from Liberia.
Ebola is transmitted by contact with infected bodily fluids, and Lagos, a densely-populated city of 20 million where people shop in packed markets and ride on overcrowded buses, presented an ideal environment for the virus to spread.

Former First-Lady, Patience Jonathan In Court With EFCC Nigeria’s Anti-Corruption Agency to Court


Nigeria’s former First-Lady has run out of patience with the country’s anti-corruption agency.

The wife of former Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan is taking the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to court after the agency froze four bank accounts allegedly containing $31.5 million, which the ex-first lady says belongs to her, AP reported on Wednesday.
Lawyers for Patience Jonathan, who has also previously served as a permanent secretary in Nigeria’s southern Bayelsa State, claimed in a letter to the EFCC that $15 million of the money that was blocked in her accounts was required to settle medical bills abroad.

#STOPBULLINGNOW- Bullying Ended Boy's Life


A 9-year-old boy was found dead in his West Virginia home after he apparently took his own life after months of torment by schoolmates, his devastated family said.
Jackson Grubb’s body was discovered in his bedroom Saturday by his sister at their Soak Creek home. She had entered the room in an attempt to cheer him up with a frog she found outside, relatives told WVVA.
His injuries appeared to be self-inflicted, police said, and an autopsy will determine the exact cause of death.

Defending The Theory Of Evolution Getting Tougher

Stromatolites in Shark Bay. (AP Photo/Hinrich BSsemann/Picture Alliance)
A new fossil discovery makes it even tougher for Darwinists to explain the origin of life.
There’s an old story about a chemist, a physicist, and an economist stranded on a desert island with nothing to eat but a can of soup. Puzzling over how to open the can, the chemist says, “Let’s heat the can until it swells and bursts from the buildup of gases.” “No, no,” says the physicist, “let’s throw it off that cliff with just enough kinetic energy to split it open on the rocks below.” The economist, after thinking a moment says, “Assume a can opener.”