Fake, Borrowed, or Stolen: Chief Chris Anukam, the Pedigree of the Tattered Cloth

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The trouble that some people have is they are so ignorant that they jump into a game without understanding that every game has rules and you must understand the rules of the game even if you have lived life breaking rules in everything you have done.  Such people are usually inconsequential as evidenced by their litany of failures, which they strut around repackaging in various forms using different identities. 

Yet, they are too eager to sneer at their superiors.  According to him, he comes from a “perdegree [sic] with unassailable evidence of service to dea people.”  They use words and phrases they do not understand, including a word like “pedigree” because in their ignorant worldview anything goes and there is no accountability to be had.  They seek to hide that which should be open and open that which should be hidden. They end up trying to hide in the open. 

Irete, Umunwaoha, Owerri-West, and indeed, the world knows between us, as pedigree goes, who is made of genuine royal velvet silk and who is cut from the cheap tattered cloth that his proclivity for the ad hominem exposes.  It is perhaps his own elusive quest to upgrade his pedigree that has him obsessed with my family; it has turned his nose brown from kissing the derrière of some members of my family.  What is that thing that Nd’Igbo say about onye adụd?  Bro., don’t cry more than the bereaved.

It is laughable that the sickest addict of the pull-him-down syndrome is also the one now bitching and moaning about the subject matter of his addiction.  Yet, you cannot pull down that which has already buried itself several meters under your feet.  Why would you have bad belle for someone who just lost an election?  Besides, everything of which he is so proud is either fake, borrowed, or stolen.  A man who has failed every election he could not rig, including the last four that he participated in, now wants us to accept that he is popular in his constituency.  That is a man under a delusion. The troublemaker-in-chief of Irete, he has the nerve to sign off with a Monica that suggests he is a peacemaker.  Omeudo arụrụala!

I noticed the following line, “Some of these people will not win an election in dea family compound.” Most persons begin their political careers by running first for a small office, and then a bigger one.  Not this egomaniac.  He did it in reverse.  He began his failed political career by first running for the Senate, then the Local Government chairmanship.  His goal is to eventually orchestrate an election “in dea family compound,” which I’m sure he’ll have to rig to win.   Biko!!  I don’t know about others here, we don’t hold elections in my “family compound,” whatever that means.  Tufiakwa!!!

I understand that a man may be disgruntled, dejected, and bitter because he lost an election (I use “he” very advisedly).  I sympathize.  But, that is no reason for him to lash out and fart in public where people are merely holding a proper discussion about the aftermath of the election. 

A candidate who lost an election is free to challenge and appeal the outcome at any tribunal. But, it is asinine for a loser to suggest that people cannot comment about activities at the tribunal, or observe that the public appearances, interactions, and utterances of the winner and the challenger seem odd. It is a shame that one has to teach this to a man who claims to be educated.  Such are the rules of the game.

It is particularly odd when the challenger has publicly congratulated the winner and received praises, including from me, for sportsmanlike behavior.  Should we now withdraw our messages commending the APGA candidate for sportsmanlike behavior?

Did the candidate not know that Irete results were canceled before he congratulated the winner?  Did INEC not know that canceled results from Irete are not enough to change the outcome in favor of the APGA candidate? Considering his public appearance and congratulatory message to Egbe, is the APGA candidate now acting of his own free will at the tribunal or is he being pushed by puppeteers, an issue that dogged the APGA candidate’s entire campaign?  Most people from Owerri-West are still not able to distinguish uncle from nephew in the APGA candidate's participation in politics.  These are legitimate questions.  No amount of childish attacks against participants in this forum will stop the inquiry.

The APGA candidate is a friend of mine.  I believe he would have done better in the election if he did not have to carry the baggage that some of his relatives who are dangling under my nose represent in Owerri-West politics.

           ~~~ © Agbara1

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