Progressive Youth Ambassadors -PYA-

Progressive Youth Ambassadors -PYA-

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We are using this medium to get as many Youth as possible that are ready to contribute to the growth of our Country Nigeria.

31/12/2025

Fellow Nigerians,

As the dawn of 2026 breaks over our beloved nation, we stand at a crossroads—tired from the weight of 2025’s trials, yet undiminished in our spirit and resolve. This past year tested us like few before: inflation eroded our earnings, insecurity shadowed our communities, and corruption continued to drain the lifeblood of our collective future. We have mourned, struggled, and persevered—but we have not surrendered.

Today, as we welcome a new year, let us resolve to channel our righteous frustration not into despair or violence, but into disciplined, focused, and unwavering civic energy. Nigeria’s greatest resource has never been oil—it has always been *us*: our voices, our votes, our vigilance, and our unity.

**This year, let us govern Nigeria—every single one of us.**

Not through anger in the streets, but through accountability at the ballot box.
Not through silence in the face of theft, but through organized, peaceful demand for transparency.
Not through indifference to our neighbours’ suffering, but through community action that builds safety from the ground up.

Let 2026 be the year we:
- **Demand better leadership**—not just by complaining, but by holding officials accountable through lawful, democratic means.
- **Support honest voices**—in media, civil society, and public office—who speak truth to power without fear.
- **Reject corruption in all its forms**—from the marketplace to the ministry—and celebrate integrity wherever it appears.
- **Invest in solutions**—by mentoring youth, supporting local enterprise, and refusing to normalize decay.

We owe it to the farmer in Benue, the trader in Aba, the student in Sokoto, the nurse in Port Harcourt, and the artisan in Lagos—to build a Nigeria where dignity isn’t a privilege, but a promise kept.

The road ahead is steep, but Nigerians have never feared hard ground. Our strength has always been in our resilience, our creativity, and our unwavering belief that a better Nigeria is not only possible—it is inevitable, if we choose to build it *together*.

Let this New Year be our turning point. Not with fire and fury, but with focus, faith, and firm resolve.

**Happy New Year, Nigeria!**
May 2026 be the year we reclaim our future—peacefully, proudly, and powerfully.


*In unity and hope*

Photos from Amarachi Attamah page's post 22/12/2025
22/12/2025

Jelani grounds eagle precision — bamboo talons dig and lift with control.

22/12/2025

“Truth does not perish, though men may burn its books and silence its prophets; it does not fade, though time may obscure its face; it does not yield, though error may assail it. Truth is the daughter of the infinite, the sister of the eternal, the mother of all that is just and good. It lives in the stars, it breathes in the winds, it shines in the light of reason, and no force can prevail against it.”

22/12/2025

While the government presents the new tax laws as a "relief package," many economists and ordinary Nigerians argue that the laws are being introduced at the worst possible time.
Here is the counter-argument: why these laws may feel like an additional burden rather than a helping hand.
1. The "Inflation Trap" (Hidden Taxation)
The law exempts anyone earning below ₦800,000 a year from income tax. While that sounds good, record-high inflation in Nigeria means that ₦800,000 today buys much less than it did a year ago. * The Reality: As prices for food and fuel soar, people need higher salaries just to survive. If your boss gives you a small raise to help you cope with inflation, it could push you above the tax-free limit. You end up paying "new" taxes on money that is already losing its value.
2. VAT: The Silent Price Driver
The government has kept the VAT rate at 7.5% for now, but the new laws create a roadmap to increase it to 10% and eventually 15% by 2030.
* The Impact: VAT is a consumption tax. Even if you don't pay "Income Tax," you pay VAT every time you buy a phone, pay a bill, or use a service. In a country where the cost of living is already unbearable due to the removal of the petrol subsidy, any future VAT increase will directly hike the price of almost everything, hitting the poorest the hardest.
3. The "Trust Deficit" and Corruption
A major argument against the new law is the lack of accountability.
* Wasteful Spending: Many Nigerians ask, "Why should I pay more when I don't see what the old taxes were used for?" News of government officials spending billions on luxury SUVs, renovations, and foreign trips while citizens are told to "endure" makes new tax enforcement feel like a targeted attack on the masses.
* Leakages: There is a fear that the increased revenue won't reach the schools or hospitals it's promised for, but will instead be lost to the "gross corruption" you mentioned at various levels of government.
4. Burdens on Small Businesses (SMEs)
Small businesses are the backbone of Nigeria, and they are currently struggling with high electricity costs and expensive fuel.
* New Compliance Costs: Even if a small business pays 0% tax, the new law requires stricter record-keeping and "Tax IDs" for almost everything.
* Complexity: For an informal trader or a small shop owner, the cost of hiring an accountant or navigating the new digital tax portals can be more expensive than the tax itself.
5. Aggressive Enforcement in a Fragile Economy
The new law gives the tax authorities (now the Nigeria Revenue Service) more "teeth" to go after people.
* Harassment: There is a fear that tax officials, under pressure to meet higher revenue targets, may resort to aggressive tactics, freezing bank accounts or shutting down small businesses over technicalities, further damaging the fragile economy.
Summary Table: The Dark Side of the Reform
| The "Promise" | The "Problem" |
|---|---|
| Exempting Low Earners | Inflation makes the "tax-free" salary insufficient for basic survival. |
| Simplifying the System | Higher penalties and stricter digital rules may frustrate less-educated business owners. |
| Increased Revenue | Without solving corruption, more revenue just means more money to be mismanaged. |
| Modernizing VAT | Future increases to 10-15% will make basic life even more expensive. |
> Bottom Line: Critics argue that before asking Nigerians to pay more or follow stricter rules, the government should first demonstrate "fiscal discipline" by cutting its own wasteful spending and proving that tax money actually improves the life of the average person on the street.

22/12/2025

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