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Arrogance of ignorance masquerading as intellectual discourse

By Abdullahi Manu

Silence, they say, is golden, but not when falsehood is flung about like confetti at a village carnival. In a recent social media post, an individual seeking relevance decided to launch an ill-conceived attack poorly disguised as intellectual commentary. What he succeeded in doing, however, was not a triumph of logic but a parade of ignorance clothed in arrogance. And when someone tries to sound intelligent while spewing misinformation, it is not wisdom that speaks; it is recklessness that must be corrected. This article serves exactly that purpose.

The post, filled with shallow reasoning and embarrassing innuendos, dragged Shamsudeen Bala Muhammad into a conversation born out of personal frustration and desperate clout-chasing. But here is the reality: Shamsu’s identity as the son of a political icon was not a choice; it was destiny. What he did choose, however, was to forge his own path, serve with integrity, and build a reputation devoid of scandal or controversy. This, by all measures, is commendable and speaks volumes more than social media theatrics ever could.

As for his father—Senator Bala Abdulkadir Muhammad—attacking his legacy reflects not just a disdain for excellence but an intentional distortion of truth. His record speaks for itself: a distinguished tenure in the Senate, a groundbreaking six-year period as Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), and now serving a second term as Governor of Bauchi State. These are feats backed not by slogans but by impactful facts that keyboard warriors cannot simply erase with bitterness and a smartphone.

One of the most outrageous elements of the attack was the baseless claim regarding a fictitious N70 billion scandal. Here, misinformation descended into outright fabrication. The EFCC and a competent court of law clearly established that the actual figure in contention was N8 billion—not N70 billion. Deliberately inflating figures to mislead the public is not only irresponsible; it reveals intellectual laziness and an agenda steeped in mischief. When you peddle falsehoods knowingly, you become a danger to discourse, not a contributor to it.

Let’s turn to governance, a subject clearly lost on the writer. Kaura’s tenure as Minister of the FCT brought about infrastructural transformation and innovative housing policies. His time as Governor has ushered in monumental road construction, revitalization of the education sector, healthcare development, and civil service reforms. For those who equate governance with social media optics and empty noise, Bauchi’s progress may be incomprehensible—but for the people, the change is tangible and real.

Ambassador Tuggar, on the other hand, is still within his first four years as Minister. Expectations are high not for social media applause but for measurable results. Young individuals like Shamsu should not be the targets of unwarranted attacks by overzealous supporters looking to cover for silence with online noise. If Tuggar’s record is impactful, it will speak for itself; so far, it has barely whispered.

To cap it all, the most juvenile part of the original post was the detour into grammar critique—a poor attempt at deflection. When one fails to string coherent arguments and yet presumes to teach others language, it is no longer irony; it is tragedy. Debates of intellect are not won through noise; they are claimed through clarity, facts, and reason—all of which the original piece glaringly lacked.

If your only weapon in a debate is misinformation, then perhaps silence would have indeed served you better. For those seeking to challenge Kaura’s record or Shamsu’s integrity, come with substance, not recycled slander. Until then, we remind you: when a man remains standing after being stripped of lies, it is not him who is naked; rather, it is you.

Manu writes from Bauchi

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