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oluoye majek
181 followers -
Chevening Scholar 2016/17
Chevening Scholar 2016/17

181 followers
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Olorun t’o da awon Oke Igbani
Eyin ni mo fo Ope me fun
Olorun t’o da awon Oke Igbani
Eyin ni mo fo Ope me fun
T’ani N’wo tun gbe ga 0
Bi Ko se Baba l’oke
Tani N’wo tun fi gbogbo Ope mi fun
Olorun t’o da awon Oke Igbani
Eyin ni mo fo Ope me fun
My God who created the ancient Hills
I give all my praises to you
My God who created the ancient Hills
I give all my praises to you
Who else will i exalt if not you O God
Who else will i give my praises to…
My God who created the ancient Hills
I give all my praises to you..

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heaven!!!!! beautiful song

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I made you chocolate...

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In the process of development, cities, states, and countries do not specialize; they diversify. They evolve from supporting a few simple industries to sustaining an increasingly diverse set of more complex industries. Achieving this implies solving important coordination problems, because an industry that is new to a city will not find workers with industry experience or specialized suppliers. But policymakers can do a lot to solve these coordination problems.

This is why the idea that cities, states, or countries should specialize in their current areas of comparative advantage is so dangerous. Focusing on the limited activities at which they currently excel would merely reduce the variety of capabilities – or “letters” – that they have. The challenge is not to pick a few winners among the existing industries, but rather to facilitate the emergence of more winners by broadening the business ecosystem and enabling it to nurture new activities.

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Ronald Reagan famously insisted that, “government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” Today we know better: If government is not part of the solution, our problems will only get bigger.

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For you he's the best he can be
For you child
For you he's the best he can be
Oh child don't you know
Your daddy love come with a lifetime guarantee

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hmmmmmmmmmmm

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When the woman, 37, arrived at Cabo Frio's Woman's Hospital saying she was 41 weeks pregnant and in pain-with a protruding belly and some kind of proof of prenatal care-doctors assumed she was in labor, officials revealed this week.

"Because the doctors couldn't pick up the [baby's] heartbeat, they decided there wasn't time to request an ultrasound," the site's director told the Daily Mail. "They did the surgery then had the great shock of not finding any baby at all."

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