Africa
Intelligence Na Water: Countering Toxic Narratives in Nigeria -By Patrick Iwelunmor
Nigeria grapples with a cultural dilemma: spectacle competes with substance and immediacy challenges endurance. One path glorifies speed without structure and wealth without wisdom. The other path requires discipline, learning, institutional reform, and strategic patience. It may not trend as quickly, but it endures. Intelligence is abundant in Nigeria but its application is the biggest problem. Without it, ambition dries into desperation; with it, even modest beginnings can grow into rivers of sustainable opportunity.
There is a dangerous lie circulating in Nigeria today, subtle yet persistent, whispered in music lyrics, amplified on social media, and normalised in everyday conversations. It is the idea that money is everything. It suggests that the speed at which wealth is acquired matters more than the method, that visibility is more important than value, and that if one can display luxury convincingly enough, questions about legitimacy become irrelevant. This lie has gradually shaped the aspirations of many young Nigerians, creating a culture in which the pursuit of quick cash overshadows the slower, more demanding work of building competence, credibility, and character. Yet history, economics, and even common sense teach a different lesson: money without intelligence is fragile, influence without integrity is hollow, and success without structure rarely survives scrutiny or time.
It would be simplistic, however, to pretend that this distortion emerged in a vacuum. Nigeria’s economic realities are harsh. Youth unemployment and underemployment remain high. Inflation has eroded purchasing power. For many graduates, years of education have not translated into dignified work. In such an environment, the temptation of fast money is not merely greed; it is often anxiety wearing the mask of ambition. When legitimate pathways appear blocked or painfully slow, illegitimate shortcuts begin to look like innovation. Any honest analysis must acknowledge this structural pressure even as it critiques the choices it produces.
The rise of the Yahoo-Yahoo mindset among segments of the youth population illustrates this tension vividly. Instead of seeing internet fraud as criminal and self-limiting, some now treat it as entrepreneurial improvisation in a hostile economy. The goal is no longer to create value in the marketplace but to extract it from unsuspecting victims. Reports and prosecutions by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission repeatedly highlight the scale and sophistication of cybercrime networks involving young Nigerians. These are not isolated incidents but symptoms of a deeper moral and economic dislocation. Social media amplifies the confusion. Certain influential celebrities, some with questionable sources of income, project images of extravagant lifestyles without transparent narratives of process, discipline, or enterprise. Young people scrolling through curated timelines absorb a powerful, if unspoken, message: if you look wealthy, you are successful; if you trend, you matter; if you acquire money quickly, you have won. The mechanics of value creation are erased, replaced by spectacle.
In parts of the South East and beyond, the emergence of celebrity ritualists further complicates the moral landscape. Figures such as Akwa Ukukor Tiwara Aki have gained notoriety not for measurable contributions to productive sectors of the economy but for flamboyant displays of wealth and claims of extraordinary spiritual influence. Whether exaggerated by followers or strategically cultivated for attention, such personas reinforce a troubling narrative that shortcuts, manipulation, or mystical access can substitute for disciplined effort and strategic thinking. To impressionable minds navigating economic hardship and limited opportunities, these displays can appear as proof that conventional pathways are unnecessary. The deeper cost, however, is intellectual erosion. When spectacle becomes the benchmark of success, intelligence is sidelined, and the patient cultivation of skills is dismissed as naïve.
Yet intelligence is an asset of inestimable value. It nourishes ambition rather than inflaming greed. It adapts to changing environments, flows around obstacles, and sustains growth over time. Sustainable wealth, whether in manufacturing, technology, agriculture, or finance, is built on the invisible architecture of research, planning, mentorship, institutional support, and disciplined execution. Consider the trajectory of Aliko Dangote. Whatever debates may surround aspects of his business empire, his rise was not built on flamboyant theatrics or social media spectacle. It was constructed through strategic positioning, reinvestment, large-scale risk-taking, and long-term industrial vision within a complex policy environment. His story illustrates not merely personal intelligence but the power of systems thinking and institutional alignment.
An intelligence infrastructure, therefore, extends beyond individual brilliance or academic certificates. It involves financial literacy, technological competence, market analysis, civic awareness, and emotional discipline. It requires young people to ask not merely, “How can I make money quickly?” but rather, “What problem can I solve consistently in this economy?” It demands exposure to mentors, apprenticeship in real industries, and a willingness to endure delayed gratification in a culture obsessed with instant validation. It also requires understanding how political systems function. With the proper application of intelligence, young people would refuse to make themselves available to politicians for dirty jobs such as snatching ballot boxes or using violence to intimidate political opponents. They would recognise that temporary political patronage cannot substitute for long-term economic stability. They would understand that the same system they help to corrupt today may deny them justice, opportunity, and protection tomorrow. Electoral violence is not merely a political problem; it is also a failure of civic education and economic inclusion.
The toxic narratives dominating popular culture undermine this process. Drug use is sometimes glamorised in entertainment spaces, subtly framing self-destruction as rebellion or authenticity. Recklessness is marketed as boldness. In some religious spaces, magical thinking is elevated above rational planning, diminishing the value of disciplined effort and evidence-based reasoning. At the same time, shifting social pressures, economic strain, and changing gender expectations have contributed to fragile relationships and rising single parenthood in many communities. These are complex social developments with multiple causes, including economic hardship and migration patterns. Yet when intelligence, responsibility, and long-term planning are de-emphasised in public discourse, the social fabric inevitably weakens.
Countering these narratives requires more than moral condemnation. Government must create credible pathways for enterprise through transparent access to capital, regulatory reform, and genuine support for small and medium scale industries. Educational institutions must prioritise critical thinking, digital skills, and entrepreneurship training that reflects real market demands. Families must recalibrate conversations with their children, affirming dignity in process rather than only celebrating outcomes. Religious and community leaders must reinforce teachings that honour reason, effort, and accountability. Celebrities must understand that influence carries ethical weight; the lifestyles they glamorise shape the aspirations of millions.
Ultimately, the most powerful shift must come from the youths themselves, but it must be a shift informed by empathy for their own circumstances. Many are not immoral; they are frustrated. Many are not lazy; they are navigating systems that feel stacked against them. Recognising this does not excuse destructive choices, but it contextualises them. Intelligence, properly cultivated, allows one to critique systems without self-destructing within them. It teaches strategic patience rather than impulsive rebellion. It transforms anger into innovation and exclusion into enterprise.
Nigeria grapples with a cultural dilemma: spectacle competes with substance and immediacy challenges endurance. One path glorifies speed without structure and wealth without wisdom. The other path requires discipline, learning, institutional reform, and strategic patience. It may not trend as quickly, but it endures. Intelligence is abundant in Nigeria but its application is the biggest problem. Without it, ambition dries into desperation; with it, even modest beginnings can grow into rivers of sustainable opportunity. If Nigeria’s youth invest in building their intelligence infrastructure while demanding better institutions and fairer systems, they will not only transform their personal trajectories but also reshape the nation’s economic and democratic landscape. And in a country hungry for genuine progress, that transformation is not merely desirable; it is essential.