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Saturday, November 01, 2025

Petty Lies In Nicki's Feed!

More noise from Onika Petty (aka Ms. Barbz Nicki Minaj)

We are in a government shutdown. Americans who were let go from the federal government, public and private sector are desperately needing resources. The U.S. lawmakers and our president are stubborn as fuck. They are not willing to compromise or pass meaningful legislation.

It is status quo.

Also, the elitists. A prominent female rapper who has feuded with every rival ranging from Lil Kim to Cardi B once again posts something online to generate controversy.

Nicki Minaj is emerging as a prominent supporter of President Donald J. Trump.

Minaj (Onika Petty) is a rapper, producer, actress, model, media personality and business mogul.
Christianity is declining worldwide.

The 42 year old (43 in December) rapper screenshots a misleading post from the president. She posts it on her X account.

It claims that Christians in a African Union country are being targeted. That is patently false. Nigeria with a population of 245 million people has a large swath of religions.

Trump has labeled Nigeria a state of concern. 

The Nigerian government which is kicking out Western back corporations is under the far right's radar. It has a huge issue with Western-back capitalism. Nigeria is devoted to taking soverignty of its resources.

Nigeria has long rejected suggestions by some U.S. evangelical Christian groups and politicians that killings of Christians are a deliberate campaign of extermination rather than being part of ongoing violence by resistance fighters and bandits who also routinely kill Muslims in the West African nation.

A worsening relationship between the United States and Nigeria, which could now face potential sanctions, could have implications for the U.S. position more generally in Africa, where China’s diplomatic weight has been growing.

Nigeria, whose population is about evenly split between Christians and Muslims, has been beset by decades of violence whose roots lie not only in religion, but in ethnic division, criminality, local politics, poverty and battles over land between farmers and herders that have been exacerbated by shifts in the climate.

 Then president Muhammadu Buhari with Trump in 2018.

Trump has opened the door for sanctions to be imposed on Nigeria for allegedly failing to rein in the persecution of Christians in the West African country.

Trump announced Friday that he would designate Nigeria “a country of particular concern” as it relates to religious freedom, a move that had been pushed by some U.S. lawmakers.

The designation does not necessarily mean that sanctions, which could include a ban on all non-humanitarian aid, will be imposed, but it is one step ahead of that.

“Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria,” Trump said in a social media post. “Radical Islamists are responsible for this mass slaughter. I am hereby making Nigeria a ‘COUNTRY OF PARTICULAR CONCERN.’”

The Nigerian government vehemently rejects the claims, and analysts say that while Christians are among those targeted, the majority of victims of armed groups are Muslims in Nigeria’s Muslim-majority north, where most attacks occur.

Trump said he would be asking several U.S. lawmakers to look into the matter and report back on what the response to the designation should be.

“The United States cannot stand by while such atrocities are happening in Nigeria, and numerous other Countries. We stand ready, willing, and able to save our Great Christian population around the World!” Trump said.

Designating a “country of particular concern” under the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act is an executive prerogative that normally follows recommendations from both the congressionally mandated U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom and the State Department.

The State Department usually releases its annual Report on International Religious Freedom in the spring, but has not yet done so this year. The report may or may not include “particular concern” designations, which can be done at any time. And, such designations, which authorize U.S. penalties, do not necessarily impose sanctions.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu took over in August 2025 after Muhammadu Buhari passed away. 

The State Department’s most recent religious freedom reports cover 2023 and were released last year under the Biden administration. These reports, like others on broader human rights and human trafficking, cover the previous calendar year and are often late in being submitted.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) has been trying to rally fellow evangelical Christians to urge Congress to designate Nigeria as a violator of religious freedom with claims of “Christian mass murder.”

He called Trump’s action “a critical step in holding accountable and changing the behavior of Nigerian officials.” Cruz said his legislation would take it further, including targeting those who implement blasphemy and sharia laws in Nigeria.

“I am committed to working with the administration and my colleagues to advance my bill and implement these necessary measures,” Cruz said in his statement.

Nigeria was first placed on the “country of particular concern” list by the U.S. in 2020 in what the State Department called “systematic violations of religious freedom.” But, the designation did not single out attacks on Christians. The designation was lifted in 2023 in what many saw as a way to improve ties between the countries ahead of a visit by then-Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

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