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REBUTTAL TO SAM ONWUEMEODO: THE ERA OF LOCAL CHAMPIONS IS OVER

Emeka Ubani (PhD, Columbia University)

It is laughable—if not entirely pitiful—that Sam Onwuemeodo, a man perpetually caught in the hangover of his outdated political grammar, would presume to lecture Bring Back Ohakim (BBO) 2027 on how to run a 21st-century political campaign. We will not indulge his self-righteous detour into false piety or his attempt to masquerade spiritual gratitude as a political strategy. The political ecosystem of today is not the same terrain where “hand of God” rhetoric wins elections. This is 2027. And only those who have evolved have the right to speak.

Sam lacks the tactical, intellectual, digital, and strategic bandwidth to offer relevant advice to BBO 2027. If he’s jealous or wishes he were the one steering this vehicle of destiny, he is welcome to respectfully apply to join our movement. But to think he can patronize our platform from the sidelines without a fight is delusional.

Our team is not made up of newspaper columnists with tired metaphors and recycled analogies. The BBO 2027 is a fortified political machinery powered by a multi-disciplinary workforce: researchers, data scientists, behavioral psychologists, constitutional lawyers, military intelligence officers, creative tacticians, and market analysts. These are men and women from the world’s best universities—Harvard, LSE, Oxford, UI, ABU—and the rugged trenches of grassroots Nigerian politics. This is not a marketplace for philosophical lamentations. This is a political battlefield.

Let it be known that we do not throw stones to beg for sympathy. We hurl tactical bombs of truth when falsehood tries to rear its ugly head. Our political war room operates on data, not delusions. We do not seek applause from the gallery of yesterday’s men. We aim for electoral victory—and we are not afraid to expose the underbellies of any opposition that threatens our agenda.

Sam says we must not “beat the war drums.” Well, tell him to cover his ears. The drums of truth, strategy, and electoral dominance are already echoing from every polling unit to every LGA in Imo State. This is not warrior Obinna dancing to Voice of the Cross. This is the generation of strategic disruptors—and we have arrived.

Onwuemeodo’s sermon about gratitude to God is rich, coming from someone who has benefited from the same system he now pretends to be above. Dr. Ikedi Ohakim does not owe him an apology for 2011. If anything, Sam and his likes owe him a sober, strategic restoration for a stolen mandate. His record is uncontested. His vision remains unbroken. And his resolve—unshaken. The mission is redemption, not lamentation from those intent on distorting his records.

We will not be bullied by vague lectures soaked in sentimental nostalgia. Our technical team, with global partnerships and cutting-edge tools, conducts forensic opposition research to construct psychological voter profiles and apply persuasive messaging in micro-targeted ways. Our strategy goes beyond typical campaigns. We engineer electoral perception, mobilize data-driven narratives, and weaponize truth with surgical precision.

Let Sam Onwuemeodo understand this once and for all: we are not local champions, so we do not take instructions from one. Our battlefield is digital, demographic, and deeply strategic. We are not begging for sympathy, instead we are asking fair assessment of our records exaplified in Ikedi Ohakim—we are awakening Imo people to do just that.

If Sam or anyone like him feels threatened, it is because we are doing something right. And that’s not going to stop anytime soon.

We are BBO 2027. We do not retreat. We do not beg. We dominate.

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