
Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun
Bio
I'm a passionate writer & blogger crafting inspiring stories from everyday life. Through vivid words and thoughtful insights, I spark conversations and ignite change—one post at a time.
Stories (394)
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How MAGA Rhetoric Went Viral in Europe
Imagine scrolling your social feed and seeing political debates about France’s elections, Germany’s nationalist rise, or far-right gains in Italy and Poland — all tied, at least in part, to the influence of America’s Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement. What started as an American slogan transformed into a global conversation about nationalism, identity, and political strategy, generating massive public interest, academic analysis, and viral news cycles across the United States and Europe.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun17 days ago in Journal
Why the Greenland Crisis Became the Most Viral Geopolitical Story of the Year
Picture this in your feed: The President of the United States publicly threatens to take control of a NATO ally’s territory — and Europe doesn’t just push back… it mobilizes troops, intensifies diplomacy, and ignites fierce debate worldwide. That’s exactly the story gripping global headlines in early 2026 — the Greenland crisis — and it’s gone wildly viral.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun17 days ago in Journal
Machado Presented Her Nobel Peace Prize to Trump — But He Didn’t Actually Win It
In a stunning and symbolic moment at the White House, Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado handed President Donald Trump her Nobel Peace Prize medal — a gesture that is now rocking world headlines and social media feeds.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun18 days ago in Journal
The Timeless Title: “Olu of Warri” – A Pre-Colonial Legacy Rooted in History, Affirmed by Colonial Recognition Before 1952
The title “Olu of Warri” stands as an enduring symbol of sovereignty, predating colonial rule by centuries and embodying the unbroken monarchy of the Warri Kingdom. Far from being a modern invention, this title traces its origins to the late 15th century, when Prince Ginuwa, son of the Oba of Benin, founded the kingdom in 1480 as “Iwere” – the ancestral homeland of the Itsekiri people. Historical records, maps, and accounts from European explorers unequivocally demonstrate that the monarch was consistently referred to as the Olu or King of Warri long before British colonial interference. The temporary shift to “Olu of Itsekiri” in the 1930s was a colonial administrative concession tied to the creation of Warri Province, but compelling evidence from colonial documents reveals that the British authorities had already recognized and supported the historical validity of “Olu of Warri” as early as 1936 – well before the formal restoration in 1952. Through persuasive evidence from Portuguese decrees, ancient maps, literary accounts, royal narratives, and declassified colonial dispatches, this article affirms that the “Olu of Warri” has always been the rightful designation, reflecting a kingdom’s sovereignty and its king’s dominion, with pre-1952 colonial endorsements underscoring its legitimacy.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun22 days ago in FYI
How The Destiny Swapper Was Dupped
What if your death had a due date? What if it were written not on paper, not in a hospital file, but carved into the bone-memory of your bloodline—an ancient marker ticking quietly beneath your skin like a clock no one else could hear?
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun25 days ago in Journal
How I.C.E. Shoots Renee Good and the Moment Minneapolis Broke
Sometimes a single bullet does more than tear through glass. Sometimes it shatters trust. On a cold Wednesday morning in south Minneapolis, a maroon SUV sat awkwardly on Portland Avenue. Horns echoed. Whistles pierced the air. Federal vehicles clogged the street like stones dropped into a river. Then came the gunshots — sharp, final, irreversible.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun26 days ago in Journal
Charlotte Rose Harper Autobiography
My name is Charlotte Rose Harper, and every life has a beginning—but not every beginning is loud. Mine unfolded like a slow sunrise over brick buildings and narrow sidewalks, shaped by patience, observation, and the quiet insistence of becoming. If you are reading this, then you are stepping into the story of Charlotte Rose Harper, a woman whose life has been defined not by spectacle, but by substance.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Journal
Victoria Jones, Daughter of Tommy Lee Jones, Found Dead in San Francisco
The new year is often imagined as a blank page — clean, hopeful, and full of promise. But for one Hollywood family, January 1 arrived not with celebration, but with devastating silence.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Journal
Naked Burglar Busted After Boisterous Booze-Fueled Break-Ins at Miami Mansions
Christmas night is usually wrapped in lights, laughter, and late dinners. But in one exclusive oceanfront community near Miami, the holiday took a surreal turn—one that felt less like a festive movie and more like a crime drama written by chaos itself.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Journal
Tinubu Announces Arrival of 4 US Attack Helicopters as Nigeria Tightens the Screws on Insecurity
In the war against insecurity, perception matters almost as much as firepower. On Friday, December 26, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu pulled back the curtain on a key development in Nigeria’s security strategy: four attack helicopters ordered from the United States will soon arrive in the country. The announcement, made during a meeting with leaders of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) at his Lagos residence, comes at a time when Nigerians are desperate for visible action against banditry, terrorism, and insurgency.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Journal











