Don't JAPA Anyhow!!! Migrants Are Dying From Leaving On The Streets Of Canada - Kemi Amusan Advise

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  • čas přidán 25. 06. 2024
  • The rate of African running to other countries especially Nigerians is alarming and the scary part is that they don't full understand how things works in these countries they are running. Kemi Amusan is the founder of global women ambassador (GWA), an advocate for the migrate the right way, she is a tri-linguist, she is also an editor and crisis prevention/intervention trainer, a community leader of over thousands.
    #japa #japasyndrome #canada #toronto #torontocanada #migrate #canadianmigrant #migrants #naijaentertainmenttv
    #NigerianCelebs #NollywoodGist #AfrobeatMusic #AfricanEntertainment #NigerianMusicIndustry #NaijaMovieIndustry #NaijaCelebrities #NaijaEntertainmentTV
    #NigerianEntertainmentIndustry #NaijaShowbiz

Komentáře • 72

  • @Folakanbi
    @Folakanbi Před 6 dny +12

    PLEASE WHY NOT LET HER FINISH ONE POINT BEFORE ASKING ANOTHER!!!! YOU GUYS DO NOT LET HER FINISH CERTAIN KEY POINTS...

    • @adetayoonasanya1131
      @adetayoonasanya1131 Před 6 dny +2

      Too many presenters is their problem
      They are all interrupting the lady
      It’s too much
      That’s the way they do to their guests

    • @coderite_
      @coderite_ Před 2 dny

      It is common with these ladies.

    • @hopenember3097
      @hopenember3097 Před 9 hodinami

      Exactly

  • @stephenosiegbu1303
    @stephenosiegbu1303 Před 5 dny +15

    Why do you all only air negative stories of people who go abroad? To be very clear, out of 3 unsuccessful stories they are 8 very successful stories so you guy should always give balanced reporting

    • @damilolabashorun8890
      @damilolabashorun8890 Před 3 dny +4

      They told nothing but the truth about migration in recent times. Economies are currently doing badly. This period is not the time for migration at all. Except you're going to be getting a high paying job.

    • @samuelawokola9636
      @samuelawokola9636 Před 2 dny +1

      There's no balance reporting here anymore Nigeria is far better than all this abroad now.

    • @coderite_
      @coderite_ Před 2 dny

      Bro, abroad is not better anyway at all unless you get a job there before leaving.

    • @stephenosiegbu1303
      @stephenosiegbu1303 Před 2 dny +1

      You guys have to understand I Never stated anywhere was better than anywhere that will be a myopic way to look at the issues. It will always depend on what is your individual way of rating “better” are you aware that some people may have moved just for better health care?

    • @coderite_
      @coderite_ Před 2 dny

      @stephenosiegbu1303 Aside government corruption and all, do you understand that one of the many reasons our currency has lost valuation is this japa mentality. In 2021, 67k Nigerians moved to the UK alone. Imagine how much they pushed outside the country just for most of them to go there and be the worst of them.
      I doubt health care being the reason, if is just a wave now and that people want to live in white man's land.

  • @abayomiabi
    @abayomiabi Před 6 dny +12

    LIVING on the streets Not Leaving on the streets, English kee una for dere. 😜

  • @DrHugoMD
    @DrHugoMD Před 6 dny +14

    I think the focus should be Japa with good plans/sense.
    Aren't loads of people dying in Naija. 😅

  • @mscontinental3150
    @mscontinental3150 Před 6 dny +2

    Waoo. Sister Mi. Glad to see you on TVC. Thanks for representing

  • @adebanjoisreal3563
    @adebanjoisreal3563 Před dnem +3

    Pls I stay I Toronto, and I haven't seen any Nigerian that died on d street of of Canada. And the population on India and other Nations in canada is higher than people from Africa talk of Nigeria only.

    • @stephenosiegbu1303
      @stephenosiegbu1303 Před 9 hodinami

      Exactly my point too also in Toronto although moved before the whole Japa thing

  • @mercyosayi1328
    @mercyosayi1328 Před 5 dny +1

    Great job, Lady Kay. Our Canadian exposure as community builders makes most Nigerian Canadian organizations readily positive to impact our society. At Women of Dignity International (WODI) my organization, it's our mission to empower women globally: Women EMPOWERING WOMEN. New immigrant families get settlement supports to integrate in Canada easily.

  • @danielmedu8777
    @danielmedu8777 Před 23 hodinami

    She's the chairlady of baby mamas, I'm sending her my greetings

  • @worldcitizen2307
    @worldcitizen2307 Před 2 dny +1

    Fight for the future of your country and don't just Japa out of cowardice. Kenyans have shown you the way!

  • @vincentogboi6494
    @vincentogboi6494 Před 6 dny +1

    Exellent topic and I will like to contribute to such when I visit Nigeria next

  • @BabatundeOlarenwaju
    @BabatundeOlarenwaju Před 5 dny +1

    Well-done Aunty Kemi. Proud of U ma.

  • @pheshophesho9908
    @pheshophesho9908 Před 3 hodinami

    That’s why lots of Naija men are going for foreign women and/or living the women behind in Nigeria. At least with them there are no pre-existing grudges inside a woman who wants to show you “shege”. Only a fool will see fire and jump into it. Nigerian guys, over to you.

  • @maryagboola4752
    @maryagboola4752 Před 6 dny

    Great topic. May I know what is required to be a part of your organization?

  • @niolab7
    @niolab7 Před 6 dny +11

    Living * please change the title

  • @gzk3353
    @gzk3353 Před 23 hodinami

    To each his own! Migration has always been an alternative to people for thousands of years. People even migrate within Nigeria annually. She should stop painting a gloomy picture of Canadian migration just because it suits her commercially.

  • @otubanjo
    @otubanjo Před dnem +1

    Living not leaving

  • @demehinjyde.o725
    @demehinjyde.o725 Před 5 dny

    What she is saying is TRUE! THERE IS NO WORK ANYMORE IN CANADA. INDIANS ARE MORE HERE AND THEY ARE SUFFERING TO GET A JOB!!!

  • @olubunmiakingun7740
    @olubunmiakingun7740 Před 16 hodinami

    Don't JAPA Anyhow!!! Migrants Are Dying From *LIVING* On The Streets Of Canada - Kemi Amusan Advise

  • @olubunmiakingun7740
    @olubunmiakingun7740 Před 16 hodinami

    *LIVING* NOT LEAVING

  • @latonyaclemence3021
    @latonyaclemence3021 Před 17 hodinami

    You people should be professional with your guest, una just dey Bump her with questions without letting her finish her speech.

  • @Lowme1234
    @Lowme1234 Před dnem

    Obviously you don’t read the comments correcting LIVING not LEAVING. Please correct.

  • @oluwabankeoyesoko2395
    @oluwabankeoyesoko2395 Před 5 dny +1

    Dogs and cats 😂😂😂😂😂 Tope said eehhhhh😂😂😂😂

    • @demehinjyde.o725
      @demehinjyde.o725 Před 5 dny

      That's true even they don't marry women anymore you'll hear am with my boyfriend for 12yrs no kids.

    • @osasobaretin6267
      @osasobaretin6267 Před 3 dny

      That was a Globalists agenda to destroy marriage. Men are keepers not women. Check how many white men marries in a year

  • @adejoke4875
    @adejoke4875 Před 10 hodinami

    This post was made 6 days ago and your caption still reads "Leaving" instead of "Living". Why so mediocre?

  • @mikesenesie8430
    @mikesenesie8430 Před 2 dny

    wow, children, women, cat and dogs, then men....

  • @martinsejemiku9787
    @martinsejemiku9787 Před 6 dny +1

    Madam any how u won put the story we dey go there. T

  • @iku5243
    @iku5243 Před 5 dny +2

    Change your title to living.

  • @patrickoriaifo7464
    @patrickoriaifo7464 Před dnem +2

    She’s a liar. CANADA is good. CANADA is beautiful. 1:34

    • @dadakeshinro6749
      @dadakeshinro6749 Před dnem

      Thank you! 🎉Most of Blackwomen are totally dysfunctional. They turned marriage into ownership and possession 😳

    • @gzk3353
      @gzk3353 Před 23 hodinami

      Don't mind her, as if Nigeria is better than Canada

    • @dadakeshinro6749
      @dadakeshinro6749 Před 23 hodinami

      @gzk3353 That is the question?

  • @henry5118
    @henry5118 Před 5 dny

    Can’t even write the title correctly.

  • @HUMANITY_365
    @HUMANITY_365 Před 5 dny +3

    The woman is not 100 percent right. It depends on where you live in Canada. Those that want to live in the big cities in Canada without jobs are the ones suffering . A two bedroom apartment in different parts of Canada I know ( the so called interior even in British Columbia) is 1200 cad with less expensive life, good amenities, readily available jobs and ability to save plus serene environment for children. Her narrative is not accurate. She should have mentioned locations that all she highlighted occur often. Her not- substantiated submission on marriage breakups and women becoming something else is relatively right. However, it is also depends on the kind of woman you married. One should know from Nigeria. From my personal experience, if your wife is from good home in Nigeria and controversially, (but relatively true from my personal experiences and that of my married friends here - men), if her parents are still together as couples ( except death), one might be lucky to be immune from adultery and society-inclined divorces that often happen among blacks. A lot of white Canadians, Indians and Asians ( men and women) I know personally here in British Columbia are married and still married despite living here for over 11 years. It all depends on who we are getting married to these days especially Ghana and Nigeria women here in Canada and even worst in the United States. Ironically, these women divorce their black husbands to date married black men either from Africa or Jamaica. Men should marry right, we should not focus on physical appearances of women alone! ( this is why we have many paternity issues even in Nigeria). Men, please know your wives before you bring them over here. There are a whole lots of good women who stay in their marriages too here. Disagreements happen but our background, virtues before we japa, the kind of family we are from and our refusal to major in minor will see us through. Finally, education is a also a serious determining factor as well as the willingness of us here to integrate deliberately within the host and drop our autosuggestive Nigerian or African nuances. We should volunteer, domesticate our Nigerianess instead of importing every iota of our Nigerianess. I came here as a PhD holder and I did not spend a month at home before I got fixed. My wife came with Masters and a number of IT certifications, it is not all gloom and doom here! So we should stop skewing the narrative. Nigeria is worst- families live under the bridge for years- there is housing provision here for people who cannot afford so long you are not on hard drugs or you have people with the right information. My view!

    • @azeezajibola3115
      @azeezajibola3115 Před 4 dny +1

      She may not be 100 percent correct, but it would be wise to listen to her instructions than follow your advice.
      This is because she was only urging people to get prepared for obvious challenges that those that want to japa refuse to consider and also for immigrants to come in through the right channels.
      While on the other hand, your statement is more like a sales pitch and you are using your unique case as case study.
      The fact remains that the primary reason most Nigerians japa is to earn foreign currencies, every other reason is secondary.
      However, many educated ones end up working like crazy for peanuts abroad because they refused to focus on avenues that can earn them Dollars and other foreign currencies "legitimately" in plentiful supply while living in Nigeria.
      At least me and a few friends of mine didn't fall for the japa bandwagon after leaving school and we earn better than an average Canadian without paying taxes.

    • @HUMANITY_365
      @HUMANITY_365 Před 4 dny

      @@azeezajibola3115 It is imperative not to magnify a narrative that is not the story of every focused person abroad.
      There is no bandwagon effect here, but personal decisions triggered by many factors but not populist or myopic generalisation.
      Yours truly worked in a number of dollar paying schools in Nigeria for over 13 years before leaving Nigeria. Besides, my PhD thesis was on diasporic Nigerians in Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom. In the course of my 4-year field work in the countries using measurable ethnographic research methods,, I saw a lot of stuff based on the lived experiences of diasporic Nigerians.
      Hence, as an International Migration and a Social Historian expert with a couple of journals on this subject-matter, I reiterate that the woman engaged in the fallacy of generalisation.
      Please note that not all Nigerians "Japa" for the money solely. Enjoy your Naira and I will enjoy my dollars with a more Global mindset.
      My view.

    • @HUMANITY_365
      @HUMANITY_365 Před 4 dny +1

      Her advice does not apply to every diasporic Nigerian; hence, it is not sacrosanct.
      There are challenges everywhere and even worse in Nigeria so for commercial gains, she should stop creating one-sided immigration narrative. Who advises Nigerians how-to live-in Nigeria on TV or social media- these people say rubbish for commercial gains. Hence, I take her (people like her) “empty all- knowing- verbose” as commercial gimmicks.
      My unique case is the story of many Nigerians I know here! Even Nigerian politicians have their children here and have a palpable migration foot-print here- She should not advise adults like “iya alata" or one nonentity via that platform (who advises Americans or Canadians etc no to go to Asia for things other than foreign currencies?). My point is that she should stop her one- story syndrome. It is very dangerous- she painted almost a 100 percent negative narrative.
      There is a serious need not to write or speak in certainty when it comes to diasporic issues. Beyond the hysterical and the fallacy of generalisation, I reiterate that a number of what the woman said is not 100 percent correct. Again, you have fallen into the trap of unsubstantiated generalisation. So many Nigerians who “Japa '' (including the current Nigerian President and many other politicians, today’s captains of industries) in the 1970s, 1980s, etc did that solely for foreign currencies? Your “every other reason” is the problem and the crux of this response as well as the reason I repeat that the woman generalised.
      It is imperative for you to know that my PhD thesis (completed in one of the Nigerian top Federal Universities) was on Diasporic Nigerians in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. Through my measurable ethnographic research methods, I can empirically tell you that your conclusion is wrong. Live experiences differ and it is inaccurate to lump everything using a financial lens. As a scholar whose areas of expertise are Social History, International Migration, Social Integration to mention but a few and with a couple of written and published journals on this subject-matter, I disagree from a more knowledgeable angle. Hence, I reiterate that the woman’s general gloomy picture is wrong.
      There is no bandwagon effect here. Yours truly taught in a number of dollar-paying international schools in Nigeria for over 13 years and a couple of years in Malaysia and Singapore before choosing to relocate to Canada. People move or “Japa” for different reasons, not solely making dollars or foreign currencies. Change that screwed conclusion. Check Push and Pull factors on why people migrate.
      I am highly educated, and many Nigerians I know in the diaspora are but we are not working crazy and we see the gains of our tax paid with many amenities, infrastructures, social, economic and general benefits with ability to plan with certainty to a better day ahead. I earned more than your “average” while in Nigeria. Keep earning your average while some of us choose to live abroad with a more global mindset. So let us do it in peace without skewed narratives that are not 30 percent correct.
      My View!

    • @azeezajibola3115
      @azeezajibola3115 Před 2 dny

      @@HUMANITY_365 Well, it appears you are the one doing the generalisation here. I understand you are a scholar that is knowledgeable on this topic, but you should also understand that you are but just an academician regardless.
      I can't trust the professors of medicine that taught me in school as much as I would my practicing senior colleagues in the practical field of medicine. That's the reason I prefer to see this from a broader view rather than from your academic lens.
      Your argument is solid sir, but it lacks practicality. I know of a few Americans that were earning upwards of $130k a year that relocated to South East Asia where there are fewer opportunities to make such an amount of money.
      They all have similar reasons for their relocation and it's about the toxicity of the corporate world in their country, high cost of living, and the unsafe environment to raise their kids owing to high use of drugs and immense gun violence.
      It would be wrong for me to use them as case studies in the topic of relocation because "most" Americans won't leave the US regardless of the above reality. Those guys that left have online side hustles that pays them enough USD to live a quality life outside the states.
      You got the japa concept entirely wrong. In your case, you didn't japa to Canada, you relocated to Canada for personal or professional reasons.
      Japa is for those that are having challenges beyond what they can handle in Nigeria and risk it all to travel abroad with the belief that no matter how bad things could turn out over there, it can't be as bad as living in their country. It's also for those that are doing relatively well, but have the feeling they can do way better abroad.
      Politicians and affluent Nigerians do not send their children abroad for the same reasons the majority of Nigerians do. They don't send them there to be a clog in the wheel in the western corporate world. Many of their children go there just to come back with some so called international exposure and continue to rule and dominate in Nigeria just like their fathers.
      If you believe that "the major" motive behind japa from a third world country like Nigeria is not about money, please name 1 financially successful Nigerian that is living the dream here that has japa.
      I'm talking about someone that earn an excess of 30k USD a month or its Naira equivalent that shuts down his business, japa abroad and start over from scratch for reasons like "I want to have a global exposure" "I want to secure the future of my kids" and other weird but common justification struggling Nigerians make for japa.
      I can't shy away from the fact that Nigeria is a difficult place to live for most Nigerians, neither will I ever discourage japa. I have friends and professional colleagues that are living their dream lives abroad, while there are some that are still struggling after several years of living there. But the reality on ground is that many people japa with the wrong narratives and poor planning these days, that's why I'm in support of that lady.

    • @HUMANITY_365
      @HUMANITY_365 Před 2 dny

      @@azeezajibola3115 This is the last time I will respond to this matter. Go to the crux of the origin of these unnecessary back and forth, compare it to your submission and see the cracks in the woman's general assertions such as " No jobs in Canada "."Rent is expensive in Canada." "People live on the streets in Canada ". I can count a number of rich Nigerians including wealthy Pastors as well as rich Politicians who have left the country for good despite their affluence in Nigeria. But because this conversation is not in any way adding value to me nor paying me, I will leave you to wallow in your myopic thoughts. In case you didn't know, Morayo, the presenter of the program has made attempts at Japa but to no avail. My conclusion is that the woman and her likes, for God sake, should stop screwing up the japa narratives. Japa, migrate, emigrate, exodus and movement the people from one region to another for different reasons, is as long as humanity and no unenlightened narrative can change it. I rest my view on this for good. As a practising social Historian, migration expert and diasporic who have lived and worked in 4 continents of the world and ethnographically deal with sojourning citizens not for the media or financial gains, I should know better than armchair migration analysts.

  • @patrickoriaifo7464
    @patrickoriaifo7464 Před dnem

    TVC your proposal stop lying I am CANADA what do you people are saying is not true CANADA is good 2:21

    • @dadakeshinro6749
      @dadakeshinro6749 Před dnem

      Thank you! I think you're the second person to discredit her narratives about Canada 🇨🇦 😉, this is the downside of Nigerian women. Sad case scenario 😢

  • @meoerhum4579
    @meoerhum4579 Před 4 dny

    Nigerian women should be calling out all women to come out to protest for their rights.

  • @olubunmiakingun7740
    @olubunmiakingun7740 Před 16 hodinami

    *LIVING* NOT LEAVING