“Nigerians Are Hypocrites” — Tacha doubles down, slams selective outrage over cyberbullying and arrests following content creator Lawrence Alabi'
Reality TV star and media personality Tacha has reacted again following the online drama surrounding cyberbullying, arrests, and public humiliation, and she is not holding back.
In a lengthy post on X, Tacha made it clear that she does not support bullying, cyberbullying, cyberstalking, or defamation in any form. She stressed that she has nothing against Lawrence Alabi or his wife, describing Alabi’s wife as “an amazing woman” who does not deserve daily trolling.
However, Tacha turned the spotlight on what she described as Nigeria’s biggest problem online: hypocrisy.
According to her, many Nigerians only call out oppression or corruption when it doesn’t benefit them or when the victim isn’t someone they like.
She pointed out that she has personally taken people to court in the past without turning police stations into content factories or humiliating anyone online.
“I did not make one video. I did not take one picture. Because I am not the law,” she said, explaining that she followed due process quietly.
Tacha also questioned why Nigerians suddenly act shocked when popular figures use legal means, even though many influencers built their platforms off trolling, dragging, and pushing harmful agendas.
She cited the backlash actress Toyin Abraham faced after arresting someone who allegedly trolled her family, noting how Nigerians quickly framed it as “oppression” simply because they don’t like her.
Her final stance was clear and firm:
Use the law if you must — but don’t add public humiliation to it.
“You cannot do this in the UK, even with a billion pounds,” she said, urging Nigerians to be guided and consistent with their outrage.
Once again, Tacha has reignited a bigger conversation about accountability, bullying culture, and selective morality on Nigerian social media.
Reality TV star and media personality Tacha has reacted again following the online drama surrounding cyberbullying, arrests, and public humiliation, and she is not holding back.
In a lengthy post on X, Tacha made it clear that she does not support bullying, cyberbullying, cyberstalking, or defamation in any form. She stressed that she has nothing against Lawrence Alabi or his wife, describing Alabi’s wife as “an amazing woman” who does not deserve daily trolling.
However, Tacha turned the spotlight on what she described as Nigeria’s biggest problem online: hypocrisy.
According to her, many Nigerians only call out oppression or corruption when it doesn’t benefit them or when the victim isn’t someone they like.
She pointed out that she has personally taken people to court in the past without turning police stations into content factories or humiliating anyone online.
“I did not make one video. I did not take one picture. Because I am not the law,” she said, explaining that she followed due process quietly.
Tacha also questioned why Nigerians suddenly act shocked when popular figures use legal means, even though many influencers built their platforms off trolling, dragging, and pushing harmful agendas.
She cited the backlash actress Toyin Abraham faced after arresting someone who allegedly trolled her family, noting how Nigerians quickly framed it as “oppression” simply because they don’t like her.
Her final stance was clear and firm:
Use the law if you must — but don’t add public humiliation to it.
“You cannot do this in the UK, even with a billion pounds,” she said, urging Nigerians to be guided and consistent with their outrage.
Once again, Tacha has reignited a bigger conversation about accountability, bullying culture, and selective morality on Nigerian social media.
“Nigerians Are Hypocrites” — Tacha doubles down, slams selective outrage over cyberbullying and arrests following content creator Lawrence Alabi'
Reality TV star and media personality Tacha has reacted again following the online drama surrounding cyberbullying, arrests, and public humiliation, and she is not holding back.
In a lengthy post on X, Tacha made it clear that she does not support bullying, cyberbullying, cyberstalking, or defamation in any form. She stressed that she has nothing against Lawrence Alabi or his wife, describing Alabi’s wife as “an amazing woman” who does not deserve daily trolling.
However, Tacha turned the spotlight on what she described as Nigeria’s biggest problem online: hypocrisy.
According to her, many Nigerians only call out oppression or corruption when it doesn’t benefit them or when the victim isn’t someone they like.
She pointed out that she has personally taken people to court in the past without turning police stations into content factories or humiliating anyone online.
“I did not make one video. I did not take one picture. Because I am not the law,” she said, explaining that she followed due process quietly.
Tacha also questioned why Nigerians suddenly act shocked when popular figures use legal means, even though many influencers built their platforms off trolling, dragging, and pushing harmful agendas.
She cited the backlash actress Toyin Abraham faced after arresting someone who allegedly trolled her family, noting how Nigerians quickly framed it as “oppression” simply because they don’t like her.
Her final stance was clear and firm:
Use the law if you must — but don’t add public humiliation to it.
“You cannot do this in the UK, even with a billion pounds,” she said, urging Nigerians to be guided and consistent with their outrage.
Once again, Tacha has reignited a bigger conversation about accountability, bullying culture, and selective morality on Nigerian social media.
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