“I cannot cook for a man, I cannot wash a man's clothes, I cannot clean the house because I aspire to be a billonaire's wife. For crying out loud, our house is going to be so big, you don't expect me to be entering the kitchen when I could actually pay for the service of a chef. You don't expect me to do laundry when I could literally pay for the services. You don't expect me to clean the house when I could also pay for the services. Because if you have the money and you're making the money, then please pay for these services. Because it saves you time. I mean, for someone that is going to be pushing her own brand, I run an online store, and I aspire it to be like Amazon. Me and my husband are going to be fucking multi-billionaires. So you don't expect us to worry over the things we can pay people for. So if you find yourself washing cleaning for your man doing laundry, cooking, cleaning, taking care of the kids...As a girl, you do not have anything to offer. He is the one providing everything and you do not have something to offer. So you're expected to be loyal — Lady sparks debate on marriage roles
US-based Nigerian nurse Joy William says she earns in two hours what many Nigerian doctors earn in a month, stressing that location, not just skill, drives income.
Her post sparks debate on pay gaps, brain drain, and respect among Nigerian health workers.