The Infinity Cap and the Temptation of Endless Power.
In Nigerian street wisdom, there is a blunt proverb: “Na Thursday we dey take know how weekend go be.” It is Nigerian, born from the everyday realism of people who have learned to read the signs of what is coming before it fully arrives.
By Thursday, the shape of the weekend is already visible.
That proverb should guide how Nigerians interpret the curious political symbolism that has followed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his supporters, particularly the infinity symbol increasingly seen on caps worn by his longtime supporters and now members of the so-called City Boys Movement.
The infinity symbol is not neutral. In mathematics, it represents endlessness, something without beginning or end. In politics, such symbolism deserves interrogation.
Because democracies are not built on infinity, they are built on limits.
Political symbolism often reveals ambitions long before formal declarations. Across history, movements seeking prolonged power frequently begin by normalising the imagery of permanence; leaders become indispensable figures rather than temporary office holders, political movements morph into personal loyalty cults and symbols quietly suggest eternal rule.
Nigeria’s constitutional order, however, is explicit; the presidency is limited to two four-year terms. That limitation exists precisely to prevent the concentration of power in one individual.
When political branding introduces an infinity symbol, citizens are justified in asking what message is being prepared.
Even supporters acknowledge that the current administration has struggled under the weight of economic hardship, insecurity, and public dissatisfaction. For many Nigerians, the first term of the Tinubu presidency has appeared shambolic, marked by economic turbulence, rising hardship, and uncertain policy direction. In a free and fair election, the ruling party knows it will be booted out.
In such circumstances, the immediate political goal is obvious; secure a second mandate.
But the deeper danger lies in what might follow. The political calculation could be simple and cynical; seek renewal of the mandate through the ballot box, and once power is secured again, initiate a project of tenure elongation.
At that stage, the arithmetic changes.
If the attempt to extend tenure succeeds, the reward is extraordinary; the transformation of a democratically elected president into a de facto life ruler. If the attempt fails, there is little to lose. The constitutional limit would have ended the presidency anyway.
In other words; all potential reward, minimal personal risk.That asymmetry is precisely why societies must be vigilant when leaders begin to flirt with symbols of permanence.
The country has previously confronted the temptation of extended rule.
Before the Fourth Republic, we had once toyed with exchanging the khaki for Babanriga. Recall that all then so-called political parties adopted Mr. Sani Abacha as their Presidential candidate. But for providence, we know where we all would have been.
During the presidency of Olusegun Obasanjo, the controversial Third Term Agenda attempted to amend the constitution to allow the president remain in office beyond the established limit. That proposal was eventually defeated through the resistance of legislators, civil society, and public pressure.
But history teaches a sobering lesson; ambitions for prolonged power rarely disappear, they simply wait for another opportunity.
Tenure-elongation projects rarely unfold peacefully. Across the world, when leaders attempt to convert democratic mandates into indefinite rule, a predictable pattern emerges; opposition figures begin to disappear, state violence becomes normalised, security agencies are weaponised against dissent, and critics are silenced through intimidation or worse.
In the most extreme cases, the state begins to practise what can only be described as politically motivated disappearances, state-sponsored killings, and systematic targeting of opposition voices. These are not abstract fears, they are the historical consequences of leaders who decide that power must become permanent.
When a leader begins to believe that his rule must never end, the opposition ceases to be political competitors, it becomes an existential threat that must be eliminated.
The danger therefore lies not only in constitutional manipulation but in the psychology of permanence. The infinity symbol subtly promotes three ideas; leadership as destiny, power as permanence, and opposition as obstruction.
Once those ideas take hold, democracy becomes a mere ritual rather than a genuine mechanism for change.
That is why Nigerians must remember the proverb: “Na Thursday we dey take know how weekend go be.”
By the time a society recognises the full shape of authoritarian ambition, it may already be too late. Symbols appear first. Narratives follow. Constitutional manoeuvres arrive last.
The infinity cap may be dismissed as branding, it may be nothing more than political theatrics, but history suggests that citizens ignore such signals at their peril.
Because democracy survives not by trusting the ambitions of leaders, but by questioning them early, loudly, and relentlessly.
Thursday has already arrived. The question Nigerians must ask is simple: What kind of weekend is being prepared?