The Danger of Showing Success: Why Ukambani Must Hide Its Bountiful Harvest
A content creator recently shared a video from Ukambani showing fields bursting with fertility - a rich, bountiful harvest of oranges that left her visibly shocked. The land is clearly capable and productive.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth: you have to be extremely careful when posting such videos. Western diplomats, globalist NGOs, foreign importers, supermarket chains, and corrupt local bureaucrats are always watching.
The moment they see genuine agricultural potential, they spring into action. Expect a new bill soon - full of artificial barriers, taxes, input restrictions, and bureaucratic red tape - designed to make local orange farming unviable so Kenya can be reduced to importing those brightly coloured, overpriced GMO oranges currently flooding our supermarkets.
If you want to preserve your peace and your land, the sad reality is this: preserve the narrative that Ukambani is a hunger-stricken desert. Show poverty. Show malnourished children. That is the only language the system understands and respects.
Kenya was once the world’s top producer of pyrethrum, not just Africa’s. In 1990, we exported 130,000 metric tonnes of coffee. Today, that figure has collapsed to barely 15,000 tonnes.
Prime agricultural land in Mount Kenya has been deliberately converted into golf courses like Thika Greens and Migaa, or turned into real estate scams like Edenville on Kiambu Road and Tilisi in Limuru.
Cotton and sugar farming in Western Kenya were systematically destroyed through legislative and bureaucratic sabotage so we could become net importers of second-hand clothes (mitumba) and sugar.
This is not mismanagement. It is engineered de-industrialisation and agricultural collapse.
The Kamba community, like many others, faces a cruel dilemma. To protect their fertile land from the vultures of capitalism - foreign interests and local enablers - they should maintain the optics of poverty and desperation. Show success, and the predators descend. Show hunger like malnourished Stivvo Simple Boy-looking children, and perhaps the land remains yours a little longer.
This is the tragic state of Kenya: a country punished for daring to be productive. The system would rather import everything and keep us dependent than allow genuine local prosperity that threatens their control and profit margins.
The video from Ukambani is beautiful, but dangerous. In a sane country, it would be cause for celebration and investment. In Kenya, it is a warning siren.
She went missing last night. She was taken by someone claiming to be a family member when her mom was not around. If you see her, kindly reach out to 0115033806.
RT