If you have faith, please say a little prayer for Kenyans tonight. So many people are tired, anxious, angry and depressed. It’s devastating to live and witness.
June has become a month of reflection, remembrance, and difficult conversations about Kenya's future.
As young people continue to shape the national conversation, we ask: What is the Kenya young people want?
@TeamRao2022@Osama_otero It's true... Our country is literally the best place for us so both outside and inside forces are fighting for selfish pieces. Whether commercial activist or government funded bloggers none have long term views of our land.
We speak out to avoid only those two voices control 🇰🇪
@TeamRao2022@Osama_otero Some people fund themselves from their own income some are paid by the government to propagate government agenda some by private entities and some are fully funded by Kenyans.
He can chose to share or not. The more one tweets the more we can see their agenda setting and decide.
The @USEmbassyKenya has issued a travel advisory to Americans in Worldwide to be careful as they manoeuver across Kenya yet they are the one who have caused the demonstrations because of setting up an Ebola center against a High Court Order made in Kenya.
Two words: NIKO KADI
@AVID_SZN 1. As a parent, I would consent 💯 to their being CCTVs in corridors, not cubicles, for my kids' safety.
2. Both of us (child and parent) have to be notified about it in advance.
As a parent, I feel for those parents... Truth is, some parents are a bad influence on their kids on the other end.
A parent can do everything right, and this still happens to you.
Do you guys think the way the Kenyan economy is structured? Boarding schools play a huge role in it...?
I know many parents who become more productive when the kids go to boarding schools.
What's your take?
The CCTVs might have come before the beds in the corridors. So, yes, the problem is overcrowding, forcing some girls to sleep in the corridors... which should be open to surveillance (not a good move for the children).
When someone asks why there was a CCTV camera inside a girls’ dormitory and you respond with “children died and you’re worried about cameras?”, you’re not making an argument.
You’re using a straw man fallacy by pretending they care more about cameras than the children.
You’re creating a false dichotomy by acting as if people must choose between caring about the victims or asking questions about privacy and child protection.
You’re engaging in relative privation by suggesting that because a bigger tragedy occurred, other legitimate concerns should be ignored.
People are capable of holding multiple thoughts at once. Demanding accountability for a fire and questioning surveillance of minors are not mutually exclusive.
When someone asks why there was a CCTV camera inside a girls’ dormitory and you respond with “children died and you’re worried about cameras?”, you’re not making an argument.
You’re using a straw man fallacy by pretending they care more about cameras than the children.
You’re creating a false dichotomy by acting as if people must choose between caring about the victims or asking questions about privacy and child protection.
You’re engaging in relative privation by suggesting that because a bigger tragedy occurred, other legitimate concerns should be ignored.
People are capable of holding multiple thoughts at once. Demanding accountability for a fire and questioning surveillance of minors are not mutually exclusive.