@livingsonmasha@Shadaya_Knight Thats th spirit Bro, the burden is on all of us. Which is why im having issues wth people vakuramba vachisairira Chamisa kuti do this fo us as if Constitution ndeyake ega. Its our collective fight
@AndyMcDusty@Am_Blujay No one ever really fights against only illegal immigration. It's against all immigration. If your neighbour says they hate illegal immigrants and wena you're a legal one, you'd be naive to think they don't hate you too.
@ogksad@daddyhope At such an age n even wth a verified handle...
Yo key take away from evrything written is THE MEANING N TRANSLATION OF TRABABLAS?
Jahman muri dhodhi pamwe chete neve kwamunobva
@matinyarare@Busbytee So there is no need to make referral hospitals functional bcz other small health centers are neglected so better neglect them all? ๐คก
U actually sounding like the idiot u really are
It is fair to report that I woke up unblocked today by Nelson Chamisa, since I reported when I had been blocked.
I hope this level of tolerance will remain in place, and that I can critique him and any politician without being blocked, as long as that critique is fair and necessary.
We have endured 45 years of fear and intimidation, this requires the political alternative to be different.
Good morning. @nelsonchamisa,
I agree with the message of reforms, but they must go beyond spiritual reforms, we need political reforms if any change is going to happen in Zimbabwe.
We cannot keep repeating the same thing and expecting a different result.
By this, I mean going into elections under the same undemocratic conditions under the illusion that this time it will be different.
It wonโt be different unless we have reforms.
You received a SADC report which supported the call for reforms. You and all opposition players should by now have had hoarse voices from calling for those political reforms.
ZANUPF is laying the ground for more authoritarian rule through the 2030 project, while the alternative is just watching without any real action, both at home and abroad.
You are the leading opposition voice. We are only 1,187 days from the next election, yet there is no substantive work to deal with the crisis of reforms on the ground, both in Zimbabwe and regionally.
Mnangagwa feels more emboldened today than ever to violate the nationโs constitution because there is no organised resistance to such horrible acts.
It is sad that the resistance is having to come from within ZANUPF and not from the traditional opposition.
I know that you publicly shared a letter saying you had resigned from CCC, but you have not resigned from politics.
As such, your leadership is needed, since you are the person Zimbabweans voted for, and the person who still commands mass political appeal within the opposition ranks.
The SADC report you received is a powerful tool to fight against constitutional violations and to demand reforms.
This requires you to have a plan of action beyond motivational talk โ which, of course, is part of the political toolbox, but on its own yields nothing.
We might have political differences, we do and it is healthy to have them, they might be deep, but responsible leadership requires us to put the people and the nation first, beyond our egos.
So thank you for unblocking me. It is a sign of progressive leadership to tolerate your critics.
What is more important is to address the peopleโs suffering, and to do it through collective leadership, to do it robustly, and not allowing our individual feelings towards each other to get in the way.
I want to assure you and the nation that I have no political ambitions, I know you have been told that I have presidential ambitions, I am not critiquing you to topple you. I am doing so in order to create a better you and opposition movement.
I have no interest in running for public office, so do not think my work is a foundation for challenging you or any political leader.
My work is rooted in helping our suffering people build a better country and a future for their children.
That requires me to be honest with you, the political class and the nation.
You and I know a lot of things that our ordinary followers do not know about what goes on in our politics.
We should not, therefore, manipulate that ignorance, the lack of awareness about what is happening in the background or what has happened in the past in the political sphere.
In the midst of disagreement, true leaders focus on what matters most.
Our arguments are not signs of division but opportunities to strengthen the foundation of progress to get where we need to be.
I am glad that we can now engage because leaders donโt fear disagreement; they embrace it as a means to forge stronger paths. We do not have to always agree because engagement is about ensuring that, through disagreement, we continue to move towards a common goal.