1/5. During Covid I travelled with my family to Btz. So we stopped by Chikondi Stop Over for some snacks. M'mimba nde simunali bho. Nde ndinati ah ndipite kuseli kuja paja kuli ma toilet. Chimbudzi nde sichinali bwino icho. My pride couldn't let me use it.
God forbid I work this hard only for my children to be applying for jobs and unpaid internships because I want them to “find their own way.” My children will never have to beg anyone for employment because they will already have businesses I am building to run, Inshallah!
From Korea to Malawi — Building Something That Matters 🇰🇷🇲🇼
Coming to South Korea for my master’s changed how I see the world.
This country is something else. The technology here just works — seamlessly, effortlessly, everywhere.
Buses tell you exactly when they’ll arrive. Government services are just a few taps away. Information is instant, reliable, and accessible to everyone.
I remember walking around Seoul thinking:
“This is what it feels like when technology actually serves people.”
And then I thought about home.
Not with shame — but with hunger.
Because I know Malawi has everything it needs:
the talent, the ambition, the people.
What we’ve lacked is the infrastructure to connect it all.
I kept asking myself one question:
Why is it so hard to find basic information in Malawi?
A world-class scholarship a Malawian student qualifies for — buried in a Facebook or WhatsApp group, or never seen at all.
A government process nobody can explain clearly.
A business in your own city you never knew existed.
Jobs that come and go before most people even hear about them.
Information that could genuinely change someone’s life — scattered everywhere, accessible to almost nobody.
Information is power.
And in Malawi, that power is still unevenly distributed.
So I sat down and started building.
I didn’t want to copy what Korea has.
I wanted to take the spirit of it — easy, accessible, instant information — and build something made for our reality.
Our government.
Our businesses.
Our people.
That’s how Mthandizi was born.
A platform where Malawians can ask questions and get real answers.
Where contributors can earn from the knowledge they share.
Where businesses can be discovered.
Where students can find scholarships they never knew they qualified for.
Where government information is no longer a mystery.
We’re still early.
But the foundation is solid, and the mission is clear:
Make information accessible to every Malawian — wherever they are. 🇲🇼
Join https://t.co/vYAMHCBYwm today and recommend it to your friends.
If you believe Malawi deserves better access to information,
share this post.
#Mthandizi #Malawi #BuildInPublic #TechForGood #Innovation #DigitalMalawi #AIForAfrica
Something for “deputy Israelis” in Africa including the stupid @mkainerugaba from Uganda who is embarrassing Africa to ponder on:
There is something deeply unsettling in how easily many Africans are persuaded to dismiss their own history. Since 1952, Germany has paid Israel reparations for the Holocaust, amounting to well over 90 billion USD to date, including ongoing payments to survivors. And still pays around 1 billion USD every year. Yet when discussions arise about reparations for the transatlantic slave trade and colonial exploitation, Israel has opposed such efforts at the United Nations. That loud hypocrisy should give Africans a pause.
And still, some Africans insist that we suffer from a “victim mindset,” that we must abandon the past and move on. This argument ignores a basic reality of how nations preserve power and identity. No serious society discards its history. The British do not forget their empire and long history of their monarchy and early founding. Americans do not forget their foundational struggles. China and India draw continuously from their civilizational pasts. Israel itself anchors modern political claims in events that stretch back thousands of years, in particular in laying claim to Palestine which few stupid Africans support based on history. History, for them, is not a burden. It is a resource.
Why, then, are Africans encouraged to forget? The answer is uncomfortable. A people disconnected from their past are easier to influence, easier to divide, and easier to define from the outside. Without historical memory, there is no coherent identity, and without identity, there is no strategic direction.
It is therefore not surprising that Holocaust history is widely taught and institutionalised, and was forced down our African throats, while African demands for historical justice are often dismissed. Nor is it surprising that some Africans, guided more by inherited narratives than by critical reflection, feel obligated to support foreign interests even when those interests do not align with Africa’s own.
At some point, this must change. No one is coming to secure Africa’s future except Africans themselves. That requires clarity, historical awareness, and the discipline to distinguish sentiment from strategy. A people that abandons its past does not become free. It becomes unmoored. And if you would rather forget your history, the future will rather forget you too!
The reason for all these changes on Twitter policies is that on this App, the whole globe is united against Israel and the USA in their terrorist attacks against Iran. It is rooting for Iran and it is showing America’s and Israel’s losses which cannot be hidden. Admittedly, Trump has complained about the bias on media that it is not showing America’s “alleged” wins. The Zionists and Jews that control Elon and this App are unhappy. Hence, they are trying to use monetisation to force people to tweet less about America, the war and their losses and to alter the algorithm. Now, they have introduced a blocking feature for comments based on regions. Why should someone see a tweet, they cannot engage with? Then don’t even show it to regions it blocks commenting. At this point, Elon might even just create different Apps for different regions and dismantle this one. Otherwise, it defeats the whole reason why Jack built a global App to bring the world together so while sharing our diverse experiences and stories, we could also discuss common issues that affect us all as a globe. This is the reason @elonmusk, Trump and Americans comment on issues happening in South Africa regarding land, comment on issues happening in Somalia and Nigeria etc. And this is the reason Africans are commenting on the war in Iran because its consequences on the global economy and global peace affects us all. So stop the hypocrisy because you are losing the war and because the propaganda is failing massively!
If Iran dropped a bomb on US soil and killed 168 girls, WE all know what America’s response would be. Nuke Iran.
America is the only country to have ever nuked another country. Yet so many fools have been brainwashed that it’s Iran who cannot have a nuclear weapon because they would bomb everyone. But we all know, it is America that has no restraint to bombing anyone at will and using a nuke. Knowledge is free, just as stupidity is free!
Date cancelled. I asked her to pay for my haircut and outfit, and to send a ride to my place to take me to the location, but she declined. Biggest red flag I have ever seen. I dodged a bullet. 🚩