Acha niwachanue sasa.
Real forex traders rarely flaunt their wealth. Most of the people constantly showing off money online are trying to sell you a dream and make Forex look like a get-rich-quick scheme—which it isn't.
The goal is simple: make you believe they have the secret so that you slide into their DMs.
What usually follows?
1. They charge you for mentorship, signals, or a course. (Big red flag. If they're supposedly making that much money consistently, why is charging you their main business?)
2. They send you a referral link and insist you open an account with a specific broker, or worse, direct you to a Ponzi scheme.
3. They tell you to deposit money and promise to send trading signals. If you make a profit, they want a share. If you lose, you're told, "It's part of the game."
4. In Ponzi schemes, the balance you see on the website is often just numbers on a screen. The real money is somewhere else—being used to pay earlier investors or fund the flashy lifestyle being displayed online.
Forex is a skill that takes time, discipline, risk management, and patience. Don't let social media flexing convince you otherwise.
He’s dating Kim Kardashian, who has an estimated net worth of nearly $2 billion. He's worth nearly $500 million and lives in Monaco to avoid paying taxes in the UK.
Remarkable lack of self-awareness.
Kenyan content creator Thee Pluto has shared his frustration after his recently acquired Mercedes Benz experienced a mechanical breakdown. The vehicle developed an air suspension fault just two weeks after purchase. According to updates shared online, the estimated cost to repair the vehicle's suspension system is up to KSh 150,000.
The sheet of faces taped to his camera is there because, up close under the lights, NBA players barely look like their team photos. So the second an announcer says a name, he gets a split second to find that exact guy in a tangle of moving bodies and swing the camera onto him.
And finding the player is the easy part. He's running three jobs at once that a movie crew would split between three people. With one hand he aims a heavy camera and works the zoom. With the other he keeps the shot in focus. The whole time, a director is talking in his ear, calling out what to grab next, and none of it gets a second take. On a real film set, there's a person whose only job, all day long, is keeping the picture sharp. For this guy, focus is just one of the things he's juggling at once.
The lens itself works against him. The long lenses used for live sports can fill the whole screen with a single player standing at the far end of the court, and the good ones cost as much as a Lamborghini. The more he zooms in, the thinner the strip of court that stays in focus. Zoom in tight, and only a few inches are sharp. A player leans in for a layup, drifts half a step, and just like that, he's a blur.
So he can't just follow the ball. By the time his eyes catch a pass and his hands react, the shot's already soft. He has to guess. He reads the play a beat early and aims the focus where the ball is about to go, like a point guard firing a pass to a spot before his teammate even gets there. One of Canon's top lens engineers summed it up: he said he wouldn't want to be the one keeping a snowboarder sharp on a halfpipe with the whole world watching.
Wemby is the best athlete in that building. But the guy making sure you never miss a second of him might be the one person in there nobody's supposed to notice.
Fellow Kenyans, I need you to help me reset, rebuild and restore Kenya.
I have chosen to run a campaign that is funded by you, ordinary Kenyans.
I am appealing to you to make a donation to the campaign.
If my campaign is funded by donations from you, the everyday Kenyan, then it becomes OUR campaign. And I will be accountable to you, the everyday Kenyan.
You can donate any amount.
Simply log in to
https://t.co/Qnx8YlRZfQ.
Or go to Mpesa Paybill: 4164137
Account Number: 4164137
10M was budgeted for the Egypt Skate game by the Ministry of Sports, but Kevin Kiarie was not sponsored.
He paid for his ticket to Egypt and was nearly chased away after Kenya failed to pay the affiliation fees of 300 dollars.