Phokoso layamba kumvekaso kwambiri kuseliku. The DG for @MACRAMALAWI just viewed my LinkedIn Profile. 🤣🤣
Good people, sign, share and repost.
cc: @Nkhondo_
https://t.co/gd4hUooc7f
@MACRAMALAWI we all know that this is not a solution. This is a temporary fix to divert your attention.
Tell us what you will do about the dark billing and service fees after compensating the selected few.
Guys, sign the petition and keep sharing it
https://t.co/ViAEtkGW28
500+ signatures and counting! 🇲🇼
Help us demand affordable internet, transparent billing, and accountability from MACRA.
Please sign, repost, and tag others.
cc: @Nkhondo_
@Kamoza0104 Focus on maintaining expenses for now
Share a house / stay with parents/guardians
Move closer to work
Minimise going out
When you have the extra disposable; focus on building an emergency fund
Only then, can you think of investing..
Invest from a comfortable and safe space
If this was Ronaldo’s last game for Portugal, he leaves having played most international games in history (233), scored most international goals (146), and become the only man to score in SIX different World Cups. Congrats, @cristiano - you’ve done your country & family so proud.
Settled with the fact Ronaldo will never win a World Cup long ago. The competition just didn’t bend to his will.
And that’s football. Sometimes being one of the greatest to ever touch the ball still isn’t enough. A World Cup isn’t won by one player, no matter how extraordinary he is. It takes timing, luck, teammates, injuries going your way, and moments that can define an entire generation.
That trophy will always be the one missing from his cabinet, but it doesn’t erase everything else he gave the game. Five Ballons d’Or, five Champions League titles, the all-time goalscoring records, carrying Portugal to their first major international trophy, and maintaining an elite level for nearly two decades.
People will always use the World Cup against him, but history won’t remember Cristiano Ronaldo because of what he didn’t win. It will remember him because of what he became.
He turned talent into an obsession with improvement. He showed that discipline can take you as far as, if not further than, natural ability. Millions of kids around the world didn’t just copy his stepovers or celebrations, they copied his mindset.
A World Cup would have completed the fairytale. But even without it, his legacy is already written in permanent ink. Few players have ever changed football the way Cristiano Ronaldo did, and even fewer will leave behind a standard that generations will spend decades trying to reach.
I understand why Moroccans don't feel like Africans. If they did, they would be LOSERS. Africa is known for incompetence, failure and begging. Either you invest in football, (and in anything worth succeeding at really) or you will fail. Even here in Malawi, football management is a joke. As Essau Kanyenda once noted, the men in suits would rather share the biggest chunk of the money among themselves than invest in players, youth academies, coaches, scouts, sports science, medical teams, facilities, competitive local leagues, grassroots development and competent management. What makes it worse is that we never learn from our own failures or from the success of others. We will arrive at the next World Cup just as weak and unprepared. We will still be expecting donors to fund our football, and even when they do, the men in suits will embezzle the money. We cannot fund ourselves because we have become addicted to begging and letting others do the heavy lifting. Shame on us all!