He wanted to burn centuries of rituals thinking its not under protection?
In occult traditions, a dedicated space that has been used for decades for high-level ritual work develops an Egregore. Now what's an Egregore?
I was equally shocked to learn that the net minimum wage in France is
KSh 215,752 per month!
The French people are indeed suffering more than us!
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Any BSc having climate smart agriculture is a USELESS DEGREE.
Only the following matter for any country that wishes to be agri-sustainable:
Agronomy
Animal Science
Agricultural Engineering
Agricultural Economics
Veterinary Medicine
Soil Science
Agricultural Extension
Food Science
Decades of growth destroyed in minutes. Giant lobelias, some of the rarest alpine plants are being damaged. This is heartbreaking for Kenya’s natural heritage.
@KWSKenya @Kenya_Forestry please step in.
The destruction of giant lobelias is unacceptable.
@elvis_oduor@KWSKenya Better still, such characters should be blacklisted from gaining entry into any forested area, nature reserve, parks, orphanage..... etc henceforth.
Handrails can elevate Kenyan homes—here’s how to get it right:
1. Use weather-resistant materials like stainless steel for outdoor balconies
2. Incorporate cultural elements like carved wooden details
3. Keep spacing between balusters narrow to prevent accidents
Insight: A well-designed handrail is both functional and a statement piece. 🛠️
#ArchitectureKenya
📸 Visual context: see attached media for the key details.
If a goal makes you anxious, break it down until today knows exactly what to do. A five-year ambition is useless if this afternoon still feels vague. Build a descending ladder: the big objective, the next milestone, the weekly target, the move you can finish before sleep.
Anyone who has read Animal Farm can see the warning signs unfolding before our eyes in Kenya. The pigs have taken over the farm, rewritten the rules, protected one another, and convinced the rest of us that suffering is normal.
That is exactly how it feels when those entrusted with power appear more interested in protecting corruption than protecting citizens. How do MPs abandon the probe into the alleged Sh6.3 billion eCitizen scandal and expect Kenyans to remain silent? How does such a serious matter simply fade away while ordinary people are taxed harder, businesses are collapsing, jobs are disappearing, and the cost of living keeps rising?
The tragedy is that it no longer feels like one arm of government has failed. It feels like all the arms of government have quietly agreed to look away together. Parliament is supposed to oversight the Executive. The Judiciary is supposed to defend justice. The Executive is supposed to serve the people. But when corruption becomes normal, accountability disappears, and public anger is ignored, citizens begin to lose faith in the entire system.
Kenya does not need excuses. Kenya needs accountability. We need answers on eCitizen. We need Parliament to stop behaving like a retirement home for public scandals. We need institutions that fear the people more than they fear political masters. We need leaders who understand that public money is sacred because it comes from the sweat, pain and sacrifice of ordinary citizens.
At this point, Kenyans must embrace peaceful, lawful and fearless civic resistance. We must refuse to normalize theft. We must reject leaders who defend looting. We must organize, speak, vote wisely, demand resignations where necessary, and use every constitutional avenue available to remind those in power that Kenya belongs to the people — not to a cartel of political survivors.
The looting is too much. Life is too hard. The silence is too dangerous. And the betrayal is too painful.
A country cannot be robbed in broad daylight while its citizens clap for the thieves.
I saw someone on a YouTube comment saying ati the reason why cults prohibit people from eating meat is because the lack of animal proteins mentally exhausts the followers, making them unable to resist. I'll look into it. But it is an interesting point to think about.
Hii statement “barber amenitoa from a 5 to a solid 10” mnaflex nayo, haujui.
Across the continent, hair was cosmological architecture worn on the head. Kunyoa, in most traditions, was a sign of mourning, defeat, or initiation crisis. Si default.
The colonial schools cut the hair on day one. Justification was hygiene (lice).
The actual function was symbolic submission, to teach the child that the body now belongs to the institution, not to the lineage. Public ritual of conversion.
A quick rule: if the ingredient list contains E1422, E1442, modified starch, pectin, stabilizers, gums, or gelatin, much of the texture is coming from added stabilizers rather than solely from whole milk fermentation.
Also, be suspicious of all probiotic yogurt sold in kenya!