Nigerians come to Kenya visa-free but Nigeria is denying Kenyans visas after applying, paying $80, submitting flight + hotel bookings, invitation letters etcetera.
How is this acceptable?
Just my luck that whenever I am the one shopping the list has that one obscure thing that is hidden underneath the supermarket - which MUST be bought. Wacha tulale njaa.
There are 7 billion versions of Earth right now. One for every human nervous system rendering it.
Yes, your brain has never once, in your entire life, shown you the world as it actually is.
Every single thing you've ever seen, touched, smelled, or believed was real?
A construction. A highly convincing hallucination assembled inside roughly 1.4 kg of electrochemical tissue that has never directly touched reality and never will.
The deeper implication of this runs so far beyond philosophy that most people stop engaging with it the moment it starts threatening their comfortable assumptions. So let's go there anyway.
Neuroscientist Anil Seth calls conscious experience a "controlled hallucination." But that framing still doesn't fully land for most people because we treat the word hallucination as a malfunction — something that happens to people who are unwell.
Strip that stigma away and what remains is staggering: the brain iis a prediction engine. It doesn't wait for sensory data to arrive and then interpret it. It generates a model of what it expects to be there, sends that model out ahead of incoming signals, and then only updates when the prediction errors become too loud to ignore.
You are, at all times, living approximately 80 milliseconds in the past — and inside a story your brain wrote before your eyes even opened.
The color red you see isn't in the apple. The apple emits no redness. Photons at roughly 700 nanometers enter your eye, stimulate certain cone cells, and your visual cortex translates that signal into a subjective experience your particular nervous system calls red.
Someone with different cone receptors — or a mantis shrimp with sixteen photoreceptor types compared to your three — inhabits a genuinely different visual universe while looking at the exact same apple. Neither is seeing "the real apple." Both are seeing what their biology decided was worth rendering.
The philosopher Thomas Nagel once asked what it is like to be a bat.
The question sounds playful until you realize he was pointing at something structurally thought provoking:
"there is no view from nowhere."
Every consciousness has a species-specific, individual-specific interface with reality. And interfaces, by definition, are not the thing itself. A GUI on your computer shows you folders and icons. Behind it is machine code, electrical states, binary operations — none of which look anything like the folders. The interface was designed for usability, not transparency.
Your perceptual system was designed for survival, not truth.
Evolution rewarded useful perception. Ancestors who correctly modeled a rustling bush as a predator — even when it wasn't — survived longer than those who needed certainty before reacting. The bias toward false positives is baked into your biology. Which means you are structurally, neurologically, evolutionarily inclined to see threats, patterns, and meanings that may have no basis in external reality. Your anxiety isn't irrational. It's an overactive survival interface interpreting a modern world through ancient rendering software.
Donald Hoffman, a cognitive scientist at UC Irvine, spent years building mathematical models to test whether accurate perception of reality would confer evolutionary advantages. His conclusion: organisms tuned to perceive reality as it actually is consistently lose, in evolutionary simulations, to organisms tuned to perceive fitness-relevant information. Seeing the truth is expensive. Seeing what keeps you alive is efficient. So that's what got selected for — relentlessly, across millions of years.
What you're left with is a species that experiences a seamlessly rendered simulation of reality and has almost no intuitive access to the machinery generating it.
And yet, the simulation is consistent enough across human nervous systems that we built civilization inside it. We agreed, implicitly, on what tables feel like and what gravity does and what fire means. Shared hallucination became culture, became language, became science — which is, ironically, the only tool we've developed precise enough to start revealing the hallucination for what it is.
Meditation practitioners figured out a version of this without the neuroscience. Sit still long enough and observe the contents of your mind without identifying with them, and the constructed nature of experience starts to become viscerally apparent. Thoughts arise. The sense of "I" that seems to be watching them also arises. The boundary between self and world — which feels so absolute in ordinary waking life — starts to look like another rendering decision, not a metaphysical fact.
The self is part of the simulation too.
Most people stop at the philosophical discomfort this creates and retreat back into practical reality — bills to pay, emails to answer, a life to live inside the model.
That's fine. Functional. But there's a version of absorbing this that produces something closer to radical humility.
If your perception is an interface, your beliefs about other people are low-resolution renders.
Your certainty about what someone meant, what they intended, who they are — all of it filtered through a system that prioritizes your survival narrative over their actual inner life. Every conflict you've ever had lived, at least partly, inside mismatched simulations that neither party could fully step outside of.
Every opinion you hold with absolute confidence was formed by a brain that has never once had unmediated access to the thing it formed an opinion about.
That doesn't make truth impossible. It makes humility the only honest starting point.
W e live so deep inside the map that most people die never having questioned whether the territory looks anything like what they spent their whole life navigating.
Our engagement as the Broad Based Youth Front continues.
I sincerely thank PS @SusanAMangeni of the State Department for MSMEs for her time, guidance, and assurance of support. We look forward to working closely with her office to link young people to enterprise development opportunities, access to finance, capacity building, and markets, in line with our commitment to lobby government in ways that deliver tangible economic outcomes for the youth.
The journey continues.