Tukiwaambia kuiba elections Kenya sahii ni almost impossible mnaanza kutupea wild theories, 2027 kila mtu akue na kadi yake ready. 8am Ruto atakuwa kamiti
Again, if you're a bad or arrogant person, people won't be doing this for you. It is simply not possible.
These guys are also big players in their rights.
Enzo plays for Chelsea, MacAllister for Liverpool, Lisandro for United, Romero is a captain for Spurs, Lautaro a king in Milan and a captain of the team, Otamendi has touched the biggest clubs, Alvarez has won everything there is to win, Simeone and Molina for Atletico, Paredes has touched the biggest clubs in Italy...
These are big players in their rights, but why do they all submit to Messi? Like why????
Why do they want to die for him?
Any party which wants to offer political change must have this agenda on their manifesto:
Retraining the civil service out of its colonial master-slave mentality.
Until that is sorted, Kenya government will continue punishing Kenyans for having skills and will constantly block Kenyans from building the country with their brains and muscles. Our civil servants and politicians believe what their British godfathers teach them, which is that work is demeaning and that economic growth comes from policy and handouts. They don't want us to work.
Jaramogi Oginga Odinga started that project of retraining civil servants with the Lumumba Institute. Pio Gama Pinto was assassinated to stop it, and Jaramogi was thrown into the political freezer for imagining it. Together with Bildad Kaggia. CORD put this issue in their manifesto in 2013. We must revive that agenda.
We have 1 million people in the civil service and another almost 2000 people in the legislature who are parasitic. They are a threat to the health of the Kenyan body politic.
A nation that cannot find work for its teachers, nurses, engineers, scientists, and graduates is not suffering from a shortage of talent. It is suffering from a catastrophic failure of leadership.
Teachers, once the moral architects of the nation, now ride boda bodas just to feed their families.
Nurses, trained to heal, are forced into exile, caring for the sick in foreign lands while their own families are left behind.
Engineers, who should be designing highways, bridges, and industries, now run M-Pesa kiosks and hawk electronics on dusty streets.
IT graduates repair cracked phone screens instead of building the digital economy.
Lawyers compete for data-entry jobs.
Scientists remain underfunded, unemployed, and forgotten.
Our educated youth, gifted with intelligence, innovation, and ambition, sell sweets at matatu stages—not because they lacked ability, but because the system denied them opportunity.
A country that exports its professionals while importing unemployment is not progressing. It is consuming its future.
Kenya does not have a talent crisis. It has a governance crisis.
#SafinaAt30
One of the best things you can do for any well-meaning person in your life who consumes a lot of news is to have them listen to 5 episodes—virtually any will do—of this exceptional podcast. It will change their perspective and make it easier to talk to them.