@Wisdom_HQ@Mr_Tola_ or simply fill the 13kgs jar twice that will give you 26kgs and our on the floor
Using 5kgs jar take three times from that floor ie 15kgs and put back to the bulk
What's left on the floor is exactly 11kgs put it in 13kgs jar.
🔸Comrade Bombshell Geza is the Politician of the Year. Without Geza, the ED2030 agenda would have been gazetted by March 2025, right now, we would have been preparing for a fake referendum! Parliament is closing or has closed for the year without any action. No one should take credit away from Comrade Bombshell!
Wafawarova’s comparison may be provocative, but dismissing it outright misses a deeper point about institutional consistency and the dangers of selective outrage.
Let’s start with the claim that the VP’s wife should be compared only to the First Lady. That’s a flawed premise. The First Lady is married to the Head of State; the VP’s wife is not. Their roles are not constitutionally equivalent, nor are they bound by the same expectations. If anything, the comparison to Sean however imperfect raises a valid question: why is it acceptable for some political families to embed themselves in state structures while others are vilified for it?
The idea that the VP’s wife becomes “Acting First Lady” when her husband is Acting President is a constitutional fantasy. Zimbabwe’s Constitution does not recognize a rotating First Lady role. The office of the First Lady is informal, symbolic, and not transferrable like a ministerial portfolio. To suggest otherwise is to invent protocol to suit a political narrative.
Moreover, the argument that she must abandon her military career because of her husband’s position is deeply regressive. It implies that women married to powerful men must surrender their professional identities to perform ceremonial roles. That’s not a defense of institutional integrity it’s a call for patriarchal conformity. If her military role presents a conflict of interest, let’s debate that on legal and ethical grounds, not on outdated gender expectations.
As for the “subtle social media campaigns,” that’s a slippery slope. If we begin disqualifying individuals from public service based on perceived political sympathies or family ties, we risk turning the state into a purity test for loyalty. The same logic could be used to purge entire ministries of anyone with a relative in politics.
Finally, invoking Museveni, Kagame, and Trump to normalize nepotism while condemning the VP’s wife for merely holding a job is a contradiction. If we’re serious about protecting the integrity of public office, then let’s apply that standard evenly across all factions, all families, and all genders.
The real danger isn’t that the VP’s wife wears a uniform. It’s that we’re willing to weaponize protocol and morality selectively, depending on whose ambitions we fear most.
To my followers & sympathisers who defend me when I’m being attacked & harassed,you do so without payment or promises, but just shared dreams, views, aspirations, hope, desires and the love we have for our country, I am reaching out to you to say thank you so much, l don’t take your support for granted, it doesn’t mean you don’t have better things to do with your time, but you make me part of the “To do list “ Ngiyabonga kakhulu, Ndinotenda zvikuru, Asante Sana 🌹❤️♥️🙏🏽
Ok Let us finish this debate Zimbabweans
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