@fit_verse001@Philosopher254 I am a doctor
I interact with doctors on a daily basis
Pharmacists and dentists, ladies are having more graduates every year
Men are just the majority in specialist MO roles,and this is not very clearcut
@Kamau266 It's a subtle sign of weakness. Women naturally abhor any acrid stench of a weak man. They would rather tolerate a disrespectful and cruel man, than a weak one. Weakness is a lack of masculinity while cruelty is a misdirected one.
There is a historical constant: no amount of wealth can liberate a third-rate thinker from intellectual envy or from the deeply degrading sense of scholarly inferiority -- that feeling of impoverished erudition.
No amount of wealth.
KCB are selling Properties of pale East Africa Portland Cement. Those chaps who bought through mikoras and built houses are being asked to sign new payment agreements with KCB. The bank is looking at netting kes 7 billion from the 2000 acres.
@DavidNdii Exactly 💯
Adults want to misbehave, destroy property in the name of legitimate picketing & when their children do as they did, they call out government to act.
@MihrThakar Ndii is one of the few kikuyus that has supported candidates outside the tribe for as long as I can remember
He meant well as a Raila thinktank
On Ruto, he had to alter his ideals for the greater good
Infact Ndii is not tribal and i hope to one day sit down for a conversation
HFCB Group is no longer just a bank changing its name. It is an institution announcing a new era. From Housing Finance to HF Group and now HFCB Group, this is a turnaround story Kenya’s banking sector can no longer ignore. @hfcbkenya
Thread 🧵
Senegal is becoming a perfect case study of what happens when revolutionary politics finally meets the realities of governing.
It’s easy to unite people against a system.
It’s much harder to run the economy, negotiate debt, satisfy voters and still maintain the purity of the movement.
A lot of liberation-style movements in Africa struggle once they transition from opposition to government because charisma and slogans eventually collide with budgets, IMF pressure and state institutions.
That’s exactly what we’re watching in Senegal right now.