This is the largest sporting event on the planet, despite what some Americans may believe, and the decision to prevent Africa's leading referee from participating in the World Cup sends an extraordinarily damaging message about the United States and the direction in which it is heading.
I am genuinely astonished that FIFA has not lodged a formal protest with the United States Government and sought intervention to ensure that this referee, who is held in the highest regard within the international refereeing community, is granted a visa to undertake one of the most important roles in world football. For any referee, appointment to a World Cup is among the greatest honours the sport can bestow.
A person's country of birth should never be the sole reason for preventing them from entering a country to carry out a specific professional duty at a specific international event. Particularly when the President of the United States publicly assured the world that participants would be welcomed.
If nationality alone has been the determining factor, then this is a serious stain upon both the tournament and the host nation. It raises profound questions about fairness, equality of treatment and whether political considerations are now taking precedence over sporting merit.
The World Cup is supposed to bring nations together. Decisions such as this achieve precisely the opposite.
Australia passed a law yesterday that no child under 16 can have a social media account. The day it passed, it deleted every single child account across multiple social media apps.
Well done, Australia! 👏🏾
The Human Hair Revelation: The Spiritual,Psychological & Economic Truths We Must Learn As Black Women…
Most Black women wear human hair, but very few know the real story behind it. Not the marketing. Not the glam. The truth.
Where it comes from.
How it’s collected.
What it means spiritually.
Why it’s tied to poverty.
How it shapes our confidence.
And why a billion-dollar industry built on Black women does not belong to Black women.
This episode is not about attacking wigs or judging anyone. It’s about asking the questions we have avoided for too long:
What are we really carrying on our heads?
Why did we stop trusting our own hair?
And how did we become the consumers of an industry we do not own?
If you wear human hair, if you love it, if you’ve ever questioned it, or if you simply want to understand the system behind it,
this is your episode.
Watch to understand.
Not to feel guilty.
But to finally know the truth.
Full episode here https://t.co/vMsxGurFpZ
Al Jazeera reports that NAN and Artificial foods given to babies in Afrika have 50% more added sugar than in other areas.
They add that the WHO has warned that sugar fed to babies predisposes them to developmental failures and chronic metabolic diseases.
But the educated illiterates don't listen.
They have refused to breastfeed and instead feed their children all these useless products.
Babies need food, not products.
KES 300 billion cannot simply “go missing.” If the Auditor General cannot trace funds raised through government bonds, then we are staring at a full-blown crisis of accountability at the @KeTreasury and @CBKKenya
Public debt is borrowed on behalf of every Kenyan, present and future. Every shilling must be accounted for. Article 201 and 206 of the Constitution demand nothing less than full transparency in public finance.
Money does not vanish, it is made to vanish. Those responsible must be held personally liable.
We refuse to normalize theft. We refuse to accept impunity. We will pursue the truth, in Parliament, in court, and in the public domain until Kenyans know exactly what happened to their money.
Kenya is not a private enterprise. The Constitution must reign. We demand full accountability and radical transparency.
The World Bank says Kenya is borrowing too much money locally, and this is making it hard for businesses to get loans.
Banks are choosing to lend to the government instead of helping companies that are already struggling
Guys, seriously, what are we going to do about this Ritz-Carlton in Maasai Mara?
I need serious, actionable ideas.
Are we going there or what?
Because they’re banking on this conversation fading soon and then it’ll be business as usual.
We seriously need to rethink tourism in this country.
When I say he wants monopoly over everything that makes us independent, this is what I mean,..
For years, Bill Gates and the Gates Foundation have used their money to “shape Africa’s future”, not through partnership, but through control.
In agriculture, Gates funds projects like AGRA, pushing farmers to abandon indigenous seeds for patented ones owned by multinational companies. This traps farmers in cycles of buying seeds and fertilizers every season instead of saving their own ,eroding Africa’s food independence.
A perfect example is Burkina Faso’s GMO cotton experiment, heavily promoted by Western biotech interests that Gates openly supports. The genetically modified cotton was meant to increase yield, but it ended up destroying fiber quality, collapsing export value, and costing farmers millions. Burkina Faso eventually abandoned it , proof that foreign “innovation” can ruin local industries when Africans aren’t in control.
In technology, Gates is heavily funding the rollout of digital ID systems and data-driven programs across Africa .Things like biometric IDs, health databases, and digital payment systems.,On the surface, they sound modern and efficient. But most of these systems are designed, hosted, and managed by foreign tech companies ,not African governments. That means our data ,fingerprints, health records, financial information ,often ends up stored on servers controlled from outside the continent…It’s like giving outsiders the keys to Africa’s digital future. And whoever controls the data, controls the people.
In health, the Gates Foundation is one of the largest donors to the World Health Organization (WHO) and the GAVI vaccine alliance. That gives Gates enormous power to decide which diseases get funding and attention.
So instead of African experts setting their own priorities like clean water, maternal care, or malnutrition ,most of the money and focus go to programs chosen by foreign donors. This makes African health systems dependent on external funding and unable to plan for long-term solutions.
And in policy, Gates-backed organizations often influence how governments design their agriculture, health, and education policies. Many African ministries rely on his foundation’s research, consultants, or funding so they end up answering more to Gates-funded partners than to their own citizens…It’s a quiet form of control that doesn’t look like colonialism, but works the same way ,money decides, not the people.
Would love to hear your views as well✌️