I have a piece about @stonebwoy I will be releasing this year.
I wrote it backwards. 🔙 From the END to the BEGINNING.
I'm ready for the comments and backlash.
The Postman ✍️.
The way Manchester United is all into Sancho I pray he doesn't pull a Sanchez on us.
And inter milan should be ready, we might just do them another favor by gifting them Sancho soon.
Spacious 2-bedroom for rent
.Landlord doesn't live with tenants
.Upstairs available
.Serene environment
.Fans
Location ADENTA (Junction 5)
GH3,000 per month NOTE: The Gh3,000 includes service charge that is water, refuse and cleaning for the whole year
Call or text 0538708013
@ThePostmanGH we need to make sure that waste management is able to handle all of the waste that is no longer toxic and full of galamsey https://t.co/aJp0XjDKLz
@ThePostmanGH We don't have the resources for anymore essential services. We are already struggling to pay for the resources we have. Galamsey is already polluting the water that is supposed to be ours. We need to fix that before we take on any more burdens
One day the floods will not spare parliament. One day our MPs and Ministers will be the ones trapped, watching their furniture float and their files wash away. Maybe that is the day the drainage budget will finally make it past the first reading. Until then, the rest of us will keep managing.
Ghana Water supplies our water. ECG powers our homes. Both are recognised as essential services with dedicated institutions, infrastructure, and national coverage. So why does waste management remain an afterthought?
It is time for Ghana Waste. A fully state-owned and properly funded waste management institution that operates with the same seriousness and structure as our other utility providers. An organisation that collects waste from homes, markets, and businesses on a scheduled and reliable basis. One that processes, recycles, and disposes of waste responsibly. One that that employs thousands of Ghanaians, from drivers to engineers to environmental officers, and pays them well for the work they do.
The private companies currently handling waste in various districts are inconsistent, underfunded, and largely unaccountable. Some communities go weeks without collection.
Gutters overflow. Illegal dump sites multiply. And the government watches.
Ghana Waste would change that. It would bring uniformity, accountability, and national coverage. It would reduce the disease burden that comes with poor sanitation. It would clean up our cities, our towns, and our rural communities. It would create jobs and generate revenue through recycling and waste-to-energy initiatives.
We found the political will to build Ghana Water and ECG. We can find it again. Sanitation is not a luxury. It is infrastructure. And Ghana deserves to treat it as such.
We have Ghana Water. We have ECG. So why do we not have Ghana Waste? A fully structured, state-owned waste management company that collects, processes, and disposes of waste across the country. If electricity and water are essential services, so is sanitation. Treat it like one.
Ghana needs a dedicated National Sanitation Corps not these private companies who only clean the vantage areas of the country . Recruit, train, and pay people to keep this country clean.
Bring back the Town Councils in every community. And this time, attach real punishments for those who turn our streets into dumping sites.
Cleanliness should not be a campaign. It should be a policy.
The floods will recede. The outrage will fade. Our MPs and Ministers will walk freely, unquestioned, unbothered. And we will all wait quietly until the rains return and the cycle repeats itself. This is how we have always done it. And nothing changes.
The biggest threat to Ghana is not poverty or unemployment. It is the cancer in the presidency.
Sycophants, gatekeepers, and self-serving advisors who filter truth from the president and replace it with convenience. A leader is only as good as the information he receives.
Our gatekeepers were meant to be our voice. Instead they state the obvious, dodge the difficult, and let the most important conversations disappear quietly into the background. We are not being represented. We are being managed.
In every serious organisation, performance is measured. There are targets, timelines, and consequences for failure. But in Ghana, our MPs and Ministers operate in a system where accountability is a suggestion and tenure is a reward for political loyalty rather than results. What has your MP done for your constituency this term? What projects has your Minister delivered? What problems have been solved? If we applied a basic KPI framework to our elected and appointed officials, how many would still have their jobs? The hard truth is that we have normalised mediocrity in public office for so long that we celebrate the bare minimum as achievement. A country that does not demand performance from its leaders will always get exactly what it tolerates.
The events unfolding in South Africa carry an important lesson for Ghana. Our citizens’ personal data sits in the hands of international telecommunications companies, and we have done little to reclaim it or protect it. Beyond data sovereignty, the conversation about a national telecom is long overdue. A state-owned telco is not just a business decision, it is a national security decision. Yet as a country, we have a pattern of waiting until a crisis forces our hand, then scrambling into agreements that cost us far more than proactive planning ever would have. The time to act is not when we are desperate. The time to act is now.
The health sector is the backbone of any functioning society, yet it remains one of the most neglected. Nurses go months without pay. Hospitals run out of basic supplies. Doctors emigrate in search of better conditions. Patients sleep on floors and share beds in wards that were built for half the number they now hold. We talk about development, infrastructure, and economic growth, but a nation that cannot take care of its sick is building on a weak foundation. Health is not a privilege. It is a right. And until our leaders treat it as such, the people will continue to suffer in silence, or die waiting.
Two Bedroom Apartment for rent
Location: Adenta Housing Down
Self electricity meter
Ghana Water
Good road network
3 washrooms
Spacious Kitchen
GHC 2500 a month for one year advance
Call or text 0538708013