Ghana issues we are facing;
Galamsey
Dumsor
Sanitation
Transportation
Water
Cost of living
Unemployment
Rent
Corruption
Looting state
Roads
Streetlights
Hospital beds
Ethnic conflicts at Bawku
Grazing
misappropriation of funds
Black stars
Cocoa farmers
Overpricing
My hypothesis is that he believes he is doing stakeholders a favour by engaging on such consequential legislation. Notice how he points to his predecessors and argues that they did not engage at all on other legislation. The implication seems to be that stakeholders should be grateful for the engagement, even if the quality of that engagement is lacking.
If you publish a poor first draft of a bill and subsequently make substantial changes to it, a genuine commitment to transparency requires that you publish the revised and more polished draft as well. That way, stakeholders can review the current provisions under consideration and provide informed feedback.
Looks like a good way to spin civic education.
Imagine creating content for airing across major TV channels and socials for students to follow?
Wasn’t there but from the comments, it went well. Is it already released on YouTube yet?
Anytime I see a house in Ghana being paraded as luxurious, it reminds me Ghanaians simply do not have taste.
Also, what’s the beef with windows these days?
It’s like they finish building and remember they have to add windows cos what are these slices of windows I keep seeing?
Today I graduated with a Master of Science from @harvardmed : degree number 6 overall, and my 4th from @Harvard .
I truly love learning, and God has blessed me with a neurodivergent brain. People often ask how I manage to do so much with so little time, and the honest answer is that I cannot take the credit. It is grace, entirely. As Paul writes: “But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me has not been in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them—though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me” (1 Corinthians 15:10, NRSV). To Him be all the glory 🙌🏿🙌🏿🙌🏿.
My family, on the other hand, has officially tapped out. Nobody came to my graduation 😂😂😂. They told me plainly: “We are tired. You like school too much.” So a big shoutout to one of my dearest friends in the world, Wardiya, who left work and showed up so I would not be the only person crossing the stage to a wall of silence.
Balancing academic study with full-time work and family commitments isn’t easy and requires sacrifice and tradeoffs. I’m grateful to my family, friends, loved ones and my incredible colleagues at @CarePointCares@S_D_Foundation@mydeghana
The Executive Leadership track in the Harvard Medical School MSc program put me alongside founders, CEOs, and leaders of health systems across North America, the Middle East, Eurasia, Latin America, and beyond; medical directors, scientists, researchers, academic leaders. My capstone, Aging@Home, focused on designing an AI-driven platform for managing geriatric care in urban Accra.
And I got to hang out with our commencement speaker, @ConanOBrien , which was such a highlight.
In Nandom, we have no wealth from oil, gold, diamonds or other natural resources. All we have is our God and our brains. Nandome, this is for you.
Night is here; the celebration is over. As I learned at @PeddieSchool , Finimus Pariter Renovamusque Labores. Back to work 🙏🏿.
#lifelonglearner #foreverscholar #veritas #harvardcommencement2026
Chef Abbys has hacked it! Food is such a unifier and a timeless cultural export. With her consistency and @myrunwaygroup’s support, there is really no limit for her. Can’t wait to see her become a WHO or FAO ambassador soon!
Go Neighbour! @chefabbys