If you want to hide a mass grave, build a monument, a church, or a prison on it.
If you want to hide a tartarian building, you allocate it to a bank or a Government department.
If you want to hide mineral sites,you demarcate it as a national park.
If you want to hide your secret mining activities, build a dam on the degraded land.
🇮🇷 Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi in Switzerland 🔥
He stated: "The first line of the deal reads, 'ending the war on all fronts, including in Lebanon.'"
"Although Iran has stayed committed to maintaining the agreement, the Zionist regime broke it by killing civilians in Lebanon.
Look at the chronology: whenever we moved toward peace, Netanyahu dragged us back or into something worse.
He is the real cancer of the world."🔥
Brutal reality by Araghchi. He is going to expose Netanyahu on Global level 💪
Kenya does not suffer from a shortage of political experience. It suffers from an excess of politicians whose experience has been spent managing decline rather than delivering progress.
If the same individuals have been at the center of power for years while the same challenges persist, they cannot continue presenting themselves as the solution. They are not spectators to Kenya's problems; they are participants in their creation and perpetuation.
🕊️ Before Zionism, this is how Jerusalem actually was.
A Christian grandmother born in the city explains how Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together as equals no second-class citizens, no checkpoints, no occupation.
Then 1948 came.
Zionist forces attacked Arab residential areas.
Her family was forced out.
Like ~98% of the Christian residents of West Jerusalem.
She ends with the line that hits hardest:
“Our homeland is gone…”
This is the history they work overtime to erase.
Watch every second.
Then ask yourself why this testimony is buried while the opposite narrative is amplified everywhere.
This was 49 years ago… all those racist white kids in the video are 55-75 today. They run the country, run the judicial system, serve as police chiefs, etc. Let that marinate, bro.
Iranian TV host bursts into tears talking about Minabi parents who still go the cemetery every night and sleep there
One parent said my kids were afraid of dark, I'll go there to be with them at night so they don't feel afraid anymore
Sen Okiya Omtatah told the Senate that under President Ruto’s four-year administration, approximately Sh4.8 trillion had been borrowed without parliamentary approval — a figure he argued exceeds what was borrowed during Uhuru Kenyatta’s entire eight-year tenure.
He described this as “odious debt” and tabled 93 official documents, including Appropriation Acts from 2014 onwards, to demonstrate the pattern of unconstitutional borrowing
This thing called goons that you are breeding will one day haunt you.
History has a cruel way of turning yesterday’s instruments of intimidation into tomorrow’s source of instability. The same groups you unleash against citizens, protesters, and critics in pursuit of short-term political advantage can eventually become uncontrollable forces that threaten the very system that created them.
No society can build lasting peace on violence, fear, and lawlessness. When the rule of law is replaced by gangs, and institutions are weakened in favour of hired muscle, the consequences spare no one. Governments come and go, but the culture of impunity they nurture often outlives them.
TSC deducted an extra Sh108 in PAYE from teachers’ June payslips without any explanation. For over 300,000 teachers, this amounts to roughly Sh32.4 million taken in a single month with no public justification or prior notice.
That is a pattern of opaque decision-making where deductions are implemented first and explanations, if any, come later. Teachers are left to adjust their already stretched incomes while institutions operate without urgency or accountability.
Fraudsters all over !
Remember when it was revealed that Tsavorite and Rubies were being mined at Tsavo East National Park? It seems that the theft is complete and to hide the evidence, the killer regime has chosen to build a dam as a form of land reclamation. Amkeni MAJAMAA. Nchi inaporwa!
The cockroach voted for the insecticide because it hated the ant. The cricket abstained. The fly stayed home. When the spraying began, everyone discovered a painful truth: consequences do not recognize supporters, abstainers, or bystanders.
That is the danger of apathy, neutrality, and voting driven by resentment rather than reason. In the end, the consequences of bad decisions are rarely selective. They reach everyone.
Narok residents walked out on Governor Patrick Ole Ntutu as he took the stage to deliver President Ruto’s condolence message. The crowd exited en masse after the governor shifted his speech to lecture the audience and attack opposition leaders, leaving him addressing mostly empty chairs.
Electricity costs have gone up again.
EPRA has added new charges that will increase power bills by about Sh3.87 per unit this June, piling even more pressure on Kenyan families, small businesses, and manufacturers.
Yet we are constantly treated to lectures about economic management and the cost of living from Hon. Ndindi Nyoro. Curiously, however, there is little public agitation from him when electricity prices rise despite his status as KPLC's largest individual shareholder.
If high taxes are a problem, surely unaffordable electricity is too. If ordinary Kenyans deserve relief from government-imposed costs, they also deserve relief from corporate decisions that keep power bills climbing.
So where is the campaign for cheaper electricity? Where is the demand that shareholders accept lower returns so that millions of struggling Kenyans can pay less for power?
It is easy to advocate sacrifice when the sacrifice is required from others. The real test comes when the sacrifice touches one's own interests.
Kenyans deserve consistency, not selective outrage. When electricity prices go up, silence from those who profit from the system speaks louder than any speech.
"Planting a tree is contributing to the life of all humanity," President Captain Ibrahim Traoré of Burkina Faso 🇧🇫 said as he planted his tree today as part of Burkina Faso's National Tree Day.