Harry Truman once said: “The only thing new in the world is the history you do not know.”
Fellow Kenyans, our crisis did not begin yesterday.
The looting. The illegal debt. The betrayal of the Constitution. The collapse of public services. The silence of career politicians. These are old scripts repeated by leaders who believe Kenyans forget quickly.
They believe another scandal will trend. Another distraction will come. Another funeral, another handshake, another coalition, another slogan.
Meanwhile, you pay more taxes for debts you never approved and never benefited from.
Between 2014 and 2024, Kenya borrowed Sh9.11 trillion. Only Sh2.57 trillion received proper parliamentary approval. The remaining Sh6.54 trillion is odious debt, unconstitutional borrowing forced onto the backs of struggling citizens.
This is why food prices rise while wages stagnate. This is why hospitals lack medicine while billions disappear. This is why schools decline while politicians grow richer. This is why young people graduate into hopelessness.
And while Kenya bleeds, legacy politicians remain silent. Many are not fighting to fix the system. They are fighting to inherit it.
They criminalize protesters. They weaponize police. They reward political loyalists with advisory jobs funded by taxpayers. They protect corruption networks while ordinary Kenyans suffer.
We go to court because the Constitution is the last line of defense between the people and organized state plunder.
From the struggle for independence in 1963, to Saba Saba, to the 2010 Constitution, every generation of Kenyans has been called to defend freedom against greed and impunity. History is watching us now.
If we remain silent while our country is looted, future generations will remember us as the people who watched Kenya collapse and did nothing.
Read history. Defend the Constitution. Reject fear. Reject silence. Reject thieves disguised as leaders.
We must be a nation that reads, remembers, and refuses to be misled by the same old tricks. Know your history, defend your rights, and let us not be "newly" surprised by what we should have already learned.
Kenya istahili heshima
#OdiousDebt
#ReKe
#Constitutionalism
All development has to be conducted in the context of the Constitution. Yes we want markets, but you must do it right. My full statement on the so called “cooperation agreement”.
There’s a GenZ vying in Magarini constituency in the upcoming elections of 27th November 2025.
His name is Amos Katana. He is 25 years old and vying as an independent candidate.
Let’s make him famous.
Rizq doesn't come from hustle.
It comes from Al-Razzāq.
Yes, work, study, strive.
But never believe your hands are the source.
Degrees, jobs, late nights are just means.
Barakah is only from Allah.
That's why two people do the same work...
One feels suffocated.
The other feels expanded.
It's not the grind.
It's the Giver.
Work smart. Show up.
But trust Allah harder.
Lately, I’ve seen people ask:
“Why didn’t Amason Kingi or Salim Mvurya ever bring real development to the people of Kilifi and Kwale?”
And also: “Why do locals keep electing bad leaders despite so much suffering?”
Here’s how I see it (and I know some may disagree):
The poverty is deliberate.
Many of these leaders actually prefer keeping their people poor.
Think about it, if Kingi or Mvurya had fixed the water problem, people would be farming more. If they had built proper roads, farmers could easily get their cassava and other produce to market, make money, and improve their lives. Like even youths could earn from agriculture
And once people are empowered like that, they stop relying on handouts. They start demanding better schools, better health care, real services. Because they can feed themselves & solve their problems
That kind of awakening would threaten the survival of leaders who only thrive by keeping people desperate.
So what happens? 1/2
"Please take it from me. I am nobody's project.
I will never be Ruto's project. Please understand that and take my word for it."
President Maraga The 6th
Team @dkmaraga kindly make a mechanism for Kenyans of good will to join and support the campaign. I'd suggest a website that is integrated with payment services so that we can contribute funds via Mpesa and other means. I'd also suggest that there be an option for volunteers to adopt a polling station, a ward, a constituency, or a county (depending on ability, willingness, and experience). Let the volunteer registration data include names, ID numbers, voter numbers, mobile number, email address and the polling station at which the volunteer will be voting at. Let the website also be capable of recording non-cash donations because for instance you may find somebody willing to donate a motorvehicle or a hundred T-shirts or other material. There should be infrastructure for collection of these items and feedback to show they've been collected and delivered to the campaign team. 2027 isn't very far, I also propose engaging a young but brilliant branding expert such as @georgeadulu to help with basic branding and communication. @NelsonHavi please amplify, we all want a president Maraga!
If you want to negotiate, we've nominated the late Rex Masai, Albert Ojwang, and Boniface Kariuki to represent us ~ Bernard Kavuli says that if the government insists on dialogue, they have appointed some of the late victims to represent them
You have no reason whatsoever, not to consider voting David Maraga for President in 2027. All you need is to be registered as a voter. In the meantime, hear him.
Tunaamka Na Maraga Kwanza before anything. Share the message from Malaba to Mombasa, Vanga to Mandera, Amboseli to Lodwar.
Let it resonate with everyone.