Two things he said and I clapped like a mad woman
1. The constitution is the only Kenyan document (book) that unites us regardless of religion, creed or ethnicity
Inculcate it in the curriculum
2. Governments Respect Noise!
Sir, whoever you are, Standing Ovation Nganga
Emotions are forms of knowledge. Never apologize for them. What we need is the whole range of knowledge, not just one, not reason only, emotion only, spirituality only. Knowledge is a stew that combines different ingredients. Imperialism likes to fragment and isolate different sources of knowledge so that our minds remain compartmentalized.
Inflation has indeed fallen from a 9.6% peak in late 2022 to around 4.6% now, forex reserves hit a record $12B (up from $7-8B), and CBR dropped to 9.25% from highs above 13%. Exchange rate claim off—~120 KES/USD at Ruto's 2022 start, not 165; it's now ~129 after interim depreciation. Debt rose ~KSh9T to 12T (not 5T), unemployment stable ~5% (not to 7.6%), poverty disputed but likely up slightly amid global pressures. Mixed progress: macros stabilizing, but household costs persist.
I can confirm that the last time FOOLS tried to stop a TEACHER from teaching, through a court process, was in 399BC. The teacher was the famous philosopher SOCRATES. Robert ALAI is trying to repeat that feat 2424 years later. It takes millenia to produce this kind of stupidity.
There are two agendas being pushed at the same time and what amazes me is how most people don’t see it.
The first agenda: the viral videos and photos mocking Raila Odinga Jnr.
At face value, it looks like people being insensitive or childish online. But if you look closer, it’s a calculated psychological operation meant to prepare you, to soften your resistance, for the Computer Misuse and Cybercrime (Amendment) Bill, 2024.
They want you to be outraged enough to say, “Take those videos down!”
They want you to willingly call for censorship, to beg for regulation, to cry for control. That is how manufactured consent works.
They make you feel like you’re making a moral choice, when in reality, you’re giving them permission to police your speech, your thoughts, your digital space.
It is shameful to mock anyone with a disability. Society has always known that.
Long before government bills and online outrage, that punishment existed naturally and socially.
Nature has its own way of punishing cruelty — often by giving the cruel something equally heavy to carry.
And socially, such mockery has always been taboo. But now, in the age of moral decay and shallow trends, you’ve baptized mockery as “dark humor.”
There was a time when even our art corrected us:
“Ukiona mtu ni kilema, baba,
Ukiona mtu ni kilema, mama,
Wacha kucheka, kesho ni kwako,
Wacha kucheka, utazaa kilema.”
That song was not just a melody. It was a mirror of conscience.
Now, that conscience is being manipulated — your compassion being used as a tool of control.
The goal is to amplify outrage so that there’s no resistance when new laws, quietly designed to silence dissent, are passed.
You’ll think you’re defending decency, but you’ll be defending tyranny in disguise.
The second agenda: Governor Mutahi Kahiga’s remarks.
Here again, you all know what’s going on, but many will still pretend not to.
His utterance was despicable, yes, but the intent behind the timing and amplification is even worse.
Ask yourself: Who benefits most from this kind of ethnic provocation?
If you pay attention, you’ll see a familiar pattern. A rift is being engineered, deliberately, to prevent two major communities from ever sitting at the same table.
The irony is that many in the political class from both sides have intermarried, dine together, and laugh at your outrage.
The architects of division know that if Kenyans unite on class and conscience, if you ever decide to speak with one voice, their empires crumble overnight.
So they light a fire between tribes, feed you anger, and then hide behind the smoke while signing new laws and sealing new deals.
You’ll spend weeks debating the words of one misguided messenger, while the real enemies of progress keep cashing in on your distractions.
This isn’t new anything new. It’s Divide and Rule 101.
You think you’re reacting to events, but they’re designing your reactions.
You think you’re watching coincidences, but you’re witnessing choreography.
As for me, I see it clearly. Langu huwa jicho ila nawaona kabisa.
And until you start listening, really listening, Kenyan politics will keep repeating the same script, just with different actors.
The system survives not because it’s powerful, but because the people are divided and distracted. Wake up before the smoke becomes your reality.
Kipchumba Murkomen, Kenyan youth are not fools. We see, we hear, we remember. Under Uhuru Kenyatta’s government, getting a National ID was free. The system worked. Chiefs and assistant chiefs ensured every young Kenyan rich or poor, from Turkana to Taveta got their IDs without bribes or bottlenecks. The machines worked, the offices were functional, and the process was straightforward.
Then came William Ruto’s administration loud in promises, hollow in action. Under the “wise” leadership of Interior CS Kithure Kindiki, the government suddenly decided that to be recognized as a Kenyan, you must pay Kshs 1,050. Imagine that you must pay to prove you exist!
They claimed it was for “processing,” but the truth is darker. That money, collected from millions of desperate youth, ballooned into an amount approaching Kshs 540 billion money that cannot be traced, money that evaporated into private jets, new choppers, luxury SUVs, and lavish lifestyles of the so-called “leaders of the hustlers.”
They milked the poorest Kenyans to fund their greed, turning a basic right into a cash cow. They made citizenship a business. Then, when the outcry became too loud, when social media burned with anger and jobless youth cried out in desperation, they turned it into a PR stunt.
Now Ruto and his echo chamber parade around boasting that “we have removed the fee” pretending it was an act of compassion. No, it wasn’t compassion. It was guilt management. It was damage control.
When the youth reached out to the President’s daughter, Charlene Ruto, pleading that not everyone can afford to pay Kshs 1,000 for an ID, they weren’t asking for pity. They were crying out against systemic exploitation. And when Ruto now claims he acted because his daughter “told him” it was unfair, it only exposes how detached he is from reality. A leader who needs his child to tell him his people are suffering is not a leader he’s a stranger to the nation he governs.
This is not an achievement. This is an admission of failure. You don’t get applause for cleaning up a mess you deliberately created. You don’t deserve praise for returning what you stole. The ID fee saga is not a sign of leadership it’s a confession of corruption, incompetence, and arrogance.
Kenyan youth are not blind. We know when a government is playing mind games. You first punish us, drain us, and then present the correction as kindness. You rob us in daylight, then call it reform.
Ruto, Kindiki, Murkomen all of you who claim to speak for the youth what you’re really doing is speaking on top of the youth. You’ve turned every ministry into a collection point, every reform into a scam, every “digital transformation” into a cover for theft.
The hypocrisy is suffocating. You called it a “bottom-up government,” but what we’ve seen is top-down greed from billionaires in helicopters lecturing jobless youth about hard work.
Removing the ID fee isn’t progress it’s proof of how deeply you’ve lost touch with the people you swore to serve. You celebrated it as if it was a gift to the youth, yet the truth is it was their money all along.
We are not idiots. We are angry. We are awake. We will not be deceived by PR smiles, staged pressers, or hollow apologies. We know the game, and we’re calling it out this government is rotting from the top.
Officially launched my Campaign to go around all the Universities to ensure all Gen Zs are registered voters. We started today at Pwani University in Kilifi County. We will Traverse the Nation to ensure all young people Register and have a say in leadership and decision making
Global Centre for Adaptation did a promo vid asking The Gates Foundation to support their activities in Kenya. Ask them @GCAdaptation why an organisation dealing with climate change, Land and natural resources needs immunity from legal process and being sued.
Dets on pinned tweet
Wakenya: this is where your children are at. If you don't intervene immediately and train them to do the work of learning, if you dont stop following the CBC and media propaganda of talent, your children are going to collapse into a generational and mental health crisis. And this is especially for you middle class parents. Your children are the ones most affected by the epidemic of parents who don't want their kids to break a nail to learn anything. And the private schools you're paying baby sitting fees to are not going to tell you the truth, because you pay for the lies.
Funny how Kenyans shout about not listening to anyone but Africans, but won't listen to a Kenyan round the corner.
So what is an "African," may I ask? It seems most of us Kenyans don't qualify as African, no matter all the knowledge work we do. So Kenyans proclaim they won't listen to Europeans, then refuse to listen to Africans as they announce they're not listening to wazungu.
So to whom do you listen, if at all?
Voter registration starts on Monday the 29th of September. Have your IDs ready and register in numbers. The change of leadership in this country will happen if we register and then vote when the time comes.