151,630 students have dropped out of school under CBC/CBE.
According to Citizen TV Kenya, many of these learners come from poor families struggling to meet fees and other school-related costs.
Yet the government keeps celebrating Grade 10 transition numbers, creating the impression that every child has successfully moved on.
But joining is one thing. Continuing is another.
Enrollment figures mean little if thousands quietly disappear from the system because education has become unaffordable.
There goes the destruction of the Kibaki legacy of ensuring all students, both rich or poor, get free education, by the William Ruto Govt
Mutahi Ngunyi and the Dying Podcast of Clowns: Still Peddling Divisive Lies in 2026
Aging war-monger @MutahiNgunyi and his struggling Youtube channel of clowns - complete with their Njeri Thorne fake British accents and performative intellectualism - continue to recycle the same tired, toxic tribal narrative.
They are still pushing the falsehood that Kikuyus live a full decade longer than Luos, hoping to stoke a fictitious sense of ethnic superiority among the Kikuyu community.
This claim is not rooted in solid, verified national statistics. Kenya’s overall life expectancy hovers around 63–66 years. Any regional differences that do exist are driven by access to healthcare, nutrition, urbanization, education levels, and historical investment patterns - not by ethnicity itself.
The “10-year gap” is political propaganda, not public health data.
The real tragedy is that Kikuyu counties are being systematically looted to their deathbeds. There are no new hospitals, no modern public recreational facilities, no proper pedestrian walkways, and no meaningful reforms aimed at genuinely increasing life expectancy.
Historically, the community has suffered immensely: British colonial concentration camps killed thousands, and later, John Michuki’s brutal “war” against the Mungiki claimed hundreds of innocent lives, particularly among young men.
Add to this the epidemic of illicit brews and alcohol addiction fueled by chronic joblessness, and the much-hyped “Kikuyu prosperity” reveals itself as little more than a mirage, carefully maintained to suppress revolutionary sentiment and sow enmity between communities that share the same history of being used as cannon fodder by successive oppressors.
The deliberate destruction of key sectors like coffee under Mwai Kibaki left the region barely surviving. Many residents have been forced to migrate to the Gulf in search of menial jobs or even Russia to fight in the frontlines of Putin’s war, a humiliating indictment of decades of mismanagement.
The same pattern of sabotage is evident in Nyanza. Flagship industries like sugar were deliberately run down to favour importers and cartels. The result is gradual disempowerment and poverty.
To distract attention from these state-orchestrated heists, especially those carried out by governors tethered to corrupt political parties - divisive ethnic narratives must be constantly manufactured and amplified.
Since the advent of devolution, no county should still lack a functional referral hospital, decent schools, or basic recreational and social amenities.
Yet the failure is glaring.
Instead of addressing these governance disasters, the system prefers to keep Kenyans fighting each other over fictitious ethnic superiority or victimhood.
This is British colonial divide-and-rule psychology imported by @UKinKenya to preserve William Ruto’s degenerate regime. The ruling class and their media enablers understand that a united population would quickly turn its anger toward the real sources of misery: state capture, looting, and foreign-driven economic sabotage.
So they keep the public distracted with tribal scorekeeping while the country continues to bleed.
Mutahi Ngunyi and his ilk are not analysts. They are propagandists recycling the same old poison to keep Kenyans divided, angry, and blind to the common enemy.
The sooner the public sees through this tired game, the sooner we can focus on the real fight.
The Psychological Trap of “Mass Endorsement” Optics: How Politicians Weaponise Boda Boda Crowds to Break the Middle Class
Kiambu residents - and Kenyans at large - must consciously reject the deliberate psychological manipulation hidden in these panoramic photos of politicians surrounded by hundreds of boda boda riders in branded jackets.
This is not organic support. It is a carefully engineered spectacle designed to trigger voter resignation, defeatism, and apathy among the thinking middle class.
By flooding the public with images of massive, uniform crowds, the political class wants you to internalise one dangerous message: “They are too many. We are outnumbered. Resistance is futile.”
The truth is far more sobering. These one-off handouts and reflector jackets come once every five years. It is you, the working and middle class, who sustain these operators every single day through your daily patronage - your rides, your shopping, your businesses.
They depend on you far more than you depend on them. Yet the system trains them to look to politicians for validation instead of their actual customers.
This is classic divide-and-rule psychology: make the middle class feel isolated and powerless by projecting an illusion of overwhelming “peasant power.” It preys on the human tendency toward social proof and majority bias - if it looks like everyone else is supporting a candidate, your brain starts questioning its own judgement.
Do not fall for it.
If you struggled through school, built a career, pay taxes, and have never received even a fraction of a bribe from any politician, you have no reason to be intimidated by these optics. Your education, experience, and discernment give you superior analytical capacity.
Do not surrender your electoral power to groups that have been deliberately kept dependent, poorly educated, and susceptible to short-term inducements.
Stop asking your mboch, watchman, gardener, boda boda rider, mama mboga, matatu driver, or makanga who they are voting for. Don’t be like your stupid parents and the generation of old useless bastards who made voting decisions by asking random peasants and slum-dwellers “watu wanasema nini” or “mnachagua nani”?
That question itself is a form of self-sabotage, handing over your hard-earned political agency to people the system has systematically impoverished and conditioned to vote against their own long-term interests.
The middle class must psychologically reclaim its power. These boda boda crowds are nothing without your daily money. Never allow staged mass photos to make you feel outnumbered or defeated.
Your money. Your choice. Your future. Take your power back.
@returnflights6 @Faksback666 The ancient Romans usually made fun of your ancestors because of this particular shortcoming while they struggled trying to civilize them.