Trump on Balogun:
Balogun is our best player. He got a red card. I didn't know what that meant, but then I heard that it means you cannot play in the next game.
That's very unfair. How do you penalize him for a game that hasn't been played yet?
I asked for a review by FIFA.
Red cards are not overturned by political phone calls. They are overturned by rules, evidence and independent bodies. If a U.S. President intervenes with the FIFA President — and a player is suddenly cleared before a World Cup knockout match — the question is unavoidable: Quo vadis, FIFA?
Football must never become a playground for political power. #FIFA #WorldCup #GianniInfantino #DonaldTrump
🚨⚪️ BREAKING: Real Madrid officially inform Como they activate €9m buy back clause for Nico Páz.
Nico returns and the club gives Como the chance to buy him for €60m from now to Monday.
Otherwise, next week Nico will be back to Real Madrid — and on the market again for MORE than €60m.
The debate is being framed incorrectly.
The issue is not the existence of CCTV cameras in school dormitory hallways. Surveillance in common areas is a standard safety measure in many boarding institutions and is often intended to enhance student security, emergency response, and accountability. Hallways are not private spaces.
The fundamental question is this: Why are students sleeping in hallways in the first place?
If learners are occupying corridors designed for movement and emergency evacuation, then the discussion should focus on overcrowding, inadequate infrastructure, student welfare, and compliance with minimum boarding standards.
A corridor is not a dormitory. It is not a sleeping area. The presence of students sleeping there points to a deeper institutional and policy failure that cannot be obscured by arguments about cameras.
Public attention should be directed toward capacity management, dormitory standards, and the conditions under which students are being accommodated. When a school reaches the point where hallways become sleeping quarters, the problem is not surveillance, it is overcrowding.
That is the issue that demands answers.
Now that you guys are done with your Mama mboga arguments of CCTVs in that Utumishi school,let me,the expert,speak. Anyone whose been in this security field long enough knows that first before anything,even the installation of the cameras,we do what we call a DPIA. Data protection Impact Assessment. Primarily moving within the section 25 of 2019 data protection act that says we can only set up cameras in areas where its needed.
And its very clear. Security does not surpass privacy,in anyway manner. In Utumishi the cameras are facing the door,infact its observing the hallway entrance to see who comes in. That is still within the parameters of the data protection act. The real question here should be,who saw it fit to have children sleep in the hallway like refugees. This is a national school for christs sake!
Anyway. If any of you are interested in survellience cameras low/high/premium range, reach us via https://t.co/QqiVqtp6i6 we are open from tomorrow!
Ruto must Go!
The greatest mistake we made after the Finance Bill demonstrations was elevating some of the most foolish people far beyond their IQ capabilities. For instance, this woman raised her fist high in front of a police officer and suddenly became the face of liberation. Today, when Maraga was out on a genuine cause against femicide, she's all over the place cursing the old man for standing against the vice.
It turns out that raising a fist is much easier than raising the level of public discourse. Some people were mistaken for revolutionaries when they were merely well-positioned for a photo opportunity. The camera crowned them heroes. 😏