STATE OF THE NATION, 2026
Part 2: Ugandan society remains mentally stuck in the 1990s.
None of the major newspapers, radio and TV talk shows, or video podcasts have ever discussed AI.
Politics, government jobs, elections, and Big Men still dominate national thought.
END SECRET VETTING: Xenophobia in all forms must be combated, and an open parliamentary vetting process is required to cancel narratives that may stoke division or prejudice against any community, and erode the rule of law. Here’s our statement on @ReachDrMuganga#Democratization
Losing a government job is like going to the guillotine. You get to know that all the talk about a vibrant growing economy with numerous opportunities is just talk. That asking the youth to be job makers and not seekers is easier said than done.
Let everyone remain calm.
The clear legal position is unambiguous.
Xenophobia in all forms must be combated.
This isolated case of constitutional scrutiny must not be misused to stoke division or prejudice against any community.
Mr. Muganga Lawrence was not rejected by the committee for being a Munyarwanda, a narrative i see some people so deceptively selling. We have other leaders who are banyarwanda who were approved & have been approved in the past. Hon . Aisha Ssekindi and Dianah Mutasingwa were approved yet they are Banyarwanda but Ugandan citizens.
Muganga was not approved after he denied holding a Rwandan passport, but the Committee investigations confirmed he holds 3 passports: Ugandan, Canadian and Rwandan. Why was he denying it? Therefore, the claim that he was rejected because of being a munyarwanda is totally false, misleading & dangerous.
@Owishemwe So if we got rid of 2 MPs it means 2000 Interns would be getting allowances for a month. Get rid of 24 MPigs and all the interns in the country are catered for for a full year. Simple mathematics but the low IQ leaders that Uganda has won't see this.
@tibzkarts2@ReachDrMuganga So there should be cases when the law is "strictly applied" and cases when it isn't? Who decides? Is it then still a law anyway, if it can be discretionarily applied? Do you have some sense in your head?