@Kerry0nan@ClaudeBrilliant@Kimuzi_ History cares,our constitution cares,the citizenry cares and even if they don't pay for it in their lifetime they will with their soiled legacy forever
Dennis Oliech and the Tragedy of Elder Capture: A Millennial Cautionary Tale
In the quiet corners of Dagoretti, where the remnants of faded glory meet the haze of muguka and cheap liquor, Dennis Oliech sits as a living monument to a generational tragedy.
Once a dazzling striker for Al Arabi, Nantes, Auxerre, and Harambee Stars, Oliech’s story is no longer about footballing brilliance. It is about what happens when a gifted young man internalises the gospel of his elders too deeply - and pays for it with his prime.
This is not merely one man’s fall. It is the story of an entire generation taught to kneel.
For decades, Kenya’s Boomers and Gen X have perfected a subtle, devastating system of control. They dangle proximity to power, promises of tenders, networks, and social elevation before ambitious young people. In return, they demand one thing above all: submission. Toe the line. Respect your elders. Serve the structure. Cosplay loyalty long enough, and the rewards will come.
Dennis Oliech embodied this bargain. At the peak of his career, he funnelled his earnings to his late mother, in an act of filial piety that many celebrated as noble. Today, the famous restaurant bearing his name is run by others, while Oliech himself chews muguka in the shadows.
This is elder capture in its purest form.
The mechanism is brutally effective. Boomers and Gen X selectively reward compliant Millennials - Jalango, Ronald Karauri, Maina Kageni, and others - parading their material success as proof that the system works. These shining examples become living advertisements: Serve faithfully, and you too can rise.
The unspoken threat is equally clear: step out of line, pursue your own path, demand justice and equity, and face isolation and exclusion.
We saw this psychology at work recently with Dennis Ombachi and Bien Aime Baraza. Their colonial-style capitulation was not merely about money. It was about the oldest temptation in the book - the promise of being “ahead of Gaitho and the rest,” of being accepted into the inner chambers of power.
The same script that turned promising young voices into performers for the status quo.
Even Njoki Chege, once a sharp-tongued columnist at NMG who built a career blasting young men while praising wazee, eventually found herself sidelined and purposeless in the newsroom she once dominated. The reward for loyalty, it turns out, is often temporary relevance.
This is not wisdom being passed down. It is a war of attrition disguised as tradition.
Millennials were conditioned to abandon their peers, sacrifice their most productive years, and serve as mboches at Kikuyu Council of Elders events - slaughtering goats, running errands and hoping for crumbs of wisdom, connections, or tenders that rarely materialise.
While they waited for the mythical quantum leap, their time - the only truly irreplaceable resource - slipped away.
The result is a generation caught between two worlds: those who obeyed and are now quietly rotting in obscurity, and those who are selectively elevated as propaganda tools to keep the rest in check.
The political implications are urgent. Look at the betrayals rocking Kenya’s reform movement - Boniface Mwangi, Kasmuel Mcoure, Hanifa Adan, Polo Kimani, Willie Oeba, Morara Kebaso, and now Ombachi and Baraza. The common thread is striking: they are overwhelmingly Millennials who, at critical moments, chose the comfort of elder validation over the uncertainty of genuine independence.
This is not coincidence. It is the logical outcome of decades of psychological conditioning.
Dennis Oliech is the cautionary tale. A man who had the world at his feet, yet chose filial duty and elder counsel over self-actualisation and strategic alliances with his peers.
The revolution will not be won by those still waiting for crumbs from the table of their fathers. It will be won by those brave enough to reject the false choice between “respecting elders” and building their own future.
The Dobler-Dahmer Theory. Grand romantic gestures are only charming if both people are mutually interested. If the recipient is not interested, the same gesture is stalker-like, alarming or serial-killer crazy. The fine line depends entirely on the recipient's feelings.
Raila is gone and he cannot hear, he cannot speak, and he cannot come back to babysit anyone’s politics.
The political babies who were spoon-fed by him, who suckled from his name, his networks, his courage and his sacrifices, must now grow up and chart their own way.
Let the dead be dead, and let the living do living things.
This habit of telling Kenyans, “Raila said this before he died” or “Raila wanted this” is useless political witchcraft. If you are alive, speak for yourself and If you want power, fight for it.
In African tradition, a child who refuses to stop breastfeeding long after the mother is gone becomes a village embarrassment.
Raila’s grave should not become a political kitchen where lazy leaders go to warm yesterday’s food.
Let the living chart their way and let the dead rest.
What makes a population of over 50 Million people normalize dysfunction from a few politicians? Is it fear, conditioning, survival, or something else entirely?
Who actually understands this, psychologists, sociologists, historians, anyone?? Feel free to weigh in✌🏾
Make me understand why ambulance iko, dere ako lakini haiwezi fanya referral just because haina fuel.
Na hapo nje motorcade ya governor inashinda ya Trump.
But when I talk, ni mimi sitaki iwork.