@amerix Men create..and you can't create without a tool box.
This is my toolkit. I do cable management & network installation. DM -let's talk business.
He is not a madman. Isack Murangiri shot and killed Rex Maasai.
The pain is too much. We all know that he, too, has a family. What if someone did the same to his child, wife, brother, or cousin?
The pain among Kenyans is so deep that as we approach June 25 this month, many will not run away from the police.
People are carrying wounds that have never healed. They are carrying anger, grief, and memories of lives lost. The country cannot continue pretending that justice does not matter.
Justice for Rex Maasai.
A young Kenyan woman is calling out Lang'ata MP Jalang'o for appearing on billboards along Nairobi County's major streets, pointing out that the photo of the MP features an upside-down national flag.
Make it make sense
That a few heartless cops
Under the instructions of a true heartless boss
Will turn a flag-waving protester into a corpse
And all tax payers pay for it by force?
@DannMwangi's #RhymeAtPrime (#RAP)
Today in the @Senate_KE, I will substantiate how public money is being hidden and stolen in plain sight through budget lines labelled “Other Operating Expenses.” OVER 90 BILLION!
If salaries, utilities, travel, maintenance, fuel, training, procurable items, and other expenditures already have specific vote heads, what exactly is hidden under this vague and ever-expanding category?
Even more troubling, the Constitution requires parliamentary approval for all public borrowing. Yet billions are spent under opaque budget lines that escape meaningful scrutiny.
Kenyans deserve transparency, not blank cheques for wastage, mismanagement, and theft. Every shilling collected from taxpayers must be traceable, justified, and accounted for.
The era of hiding public funds behind vague budget descriptions must come to an end. STAY TUNED
Police officers are suffocating small businesses that are already struggling to survive.
Yesterday, I watched in disbelief as officers moved from one wines and spirits shop to another, demanding KSh 3,000 from each owner. Those who could not pay had their liquor confiscated on the spot.
It did not end there.
They stormed pool halls, seized pool sticks, carried away the balls, and arrested attendants whose only crime was trying to earn an honest living.
As I watched this happen, I asked one officer a simple question:
"If there is a bar operating inside a police station and even a pool table within police premises, should we also arrest the OCS?"
There was silence.
A young man standing nearby shook his head and said something that has stayed with me ever since:
"Nairobi life is becoming unbearable. Corruption has become the system. Sometimes I wish Uhuru Kenyatta was still the President."
Whether one agrees with him or not, his frustration reflected what many young people are feeling across the country.
The tragedy is that these crackdowns are not targeting criminals. They are targeting hustlers, entrepreneurs, and young Kenyans trying to put food on the table. Every pool table confiscated is a family denied income. Every wines and spirits shop harassed is another dream being crushed.
When citizens wake up every day fearing the very institutions meant to protect them, resentment grows. Anger grows. Frustration grows.
The government should not be surprised when young people respond with hostility at political rallies. You cannot squeeze people economically, expose them to endless corruption, frustrate their businesses, and then expect cheers and applause.
A nation cannot be built by intimidating its own citizens. It can only be built through fairness, justice, and respect for the people who wake up every morning trying to earn an honest living.
"If we cannot get justice and you decide to pay us, this is harsh money, ‘ati wewe shika hii, nyamaza.’ So are we really serious about this compensation and justice?" ~Mulamba
Money does not destroy relationships.
Money reveals them.
Money reveals
• Discipline.
• Leadership.
• Direction.
• Priorities.
• Character.
Money reveals the quality of decisions being made inside a home.
When money is flowing, many weaknesses remain hidden because life appears stable.
But, then, when pressure arrives, suddenly the arguments begin.
Most people think they are arguing about money.
They are not.
They are arguing about what money has exposed.
The absence of:
• Planning.
• Leadership.
• Vision.
• Discipline.
A drought does not create weak roots, it reveals them.
A woman will patiently live with you when you are broke because she can still see your direction, priorities, discipline and vision.
But if you remain rudderless, disorganized, chaotic and visionless, the marriage will collapse.
It is not the absence of money, it is the absence of leadership.
A storm does not create a weak foundation, it exposes it.
Money does exactly the same thing.
#BetterTogether
" You go to jail for stealing a chicken but you become a governor for stealing a billion shillings "- Nyawanga Owuor.
( Video Courtesy of Sauti Sessions
🚨 Kylian Mbappé: “I’m not playing for revenge. If I wanted to silence all the critics, I have to play until I’m 80 years old”. 👴🏽
“I’m only focused on doing my best for my country. That’s it. Full focus on that”.
Alf Inge Haaland played for Norway in the 1994 World Cup in the USA.
32 years later, he's watching his son Erling dominate in his World Cup debut for Norway in the USA ❤️