@Koku_Sen__@Wangariiii_ Everything you've said is bs except your last sentence. Of course feminism cannot exist without men. Feminism exists because men exist. If the world was only women why would we want to be feminist when we could get equal rights anyway.
Raila Odinga was a true champion of democracy. A child of independence, he endured decades of struggle and sacrifice for the broader cause of freedom and self-governance in Kenya. Time and again, I personally saw him put the interests of his country ahead of his own ambitions. Like few other leaders anywhere, he was willing to choose the path of peaceful reconciliation without compromising his core values. Through his life, Raila Odinga set an example not just for Kenyans, but across Africa and around the world. I know he will be missed. Michelle and I send our deepest condolences to his family and to the people of Kenya.
A discarded gun dog.
No uniform. No weapon. No orders. No Ruto. No Murkomen to bark for you. No commander to hide behind. Just concrete walls and cold steel silence. Haha
You were never a hero. You were a tool.
And the moment your usefulness expired, they tossed you into the trash heap of forgotten fools.
Now sit there. Rot.
Reflect on the blood you spilled for a regime that won’t even whisper your name.
I've learnt today that this is called 'Virtue signaling'
Deplatform all these celebrities who can't use actual words to call out injustice. Tujiangalie makachieth!
I have a theory, Rusheni mawe if you must, But I know I’m not alone in thinking this,
If someone is truly in hiding ,afraid for their life, wouldn’t instinct compel them to at least send a message to family? Even just a one-liner, a missed call, something to stop the torment of those worried sick about them? You don’t just disappear in fear, get a clean shave or maybe not so clean,and reappear in silence. That’s not fear, that’s a script.
Another theory: The Judiciary, feeling the weight of public outrage, pressures the DCI to account for Ndiangui. But instead of presenting him, the DCI plays the long game. Let the tension build. Let Kenyans cry. Then at the right moment, reintroduce him with a carefully planted narrative,”He was just in hiding.” Why? Because if they can convince you this was never an abduction, they dilute the power of protest. The next time someone goes missing, the streets will be quieter. People will hesitate to demand justice. And in that silence, the state can make more people disappear,unbothered, unchecked.
And the public will fear posting because,…what if he’s just in hiding, this might backfire one day me..
Or maybe it’s something even darker.
What if money changed hands? What if someone was bought to play along …say you were never abducted, give you a job, load your account, and let government bloggers spread the gospel of “fake abduction”?
And just like that, public trust dies. The cries for justice become whispers. We forget. We move on. And the machinery that silences truth keeps grinding.