@CaptKigen@KeRRA_Ke You need to look at the road from Ewaso Nyiro to Sekenani Gate. If substandard works needed a case study then we have a distinction in that particular stretch. That repair works and re carpeting feels like a year one practical exam going on.
@lynn_ngugi1 And personally I would ask nothing of him save for instilling discipline! The entire country will fall in line and toe the line too. All this rot we see in society is because we are being fed indiscipline from the top down.
This time round
1. Don't vie, we (the people) grant you amnesty and you dissapear from politics and public service forever
2. Vie, we don't vote for you then we come for you and your family for any whiff of corruption ever levelled against you.
Amua.
Mbadi’s tribal incitement of Luos versus Kikuyus is nauseating and intellectually dishonest.
You cannot inflame villagers against an entire community while, at a personal and professional level, you sit comfortably in Cabinet with members of that same community. If Kikuyus are the problem, then let him begin by sacking the CBK Governor and boycotting Cabinet meetings where Kikuyu ministers sit. Otherwise, spare us the double standards.
You cannot tell Luo villagers that a tribe is evil while that tribe is good enough to sign your payslips, approve your budgets, and co-manage the economy with you.
Legacy politicians thrive on this fraud. They weaponise tribal anger to maintain relevance, while privately enjoying cross-tribal privilege and elite comfort. They export bitterness to the poor and import cooperation for themselves.
Mbadi must remember this: he is Cabinet Secretary for Finance of the Republic of Kenya, not a tribal mascot, not a village mobiliser, and not a professional grievance merchant. The economy does not belong to one community, and neither does the Treasury.
If you want to be national, speak and act nationally. If you want to be tribal, resign and do it honestly.
Legacy politicians must stop inciting communities for survival. Kenya deserves better.
When youth in Kajiado’s Oldonyo Nyokie group ranch, a 168,000-acre community-owned land parcel, rejected the entry of a controversial carbon credit project on April 30th this year, they did not know their resistance would expose land fraud at an unprecedented scale. ↪️#CarbonColony
I wish, as 2025 draws to a close, to honour @OkiyaOmtatah for his prolific and indefatigable PUBLIC INTEREST LITIGATION initiatives on behalf of Kenyans. This is valued service to his country. His contribution deserves a doctoral thesis. https://t.co/f439BuJ5ZO
Captain Ibrahim Traoré at the AES Summit:
My conviction, my analysis, is clear: something is happening in West Africa. I have called it the Black Winter.
The Black Winter is coming.
It will be a very cold winter.
A bloody winter.
A deadly winter.
You will ask me why.
By founding the AES Confederation, we anticipated this icy winter. Every day, we search for wood to light a fire—a fire that will warm the hearts, minds, and souls of Africans. We hunt wolves to use their pelts to make coats, coats capable of protecting us from the cold. We build mountains—solid and powerful mountains—to break the icy winds and protect our communities.
But unfortunately, some of our own are determined to sabotage this effort.
They are dousing the tree trunks with water to prevent the fire from burning.
They transform into wolves so that hunters cannot catch them.
They break rocks to prevent the building of mountains.
Yet, winter is coming.
And when winter arrives, those who fought will come seeking refuge. They will want to wear the coats we have made, take shelter behind the mountains we have built, and warm themselves by our fire.
So the real question is this:
What will become of Pan-Africanism when winter arrives?
Winter will come because war is spreading in West Africa. The imperialists are doing everything they can to plunge the region into fire and bloodshed. From the highest levels of government to certain segments of the population, they either pretend not to see the danger or are complicit.
Chaos could ensue.
Yes, I say could, but many will die.
We risk killing each other in horrific ways while others stand ready to plunder our resources and impose their will. And those who survive this tragedy will have only two choices:
unite definitively against imperialism or remain enslaved until they perish.
That is why this Black Winter is coming.
We cannot accept that Africans announce the death of other Africans as inevitable. We cannot accept that cowardly heads of state hide behind so-called “free” media to discourage, insult, and incite hatred among the people. Every morning and every evening, their mouthpieces spread toxic poison to divide communities.
They are vile. Organized into wretched groups, they have mastered the art of manipulation. Look at them: eyes filled with malice, spreading hatred daily on social media. They are numerous.
Why do we Black people cultivate hatred among ourselves?
Out of hypocrisy, we avoid speaking the harsh truth. Yet, the truth must be told, even if it is inconvenient. We must wake up.
Why are we unable to see the danger approaching?
Why can’t we unite to stop it?
Why, through our own actions, are we marching toward decimation?
Others have closed their ears. They pretend not to hear the predatory policies. Some peoples revel in colonization. They accept domination, sometimes even as if it were desired.
Every day we see so-called intellectuals engaging in sterile debates, steeped in malice and indignity, as if reality and concrete examples did not exist. When democracy violates its own rules, they turn a blind eye. But they are always ready to insult and discredit us.
Let them be certain of one thing:
we are united and we will remain so.
We must open our eyes.
Everything will not be perfect. Everything will not progress at the pace we would like. But we are moving forward—calmly, resolutely—and we will achieve our goal.
@NCBABankKenya@kcauniversity@WenasiTravels The issue is with my branch Wabera Street. Kindly speak with the Branch manager he is attached in all the correspondence since this happened.
Dear @NCBABankKenya your slow response to a wrongful deposit to @kcauniversity accounts more than 30 days ago has cost my business @WenasiTravels considerable loss! I now have clients on safari who will not be able to finish because of this!
I am considering closing my business account with you immediately I figure out a solution out of this. This has been a very disappointing experience. @KenyaBankers@Cofek_Kenya@CBKKenya
The inability of your systems to flag that when it happened really concerns me. All the correspondence for solutions are just generic, you need to have your people who think outside the box based on urgency and type of account!