My issue with the Wantam brigade is that it feels more Anti-Ruto than Pro-solution. Fourteen months to the election, I still do not know what they stand for on debt, taxes, water, energy, agriculture, roads, education, trade, international relations, or jobs.
- Anonymous
X is a public platform.
Public participation now!
It is a legal requirement .
If you want me to impeach the dumb guy!
Retweet and like.
24k likes guarantee progress .
Lets do this for our nation.
Kenya needs a renaissance !
I cannot stand this guy.
1:He passed the finance bill 2024 when thousands of people were against it and hundreds of innocent youths were killed by the state
2:He keeps crying on tv and social media when he’s a member of parliament acting like the rest of us.
Peak hypocrisy
Anyone opposing the idea of a united opposition against Ruto is a UDA mole. Ruto is busy meeting leaders from every corner of this country buying ODM and making the likes of ANC fold into UDA yet people like Kimani here are against the idea of Kalonzo,Maraga and Riggy uniting with Sifuna to kick Despot Ruto out.
How do you think you’re going to stand a chance of getting some Kamba and Mombasa votes (without Kalonzo),some Murima Votes without Riggy G,some Kisii votes without Matiangi,Some Bukuse votes (Without Natembeya etc).
Anyone opposing this line up are Ruto sympathizers,the likes of Osama have always been pro Ruto therefore I don’t have a problem with them but people like kina Polo Kimani are the ones you should watch out.
Unless he can come here and tell us what’s his mathematical reasoning and alternatives for his ideal candidate to kick out Ruto.
Some of you practice Kimende politics the furthest you’ve gone in this country is Narok to fix electric poles,you have no idea what politics is going on in Marakwet,Msambweni,Bungoma or Siaya. We cannot have such an ignorant lot perpetuating to be spokesmen and women of Wantam.
It’s either a United opposition or Ruto reelection,smart ones know no in between!
Let Sifuna and team collaborate with other like minded political outfits to kick Kasongo and his cronie out very fast!
Working in Nairobi suburbs feels like every morning, you step into a version of life that looks like yours, and in the evening, you return to the one that actually is. You clock in at 8 and clock out at 5 from a 20-storey building with glass doors, biometric scans, and elevators that whisper. A few floors above you, lights are still on. People working late, because time there converts to money.
Outside, the roads are wide. You pass by Karen Office Park, then roll past The Hub, wine shops, and coffee shops selling a cup you'll never afford. You’re still in work mode. Polite. Measured. Composed. You head downtown. Britam Tower cuts the sky. For a second, it feels like you’re part of it. You’re not.
Traffic drags you further. You stop at Westlands Square, not because you need to, but to pause for a second. The commute slowly strips off the mask.
Around you is fellow lower income employees rushing to beat traffic just to get home in time to sneak in a nap. You stroll into Sarit Centre to kill time. Inside, everything is controlled, light, temperature, and spending. Outside, a guy is selling smokies next to a car worth his lifetime income. Nobody addresses it. But it’s there.
You don’t stay long. Across Waiyaki Way, Microsoft building stares at you as if to say, "You'll never work here." You board a Super Metro and pay 20 bob to Kangemi. Inside the bus, conversations switch language, not just words but weight. You put in your earpods, but you don’t play any music. Westlands is already saying enough. You stare out the window.
Somewhere in that skyline, opportunity exists but not equally. By the time you reach Kangemi, the city drops the filter. You pass by your favourite local joint, but today, you sit a second longer.
You check your phone, notifications from friends living both lives, one posting rooftop cocktails in Upper Hill, another asking for a connection, a job, a chance.
Tomorrow, you’ll iron the same shirt and return to the suburbs. You’ll speak their language and play their part, but one thing remains clear, unless you break from that place, you'll never live in their world which you spend 8 hours a day building.