Anyone can be a father. Few choose to be a Dad.
Happy Father’s Day to the men who take that calling seriously.
You’re shaping the future one decision at a time!
Major cheat code for life: Become difficult to rush. The world will pressure you to rush into everything. Rushed decisions. Rushed conversations. Rushed relationships. Rushed timelines. There's immense power in rejecting that trend. Slow down. Create space to think clearly.
It’s all going to end, very soon, enjoy it.
“At your funeral, your friends and family will argue over who gets what.
People will want food to eat.
The topic will shift from your life to their lives.
They’ll drive away thinking about their looming to-do list.
Some people won’t be able to make it because ‘something came up’
And we worry about…a low performing post on social media.
Or what someone “thinks of us”.
Or a bad customer review.
Or whether we’re going to finish our to do list in time.
We die like we go to sleep.
With things unsaid and unfinished.
The only judge who has complete context on our lives, dies with us.
A reminder of the heavy weight we place on things that matter little.”
— @AlexHormozi
Somebody has to be the richest person on the planet.
The fact that it’s the guy who popularized electric cars, made rockets reusable, and is working on curing blindness and paraplegia as a side quest seems fair to me.
No law can replace good parenting.
Parents already have the tools to limit kids’ digital consumption: parental controls, screen-time limits — or no smartphone at all.
Instead, many parents give toddlers iPads just to keep them quiet.
No amount of regulation will fix that.
Keep seeing people say if guys like Harden, CP3, Westbrook ect had the team Brunson had around him that they’d all have rings but last I checked none of them took 113 million dollar pay-cuts to make it happen. They chose money over rings, that’s their legacy, not Brunsons.
🚨Dear Ugandans on X,
Keep those Sydney tweets coming in. Don't stop until we get justice!!
This case cannot be buried and forgotten like the others. An innocent rugby star lost his life, let's push until every killer is behind bars.
Justice for Sydney Gongodyo!!!
The brutal killing of Sydney Gongodyo has left me with more questions than answers.
Sydney was an Ugandan Rugby Cranes international. Looking at his career, his performances on the pitch, and the discipline required to reach that level of sport, you see a young man who had worked hard and had a future ahead of him.
That future was ended by a mob.
The allegation is that he had snatched a bag. Even if that allegation were true, what causes a group of people to gather, beat, and lynch another human being in broad daylight? What level of anger, hopelessness, or loss of faith in institutions leads people to become judge, jury, and executioner?
What does mob justice say about public confidence in law enforcement? What does it say about whether people believe suspects will be arrested, investigated, prosecuted, and punished through the justice system?
These are uncomfortable questions, but they matter.
How should policing and deployment look beyond election periods? How visible should law enforcement be in communities where mob justice continues to occur? What interventions are needed before crowds form and before violence escalates beyond control?
Could this have been prevented?
A father has lost a son. A family is grieving. A promising life has been cut short in the most brutal way imaginable.
I commiserate with Advocate Charles James Gyabi and the entire family during this difficult time.
We all look forward to justice for Sydney and his family.
Rest in peace, Sydney.
@PoliceUg@JudiciaryUG
All these guys can be rounded up, this can not just end with RIP Sidney, it’s time for boda guys and other culprits to understand that the consequences of mob justice to them and their stage or colleagues is as costly as it is to the victim! https://t.co/ElaLKjgQOf
By the way, what happened to late Sydney could happen to any of us. It appears to be a well-organized trick used by some thieves now days in Kampala.
I’ve heard similar stories from friends before. A boda boda rider takes you to a certain spot, suddenly stops, and starts accusing you of trying to steal their motorcycle. Within minutes, a crowd gathers and the situation escalates.
Before you know it, other boda boda riders join in, corner you, and pressure you into handing over everything you have, cash, phones, and even your mobile money. They threaten to raise an alarm or incite the crowd against you if you refuse, leaving many victims too frightened to resist.
In response to the Ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the Starlink team has provided 150 kits to @AfricaCDC, enabling reliable connectivity for frontline health workers working in affected areas