If it costs ksh175m to build a state house in Tanzania and ksh1billion to build 1km Road in Kenya calculate how much will it cost to fish Building Isiolo international airport in Kenya .kwako studio
Why do young men go for old women?
Truth is old women are expressed, they take good care of the man twice
1. As their own son
2. As their source of spamzi
Gentlemen I highly recommend old women with good money
Yvonne: In the beginning there was a great show of solidarity where you see opposition leaders marching with the families but at the slightest hint of trouble, they are whisked away in their SUVs leaving the families stranded by the roadside crying. If you don’t want to be part of this then don’t do it
#CitizenNewsGang @YvonneOkwara
A lady that doesn't give to you shouldn't get from you. Be a minimalist. It's easy for women to walk out of a relationship they didn't invest much — Apostle Johnson Suleman to men.
Giorgia Meloni on the couch with President Trump is literally like any young guy hitting up his millionaire uncle for an advance on his inheritance, a few company shares, and a shortcut past university, internships, and the grind
Only to be sent home with a pat on the shoulder😅
Kumbe the loans beggar was only invited for the outside garden photo session only! During the main meeting, he was at the holding area protruding teeth to the secretaries and Trump's security agents!
Jaguar Booed Off Stage: Washed-Up Musician and Ruto Sympathizer Gets Humiliating Rejection at Mataha Festival
Washed-up musician and former Starehe MP Charles Njagua, better known as Jaguar, whose only notable political achievement was shedding crocodile tears to secure a Jubilee nomination certificate in 2017, was mercilessly booed off stage at the Mataha Festival 4.0.
Fans chanted “Ruto Must Go” and “WanTam,” delivering a brutal, unambiguous verdict on his desperate attempt at relevance.
Jaguar is a well-known associate and sympathizer of the British-backed war criminal and mass murderer William Ruto.
He has remained conspicuously silent as the butcher of Sugoi unleashed a ruthless campaign of abductions, extrajudicial killings, and fabricated charges of critics and dissenters through Kiganjo D-minus DCI killer goons and Martha Koome’s corrupt judiciary.
In exchange for short-term comfort, cheap fame, and dubious tenders, Jaguar sold out the long-term liberation of the nation.
Young Kenyans, the very demographic he hoped to reconnect with through his stale and long-forgotten music, wanted absolutely nothing to do with him.
It is profoundly delusional that he imagined he could resonate with the masses and reinvent himself for Ruto’s political expediency, especially after failing to release a single hit song in over a decade.
Kenyans had no problem cancelling Bien at the peak of his career - yet Jaguar thought his faded star power would be spared.
The message is clear: Jaguar, along with other young flashy sellouts like Ronald Karauri and Jalang’o who chose money and silence while their comrades were being butchered, should lay low and forget about any return to relevance.
Their time is over. The youth have moved on, and no amount of pathetic stage appearances or regime alignment will buy them back the respect they traded away for thirty pieces of silver.
The revolution does not forget those who chose comfort over conscience.