@gichohi2008@ahmednasirlaw@HonMoses_Kuria The Kenyan small business trader is not a businessman but a ward of the govt unfair practices and policies that are geared to serve political interests.
@NationAfrica@Bwatuti1 Adan Duale should just teach the right way. He should leave it to Allah to demand. We are all equal in the eyes of Allah the all merciful.
@Honeyfarsafi@SakajaJohnson ...deserve a festival, they will create one for themselves. Clean Eastleigh business district, unblock sewers, provide medicine and clean services in hospitals, employ qualified staff to provide public services in the city, and Train and hold responsible those mandated to serve.
@Honeyfarsafi@SakajaJohnson If Sakaja does not prioritize this as an emergency, then we can interpret it as how he disregards the cries of the people who elected him. This situation is more urgent than that stupid Nairobi festival. For the festival, just open it our dear public space, and if Nairobians ....
@MauMauMwangi1 @egathage@Sam37138180 @JosephO47304549 Well true. But let's compare that with what W.R would have built during his tenure at the end of it. Right now it is no comparison as the new regime is just taking shape.
@egathage @MauMauMwangi1 @Sam37138180 @JosephO47304549 With the ease of mobility from the city, Limuru is fast becoming the next wild west and the scramble is on.0
@egathage @MauMauMwangi1 @Sam37138180 @JosephO47304549 Oh, they are there already. It's just a matter of time. And by the way, Rwaka is not the only place where corruption money is at work, it is everywhere you see a booming real estate explosion. Rwaka is a good case study.
@BenMashcharm @JosephO47304549 ...without having to be so far away from the CBD. But for the little towns to attract such investors, they have to put in a lot of hard work, to help bring their towns up and ready for investment.
@BenMashcharm @JosephO47304549 ...environment, there would be no reason why they would not attract businesses to this towns. Nairobi is becoming very very congested and dirty. This offers an opportunity to the satellite towns to compete for the businessmen that may wish to relocate from the city to towns.....
@Lighthouse254@simonwachira @JosephO47304549 Any town, that has a decent population will benefit from real estate investments. But, with no production base, be it from agriculture, or manufacturing, it's survival will depend on its proximity to a larger town or city, where it can play as a bedroom to the larger brothers
@brianwairimu@elvisgromyko @JosephO47304549 Towns can't grow into cities, or cannot progress through subsistence farming and labor. This Kenyan rural towns are not geared to succeed. It's like they are geared to fail by design. Towns that suffer from lack of an industrial base, cannot gain from lack of economic activity.
@egathage @MauMauMwangi1 @Sam37138180 @JosephO47304549 Countries don't develop because the have skyscrapers, but rather because of manufacturing industry. The rise of the likes of Rwaka is not a determinant of progress, if the source of funds to put up such monstrosities is not accounted for, and can only be attributed to corruption.
@JosephO47304549 @colour_jah Kenyans by nature have not grasped well the concept of money and investments. Kenyans of African descent believe in hoarding money, either under the mattresses or in bank accounts, where there is minimal growth. Those rural rich do not have a grasp of the intrinsic value of money