At oncology department Nyeri. This mask is the only type advisable for one to be safe when doing extemporaneous preparation of oncology medicines. Hii niliivaa for 3 days juu hii ingine ya 10 bob is not safe. Tuko katika Hali ya hatari sana.
Mask unavalia ukiingia hiyo theater ndio utatoa ukimaliza jioni, saa hiyo mmepiga kama surgeries 7 with the same mask.
Simply because "pesa" ya kununua mask governor alienda kutoa mchango ya kanisa.
I don’t know, I just keep coming back to this idea that children are supposed to outgrow you. That’s the whole point, right? You give them everything you didn’t have & pray they run farther than you ever imagined. You hand them a map & whisper…please, find the roads I was too afraid to walk, let the world be kinder to you than it was to me, step into the future like it’s yours, because it is. And honestly, the idea of being jealous of them feels so backwards. Because a parent who envies their child has forgotten the assignment entirely. If my children surpass me, GOOD, that means the story didn’t end with my mistakes. Envy has absolutely no place in a room where you’re teaching someone how to grow. I want them to take every beautiful thing I ever did & every bad thing I survived and use it as scaffolding. Please, climb so high the sun is forced to learn your name. Please, fly so high you never have to look back to see where I stopped. And if all I ever do in this life is give my children the ground to launch from, then that’s enough for me. More than enough.
@makori2018@cross_Xkaran7@CapitalFMKenya The work of auditor general is to audit books (reporting if public funds are being used correctly).
They're not responsible for curbing the misuse. Questioning of the misuse is PAC's work. Investigations and prosecution is done by EACC, DCI etc.
Notice the pattern? You protest, they tell you it’s hopeless and you should vote. You do mass drives to register to vote, they tell you ni paid influencer nonsense. You see the game played? They don’t want you to take any action. They want you to feel hopeless. That’s the plan.
@moneyacademyKE That money must be for those endless meetings in statehouse to buy voters, while hospitals and schools remain intentiknally underfunded.
Such a detestable human being for president, wallahi.
@sholard_mancity And before we know it, kids will slowly slip into prostitution and child labour to afford what was once afforded them basic human decency.
Eish! Painful
We must and should vote wisely akii!
There’s a reason the vision of the coming famine wasn’t given to Jacob. Instead, it was shown to a foreign king who didn’t worship God, and God sent His servant to interpret it in a foreign land.
Sometimes who you become and the environment you grow in determines whether your calling will produce results where you are, or whether it will flourish somewhere else.
Jacob’s story is filled with favoritism and self-preservation. He was loved more by his mother, took his brother’s birthright, stole his brother’s blessing, deceived his father-in-law, wrestled for a blessing, and later showed the same favoritism among his own children by loving Joseph than the others.
One could argue that if Jacob had received the vision of famine, he might have saved only for himself and his household while everyone else suffered. Instead, the vision was given to someone with the capacity to prepare for an entire nation even in a land that didn’t worship God. And Jacob had to migrate to avoid being killed by starvation. In the end, it is the person with the larger heart and broader capacity who ends up serving the masses.
This reflection feels very close to our reality. Many of us think only about ourselves and our immediate families. When everyone is struggling, the moment our family gains access to influence or elites, we often change sides and begin to defend the same systems that hurt others. These choices are short-lived, and even our prayers struggle to produce change because we tend to hoard blessings within our small circles.
We prefer luxury for a few instead of basic necessities for all. And that is why many people now run to less religious or irreligious countries to find the opportunities and systems they pray for at home. Migration has even become something pastors and clergy openly “bless” people with. How ironic.
Perhaps the deeper truth is this: we may not yet be ready to build the kind of capacity that benefits everyone.
@wmnjoya Kenyans are very comfortable with the bare minimum. Kenyans pay taxes but never demand value for their taxes. Kenyans need to start getting very angry coz I am angry all the time. Why are we so comfortable with mediocrity?
There are two agendas being pushed at the same time and what amazes me is how most people don’t see it.
The first agenda: the viral videos and photos mocking Raila Odinga Jnr.
At face value, it looks like people being insensitive or childish online. But if you look closer, it’s a calculated psychological operation meant to prepare you, to soften your resistance, for the Computer Misuse and Cybercrime (Amendment) Bill, 2024.
They want you to be outraged enough to say, “Take those videos down!”
They want you to willingly call for censorship, to beg for regulation, to cry for control. That is how manufactured consent works.
They make you feel like you’re making a moral choice, when in reality, you’re giving them permission to police your speech, your thoughts, your digital space.
It is shameful to mock anyone with a disability. Society has always known that.
Long before government bills and online outrage, that punishment existed naturally and socially.
Nature has its own way of punishing cruelty — often by giving the cruel something equally heavy to carry.
And socially, such mockery has always been taboo. But now, in the age of moral decay and shallow trends, you’ve baptized mockery as “dark humor.”
There was a time when even our art corrected us:
“Ukiona mtu ni kilema, baba,
Ukiona mtu ni kilema, mama,
Wacha kucheka, kesho ni kwako,
Wacha kucheka, utazaa kilema.”
That song was not just a melody. It was a mirror of conscience.
Now, that conscience is being manipulated — your compassion being used as a tool of control.
The goal is to amplify outrage so that there’s no resistance when new laws, quietly designed to silence dissent, are passed.
You’ll think you’re defending decency, but you’ll be defending tyranny in disguise.
The second agenda: Governor Mutahi Kahiga’s remarks.
Here again, you all know what’s going on, but many will still pretend not to.
His utterance was despicable, yes, but the intent behind the timing and amplification is even worse.
Ask yourself: Who benefits most from this kind of ethnic provocation?
If you pay attention, you’ll see a familiar pattern. A rift is being engineered, deliberately, to prevent two major communities from ever sitting at the same table.
The irony is that many in the political class from both sides have intermarried, dine together, and laugh at your outrage.
The architects of division know that if Kenyans unite on class and conscience, if you ever decide to speak with one voice, their empires crumble overnight.
So they light a fire between tribes, feed you anger, and then hide behind the smoke while signing new laws and sealing new deals.
You’ll spend weeks debating the words of one misguided messenger, while the real enemies of progress keep cashing in on your distractions.
This isn’t new anything new. It’s Divide and Rule 101.
You think you’re reacting to events, but they���re designing your reactions.
You think you’re watching coincidences, but you’re witnessing choreography.
As for me, I see it clearly. Langu huwa jicho ila nawaona kabisa.
And until you start listening, really listening, Kenyan politics will keep repeating the same script, just with different actors.
The system survives not because it’s powerful, but because the people are divided and distracted. Wake up before the smoke becomes your reality.
@KRACorporate Something has been quite off for a while now with ITAX, nearly 2 months.
It's becoming impossible to file taxes and obtain records, as it keeps giving back errors or logging its users off.
Fix it for easier use.
You ask if I drink, I say I don’t— not out of moral piety, I simply don’t enjoy it.
So why do you feel the need to suggest “sweeter options” or “something lighter”?
I didn’t ask for alternatives.
I just said I don’t like it. Can we leave it at that?
Nitakupiga ngoto mimi.
@tii_bag That's why mimi ata huwa siwezi blame single moms. I'd rather single parent households with peace than 2 fighting parents. Wueeh.
Always scared utapata mom amededi was my greatest fear.
@KenyanSays Rejecting kids is fine, but acting like it’s some intellectual rebellion is comedy, stop selling it as enlightenment. It’s like refusing to plant trees, then acting shocked when there’s no shade. You can’t live off society’s fruits while cursing the very roots that grow them.