Do not make long term decisions founded on emotions. Focus on your vision, not spatio-temporal emotions. Work on yourself more than on anything else. Strive to grow. As you age you will realize, as a man your worth is more in problem solving and being useful in your group than anything else!
It’s important to always be relevant to your man’s future and not just his present reality. If you have not taken time to understand your man’s vision and destiny you stand a chance of him outgrowing you. Grow with your man as he grows. Always be relevant.
Legitimacy rots fast even if the government may appear strong. when it is using coercive tools, disrespects Kenyans rights , disregards the constitution, no amount of political engineering, manipulation of the system or the buying of political players will stop Kenyans from voting the government out.
Someone should tell Kasongo that durability and legitimacy are two different things. Money can buy sycophancy, but legitimacy is respect of the rule of law and serving Kenyans faithfully as per the constitution. As of now, both legitimacy and durability are compressing fast, converging towards elections. Sycophants memory bank may be full 30 pence of silver, but for Kenyans struggling with the cost of living , amid terrible lies , it is evident that the system is not for them. @edwinsifuna stay focused. Serve Kenyans, and Kenyans will follow you
How foolish do you think we are?
I have been in this issue from February 2025.Step by step.
The calls to the chair..
The threats both calls and physical..
The forced resignations at state house/harambee hse
The dci threats and visits....
YOU CANNOT SHAME THE SHAMELESS
Many Kenyans may not know this.
Last year, the William Ruto government took a multi-billion shilling World Bank loan to support senior secondary education, including Grade 10 and junior levels.
The money was meant for scholarships, textbooks, and free school meals for students from poor families.
The funds were disbursed by end of December.
So where did they go that parents are being asked to buy books , pay for food etc ?
Today, Grade 10 students are out of school because of fees.
Classrooms remain in poor condition in many parts of the country.
This loan will be repaid by Kenyans starting 2029.
The question is simple:
Where did the money go?
Accountability is not politics.
It is a duty.
My fellow Kenyans, there is something important about CBC and Grade 10 that is not being honestly explained to the public, by the William Ruto government and, unfortunately, by much of the mainstream media.
On television, we are told that Grade 10 learners are failing to join schools because of lack of fees, and that schools lack textbooks.
But there is a bigger question that neither government briefings nor prime-time news panels are asking.
In 2025, the government signed a €180 million World Bank loan for grade 10 & cbc education.
The money was released in December 2025.
Repayment by all Kenyan taxpayers begins in 2029.
According to the official loan documents, part of this money was meant to:
- Provide textbooks for every Grade 10 learner (1:1 ratio)
- Offer full scholarships to needy students
- Build classrooms to support the CBC transition
- Provide free lunch for Grade 10 learners
Now ask yourself:
If textbooks were funded, why are parents being asked to buy them?
If scholarships were funded, why are many learners failing to report for Grade 10?
If classrooms were funded, why do many schools show no new infrastructure?
Something does not add up.
What is even more troubling is that a huge chunk of this loan is allocated to ministry offices, administration, and so-called "consultations," while less than half directly benefits learners.
If loans are borrowed in the name of our children, why do offices benefit more than classrooms and students?
This is not noise.
It is accountability.
Some truths will never lead the evening news.
But they must still be told.
Evidence attached below. Judge for yourself.