Following the 2nd National Congress of the Communist Party Marxist - Kenya @CommunistsKe , the party renamed its ideological school to the Pio Gama Pinto Institute in honour of the Kenyan Marxist, Comrade Pio.
Uproar as Sh377 million drugs expire at Kemsa
Cancer drugs, HIV treatments, and essential commodities went to waste while Kenyans were turned away from public hospitals or forced to pay out of pocket
https://t.co/z1tNpdQVRT
The British army is orchestrating arson attacks in Laikipia;
The colonizers are becoming emboldened & see no need to hide behind conservation, clean energy, etc, to kill livestock, steal land, rape & murder Kenyans.
Ke is a fully fledged British colony.
It's time for Revolution.
Boycott the games!! Make FIFA and their U.S. corporate sponsors pay the price for attempting to normalize U.S. warmongering, genocide and repression. The next step for the international community is to demand accountability & end impunity for U.S. criminality.
Killed for fighting for his country's constitution and the rule of law.
Killed for fighting for the sovereignty of his country.
Killed for exercising his constitutional rights.
He was only asking to be heard.
Colonialism never ended!
US-Funded "Lobito Corridor" Is A Tool To Cheaply Extract Africa’s Resources – David Hundeyin
On June 3, 2026, The Spearhead premiered its debut documentary, ‘What Happened On October 29?’, at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, a documentary which challenges the Western narrative about the violent, anti-government protests that rocked Tanzania in October 2025, offering an African-centered perspective on these “protests”, and exposing the nefarious, external forces behind them. This East African premiere came 8 days after the documentary’s West African premiere, which was held in Accra, Ghana.
In this excerpt from a panel discussion held immediately after the Dar es Salaam screening, Nigerian investigative journalist and founder of The Spearhead, @DavidHundeyin, sheds light on the infamous, US-funded “Lobito Corridor” railway project, how this project exists only to perpetuate the West’s plundering of Africa, and how the continent’s more equitable partnerships with China threaten the very premise of this project.
Kenyan police have fired tear gas and used water cannon on Nanyuki protesters for a second week over a US-only Ebola quarantine facility at a nearby military base. Rights groups report at least one person killed as construction continues.
Al Jazeera’s Malcolm Webb reports.
I often think of this passage from Lenin’s text on Tolstoy and the labor movement: "Despair is typical of those who do not understand the causes of evil, see no way out, and are incapable of struggle."
We rarely see the other parts of that paragraph. "Despair is typical of the classes which are perishing,” Lenin writes. "The modern industrial proletariat does not belong to the category of such classes."
Lenin was writing about the labor movement, and the objective historical process that saw it rise and replace the peasantry as the dominant force in Russia. The peasantry was gripped by despair because its class no longer had a future. The proletariat, by contrast, was growing in strength and number.
Today, Lenin’s insight also holds true of the streets of Iran, where people mobilize by the millions under bombardment. It is true of the communes in Venezuela, whose militants continue the task of building socialism and are prepared to take up arms to defend it. It is true of the people of Cuba, who remain defiant under a crushing blockade that has turned their cities dark.
Those who despair now — as a new world is being born — are really just mourning the death of liberalism. They are mourning the death of a world that never existed: a world of supposed lawfulness and “rules-based” governance. Anyone who has ever earnestly tried to bring a new world into being quickly learned that these were fictions created to secure impunity for the colonizer and oppressor.
That is why we find that people on the vanguard of the systemic transition underway — as with the labor movement in Lenin’s time — “have plenty to protest against but nothing to despair about.”
How does a government borrow to build toys using its ability to tax people? Should that even be legal? Because basically, the lenders are declaring that they trust the ability of the Kenya government to tax us and to crush rebellion if we revolt. That's very revealing about both the lenders' view of the Kenya government, and GoK's commitment to oppress and kill us for money. It's essentially slavery. Slave ships and plantation owners could insure and declare wealth against the number of enslaved people they OWNED.
These loans are such a serious, political, and mostly racist statement. Africans in Kenya have been reduced by the government to property. Forget all your romantic stories about standing up against land alienation. The reason the British didn't succeed is because we resisted being enslaved on the land they stole from us. This deal the government has cut is worse than colonialism. It's slavery. GoK is basically the nyapara that the British lacked the first time they colonized us. Under colonialism, we could see the nyapara because he was the white settler. Now we can't see the nyapara because they are supposedly one of us and we supposedly voted for them.
The @FIFAcom World Cup in the United States must be cancelled.
No one should go see any of the matches.
Tickets should be burned in public, like draft cards.
"Kenya is not an imperialist dumping ground. We reject any attempt to turn our country into a ebola quarantine zone for crises created elsewhere while our own healthcare system remains underfunded. Ruto's regime must stop auctioning our sovereignty to foreign powers."RSC chair
🚨🇮🇱 Thomas Massie CONFIRMS Israel used NAPALM on the USS Liberty.
34 Americans were burned alive, skin boiling from their bodies, after the IDF dropped Napalm on the unarmed ship.
He confirmed this yesterday in the U.S. Congress.
Kenyan police fire tear gas to disperse fresh protests in Nanyuki town. Angry residents are demonstrating against a controversial, U.S.-backed 50-bed Ebola quarantine facility under construction at the local Laikipia Air Base. Locals accuse both governments of bypassing a High Court order to halt the project and offloading foreign biological risks onto the community.