@DearS_o_n A contractor who is passionate and dedicated to his work.Below are some of my master pieces,your support will be appreciated.Dealers in
Painting
Cabinets and wordraws
Glass fitting
Cabros installation
Tilling
For inquiries/booking0795655996 email via [email protected]
Fellow Kenyans, I need you to help me reset, rebuild and restore Kenya.
I have chosen to run a campaign that is funded by you, ordinary Kenyans.
I am appealing to you to make a donation to the campaign.
If my campaign is funded by donations from you, the everyday Kenyan, then it becomes OUR campaign. And I will be accountable to you, the everyday Kenyan.
You can donate any amount.
Simply log in to
https://t.co/Qnx8YlSx5o.
Or go to Mpesa Paybill: 4164137
Account Number: 4164137
Hi I'm lynet from Komarock I lost my kids date 13 may 2026 please 🙏 who ever see them please call me on these number 0726096432 name ,precious and Zennel
The land question in Kenya remains one of the most sensitive and least honestly discussed issues of our time. Land is not merely property, it is identity, inheritance, history, and survival. For many families, especially in rural Kenya, ancestral land is the only asset passed from generation to generation.
The Constitution of Kenya recognizes land rights and the historical injustices surrounding land ownership. Yet proposals or systems that place additional burdens on freehold ancestral land raise a serious moral and social question: should people be forced to continuously “pay” to retain what their forefathers already fought for, occupied, protected, and passed down?
How does a jobless father in the village, struggling to feed his family, become a debtor on his own ancestral land? At what point does ownership become conditional? At what point does inherited freedom become a recurring financial obligation?
A nation must distinguish between taxing wealth creation and penalizing existence. Because if a citizen must perpetually pay to keep land that has belonged to generations of their family, the contrast begins to resemble a modern form of economic servitude: not ownership, but conditional occupancy.
Kenya’s land history is already scarred by displacement, dispossession, and injustice. Any system that risks pushing vulnerable families from ancestral land must be questioned aggressively. Land rights should protect people, not create new pathways for exclusion.
The land conversation cannot remain silent. It is not just an economic issue. It is a dignity issue.
If you are an observant person,
A man who is keen, and concerned about his consciousness,
You will realise something unusual is happening,
There is a silent shift going on,
We are moving from an OWNERSHIP ECONOMY to a SUBSCRIPTION ECONOMY.
In a subscription economy, you own nothing, but you pay for goods and services which you consume,
For example,
Back in the 90s,
We bought and owned music hardware like cassettes and discs,
This ensured that the music hardware was yours and nobody would charge you a recurring monthly fee to play music,
We owned newspapers and kept them,
We bought and owned books,
We owned letters written to us,
We bought, and claimed ownership,
But this is changing, and it is concerning,
In a subscription economy, you own nothing, but you pay for it.
MKOPA phones and Electric bikes are examples of how we have lost ownership of what we have bought.
It will reach a time where,
• You won't make a call, unless you subscribe to a calling service, on top of buying airtime,
• You won't send an email unless you subscribe, or you will lose all your emails,
• You won't listen to music unless you pay a monthly subscription fee for streaming,
• You won't send a text or a WhatsApp message unless you subscribe to a monthly plan, or get used to annoying advertisements,
• You won't cook food unless you pay for a monthly gas subscription plan or pay double for electricity,
• You won't drink clean water unless you subscribe to a monthly water delivery plan.
Ultimately, you won't own land or a house or a cow,
You will own nothing, and you will never be happy.
You will become a slave of the subscription economy.
That day is coming.
If you are wise,
• Go to a rural area,
• Own land,
• Get solar,
• Sink a borehole,
• Keep poultry, cows, goats and sheep,
• Grow your food.
Don't sit in the city like sheep.
Freedom will be given to those who will defeat the subscription economy.
WAKE UP!
#ManDay
Good morning patriots. It’s another day to remind everyone that David Maraga is the most suitable person to become president of Kenya in 2027.
The rest are just birds of a feather.
Ukiamka, Amka Na Maraga the 6th.
Share it with your close friends and family members. Educate them in the importance of having a man with integrity at the helm.