Recent posts
- NAKURU AND THE POLITICS OF MEMORY, PAIN, AND POSSIBILITY April 20, 2026
- LEAVING THE COUNTRY, LEAVING THE QUESTIONS April 20, 2026
- THE REAL COST OF FUEL IN KENYA April 20, 2026
- When the Mirror Shatters: Hard Truths Men Learn Too Late April 20, 2026
- Builders Die Legends; Spenders Die Broke—Which Will You Be? April 18, 2026
What's Hot
Most Viewed Posts
Rules for a Happy Marriage: Building a Foundation of Love and Respect (Poetics)
Sparkle ✨ (Poetics)
One person several feelings (Poetics)
Couldn’t feel this good 💞 (Poetics)
Intentionally (Poetics)
Browsing: Governance
The Ballot Has a Memory—Do You?
Leaders who demonstrate competence, integrity, and real results earn another term—not as a favor, but as a consequence.
Those who preside over decline, mismanagement, or broken promises are removed—not out of anger, but as a rational correction.
This is not revenge.
It is governance.
When the Law Turns on Itself—and Then Corrects Itself
Cases like this do not happen automatically.
They happen because someone refuses to accept injustice as normal.
Because someone decides that being wronged is not the same as being defeated.
Because someone is willing to endure the long road to accountability.
And in doing so, they widen that road for others.
TUJU’S LATEST PREDICAMENTS
The Politics That Won’t Stay Out
Now enter the part everyone says we should avoid—
Politics.
But politics, like gravity, has a way of pulling everything into its orbit.
Tuju was not just a businessman.
He was a political actor.
And in 2022, he made explosive revelations—the kind that don’t just disappear into the air.
And in Kenya, there is a saying, whispered more than spoken:
Power neither forgets… nor forgives.
It waits. Then it revisits.
Some believe that what we are seeing today is not just a financial reckoning—
But a delayed response.
A Nation on Hold While Power Is on Call
So we must ask—honestly, boldly, relentlessly:
What kind of country are we building?
One where power feeds itself first?
Or one where service is truly honored?
Because a nation cannot outsource its conscience.
Not to commissions.
Not to policies.
Not to speeches.
The Wealth Beneath Our Feet—and the Poverty Above It
The Deeper Question
Kenya’s mineral story is not about discovery.
It is about conversion.
Why does a country with:
Gold
Rare earths
Titanium
Oil potential
Still struggle to industrialize through them?
When Silence Meets a Pattern
The Human Reality Behind Headlines
It is easy to read about “bodies” and “mass graves” and let the words blur.
But each body was a person.
Someone with a name.
A family.
A story that did not deserve to end this way.
Behind every sack is a life interrupted.
Behind every grave is a circle of grief that has no answers.
When we reduce victims to numbers, we distance ourselves from the urgency of justice.
The Railway That Asked for Too Much
There is nothing wrong with ambition.
But ambition without alignment becomes a burden.
The SGR extension to Malaba is not just a technical decision—it is a philosophical one:
Do we prioritize visibility or viability?
Scale or sustainability?
Prestige or people?
Because in the end:
An economy is not measured by the size of its projects—
but by the strength of its people.
When Power Knocks on the Hospital Door
If rules can be stretched now—
If influence can be justified now—
If interference can be normalized now—
Then what happens in five more years?
The People’s IEBC
Imagine this:
Election night.
No tension.
No rumors.
No fear.
Just millions of Kenyans opening an app…
watching results unfold in real time…
knowing—without doubt—that what they see is true.
No press conference needed to “declare” winners.
Because the people already know.
When Tear Gas Meets the Constitution
Kenya argues loudly. It litigates fiercely. It debates endlessly. It protests visibly.
Its elections are messy — but they are contested in courtrooms and scrutinized in public.
The democratic muscle here has been exercised too often to dwindle quietly.
Can Kenya balance fiscal responsibility with social justice?
Can data-driven allocation capture the complexity of real life?
Can reforms be implemented without destabilizing dreams?
When the Gavel Meets the Ballot: Why Kenya’s Judiciary Must Rise to the Occasion
Judges are human. They face pressure — political, social, sometimes personal.
But when they don robes, they carry more than files. They carry public trust.
A single courageous ruling can strengthen democracy for a generation. A compromised one can weaken it just as long.
Kenya’s Real Existential Threats
Political parties frequently lack strong ideological foundations. Many coalitions are formed around personalities rather than policy platforms. Politicians shift parties before elections with minimal ideological explanation.
Delayed Accountability, Diminished Democracy
Kenya has a documented history of police excesses raised by human rights organizations, civil society groups, and international observers. Each time an investigation is completed and forwarded for prosecution, it becomes a test of whether accountability is real or rhetorical.
Progress Without Freedom Is Not Progress
History shows that roads cannot erase memory.
Stadiums cannot bury the truth.
Bridges cannot carry a nation over injustice.




