Dr stone
2.6K posts


Mike MUDAVADI, son to H.E. Dr. Musalia Mudavadi and Mama Tessie Musalia, has married a lady known as Ann Miitii, daughter to Mr. Patrick Miitii Mwangi and Mrs. Purity Njeri Miitii
The wedding was held at the Jockey Club, Waterfront Gardens.
We wish Michael and Ann a lifetime filled with love, purpose, and shared blessings.
Ladies and gentlemen, here you don't expect the daughter of Agrippina applying make up like a playing mantis to be here.
The rich marry the rich. Oil money will show us things. Sisi kama walala hoi letu jicho tu na kuimba wantam.


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@mohamednicholas So just because you went to bring his body automatically enlists you into the Baba favorite follower
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@Goldfield6 A fish starts to rot from the head. No two ways about that.
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Samburu, Kwale County.
Kenyans contributed to the Social Health Authority (SHA) in good faith believing that their money would guarantee access to treatment, medicine, and functioning public hospitals.
Today, that trust is hanging by a thread.
According to today’s newspapers, KSh 8 billion from the SHA fund money remitted by ordinary wananchi cannot be accounted for. These are the very funds that should have been disbursed to public hospitals across the country.
The consequences are already being felt.
Hospitals have not received their allocations. There is a shortage of medicine. Critical services have stalled. Patients are being turned away, not because doctors are unwilling, but because the system has been starved of resources.
At the same time, Kenyans are being treated to endless figures about how many people have been registered under SHA.
But registration without service is meaningless.
Numbers do not treat patients. Systems do.
The people I engaged here in Samburu, Kwale County, spoke with one voice, frustration, disappointment, and a deep sense of betrayal. They paid into a system that is now failing them at their most vulnerable moments.
Every shilling deducted from a Kenyan must be accounted for.
Those responsible must come out clearly and explain: where is the money that wananchi contributed? Why are public hospitals struggling while billions remain unaccounted for?
Kenyans deserve honesty. They deserve accountability. And above all, they deserve a healthcare system that works.
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RULES FOR KENYANS, EXEMPTIONS FOR THE RULING PARTY
What has now come to light is not just disturbing, it is a blatant insult to every Kenyan who has been forced to comply with punitive deductions.
An audit has exposed that employees of the ruling party have not been remitting the very statutory deductions they aggressively push on wananchi, SHA, the Housing Levy, and others, with over KSh 60 million unaccounted for.
The same machinery that has been threatening workers, cornering businesses, and squeezing already struggling households is itself operating outside the law. This is not an oversight. It is a calculated betrayal of public trust.
Failure to remit statutory deductions is a criminal offence. It is not optional. It is not negotiable. It is the law.
For that reason, the Secretary General of UDA, Hassan Omar, must be held to account. He should step forward immediately and answer to these serious allegations. Leadership is not about issuing directives from a distance, it is about taking responsibility when systems under your watch fail.
You cannot build credibility on enforcement while practicing exemption. You cannot demand sacrifice from citizens while shielding your own from the same burden.
Kenyans are being told these deductions are necessary, beneficial, and patriotic. Yet within the ruling party, there is a different reality, one of avoidance, non-compliance, and quiet privilege.
This confirms what many have long suspected: this system is not designed with the people in mind. It is imposed on them.
A government that does not believe in its own policies has no moral authority to enforce them.
We must ask: if they cannot trust the very system they created, why should Kenyans?
The country deserves honesty. It deserves fairness. And above all, it deserves leadership that leads by example, not one that plays by a separate set of rules.
Kenyans are watching. And they will remember.
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Julius Kamau has been arrested again, now hitting what many call his 100th arrest.
This makes him the most arrested man in Kenya and now ranked number three in the world.
But these arrests are not random. He shows up in almost every demonstration, always on the front line fighting for better leadership and defending people’s rights. Rain or sun, he never misses.
That is why his name keeps coming up again and again.
Even compared to leaders like Okiya Omtatah, Kamau stands out for his consistency on the streets.
At this point, even the police seem tired but Julius Kamau is not.

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