SpenserMUTABARUKA
472 posts

SpenserMUTABARUKA
@AddmanC
I'm a reasonable, controversial, critical Rastafarian blessed with Superior Logical mind.
Katılım Mart 2013
39 Takip Edilen9 Takipçiler

@Hon_Kasukuwere @waltermzembi Hapana innocence apo we are too old to know what's happening.......
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Congratulations dear brother @waltermzembi . Vindicated at last, your innocence was never in doubt. Be well Shumba .

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@ChambatiLevison @DumisoJnr22247 @dereckgoto @enkudheni @Hairdresse9808 @GutuObert @edmnangagwa @Comrade_Whisky @BarakaZaire @StanMazoe @Kuda_Sibanda I think you lack some facts or you just biased. Do you have any idea how many schools were built by Smith for blacks compared to your Mugabe? Obviously you don't know. Smith built more schools for us than Rob.
We shouldn't base our arguments on propaganda.
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STOP LYING ABOUT Ian Smith and Robert Mugabe.
“Ian Smith survived sanctions” is a myth. His sanctions were weak. South Africa and Portugal kept trading with him. Oil and goods still flowed in.
Zimbabwe was cut off completely. No IMF. No World Bank. No credit. No capital. That’s not the same.
Smith’s “strong economy” excluded the black majority. It looked stable because it only served a few.
Mugabe inherited that imbalance and dared to fix it. He challenged land and economic control. That’s why he was targeted.
Smith protected inequality and kept global interests happy. Mugabe disrupted it and demanded Zimbabwe control its own resources.
Stability built on exclusion isn’t success. It’s control.
Mugabe didn’t play Smith’s game. That’s why history treated them differently.
@ZANUPF_Official
@siazyaba
@AfricanTigress_
@AfricanHub_
@NkosiMangwende
@marapira_farai
@2030Resolution1
@Mwarihavanyimi
@hwendec
@nelsonchamisa
@the_Melanin13

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@zanupf_patriots Didn't even know he was abroad up until.............
Wtf
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@SokoCindy @enkudheni @PaidamoyoMutsv1 @BaShonaBaShona @bosskimhucci @Cde_TakeItEasy @ChaibvaG @ChambatiLevison @chrissy10charu @FeresuShashie @CMukungunugwa What do you know about the constitution?
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@nickmangwana @richardrmahomva You are not suppose to be bothered if that is the case.
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“The Lancaster House Constitution was amended 20 times. So what is new about wanting to amend a constitution for the 3rd time?” @richardrmahomva
#CAB3
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@TinotendaGacha1 @wicknellchivayo @edmnangagwa @MJairosi @noto2030 @ZanuPFMabvuku @NgarivhumeJ @willard_vhiri @Tinoten53374277 @steadyMasi22 Are you sure? I mean before the eyes of God.
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I have seen the comments. I have read the posts. People are asking sometimes genuinely, sometimes mischievously why Sir Wicknell Chivayo @wicknellchivayo is consistently seen in the proximity of His Excellency President E.D. Mnangagwa @edmnangagwa at high-profile national events.
Because proximity to delivery earns proximity to the President.
Sir Wicknell Chivayo is not a gate-crasher. He is not a hanger-on. He is not a man who bought his way into a photograph. He is a Zimbabwean businessman who has, through Intratek Zimbabwe, delivered on contracts that others failed to execute solar energy projects, generator installations, infrastructure works that have put power in communities that waited decades for it.
In many countries, a businessman who delivers on Presidential priority programmes is celebrated, recognised, and kept close. That is not corruption. That is accountability working in reverse rewarding results rather than just punishing failure.
Consider what his critics are actually saying.
They are saying that a black Zimbabwean businessman who drives expensive cars, wears expensive clothes, moves in powerful circles, and is unashamed about his success is somehow suspicious. That his visibility is itself evidence of wrongdoing.
But where was this energy when politically connected businesspeople of previous eras enriched themselves quietly, invisibly, and without ever delivering a single transformer to a rural community?
Sir Wicknell is visible. Sir Wicknell is loud. Sir Wicknell is unapologetically Zimbabwean and unapologetically successful.
That is why he stands where he stands. Not because of who he knows but because of what he has done with the opportunities this nation gave him.
Zimbabwe needs more Sir Wicknells. More young black entrepreneurs who are not ashamed of success, who do not shy from visibility, and who understand that building the nation and building personal wealth are not mutually exclusive.Let the man work.

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@nickmangwana Those placards says it all.
Obviously not by the people but by a well fed sponsor with self interests.
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@TembaMliswa Ummmmmm l don't have anything against you but why don't you just sit down and shut the f*ck up.
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The President is the longest serving bureaucrat, having devoted himself to public service since 1980, is a War Veteran and also serves as Commander-in-Chief of the Army. It is thus questionable to wield one's own inconsequential accolades as a weapon against him, as some alleged retired Generals have attempted to do.
Moreover, these Generals continue to hold positions as part of the Reserve Force, remaining under the command of the Commander-in-Chief, with the potential to be recalled in critical situations. The same holds for the registered War Veterans.
Thus, it is paramount for them to be cautious, for their excitable actions may be construed as undermining the authority of their own Commander.
For individuals still entrenched in the very system they seek to critique, one would presume they could address their concerns with a greater degree of professionalism and respect unless, of course, their motives are politically charged and designed to erode the stature of the President.
In this regard, they have indeed made an error, for ED has managed to stay significantly ahead of the many recent antics that masquerade as legitimate grievances.
It would be dangerous for these retired generals to be playing politics while using their credentials as Army personnel. That makes it very important for them to clear their names, whether they wrote the letter or not.
It's just that the President plays the long game; otherwise, those who have shown that they don’t support the party’s positions and resolutions should be helped to march out if they can't do it of their own volition.
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@DrMutambudzi @Jamwanda2 We don't want to get more information we want to see, with our own eyes, in our midst
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Do you want to get more of the infrastructure developments happening in the country? @Jamwanda2’s department produces a periodic comprehensive magazine called Brick by Brick. Get a copy and get informed especially those that don’t believe!!!
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Hama dzangu. Do you realize that because of sanctions and other pressures from our detractors after taking back our land, we stayed for long without any notable developments around our communities.
Enter Second Republic, things are happening everywhere around us.
An upper middle-income society is a reality for Zimbabwe.
#EDWorks




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@ChambatiLevison @edmnangagwa @dereckgoto @dambumurakashi @DrMutambudzi @DumisoJnr22247 @enkudheni @ForeverZanuPF @harmaineRopafa1 @hazelwekwagondo @Hermish19 Is that not one of the mandate of a gvt
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This is why many Zimbabweans say President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa @edmnangagwa should continue until 2030
The Bulawayo–Victoria Falls Road Rehabilitation and Upgrading Project is progressing well, with surfacing works now underway in the Insuza area.
The project will transform the 440km highway into a world-class road, boosting tourism, trade and connectivity. It is being implemented by eight contractors and is expected to be completed by 2026.
@ZANUPF_Official
@ZANUPF19633
@ZanuPFMabvuku
@KingsolomonZW
@sparks9799
@Mwenemutapaland

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@SokoCindy @enkudheni @PaidamoyoMutsv1 @BaShonaBaShona @bosskimhucci @Cde_TakeItEasy @ChaibvaG @ChambatiLevison @CMukungunugwa @FeresuShashie @CrimeWatchZW Hahaha boots eloquently licked.
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While the world often equates wealth with flashy displays Sir Wicknell Chivhayo redefines what true success looks like not by what he builds, but by what he preserves. His rural home, untouched by solar panels, Starlink, or boreholes, is not a sign of neglect, but a powerful statement of identity, humility, and rootedness. In an age where many run from their past, he stands firm in his choosing authenticity over aesthetics, heritage over hype.
This is no ordinary home it’s sacred ground. A place where values were shaped, where family stories were passed down, and where the spirit of the village still breathes. While he could easily transform it into a modern fortress overnight, he chooses not to because some things are more valuable than convenience. His wealth isn’t proven by infrastructure, but by impact: schools built, lives changed, businesses empowered, and communities lifted not just in cities, but in the very villages that raised him.
Sir Wicknell doesn’t need to modernize his homestead to prove his success his actions across Zimbabwe and beyond do that every single day. And yes, if he ever decides to build a world-class village, it would take him nothing but a phone call. But for now, he lets his roots speak louder than any solar panel ever could. That’s not poverty that’s power grounded in purpose.


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‘Let’s safeguard our sacred pillar of nationhood #UnityDay heraldonline.co.zw/lets-safeguard…
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@TembaMliswa Zimbabweans.......too much talking and less working...
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People tagging me in these photos moda ndiite sei nenhau dzemachira aya?
Some of the analysis around VP Chiwenga wearing his uniform to a military handover ceremony are just too desperate to make sense. It's common military etiquette that he can wear that uniform for specific occasions. What is there to talk about in that?
Unfortunately, it appears the mentality of many suddenly posturing about power and signals may actually be the same mindset behind his own actions too. If it was for the occasion, fine and dandy but if there were other motives, maybe zvekuda kuvhundutsira , it doesn't work.
The country has a new High Command and more power can never be resident in a retired General than in those who have been installed and legally occupy those offices. Only desperate souls weave such conspiracies.

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Why is corruption only called out in ZANU PF? 🤔
Muleya, LynneM,Chin’ono, and Mahere loudly expose ruling party leaders, labeling them as corrupt, while conveniently ignoring questionable wealth accumulation within the opposition ranks. They remain silent on the net worth of opposition figures such as Chamisa (US$116M), Biti (US$25M), Sikhala (US$3.28M), Mwonzora (US$12.3M), and Ncube (US$1.42M).
Ironically, these opposition leaders are far wealthier than many ZANU PF delegates they accuse. In a struggling economy, how did they amass such fortunes? Zimbabweans deserve to know. Corruption must be condemned across the political divide, not used selectively to settle political scores or advance hidden agendas. @Tbiti_campaign @advocatemahere @daddyhope @nelsonchamisa @mawarirej @bla_bidza @KMutisi @JobSikhala1



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