Danny M🗽

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Danny M🗽

Danny M🗽

@DannyTheGrey

Actions are the seeds of fate and deeds grow into destiny 🗽 https://t.co/nagvFHlSYh

jedah 🌏🗽 Katılım Mayıs 2021
2.3K Takip Edilen3.8K Takipçiler
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African@ali_naka·
The truth needs no preachers
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Danny M🗽
Danny M🗽@DannyTheGrey·
@rozvi_prince @MacBelts @grok People can and are dealing with multiple matters all at the same time. Our eyes are fixed on the broader fight for freedom and are fully capable of spotting a stick in the mud and plucking it out!!
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Rozvi Prince🇿🇼👑
Rozvi Prince🇿🇼👑@rozvi_prince·
@DannyTheGrey @MacBelts @grok The question is not about whether they are making money or not, but it’s a question of destraction of the real agenda. CAB3 is supposed to be in parliament this week, but because certain group push opening of Parliament to 2 June to fix their dirty. What’s the agenda?
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Danny M🗽
Danny M🗽@DannyTheGrey·
@rozvi_prince @MacBelts @grok Lol journalism is also a business... rather spread it out and get lot$ more engagement. However, yes the full audio is needed. The teasers are definitely not looking too good for Nero... for some of us though we have known for years now🥴
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Rozvi Prince🇿🇼👑
Rozvi Prince🇿🇼👑@rozvi_prince·
@MacBelts @grok And what type of journalism that comes with teaser of a full script they already published. It’s like they are trying to blackmail or trap someone into singing their music flow
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Danny M🗽 retweetledi
Dr. Tadini Masaya
Dr. Tadini Masaya@wenyikaiman·
open.substack.com/pub/tadini/p/a… Out of 170 Zimbabwean constituencies, 118 have failed to account for their public development funds. Is the Constituency Development Fund (CDF) a vital tool for grassroots empowerment, or has it devolved into a political slush fund insulated from genuine oversight? From structural loopholes to comparative global solutions, this deep-dive essay exposes the anatomy of parliamentary accountability and what it takes to put public wealth back into the hands of the citizens. Read the full critique.
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Yeu❤️
Yeu❤️@yeumchicks·
@EmmiieTLO Noise. Why are you talking at the top of your voice
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Blackbone🧡💙💚
Blackbone🧡💙💚@EmmiieTLO·
As you get older, what irritates you more than anything?🤔
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Danny M🗽 retweetledi
Gerrard Anko Ged Belts
I have registered my objection to CAB3 and I grounded it with the following points: 1. CAB3 undermines constitutionalism and the principle of separation of powers 2. CAB3 touches on rules of electing leaders and political competition, and these must never be changed without engaging in a genuine national consensus process 3. The public consultation process was marred by violence, intimidation, and exclusion and this compromised the whole process 4. CAB3 was driven by partisan or internal political considerations, not national interest 5. Our constitutional order calls for stability, predictability, and respect for the social contract agreed to in 2013 6. CAB3 falls shot when it comes to addressing the real governance challenges facing the country 7. It is for the above that I say NO to CAB3 and reject it in its entirety. I respectfully submit that Parliament should: a) withdraw CAB3, b)make publication of the full report on the 90-day process and create an environment that ensures that any future amendment is underpinned by a reform process that is citizen‑driven, transparent, and free from coercion. The owners of the Constitution are the people of Zimbabwe and amending it must honour both the letter and the spirit of democratic participation.
Gerrard Anko Ged Belts tweet media
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Mohamed Salah
Mohamed Salah@MoSalah·
I have witnessed this club go from doubters to believers, and from believers to champions. It took hard work and I always did everything I could to help the club get there. Nothing makes me prouder than that. Us crumbling to yet another defeat this season was very painful and not what our fans deserve. I want to see Liverpool go back to being the heavy metal attacking team that opponents fear and back to being a team that wins trophies. That is the football I know how to play and that is the identity that needs to be recovered and kept for good. It cannot be negotiable and everyone that joins this club should adapt to it. Winning some games here and there is not what Liverpool should be about. All teams win games. Liverpool will always be a club that means a great deal to me and to my family. I want to see it succeed for long after I have moved on. As I’ve always said, qualifying to next season’s Champions League is the bare minimum and I will do everything I can to make that happen.
Mohamed Salah tweet media
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Dr. Tadini Masaya
Dr. Tadini Masaya@wenyikaiman·
open.substack.com/pub/tadini/p/r… In Zimbabwe, the drive toward modernization often collides head-on with a political landscape that prefers the safety of the status quo. The parliamentary debate of May 2026 revealed a striking paradox: while the state pays lip service to global technological standards, its policies remain anchored in archaic regulations and a calculated tolerance for urban chaos. From the "criminalization" of modern vehicle engineering to the sanitization of violent transport cartels, the current discourse suggests that infrastructure is being treated less as an economic necessity and more as a tool for political survival. This critique unpacks the "mirage" of Zimbabwean modernization, arguing that until the government prioritizes transparency over patronage, the nation's transport network will remain a dangerous relic of a stalled transition.
Dr. Tadini Masaya tweet media
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Danny M🗽
Danny M🗽@DannyTheGrey·
@twoshadee Then stay away from the drink. You are saving yourself a great deal of problems. Also a hangover after you hit 33 is no laughing matter 😅
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Danny M🗽 retweetledi
Dr. Tadini Masaya
Dr. Tadini Masaya@wenyikaiman·
PART TWO: A "rogue" administration’s greatest weapon isn't power, it’s the manufactured silence of a fearful public. ​To fight back, you need to master the Talk-Listen-Amplify Loop. Resistance isn't just a protest; it’s a strategy to reclaim the narrative: ​Talk: Don't just vent; educate. Break down the implications of harmful bills for your neighbors and colleagues. Articulate the stakes clearly. ​Listen: Solidarity is forged in shared experience. Validating the struggles of others builds the social cohesion required for a long-term movement. ​Amplify: Use your platform to echo constitutional experts and grassroots activists. Turn individual whispers into a roar that is impossible to ignore. 📢 ​Silence is consent. Break the loop of fear and start the loop of resistance. #ZimSaysNo
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Danny M🗽
Danny M🗽@DannyTheGrey·
@dideestars Very dangerous game. Wouldn't be surprised if it blows out of control and people get hurt or die even🤬
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Boni ✨🤎
Boni ✨🤎@dideestars·
Okay so vanhu will go look for that cash Pa Trabablas is it even safe to walk around there???
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SCOTty
SCOTty@zulukingggg·
Part Two 2️⃣ 💥 Powerful Speech 🎤 From Marcie Wilks @Marcie4LOC THREAD: South Africa, migrants & the hard conversation we must have 🧵 1. This issue won’t be solved by shouting. It needs multiple honest conversations where both sides are heard. 2. Reality: People are leaving Zimbabwe because of real problems. That part is not in dispute. 3. But how we present ourselves in South Africa matters. 👉 We can’t be unclear about who we are: - Refugee - Economic migrant - Trader These are different realities. 4. If you say you are a refugee, there are expectations. If you say you are an economic migrant, there are different expectations. 👉 Mixing the two creates confusion and mistrust. 5. South Africans are also asking a real question: “If resources are limited, how do we share them fairly?” That concern is real, whether we like it or not. 6. Another uncomfortable truth: Some migrants bring skills, experience, and entrepreneurship. 👉 But locals may feel: “Why are we not being trained or empowered the same way?” That is a government failure — not a migrant crime. 7. So there are two conversations happening at once: - Community frustration - State failure And they are being mixed into one. 8. From a community level: We need honest engagement, not chest-beating on social media. 👉 Respect. Listening. Empathy. 9. If you enter someone else’s country: - Understand their concerns - Respect their space - Engage, don’t inflame 10. At the same time: 👉 No frustration justifies violence. Ever. 11. Another key point: Why are we not equally organised to challenge our own governments? That question is uncomfortable — but necessary. 12. Real solution starts here: - Organised migrant communities - Clear identity & conduct - Engagement with local communities - Not confrontation 13. South Africans are not enemies. Zimbabweans are not enemies. 👉 The real problem is mismanagement, inequality, and lack of dialogue. 14. Final truth: If we don’t speak honestly and respectfully to each other, we will keep fighting the wrong battle. Listen first. Speak with respect. Resolve as people. #TruthOverPower
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Fact
Fact@Fact·
What’s the one food you never eat but most people you know, does?
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Dr. Tadini Masaya
Dr. Tadini Masaya@wenyikaiman·
I refuse to stand by while failure and dictatorship are codified into law. I will be counted among those who say no to Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3. #ZimSaysNo
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Dr. Tadini Masaya
Dr. Tadini Masaya@wenyikaiman·
I stand against oppression and call others to do the same, not because it is safe, fashionable, or profitable, but because I share the pain of those crushed under the heel of tyranny. My faith compels me to care for all humanity, and my God demands that I take a stand. I am not guaranteed victory, but I am guaranteed a clear conscience.
Dr. Tadini Masaya tweet mediaDr. Tadini Masaya tweet media
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Dr. Tadini Masaya
Dr. Tadini Masaya@wenyikaiman·
Sorry for the length; I would have made a video if it weren't Wednesday. The tension between direct and indirect electoral systems lies at the heart of modern democratic theory, representing a fundamental choice between the "will of the people" and the "stability of institutions." A direct election is the purest application of majoritarian democracy, where the President is chosen via a single national tally. In this model, the mechanism is a straight line: the citizen votes, and the candidate with the highest total wins. Conversely, an indirect election introduces a layer of intermediaries, such as an Electoral College or a parliamentary body. This mechanism transforms the process into a two-stage affair where citizens elect representatives who then, in turn, select the executive. While proponents argue this provides a "deliberative" filter, the transition from a direct to an indirect system often leads to significant democratic erosion. ​The primary casualty of such a transition is the principle of "one person, one vote," a cornerstone of universal adult suffrage. As Robert Dahl explores in On Democracy, political equality requires that every citizen’s preference carries equal weight. Indirect systems frequently violate this by introducing geographic or representative weighting, where a vote in a smaller or "pivotal" district carries more mathematical influence than a vote in a larger one. This results in "vote dilution," where the formal right to cast a ballot remains, but the functional power of that ballot is diminished. When the link between the voter’s intent and the final executive outcome is severed by intermediaries, the voter is effectively marginalized, leading to a form of systemic disenfranchisement. ​Furthermore, disenfranchisement is not merely a mathematical reality but a procedural one. It stems from the imposition of electoral changes without the broad, captured views and explicit consent of the governed. Political legitimacy is rooted in the Social Contract; as John Locke argued in his Second Treatise of Government, "The supreme power cannot take from any man any part of his property [or rights] without his own consent." When a population is forced to abandon a direct electoral method they have historically utilized, the change often signals an attempt by the state to "de-mobilize" the public. This shift moves power away from the general electorate and into the hands of a political elite. ​Ultimately, replacing direct elections with indirect ones without a clear public mandate creates a "legitimacy gap." In Patterns of Democracy, Arend Lijphart emphasizes that for a democracy to remain stable, the participants must agree upon the "rules of the game." If the electorate feels that the system has been restructured to manufacture a specific result or to insulate the leadership from the popular will, the resulting sense of alienation undermines the very foundation of the state. By limiting the direct impact of universal adult suffrage, the state does not just change a mechanic; it risks stripping the citizenry of their fundamental agency and sovereignty. @bla_bidza @NewsHawksLive @MacBelts @lnmanzini @zulukingggg @LHNewsZimbabwe @NewsDayZimbabwe @Marcie4LOC
Dr. Tadini Masaya tweet media
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Danny M🗽
Danny M🗽@DannyTheGrey·
@missf33fo Bruh it's only Tuesday. What's Going On Out There🙆🏾🤣
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Dr Sonnenschein 🌻
Dr Sonnenschein 🌻@missf33fo·
The problem with buying “friends” is someone else can afford them too. It’s always good to remember that loyalty that comes with a price tag comes with an expiration date.😉
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