Fuel pains;
Everyone is already complaining, & when you actually think about it, it makes absolutely zero sense to keep on waiting for some sham election in the unforeseeable future.
We're getting killed now, we're getting squeezed for all we're worth now, the time to act is now!
The current IG of Police will destroy the country. He recently funded, supported and even helped the Linda Mwananchi rally in Kisumu.
Today, the same IG is seeing Gachagua's goons assault Kenya Airports Authority staff at JKIA. No noise from the tribal media and even no complaint from Irungu Houghton and his bunch of extremely tribal activists.
What are we doing to this country? How is the assault of a JKIA staff by goons allowed?
Gachagua revealed that Ruto is buying Turkana Tullow oil at USD 120M from the profits of fuel after increasing the price. Ng’ombe wa tutam wanaamini that it’s war in Iran
"Opinion poll inasema Linda Mwananchi tuko mbele na 86%, tutatoa next president. Dunia yote inasema WANTAM na Ruto ataenda nyumbani!"~Carolli Omondi speaks at Onyonka's mother funeral.
It's worse! Government allegedly paid some students Ksh8,000 and others Ksh10,000 for fake public participation of 2026 finance bill at Asyana Garden in Rongai! One of the students revealed he got Ksh8,000 in cash after the event!
#2026financebill#financebill2026
A Sh46 diesel increase means:
Higher food prices.
Higher matatu fare.
Higher electricity costs.
Every Kenyan will feel this pain.
Take a few seconds and tweet;
REJECT FUEL PRICES
REJECT FUEL PRICES
Let’s make this impossible to ignore.
Kenya is bigger than any politician, any party, any slogan, and any election cycle.
Today, a young woman named Rachel is suffering, not because she committed a crime, but because she openly expressed her political beliefs.
She tattooed President William Ruto’s face and the word “Tutam” on her skin, believing in a dream, believing in leadership, believing in democracy.
Today she is far from the comfort of her home, staring at hospital ceilings instead of living peacefully among fellow Kenyans.
This should disturb every one of us.
Not because of “Wantam” or “Tutam.”
Not because of UDA, ODM, Jubilee, DCP or any movement.
But because a human being was harmed over politics.
Have we reached a point where political differences are now enough reason to burn homes, attack neighbours, threaten families, or celebrate another person’s pain?
Is this the Kenya we promised future generations?
This tragedy painfully reminds us of dark moments in our history, like Molo, where Kenyans turned against fellow Kenyans simply because they voted differently.
We swore never again.
We promised ourselves that politics would never again become more valuable than human life.
Let this be the line we refuse to cross.
We can disagree fiercely.
We can debate passionately.
We can campaign loudly.
But we must never dehumanize each other.
No election is worth blood.
No slogan is worth tears.
No leader is worth a destroyed life.
Rachel’s story is no longer about politics alone.
It is a mirror reflecting what we are slowly becoming as a nation.
If we cannot tolerate different opinions without violence, hatred, insults, or revenge, then we are destroying the very foundation of democracy.
To all Kenyans: please, let us protect each other. Let us remember that after elections, we still share the same roads, hospitals, churches, mosques, schools, and markets. We are still one people.
A political choice is not a death sentence.
Different opinions are not betrayal.
And humanity must always come before politics.
May Rachel find healing.
May Kenya find wisdom.
And may we never allow politics to steal our humanity again.