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Smak✍️🇰🇪🇨🇦🇸🇦
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Smak✍️🇰🇪🇨🇦🇸🇦
@Solomon20336948
Humbled by God's grace.// follow if you want to be informed, entertained, and educated in diverse topics. plenty of funny and extremely amazing stuff on this TL
🇰🇪 county 014 Katılım Eylül 2020
4.9K Takip Edilen3.3K Takipçiler
Smak✍️🇰🇪🇨🇦🇸🇦 retweetledi

Ukianza Kutweet Upuzi Za Ruto Naku Unfollow
You Have No Business Appearing On My Timeline
Respect Yako Peleka Sugoi.

Bro From Siaya@_Sakko
Willie Oeba hukufollow mchana then ikifika midnight anaku unfollow . Walahi Willie umepoteza heshima zangu 🤣😂😂😂
Filipino
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SUSPECT IN USDT 431, 380 GOLD SCAM NABBED IN KILIMANI
A woman believed to be the mastermind behind a gold scam that fleeced an American national of USDT 431,380 has been arrested by detectives domiciled at the DCI Nairobi Regional Headquarters.
The con game began with sweet promises and polished deals, as the smooth-talking suspects convinced the foreign investor they could supply 400 kilograms of genuine gold bars.
Hooked by the seemingly lucrative deal, the American national flew into Nairobi to seal the agreement, unaware he was stepping straight into a carefully staged trap.
Everything appeared convincing, as documents were drawn, negotiations held, and once the fraudulent agreement was signed, the victim transferred millions into the suspects’ bank accounts believing the gold shipment would be delivered as agreed.
But no sooner had the cash hit the accounts than the so-called “gold dealers” vanished into thin air. Calls went unanswered, and not a single gram of gold was delivered.
It then dawned on the victim that he had been taken for a ride, prompting him to report the matter to the DCI.
Detectives immediately launched a painstaking manhunt, piecing together forensic leads that eventually led them to Crystal Villas in Kilimani, where the prime suspect, Mildred Kache aka Sabreena Ayesha was cornered and arrested.
Her accomplice, Ibrahim Yusuf Mohamed, however, sensed the detectives closing in and slipped through the net, abandoning a black Mercedes-Benz E50 registration number KCV 910C.
The vehicle was seized and towed to the Nairobi Regional Headquarters yard where it is being detained as exhibit in the ongoing investigations.
While Mildred is currently cooling her heels in police custody undergoing processing ahead of her arraignment, detectives are hot on the heels of the other suspect who managed to evade capture.
#FichuaKwaDCI. Call 0800 722 203 (Toll-free) or WhatsApp 0709 570 000 to report anonymously. Usiogope!

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🚨BREAKING! 💣
Holger Quintero was named player of the tournament as Independiente del Valle U17s won the Liam Brady Cup at Hale End.
He was also named POTM in the final. 🇪🇨
ℹ️ @jeorgebird

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The Transport Sector Alliance has announced a nationwide fuel strike beginning midnight on Monday, 18 May 2026.
In a joint statement, the alliance says passenger transport, cargo and logistics, ride-hailing, motorcycle transport, tourism transport, driving schools, school buses and private motorists will take part.
The alliance says the strike will take place in cities, municipalities, towns and trading centres across Kenya, and has called on private vehicle owners, farmers and business owners to participate peacefully.

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As per several announcements seen so far, schools across the country are postponing classes tomorrow ahead of the transport sector’s nationwide fuel strike.
The postponements follow concerns over possible disruption to movement, with reports indicating that some roads could be blocked during the strike.
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No matatu should be on the road tomorrow.
No truck should be on the road tomorrow.
No personal vehicles should be on the road tomorrow.
No bodaboda, including electric ones, should be on the road tomorrow.
Even the planes should join the strike.
Let's all walk tomorrow.
William Ruto can't be the best thing that ever happened to this country.
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Hi @LTrossard ,
Tomorrow is my last home game.
I came here just to support you.
After this season, I have to go back to Japan.
Could you grant me one last wish?
I made this sign inspired by your goals!
I’ll always support you, no matter what.




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In 1897, Campbell’s soup was a luxury.
A single can cost 30 cents nearly half a day’s wage for an industrial worker. Most families couldn’t afford it.
Then a petty family argument changed American food forever.
Arthur Dorrance owned the Campbell factory in Camden, New Jersey. His nephew, John, had just returned from Europe with a chemistry doctorate.
Arthur thought it was useless.
He hired John anyway — at $7.50 a week. Barely more than a laborer’s wage. And if the “college boy” wanted to run experiments, he had to buy his own equipment.
The factory workers laughed at him.
The place was brutally hot, loud, and smelled of boiling cabbage and beef fat. Campbell’s sold canned vegetables, preserves, and heavy soup in giant 32-ounce tins.
The real problem wasn’t the soup.
It was the water.
Railroads charged freight by weight, and soup was mostly liquid. Shipping costs made it expensive before it even reached a grocery shelf.
John had a simple idea:
Remove the water before shipping.
At first, it failed badly.
The broth scorched. Vegetables turned to mush. Fat separated. Beef became rubber. Workers mocked him for “burning lunch.”
But John kept experimenting in a tiny corner lab on the factory floor.
He adjusted temperatures.
Separated ingredients.
Calculated evaporation rates.
Tested batch after batch.
Finally, he cracked it.
He created a concentrated soup that kept its flavor while removing roughly half the water.
Instead of huge tins, he packed it into a small 10½-ounce can.
His uncle hated it.
Arthur thought customers would feel cheated by the tiny can filled with thick paste. He told John to abandon the idea.
John pushed for one small test run anyway.
Price: 10 cents.
Customers took the cans home, added one can of water, heated it up…
…and it tasted like the original 30-cent soup.
Sales exploded.
Freight costs collapsed.
Grocers loved the smaller cans.
Orders multiplied so fast Campbell’s shut down other product lines entirely.
The “useless” chemist took over the company.
And when the Great Depression hit decades later, millions of Americans couldn’t afford luxuries anymore.
But Campbell’s condensed soup still cost 10 cents.
It lasted for months.
It filled stomachs.
It became survival food for struggling families across the country.
John T. Dorrance never became famous like Edison or Ford.
But he quietly built one of the most important food products in American history by realizing something nobody else had:
Sometimes the most profitable innovation is simply removing what people don’t need.
John T. Dorrance:
The man who stopped paying to ship water.

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20’: Fire drill at St. James Park away end.

Central@WestHam_Central
85': Fire drill at the emirates.
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