杰夫

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杰夫

杰夫

@bb__carter

Searching Katılım Ekim 2016
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Gaffer of Gotham
Gaffer of Gotham@UtdGotham·
Declan rice wasn't even better than Casemiro this season
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PFA
PFA@PFA·
The players will have the final say…

⌛️
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Premier League
Premier League@premierleague·
Introducing your Young Player of the Season... @mancity's Nico O'Reilly 🎉
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Premier League
Premier League@premierleague·
A season for the history books 📖 @manutd's Bruno Fernandes is @EASPORTSFC Player of the Season ❤️
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杰夫
杰夫@bb__carter·
@_shad_s Mimi ata nataka Reece asiwin kitu nao io team this season because that kateam will start pushing baseless Ballon calss for their players haha
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Shad
Shad@_shad_s·
Iyo squad ya England naona iko sawa kabisa sababu I will be watching Reece James play some beautiful football, lakini bado sielewi mbona Tuchel hajaita Maguire honestly. He deserved a call up. Sasa Dan Burn ni nani smh
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杰夫
杰夫@bb__carter·
@lynn_ngugi1 @gladyswanga Were the comments made via whatsapp ama publicly ? Stop being a woke emotional retard person
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Lynn Ngugi
Lynn Ngugi@lynn_ngugi1·
@gladyswanga But you have his number, si umtumie kwa whatsapp😏😏
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Gladys Wanga, E.G.H.
Gladys Wanga, E.G.H.@gladyswanga·
OPEN LETTER TO H.E. HON JAMES ORENGO, SC, GOVERNOR, SIAYA COUNTY Dear Governor Orengo (My Father), RE: REFLECTION, DIGNITY, AND THE PLACE OF WOMEN IN OUR PUBLIC LIFE I write this letter in my personal capacity, not as Governor of Homa Bay County, nor as Chairperson of the ODM Party, but simply as Gladys: daughter, mother, wife, and a woman who, like many others, continues to navigate leadership in spaces that often demand strength while offering little grace. For many years, these spaces were occupied by men, and only courageous women dared to break through. I have reflected deeply on the remarks you recently made concerning me. I chose silence at first, because I have always believed that not every disagreement demands public contest, and not every hurt should invite a public response. Yet some moments require reflection, not because of the individuals involved, but because of what they represent. I have always held you in immense respect. To many of us who entered public life after your generation, you have represented courage, conviction, and the possibility of principled leadership. Many young politicians look up to you for motivation and inspiration. You have been around for a long time, and I have personally regarded you with the esteem one reserves for an elder and, in many ways, with the affection and deference one would extend to a father figure. Indeed, listening to your remarks and the manner in which they were received left me wondering how I would have felt hearing the same words from my own late father - whom I saw for only a few years - and from respected men of his generation like you, to whom I had looked for guidance and direction. That is perhaps why they hurt. Not because political criticism is unfamiliar to me, nor because public office exempts one from scrutiny, but because certain expressions carry weight beyond politics. They say politics is a dirty game, but I did not expect it to become dirtier through your utterances. Words spoken by respected leaders shape culture, reinforce attitudes, and determine what society permits. When remarks directed at a woman carry undertones that diminish, ridicule, or reduce her because of her gender, age, or place in public life, they travel far beyond their immediate target. They become an echo familiar to millions of women and girls who have endured various forms of gender-based violence, exclusion, intimidation, and dismissal in workplaces, homes, and public spaces. They run through the vertebrae like lightning striking a tree. Many women are told to speak more softly, lead smaller, occupy less space, or defer - not because they are wrong, but because they are women. Many endure insults that men in equivalent positions would never face. It is this reality that made your remarks painful - not merely as an affront to me, but because they inadvertently validated a burden many women continue to carry quietly. I do not write this to seek an apology through public pressure, nor to invite sympathy for myself. I write in the hope that moments such as these can remind us all - especially those of us privileged to be in leadership, and particularly in spaces where, traditionally, women were only supposed to be seen and not heard- that strength and dignity are never diminished by kindness, and that authority need not come at the expense of another’s humanity. Governor, despite the distress and untold discomfort this episode has caused me and those close to me, I do not wish to engage you in prolonged exchanges over this matter. I consider you my senior, a respected elder, and someone whose contributions to public life deserve honour and respect. I therefore choose forgiveness. I was humbled just as I was humiliated. More importantly, I choose to leave the door open for engagement, dialogue, and collaboration on matters that uplift our people and propel our community forward. After all, God gave us the responsibility to make our community better & more respectable.
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杰夫@bb__carter·
@LordGichohi you're the problem if you cant tolerate opinions and takes from people you dont like
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杰夫
杰夫@bb__carter·
@shobanes Waziri is not a poor person,he can afford that easily
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Shoba Gatimu
Shoba Gatimu@shobanes·
Ni kama waziri amevaa the Hublot Classic Fusion, Aerofusion Chrono King Gold 45MM skeletonized huko Mombasa. KES. 5,600,000 Eh.
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Omore C. Osendo
Omore C. Osendo@Conomore·
@MrKipkalya @waweru Let me guess that the only two MPs today who would match the class of 92 in addition to Prof. Nyong’o and Hon. Orengo are Hon. (Dr). James Nyikal of Seme and Hon. (Dr). Otiende Amollo of Rarieda.
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Kipkalya Kones
Kipkalya Kones@MrKipkalya·
After careful analysis, I have made the conclusion that Jaramogi Oginga Odinga was both a brilliant national leader as well as an exceptional community leader. In contrast, Raila Odinga, after him, was a brilliant national leader but a poor community leader. I think Raila's death has exposed this fact. Look at it this way. In the 1992 election, Jaramogi got himself 21 Luo MPs. 22 if you add the one in Langata. 23 if you add Ochieng' Mbeo, who joined two years later following the double by-elections in Kasarani (first, following a successful petition by Ferdinand Masinde and then the death of Masinde himself on by-election night, occasioning two by-elections in quick succession). Jaramogi's cast was so stellar that some of their names were already legendary before they even set foot in parliament. Jaramogi himself in Bondo. Iconic freedom fighter Achieng' Oneko in Rarieda. Political scientist, economist and academic giant, Prof Nyong'o in Kisumu Rural. Firebrand lawyer and feared liberation hero, James Orengo in Ugenya. Leading environmental expert and academic, Prof Ouma Muga in Rangwe. Celebrated legal intellectual, Dr Oki Ooko Ombaka in Gem. Sports administrator, business guru and leading reformer, Joab Omino in Kisumu Town. The multiple-times detainee and most uncompromising liberation fighter, former university lecturer, Raila Odinga in Langata. And the only woman in the entire cast was also the most accomplished woman in the whole land, the inimitable Phoebe Muga Asiyo of Karachuonyo. Their elections were hardly ever contested. The people chose their finest. Jaramogi never raised anyone's hand. Delegations never went to Bondo to change the will of the people. In fact, the man considered the worst of the whole lot, Tom Obondo of Ndhiwa, as if on cue, defected back to Kanu soon after the 1992 elections, and was replaced by Accountant Orwa Ojode in the ensuing by-election. The class of 92 spoke and the nation listened. In parliament, they broke down data, discussed policy, delved into complex international issues and were at home in the midst of intellectual discourse. Back home, they focused on the quest for justice and liberation. They were smart, coherent and at ease with whatever item of discussion came their way. They led from the front. They complimented Jaramogi in every sense. But the first sign that the Raila era would come with leadership regression must have been when two of the very finest Luo minds were replaced by two of the worst MPs to ever hold office, as NDP took community power in 1997. The revered Achieng' Oneko lost to one George Odeny Ngure while the hugely respected Prof Nyong'o was beaten by Winston Ochoro Ayoki. The downhill fall had begun. A quarter century later, and following Raila's death, I've been looking at the list of elected leaders in Luo land and making comparisons with the class of 92. Only four of the current leadership would make it to the Class of 92, and that includes Nyong'o and Orengo who were already there. Which means only a maximum of two, and just barely. The more disturbing question is just how did Luos end up with intellectual tadpoles like Sam Atandi, public nuisances like Gladys Wanga, political smugglers like Junet Mohamed, confused elements like Paul Abuor, comedians like Jalang'o, confirmed street ruffians like Fred Ouda, smiling empty debes like Ojienda, perennially dazed and lost souls like Lilian Gogo and Adipo Okuome and echo chamber praise machines like Rosa Buyu and Kaluma? Did Raila deliberately kill the quality of Luo leadership or did he simply focus on national leadership as the community itself regressed? Were the NDP-ODM era party nominations programmed for failure? Were Luos taken for a ride, as they voted in jokers and ruffians, while trusting only in the top leader? Something went wrong between 1992 and 2022. We need to find it.
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ᥫ᭡.ִֶָ𓂃
ᥫ᭡.ִֶָ𓂃@arispetal_·
this is how u celebrate after a trophy drought, not immediately posting instagram stories of a rival fan👍🏼
jaws 🏆@jawsavfc

tears

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