DEVINE MAFA

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DEVINE MAFA

DEVINE MAFA

@divinemafa

Founder—ZEM | Former UZ Lecturer | Economic Strategist | Author (Referendum Lie, Blood for Blood) | Facility Rehab Director @ Harborview Post Acute, Memphis

USA Katılım Haziran 2009
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DEVINE MAFA
DEVINE MAFA@divinemafa·
MEMPHIS AQUIFER KING- DEVINE MAFA MEMPHIS H20 - 1 LITER (33.8 FL OZ) - PICK UP AT KROGER A 12 PACK 24.00 USD
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Alex Jones
Alex Jones@RealAlexJones·
Trump says U.S. will blockade Strait of Hormuz after Iran peace talks fail Israel prepares troops for total war after purposely setting up the United States for economic collapse BlackRock is running the show and the world economy is the real target This is Covid 2.0
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DEVINE MAFA
DEVINE MAFA@divinemafa·
Trump announces naval blockade on Iran after peace talks collapse 📷 Barak Ravid email (opens in new window) sms (opens in new window) facebook (opens in new window)twitter (opens in new window)linkedin (opens in new window)bluesky (opens in new window) Add Axios on Google 📷President Trump speaks to reporters before boarding Air Force One en route to Charlottesville, Va., at Joint Base Andrews, Md., on April 10, 2026. Photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images President Trump announced the U.S. is imposing a naval blockade on Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, several hours after peace talks in Pakistan ended in failure. Why it matters: Iran has effectively held the strait hostage, imposing a toll and limiting oil exports. Trump's blockade aims to flip that dynamic by denying Iran the leverage it's using as a bargaining chip and preventing it from exporting its oil. "It's going to be all or none," Trump told Fox News' Maria Bartiromo, referring to Iran's practice of granting passage to friendly nations like China and India while blocking others or charging tolls of up to $2 million. Trump has been discussing the blockade option with his team for several days, as a contingency plan if the diplomatic talks fell through. "We want to take this card from the Iranians," a senior U.S. official said. What they're saying: "Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz," Trump wrote on his Truth Social. He added that the U.S. Navy will "seek and interdict" vessels that have paid a toll to Iran in order to pass through the strait. "No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas," he stressed. Trump said Iran tried to "extort" the world by intimidating ship owners and saying it laid mines in the strait. "Iran promised to open the Strait of Hormuz, and they knowingly failed to do so...as they promised, they better begin the process of getting this INTERNATIONAL WATERWAY OPEN AND FAST!" he wrote. What to watch: Trump noted the blockade will begin "shortly" and added that during the blockade U.S. forces will destroy the mines the Iranians laid in the strait. It is unclear where these mines are located. He said other countries will also participate in the blockade. "Any Iranian who fires at us, or at peaceful vessels, will be BLOWN TO HELL! Iran knows, better than anyone, how to END this situation which has already devastated their Country," he said. Driving the news: The U.S. and Iran didn't reach an agreement during marathon negotiations on Saturday in Pakistan. The deadlock in the talks puts the two-week ceasefire reached last week in limbo, with the possibility of renewed and escalating warfare. According to a source briefed on the talks, some of the disagreements had to do with Iran's demand to control the Strait of Hormuz and refusal to give up on its enriched uranium stockpile. Between the lines: Chinese, Indian and Pakistani ships have been among the few to transit the strait under deals with Tehran, meaning Trump's interdiction order could put the U.S. on a collision course with more countries depending on Iran for oil.
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ZimEye
ZimEye@ZimEye·
BREAKING- The self imposing opposition leader, Sengezo Tshabangu (standing with a brown trousers and flat cap, while waiting) has just turned up for a ZANU PF meeting at Crowne Plaza with a notorious Mabvuku man working for the GoldMafia's Scott Sakupwanya, he has been getting instructions on recalling CCC MPs, and altogether sabotaging Nelson Chamisa altogether not knowing the ZANU PF man he js meeting is journalist, Simba Chikanza, he has been in online conversations with since 21st Nov 2023. Chikanza managed to infiltrate the ZANU PF cabal back in Nov and has kept running video footage exposing the scam in which the IPU describes Tshabangu as an imposter who sent a fraudulent letter to the Speaker Of Parliament, Jacob Mudenda. Scott Sakupwanya is the kingpin exposed in the Al Jazeera @AJIunit Investigative Unit's #GoldMafia documentary, part 1 to 4. This developing story is fully covered in GoldMafia LIVE files - coming up. Full story on ZimEye
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Simba Chikanza
Simba Chikanza@schikanza·
ZimEye@ZimEye

At a time he is supposed to respond to British police officers, Douglas Mwonzora who has a UK police case that demands he must return Simba Chikanza’s keys plus those of Harvest House building to the party leader whose party he dispossessed @nelsonchamisa recently came on video to announce he is now a victim of the govt of Zimbabwe. This was after @EngMudzuri sued him at the High Court. The attached footage is of him when he caused chaos at Premier Inn, Banbury, Oxford on 28 Sept 2024.

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Zimbabwean-Xhosa 🇿🇼 🇲🇿
The truth is coming out. Chamisa’s silence on 2030 and the dumping of the Mumba Report cost $5M, paid by Tagwirei. If you think we are lying, Chamisa should make a press statement condemning the 2030 agenda.
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Retired Lt General Winston Sigauke Mapuranga
I am a soldier. I deal in facts, in patterns, and in the kind of institutional pattern analysis that a lifetime of military intelligence work teaches you to apply when something does not add up. Something does not add up. And I will not pretend otherwise simply because saying so makes powerful people uncomfortable. Nelson Chamisa is the most recognisable opposition figure in Zimbabwe. He is a man who built his entire political identity on the promise of democratic resistance on the proposition that he and his movement stood between the Zimbabwean people and the permanent entrenchment of one-party political dominance. Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3 is the most consequential assault on Zimbabwe's democratic architecture since the Constitution was adopted in 2013. It proposes to remove the direct popular presidential vote. It proposes to extend the presidential term. It proposes to restructure the relationship between the executive and the legislature in ways that by any honest constitutional assessment concentrate power rather than distribute it. This is precisely the kind of moment that Nelson Chamisa's entire political career was supposedly building toward. This is the hill that the opposition was always supposed to die on loudly, visibly, and with the full mobilisation of every democratic resource at its disposal. Where is Nelson Chamisa? Not a major speech. Not a sustained public campaign. Not the kind of front-line democratic resistance that CAB3 demands and that Chamisa's own political biography would lead every reasonable observer to expect. Silence. Measured, conspicuous, and to those of us who study political behaviour for a living deeply, troublingly meaningful silence. In military intelligence we have a term for the absence of expected activity in a known operational area. We call it a tactical withdrawal. And tactical withdrawals do not happen without a reason.When an actor who has consistently and loudly occupied a political space suddenly vacates that space precisely when the stakes in that space are at their highest the intelligence analyst's first question is never "perhaps they simply changed their mind."The first question is: what changed? What changed for Nelson Chamisa between his years of loud, sustained, front-line democratic resistance and his current studied silence on the most important constitutional question Zimbabwe has faced in a generation? I am not a court of law. I am not a prosecutor. I am not in a position to answer that question definitively and I will not pretend otherwise. But I am a Zimbabwean soldier who swore an oath to this republic. And that oath requires me to ask the question publicly loudly, on the record, and without apology. What changed, Mr. Chamisa? What silenced you? The CAB3 process is happening within that environment. And within that environment, questions about who is being resourced to do what and who is being resourced to do nothing are not paranoid conspiracy theorising. They are legitimate, necessary, urgent questions of democratic accountability. I am aware that documents are circulating. I am aware that allegations are being made in various quarters about the financial dimensions of certain political actors' behaviour around CAB3. Today I am in a position to verify those documents or those allegations independently. But I am in a position and I feel the obligation to say this A huge corruption deal has caused democratic backsliding in zimbabwe which is aiding CAB3 . This was achieved by bribing of a top opposition leader Nero chamisa who recieved a staggering amount to the tune of 5million dolars and necessitated /laundered by one of the top law firms in zimbabwe. Not speaking about the US$20 million that Nelson Chamisa pocketed as a pay off to go on a forced sabatical and move go mute on active politics until 2030 . The “Gods” have favoured mukomana apart from the $20million
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DEVINE MAFA
DEVINE MAFA@divinemafa·
get the book - DEVINE MAFA- AQUIFER KING ON APPLE BOOKS
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DEVINE MAFA
DEVINE MAFA@divinemafa·
Dear Zimbabweans, This is a critical moment. We have roughly 30 days left in the window to confront CAB 3 (Constitutional Amendment Bill No. 3). If this bill passes, it will alter electoral timelines, shift power structures, and move the country closer to a one-party reality. Public hearings are concluding, and the decisive phase in Parliament is approaching. This is not a time for division or distraction. However, it is also a moment that demands clarity about who is contributing to the national effort and who is undermining it. There are Spaces and hosts presenting themselves as citizen platforms, yet their actions raise serious concerns. Instead of building focus and unity around stopping CAB 3, they are fragmenting attention and elevating voices that do not strengthen the opposition position. A recent example illustrates the concern. At a time when veteran opposition leader President Morgan Komichi was engaged in a Space focused on CAB 3 and the defense of constitutional order, a parallel Space was opened. That decision diverted attention at a critical moment. Whether intentional or not, the effect was the same: it weakened a unified national conversation. This is not about shutting down debate. It is about timing, judgment, and responsibility in moments that matter. There is also a broader pattern that Zimbabweans must evaluate carefully. Some of these platforms operate without clear identity or accountability. Others consistently engage with the same network of voices, creating confusion instead of clarity. Whether these actions are deliberate or not, they contribute to fragmentation at a time when focus is essential. Zimbabweans must begin to ask serious questions: Who is building unity around this issue? Who is fragmenting attention? Who is advancing the national interest, and who is distracting from it? This is not a time for assumptions. It is a time for discipline. The next 30 days will shape direction. Energy must be directed where it produces impact. Call to action: Do not allow your attention to be divided at critical moments. Support structured, focused conversations on CAB 3. Demand clarity, accountability, and seriousness from those who host national discussions. Prioritize unity of purpose over noise. Zimbabwe deserves leadership that understands timing, discipline, and responsibility. Devine Mafa Host of Citizen-Focused Political Spaces 12 April 2026
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DEVINE MAFA
DEVINE MAFA@divinemafa·
The reason why fuel has gone up is the choke hold created by Iran on The Strait of Hormuz. For those that don't follow international politics. This image illustrates how important the Strait is to the global economy.
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Roan
Roan@RohOnChain·
This 2 hour Stanford lecture shows exactly how Stanford trains it's engineers to build AI systems. It's more practical than every Claude tutorial & prompting threads you've seen. Bookmark & give it 2 hours, no matter what. It'll be the most productive thing you do this weekend.
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DivineRags
DivineRags@DivineRags·
DEVINE MAFA: THE AQUIFER KING Chapter 2 — The First Objection Dubai. 11:12am. The room was too cold. Intentionally. Six men. One screen. One problem. The screen showed a rooftop in Harare. Grainy. Timestamped. Two men and a signature. The European leaned back. "Who authorised this?" The American: "No one. That's the problem." The African — educated in Geneva, loyal to no continent — spoke last and slowest. "He's not building a company. He's building a position. Water source. Air transport. Diaspora distribution. Closed loop. If it stabilises, we lose pricing control inside eighteen months." Silence. The map on the second screen told the story without words. Lines connecting Harare to Memphis. Memphis to Lagos. Lagos to London. London to everywhere a Black hand had ever built something and watched someone else profit from it. "Stop him early," the American said. The African man tapped the table once. The screen changed. A woman stepping off a boat in Lagos. Unhurried. Precise. Already inside the plan. "Too late," he said quietly. "She's already in play." Lagos. 6:44pm. Amara didn't rush. She never did. She walked off the dock the way certain rivers move — you don't see the power until something tries to stop it. A man approached. Nervous. Expensive shoes. Wrong energy for Lagos at dusk. "Ms. Kade, the vehicles—" "I don't need them." She kept walking. "Has he landed?" "Yes." "Good." A pause. Then: "They're watching." Amara didn't slow down. "They've always been watching," she said. "But now they're paying attention. That's different." She turned a corner and disappeared into the city like she was born from it. Same city. Two hours later. Devine stood at a window on the fourteenth floor of a building that didn't advertise its occupants. Below, Lagos moved the way Lagos always moves — loud, alive, and completely unbothered by what anyone in Dubai thought about it. Behind him, a man named TAU stood still. Tau was always still. It was his primary skill and his most useful quality. "Dubai reacted," Tau said. "How fast?" "Immediate." Devine nodded once. Good. Fast reaction meant real fear. Real fear meant they understood exactly what Gold Air was. "Names?" "Not yet." "They'll show themselves." Devine turned from the window. "They always do when they're frightened." Tau's voice didn't shift. It never did. "There's more." That made Devine stop. "Someone accessed the Lagos transfer before completion." The room got quieter than it already was. That was not supposed to happen. The transfer was internal. Sealed. Known only to four people, and Devine trusted all four with his life — which meant one of them had just made that trust expensive. "Internal?" Devine asked. "Has to be." A long pause. Devine adjusted his cuff. Slow. Precise. The gesture of a man who uses stillness the way other men use words. "Find them," he said. He walked toward the door. Stopped just before it. "And don't protect them because you like them." He didn't turn around. "Protect the work. That's the only loyalty that matters now." The door closed. Outside, Lagos kept moving. Unaware that the most important financial instrument in African history had just survived its first twelve hours — and its first betrayal. Devine Mafa was not an error in the system. He was a redesign. And redesigns don't ask permission.
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DEVINE MAFA
DEVINE MAFA@divinemafa·
DEVINE MAFA Book One: The Aquifer King Chapter 1 – The Midnight Close Harare, 3:47 a.m. The rooftop terrace of the old Reserve Bank building was empty except for two men and the city lights below. Devine Mafa stood at the edge, snakeskin loafers planted like he owned the concrete. The wind tugged at the open collar of the charcoal suit Solomon had finished only yesterday — African cloth, African hands, cut for a body that had never apologized for taking up space. The Minister of Mines, a small man in an ill-fitting European suit, shifted his weight. “You understand what you’re asking, Mr. Mafa. Forty thousand acres of aquifer. That’s not water. That’s power.” Devine didn’t turn around. “Power is only power when someone else doesn’t have it. I’m not asking for the water, Minister. I’m asking for the right to turn it into something Africa controls from source to shelf.” He finally faced the man. The city glowed behind him like a second sky. “Memphis Aquifer water, bottled under African ownership, routed through Gold Air, sold in every diaspora city that still remembers the taste of home. The profit stays on the continent. The jobs stay on the continent. The brand becomes the continent. That is what I’m asking.” The Minister studied him. “And if certain parties in Luxembourg move faster?” Devine smiled — slow, certain, the kind of smile that closed deals and opened doors no one else could see. “Then they will learn what it feels like when the water decides who gets to drink.” He slid the single-page concession across the low table. The Minister read it once. Signed it. No lawyers. No cameras. Just two men and the night. As the Minister walked toward the stairs, Devine’s encrypted phone vibrated once in his pocket. A message from Lagos: Sable “Four drives delivered. The fourth one is already speaking. You were right about the Architect. He’s watching.” Devine slipped the phone away and looked out over Harare. Somewhere below, Solomon was probably still awake, stitching the next suit. Amara was already running the numbers on the new aquifer rights. Zora was designing the campaign that would make the world think this was just another luxury water brand — until it wasn’t. He set his empty glass on the ledge. The water was already moving. And so was he.
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Peter Schiff
Peter Schiff@PeterSchiff·
Is there any news, or is Bitcoin tanking just because it's so overpriced?
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