T Sithole

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T Sithole

T Sithole

@eng__sithole

believes in Christ🇿🇼

Harare, Zimbabwe Katılım Kasım 2019
529 Takip Edilen291 Takipçiler
T Sithole
T Sithole@eng__sithole·
@vietha @TheManOfNuances Actually, it is safer because it is less acidic, closer to the neutral range, which is 7. You should study chemistry.
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Man of Nuances
Man of Nuances@TheManOfNuances·
S3x mistakes most men make . 1. Eating a woman's p*$$y.
Man of Nuances tweet media
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1104
1104@DHJR1104·
@shonapapi Havade kupfeka vanhu vacho kna nyadzi unotoona umwe munhu achitoti ndaona wekuroora ipapa huh
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Changamire
Changamire@shonapapi·
Women will never beat the allegations that they are the reason behind most rape cases because how do you dress like this in public , who are trying to giver a boner 🦴
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T Sithole
T Sithole@eng__sithole·
@TravQue They’re not a red flag, they’re just not your type🙇🏽‍♂️
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TravQue
TravQue@TravQue·
Red Flag🚩
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T Sithole
T Sithole@eng__sithole·
@Brian___Jethro I’m shocked you’re just discovering him now, dude is underrated
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J E T H R O 🇿🇼
J E T H R O 🇿🇼@Brian___Jethro·
Just came from Youtube , pane mface anonzi Tha Bees arikutaurwa muma streets and everywhere We might be witnessing greatness 🙌🙏 I am impressed
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The Foreigner
The Foreigner@VaPhiri·
@BabesweHunters There are situations that need to be disclosed even if not asked when starting a relationship, HIV+ is top of the list. Leave him, not that he is + but because he withheld vital info intentionally. I told my Christian wife that I'm Muslim the very first day without being asked.
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T Sithole retweetledi
Joseph Kalimbwe
Joseph Kalimbwe@joseph_kalimbwe·
a) As a Zambian, i pay $20 visa to enter DRC. A citizen of Belgium pays nothing to enter DRC b) A DRC citizen pays $20 to enter Zambia. A British citizen pays nothing to enter Zambia. Africans charge each other to enter our own countries, then we let Europeans come in freely !!
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T Sithole retweetledi
WithAlvin 🇬🇭
WithAlvin 🇬🇭@withAlvin__·
“Speed is not a normal person, he’s strong, funny and intelligent” — Ghanaian business mogul in the uk showers praise on @ishowspeedsui 🎥: @/asar.ci This man looks like Rudiger tho 😂. Ghanaians look alike.
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Sizwe SikaMusi
Sizwe SikaMusi@SizweLo·
They kept getting angrier with each Grok reply💀💀
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PP_merchant
PP_merchant@Sir_TT_Seema·
@Shadaya_Knight There’s one thing that all women want regardless of status, power, race or background : MORE! Even after being the First Lady of the U.S at one point (arguably the second most powerful person in the world), she still isn’t fulfilled and wants even more.
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richo
richo@richo·
🚨BREAKING: iShowSpeed addresses criticism accusing him of being disrespectful for not collaborating with content creators during his Africa tour in Nigeria. Speed explains that the purpose of the tour is not streamer collaborations, but to showcase the culture of Africa’s countries — highlighting everyday people who are rarely seen, street performers with real talent, and local communities. He makes it clear that every stop on the tour is pre-planned, time-restricted, and carefully scheduled by his crew, with specific locations he must reach in each country. He adds that many of the creators complaining already have platforms of their own, while this tour is about giving exposure to people who don’t. Speed says he won’t cancel cultural visits or moments arranged by locals just to accommodate influencers, stressing that the goal is to put African culture on display for the world — not to centre the tour around content creators
richo tweet mediaricho tweet media
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T Sithole
T Sithole@eng__sithole·
@freemanchari the title literally says 'housemate'. What did you expect😂😂😂
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Freeman
Freeman@freemanchari·
Title hanzi THE NEW HOUSEMATE😭😭😭😭😭😭
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Freeman
Freeman@freemanchari·
I just watched a 2hr Nigerian film with 2 actors in one house 😭.
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T Sithole
T Sithole@eng__sithole·
@controlla__zw an industrial experience, chibuku chinogadzirwa sei? 😅
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controlla
controlla@controlla__zw·
South Africa has spinners, Eswatini has culture, and Botswana has wildlife. wtf will Zimbabwe show the world when Speed lands.😭
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T Sithole
T Sithole@eng__sithole·
that guy Speed has mad aura. 😂
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T Sithole retweetledi
iNspiritextra
iNspiritextra@iNspiritextra·
Dr. Myles Munroe’s analogy is very powerful. It clearly explains the principle fatherhood.
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Sizwe SikaMusi
Sizwe SikaMusi@SizweLo·
Joshua Maponga claims that African countries can fix their job crises by getting educated and then “going back to the village” and “starting up stuff”. What Maponga doesn’t seem to understand is that individuals fail because their country’s industrial policy is not geared towards sustaining such. No amount of individual effort is going to move the needle. The idea of a mass of individuals all doing their own thing is intuitive and motivational, but history does not support it. No country ever uplifted itself through individual enterprise without deliberate state policy. That’s where everything starts, no exceptions. Maponga’s message resonates because it speaks to agency and self-reliance. It’s basically a philosophy of individual and community upliftment in the absence of a functional state. But the thing is, individuals and communities don’t operate in a vacuum. Their success is shaped by the enabling environment, or lack thereof, created by the state. An educated person can start an agri-business, but if there are no reliable roads to get goods to market and no energy grid for cold storage, the venture is hamstrung. This kind of infrastructure is a public good that requires state planning and investment. Where does capital come from? Without a functioning national financial system, development banks, or policies that de-risk lending to SMEs, entrepreneurs rely on personal savings or predatory loans. This severely limits scale. You might as well get a job. When the local population is poor, and regional trade is hampered by poor logistics and tariffs, the market is too small, so who will you sell to? State-led industrial policy must nurture industries, protect developing ones and negotiate regional/international trade agreements to create larger markets for you. Maponga’s motivated individuals would be the engine of the economy, but without the state to lay the tracks, the train of national development goes nowhere. History shows that the tracks must come first. You’re not going to “start” and hope state policy finds you along the way. Even if 100 individuals start successful small ventures, how do they become a competitive industry? A lone tomato farmer, a lone processor, and a lone trucker all fail without coordinated investment in inputs, processing facilities, and supply chains. This is where state industrial policy comes in. Getting an engineering degree means nothing when your country has no industrial policy. As I keep saying, no successful developmental state has relied on individual enterprise. There are numerous examples of this. Sure, Maponga is offering an individual survival manual within a broken system, but for individual efforts to sum to national development, you need a functioning state that provides the structure. This is where the focus should be. But he is misdirecting public consciousness. At the exact moment when Africans should be demanding the developmental state capacity of infrastructure, industrial policy and coordinated investment, he’s telling them the solution lies in individual initiative and “going back to the village.” This is politically demobilising by shifting the blame and responsibility away from where it belongs, in state failure and elite capture, onto individuals and communities. Then when hen people internalise that their poverty is due to not being entrepreneurial enough, they stop making rightful claims on the state. Instead of selling the people false hope, entertainers like Maponga should be creating political demand for industrial policy. They should be building public understanding that South Korea, China, Taiwan, Japan, and every Western nation had active developmental states. They should be making it common knowledge that “free market” development is a myth, and that Africans deserve the same state-led development that worked everywhere else. In the end, when you strip away all the self-motivation, the fact remains: development is a state-mediated process and the Maponga message is just a relic of the neoliberal moment when we pretended the state didn’t matter and individuals could bootstrap their way to development.
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T Sithole retweetledi
YOUNG DON
YOUNG DON@youngdonforvr·
Never do the most
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T Sithole
T Sithole@eng__sithole·
@sam_dzivah ask yourself why you're masterbating in the first place.
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earGROUND ®
earGROUND ®@eargroundtv·
SA President Cyril Ramaphosa met with Toyota Tsusho President and CEO Toshimitsu Imai on the sidelines of the 9th TICAD Summit in Yokohama, Japan. He was warmly welcomed with the hymn Wahambanathi, also rendered in Shona.
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