TheBull

12.1K posts

TheBull

TheBull

@kashe_e

We become what we think about!

Nairobi Katılım Ağustos 2009
266 Takip Edilen428 Takipçiler
TheBull retweetledi
Nzioka Muli
Nzioka Muli@nziokamul1·
It is better to admit you walked through the wrong door, than to spend your life in the wrong room.
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Mtemi 👑 Bokono 🇰🇪
Mathee ashai kosana na mzae akaenda. Almost 2 weeks hatukuwahi Oga... Alirudu akapata tunakunywa Sodas na Chipo daily ni ka tulimsahau😂😂😂
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Zohran Kwame Mamdani
Zohran Kwame Mamdani@ZohranKMamdani·
my brother, this isn’t garlic and we’re not vampires
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WARÚHIÚ
WARÚHIÚ@kamauwaruhiu·
Without millennial women ,the dildo market would collapse.
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jacob juma
jacob juma@kabetes·
The messages and calls that known sponsors of violence in 2007/8 was destroyed by Safaricom. Kenyans should not forget this.
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CPA Wachira Joseph
CPA Wachira Joseph@WashiraX·
What Julians has submitted is extremely critical. Extremely. Right now: • You partly tell KRA what you earned • You tell KRA what tax you owe If finance Bill 2026 passes, It is KRA that will strictly tell YOU: • What you earned • What tax you owe How? • By pulling data from anywhere • eTIMS, banks, third parties, govt ministries integrations, etc If KRA sends you a tax bill. And it is insane. And you disagree. Who must prove it is wrong? The bill says it is you. But here is the danger. KRA is NOT required to tell you: • Where they got the data from • Or how they arrived at the figures So you are left there. Trying to fight numbers you cannot see. And some of those numbers could be system errors. Now ask yourself, - How do you disprove something you don’t even understand? Are you an angel? What Julians is saying is simple. If KRA wants to tax you using their data, KRA must prove to you and the courts that that data is: • Accurate • Reliable & • Defensible Is that a fair argument? Or should taxpayers just fight ghosts?
Julians Amboko@AmbokoJH

Should the taxpayer still bear the burden of proof in instances where a tax dispute with the Revenue Authority is based in pre-populated & third party data? In my submission before the National Assembly's Finance & Planning Committee on behalf of the Tax Research Centre at @StrathU, I argue that Finance Bill 2026's proposals seeking to anchor Incomes & Expenses Validation in law will be incomplete if they do not include a proposal for the the Revenue Authority being saddled with the burden of proof in such instances. Here's why: · Finance Bill 2026 proposes to amend Sec75 of the Tax Procedures Act to provide that the Revenue Authority may use technology to pre-populate tax returns on behalf of a person required to submit or lodge a tax return · Finance Bill 2026 further proposes that a person required to submit or lodge a tax return may rely on pre-populated return generated by the Revenue Authority to file their return · Finance Bill 2026 proposes to amend Sec112 to provide that the Cabinet Secretary of the National Treasury may make Regulations for the procedure for the submission or lodging of returns based on pre-populated tax returns generated by the Revenue Authority Here's where the problem is: · In all this, Sec56(1) which provides that "In any proceedings, the burden shall be on the taxpayer to prove that a tax decision is incorrect" remains unchanged · Sec56(1) is predicated on the fact that Kenya has been running on a self-assessment based regime & the data upon which tax disputes emerges was held by the taxpayer · With Incomes & Expenses Validation & the onset of a Dual Assessment regime in Kenya, taxpayers are now exposed not just to errors of judgement & data on their part, but also errors of technology & transmission which are out of their control · Can we really still have the burden of proof lying exclusively with the taxpayer in an environment where tax compliance has shifted from a function of record keeping to one where system integration reliability is now a key factor?

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DCI MERU
DCI MERU@KaberiaCommoner·
Britain colonized Singapore. Singapore is now richer than Britain. Africans are responsible for their own suffering.
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MethoDman
MethoDman@polo_kimanii·
Have you watched that Al jazeera documentary exposing how safaricom is selling private citizens data with government even without a warrant signed by the judge. Safaricom!
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Baby shark.
Baby shark.@thee_mulela·
Kuzaa maboiz wawili one year apart ni kama kuishi na majembe na mbavu kwa nyumba moja..
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George T. Diano
George T. Diano@georgediano·
Protect your money. People are not fair to former rich people.
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Eric
Eric@amerix·
If you are an observant person, A man who is keen, and concerned about his consciousness, You will realise something unusual is happening, There is a silent shift going on, We are moving from an OWNERSHIP ECONOMY to a SUBSCRIPTION ECONOMY. In a subscription economy, you own nothing, but you pay for goods and services which you consume, For example, Back in the 90s, We bought and owned music hardware like cassettes and discs, This ensured that the music hardware was yours and nobody would charge you a recurring monthly fee to play music, We owned newspapers and kept them, We bought and owned books, We owned letters written to us, We bought, and claimed ownership, But this is changing, and it is concerning, In a subscription economy, you own nothing, but you pay for it. MKOPA phones and Electric bikes are examples of how we have lost ownership of what we have bought. It will reach a time where, • You won't make a call, unless you subscribe to a calling service, on top of buying airtime, • You won't send an email unless you subscribe, or you will lose all your emails, • You won't listen to music unless you pay a monthly subscription fee for streaming, • You won't send a text or a WhatsApp message unless you subscribe to a monthly plan, or get used to annoying advertisements, • You won't cook food unless you pay for a monthly gas subscription plan or pay double for electricity, • You won't drink clean water unless you subscribe to a monthly water delivery plan. Ultimately, you won't own land or a house or a cow, You will own nothing, and you will never be happy. You will become a slave of the subscription economy. That day is coming. If you are wise, • Go to a rural area, • Own land, • Get solar, • Sink a borehole, • Keep poultry, cows, goats and sheep, • Grow your food. Don't sit in the city like sheep. Freedom will be given to those who will defeat the subscription economy. WAKE UP! #ManDay
Eric tweet media
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NTV Kenya
NTV Kenya@ntvkenya·
Uhuru Kenyatta to Ruto: Address the fuel crisis. Malumbano na chuki haitusaidii. Wakenya hawatakula maneno.
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#𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐞
#𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐞@RealNate08·
'Sikuzaa mtu yeyote na ukimwi'. My mom's words before I joined University.😂
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MethoDman
MethoDman@polo_kimanii·
REJECT THAT FINANCEBILL! There is nothing more left to tax. IMETOSHA!
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MEDUSA!👽🩷
MEDUSA!👽🩷@Prettdaisy·
I’m afraid we’re being outnumbered by the sheer number of foolish people in this country.
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Yoko
Yoko@Kibet_bull·
Ruto ran away in Mandera when a balloon blasted. He stood still when a young man ran to him. The script went wrong.
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Yoko
Yoko@Kibet_bull·
This is so wrong, kwanza the guys work in the office of Felix Kosgei.
Yoko tweet mediaYoko tweet media
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