
S P L I T
30.1K posts

S P L I T
@kobbysplit
Pardon my french, i write what comes to mind. Tesla Fan Boy🏎️. Rt❌Endorsement


This civic overtake me whiles i was just cruising,then i had to show him Elantra no be small car🤣🤣




I went down a TikTok rabbit hole about a Ghanaian TikToker who married an Italian man in Ghana. They just visited his family in Italy for the first time (he hasn't been home in 10 years) and she just found out he's rich af







An Open Letter to the United States Embassy in Accra: Why Section 214(b) Feels Like a Blanket Excuse. Dear Embassy Staff, I’m writing as one of many Ghanaians—and Africans , who have walked out of visa interviews with a polite smile, a refusal slip, and zero real answers. We show up prepared: bank statements, property deeds, business registrations, family letters, job contracts, return tickets. We prove strong ties—homes, children, livelihoods we can’t just abandon. We explain our trip: conferences, weddings, medical care, tourism. Yet the outcome is almost always the same: “refused under Section 214(b).” travel.state.gov/content/travel… That’s it. No detail. No hint. Just a reference to “insufficient ties” or “intent to immigrate” - words that could mean anything. Compare that to Canada or the UK: they will tell you straight even upon requesting for the Global Case Management (GCMS) Note : Canada. maybe your savings look thin, maybe your job history’s shaky, maybe they doubt your return plan. At least you know what to fix. At least you get a map out of the maze. With 214(b), we are left guessing. Is it the bank balance? The job title? The way I smiled? We can’t appeal, we can’t clarify, we can’t even learn. And every time we reapply, paying another visa fee, sometimes going through the stress of booking date appointment slot. We wonder: are we being punished for being African? For not having a Western passport? The truth is, thousands of us are genuine. We are not sneaking in. We are not fleeing. We just want to visit, then come back. But when the only feedback is a vague code, it feels less like security and more like suspicion. Transparency isn’t weakness, it is trust. If the Embassy could list even one concrete reason, saying “your monthly income does not match your travel costs” or “your business lacks two years of tax records”, we would respect that. We would improve. “We would believe the process works”. Right now? It doesn’t. Not for some of us. Not when good people, with real documents, keep getting the same canned rejection. Please, give us clarity. Give us dignity. Give us a chance to actually fix what is wrong. Thank you for reading. A Ghanaian applicant (and one of many) Ruffin Perri Greno Quao. @USEmbassyGhana


@Tenewaa1 What’s the issue?


















