Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi
14.9K posts

Hamaton Mwashigadi
@MwashGard
keep your present self out of your future self's mouth
Katılım Mart 2023
75 Takip Edilen37 Takipçiler
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

The level of mediocrity absolutely stinks. They arrive in luxury SUVs, surrounded by bodyguards, dressed in expensive designer clothes, with full stomachs and most likely healthy bank accounts too, all in front of impoverished masses who can only dream of such lives. Then they get on stage, dance to popular songs, sing along, shout slogans, spew division, hate, deceit and absolute rubbish, all to keep the crowd emotionally charged and entertained.
These are the very people meant to serve you. Your employees. The ones you call public servants, representatives, leaders.
Yet many of you cheer, chant, defend them, and treat them like celebrities, while your own lives remain unchanged. No real solutions. No progress. No transformation. Just endless performance and empty noise. Then there is the other familiar script for those who pay attention, the 527/- gang are deployed to confuse, distract, divide, and muddy the waters whenever uncomfortable truths begin to surface.
The same poor and struggling people who are their real employers are the ones being played the most.
Wake up.
It is what it is
#ReclaimNairobi
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Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

So @WorldBankKenya sent an employee asking to engage, probably because I've been hitting hard on matters Odious Debts.
I don't think I need any engagement with World Bank.
All we want from World Bank,IMF and other predatory lenders is an explanation on why they are colluding with crooks in government to trap Kenyans under the armpits of Odious debts.
Why are we being overtaxed to pay debts we never incurred?
We want an audit for all debts. Any debt borrowed outside the law, and was not attached to any development project, must be declared odious and cancelled.
We are not going to continue servicing the lavish lifestyles of crooks.
#DeniBandia

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Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

LOST CHILD:
Name:Grace Wanjiru Hika
Age:17yrs.
School:Shilloh Secondary School.(soweto)
Form 4 student.
Last seen:19th may 2026 at Embakasi.
She was putting on a navey blue stripped red trouser , Black jacket.
Contact;
Mother 0742067902.
Father 0796087403.
#RadioNumberOne

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Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

So the matatu strike paralysed the country for two days, people died, businesses burned, and the masterstroke solution from the government was to sit down with matatu owners in Mombasa and cut a deal. Crisis solved. Everyone goes home happy except Kenyans.
Kenyans still woke up the next morning paying Sh140 from Kayole to town. The boda boda rider still could not save a shilling after fuelling. The mother travelling from Githunguri was and is still paying Sh150 one way, praying she makes enough sales to afford the return trip. But the matatus were moving again, so apparently that counts as governance.
Here is the fundamental problem the Kenya Kwanza administration refuses to understand. The matatu industry is not the crisis. It is a symptom. When you negotiate with matatu owners while leaving fuel prices untouched, you have treated a broken leg with a bandage. The patient is still limping. You have just made the limp quieter.
The real crisis is at the pump. At Sh214 for petrol and Sh242 for diesel, every Kenyan who buys food, uses transport, runs a business or sends a child to school is being squeezed every single day. No handshake at State House Mombasa changes those numbers. No meeting with industry leaders puts money back in a hawker's pocket.
This is the regime's favourite trick. Negotiate with the loudest voice in the room, declare victory and hope everyone else forgets they are still suffering. The matatu owners got a seat at the table. Ordinary Kenyans got a promise for June or July.
A crisis that hits everyone cannot be solved by cutting deals with one sector. That is not crisis management. That is crisis postponement, and Kenyans are paying full price for it.
Dismas wa Tabu. Dreaming in installments. Billed in full.
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Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

Now that KRA (aka the Regime's money printer) is getting Ls both in parliament, on the STREETS and in the courts, they are resorting to stealing from helpless taxpayers:
1. Strange balances appearing in iTax even after you paid everything you declared.
2. Disallowing you to file returns and then imposing penalties.
3. Disallowing legitimate expenses through the system.
4. Making suppliers withholding 2% of sales and then creating MASSIVE VAT credits for low margin businesses. Note that the courts chucked out 1% minimum tax - now, this is 2%!
5. Disallowing casual wages retrospectively through selective verification exercises of previous returns.
6. The so-called automation of VAT means that ghost credit notes from suppliers are appearing in your returns, massively inflating your VAT liability, even as legitimate invoices are rejected, despite everything being input right.
7. Making the tax declaration system for businesses extremely complex and time consuming, forcing taxpayers on a wild goose chase.
Where is KAM? Where is KEPSA? Where are business owner and taxpayer associations?
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Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

Kenyans have been told the Singapore story so many times it has become a political cliché. Every few years, a politician will invoke Lee Kuan Yew's name, talk about vision and transformation, and ask us to believe that Kenya can become the Singapore of Africa. It is a beautiful idea. It is also an insult to the intelligence of anyone who has read how Singapore actually got there.
Lee Kuan Yew built Singapore on one foundation above everything else: a clean government. Not clean as in rhetoric. Clean as in action, consequences and personal example. When anyone accused him of corruption, he did not hold a press conference. He went to court, put his private and public life under scrutiny, and won. When he won damages, he gave the money to charity. He understood that in a region where corruption was a plague, as he put it, an allegation left unanswered was an allegation believed.
Now look at Kenya. We have procurement scandals that disappear. We have public officials who cannot explain their wealth and face no consequences. We have a fuel crisis where billions meant to cushion Kenyans through a fuel stabilisation fund went somewhere that nobody can clearly account for. People died in protests. The government's response was to hold meetings and make promises.
Lee Kuan Yew wrote that he appointed the best person available to the most important role and told them what he needed achieved, then left them to deliver. He called it management by objective. In Kenya, appointments are managed by tribe, loyalty and political deals. The best person for the job is rarely the consideration.
Singapore in 1965 was poorer than Kenya. It had no natural resources, no hinterland, and had just been ejected from Malaysia. What it had was a leadership that was genuinely willing to sacrifice personal interest for national progress.
Kenya has fertile land, a strategic port, a young population and enormous potential. What the Singapore story actually teaches us is that none of that matters without accountable leadership. And that is precisely what the fuel crisis, the empty promises and the culture of impunity show we do not have.
We do not need to become Singapore. We need leaders who are willing to be held to the same standard they ask of everyone else. Until that changes, the Singapore dream remains exactly what it has always been in Kenya. A speech.
From Third World to First: The Singapore Story: 1965-2000
intuganda.org/wp-content/upl…
Dismas wa Tabu. Dreaming in installments. Billed in full.
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Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

Kenyans all over the world doing great things. From Tesla, Lockheed, Toyota & your favorite major clothing brands. System at home dumbs dowm super bright minds.
Sun Tzu@ItsChanzu
Shocked to find out that the Lead Data Scout for Aston Villa is a Kenyan called Kariuki 😳
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Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi
Hamaton Mwashigadi retweetledi

This has to be one of the most concerning things I have read in the Auditor-General’s report on KURA.
On 15 July 2024, President Ruto’s government increased the fuel levy by KSh 7 per litre, from 18 to 25 KSh.
Now look at this carefully.
On 25 February 2025, the govt signed a securitization deal worth KSh 174.4 BILLION backed by that same fuel levy for the next 10 years.
And this is the first official document I have personally seen confirming the exact signing date.
For those who don’t understand what this means:
Your future fuel payments are already planned for.
That KSh 7 was effectively booked in advance to support repayment of a massive loan.
So every time you buy fuel over the next decade, part of that money is already tied up.
It is not a coincidence that:
The levy increased by KSh 7
Then the KSh 7 was securitized.
This was intentional.
And now you know how Ruto and his govt see you. They see you as an endless source of money.
According to the audit report, the KSh 174.4B was mainly meant to clear pending road debts:
KeNHA — KSh 89.95B
KeRRA — KSh 69.15B
KURA — KSh 13.77B
This contradicts what Mbadi said on Thursday that it was building roads in Suba, Garisa, etc
The report also says delayed payments had already accumulated about KSh 20 BILLION in penalties and interest.
So when some leaders say this money is simply building new roads everywhere, the audit paints a much more complicated picture.
This govt has borrowed so aggressively that it is now monetizing future Kenyan income to deal with old debts.
Kenyans are no longer just taxpayers.
They are future cash flows.

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