shakurleni✊🏾

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shakurleni✊🏾

shakurleni✊🏾

@randomrootshead

artist, designer, techie, shipping agent • oriyo

Katılım Eylül 2017
323 Takip Edilen459 Takipçiler
shakurleni✊🏾
shakurleni✊🏾@randomrootshead·
@OjokOkot_ @Educ_SportsUg Yet its not even that hard, we just need systems to be enforced without waiting for tragedy, and all it takes is a people centered gov't.
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Ojok
Ojok@OjokOkot_·
@randomrootshead Exactly. I am glad the @Educ_SportsUg has banned these school trips, as reactive as that decision is. Getting to the root cause of the accidents and solving it is more sustainable.
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Ojok
Ojok@OjokOkot_·
One of the young people I support in school brought this letter home yesterday seeking my consent to go on a geography study trip. The school administration also asked me to top up some money on an earlier over payment made at the beginning of the term. I have declined to give my consent. Beyond the recent spate of road accidents across the country, the letter does not even indicate where the children are being taken. That is information parents and guardians deserve to know before giving consent. If the trip were to nearby places such as Fort Patiko, Aruu Falls, Got Guru Guru, or other attractions within our region, I would gladly approve it. Otherwise, I would rather drive with my own children and those I care about to visit these places myself than risk sending them on a trip that could end in tragedy. Perhaps I am being overly cautious, but when it comes to the safety, a parent would rather err on the side of caution than live with regret.
Ojok tweet mediaOjok tweet media
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Peaceful
Peaceful@PeaceVictoria1·
Next time when you’re storing things like beans, rice, drop some bay leaves in them and store. You will not see any weevils.
Kakwenza Rukirabashaija@KakwenzaRukira

Months ago, while in Southern Africa, I bought two kilograms of beans from the market and carried them back to Germany. This is sound economics when you live alone. You cook a kilo, divide it into small portions, freeze them, and whenever the craving for plant protein strikes, you defrost a portion, make stew, mingle Karo or posho, and dinner is sorted. Yesterday I came home hungry and discovered I had exhausted the frozen supply. I went for the uncooked stock and found weevils. They had moved in, made themselves comfortable, married, reproduced and multiplied inside my own house, inside my own beans, without paying a single euro in rent. Now, I could have boiled them as they were, insects, larvae, eggs and all. We ate worse at Makobore, Muyenga and Kyamakanda. A little extra protein, some wings for texture, character in the broth. But the thought of it sat badly with me, and I was not ready to throw the beans away, and picking the weevils out one by one was beneath my dignity. So I chose a middle path. I spread the beans on an oven tray, set the temperature to 250 degrees Celsius, and watched. Through the oven glass I watched them jump. Little frantic hops as the heat became unbearable, each one leaping and landing and leaping again until it could not. I smiled. That is the price you pay when you invade my food, I told them. I watched each one die and felt nothing but satisfaction, the way it feels when justice, however small, is administered swiftly and without appeal. The problem is that anger is a poor chef. I left the heat running longer than was necessary. I obliterated the weevils completely, yes. Their eggs too. Their larvae. Every last one of them. But I also obliterated my beans. When I washed them and put them on to cook, they sat in boiling water for hours and refused to soften. They remained hard as stones, as though the heat had sealed some kind of stubbornness into them permanently. I eventually threw them out. I have taken losses in this life. Some significant. Some that kept me awake. But those beans hurt me in a specific way that other losses do not. Ugandan beans in exile are not a small thing. You know how they cook, how they smell, the particular softness when they are done right, the way they taste with posho at the end of a long day in a strange country far from home. I had carried them across continents. I had protected them for months. And I threw them away in anger, which is the most Ugandan ending imaginable.

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shakurleni✊🏾
shakurleni✊🏾@randomrootshead·
@bentique3 @wekesa_amos @RwenzoriMarathn I dont care about the marathon, It's kumanyoko. Afterall its now my taxes involved yet there's a famine ravaging thru karamoja region, you and wekesa can go to the bathroom and do your thing.
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🧗🏾‍♀️Bentique🦍
We all have seen @wekesa_amos and team fighting to raise @RwenzoriMarathn to the heights they are now and for us to start getting envious and start trash talking them only speaks of who we truly are. Just a bunch of lazy fools that never appreciate other people’s work.
🧗🏾‍♀️Bentique🦍 tweet media
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Silver Kayondo
Silver Kayondo@SilverKayondo·
The way our people are surviving: Someone goes to a pork joint, buys raw kigodo of UGX 1,000 to make some soup & share with family over posho for supper. Something has to change. No Ugandan deserves to live such a sub-human life. We must agree on a minimum standard of dignity.
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Shyam Tanna
Shyam Tanna@shyamtanna_·
The attached video captures part of my submission during the maiden meeting of the Parliamentary Committee on Science, Technology and Innovation (STI). I emphasized that Uganda must invest not only in what we produce, but in how we produce it. Too often, our conversations focus on the final product, yet the machines, equipment and spare parts used to manufacture those products are largely imported. This keeps production costs high and limits our industrial independence. Uganda possesses many of the raw materials required to manufacture industrial machinery. If we invest in engineering, technology and machine-building, we can lower the cost of manufacturing, strengthen our industries, create high-value jobs and reduce our dependence on imports. Beyond meeting our own needs, Uganda has the potential to become a regional hub for industrial machinery, supplying equipment to markets across East and Central Africa. True industrialisation is not just about making more products it is about building the machines that make those products. That is where innovation creates lasting economic transformation.
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Joan Anena
Joan Anena@JoanAnena2·
@nickopiyo We need a truth telling commission to unearth some of the hidden realities of the LRA conflict in Northern Uganda.. Many would be shocked to learn of the atrocities committed by the NRA government.. Rape of men was a weapon used in distablising our men & community!
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Nicholas Opiyo (Pronouns He/Him)
In the 1990s, the NRA government compelled all bicycle owners in the Acholi subregion to pay for and acquire a number plate/registration number, embossed on the front rail of the bike. I recall accompanying my father to Gulu Central Police Station to have his bike registered. He paid 900 shillings in crisp 50-shilling notes for the exercise. The ridiculous rationale offered for this underworking was that bicycles were being used to support rebels, and this government needed to know who owned them. The humiliation and extortion of the population left a deep scar on the social and economic fabric of the entire population. All this alongside the NRA's rape of men, burial of living humans at Bucororo, forceful displacements into squalid IDP camps. The impact of these actions remains visible in the region's population. #LesfWeForget Zoom in closely to see an example of one such bike i found at Laminladere area.
Nicholas Opiyo (Pronouns He/Him) tweet media
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Daniel Rugaju Rwamwaro
@nickopiyo As learned as u are, u seem to have failed to harness the better part of yr brain to think better and see better, always seeing and thinking negative things is not good for yr health or those around u! Especially for our beloved motherland. Seems there’s nothing good here for u!!
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shakurleni✊🏾
shakurleni✊🏾@randomrootshead·
@Pamankunda Thank you, I'd be happier if he was punished for his crimes. Hopefully by 2034 uganda will be in position to charge and jail him.
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Pamela Ankunda: aptnews.ug
@randomrootshead He made Peace. He took orders from his commanders at the time, believing that it was the only right thing to do. By 2023, he was serving the Lord as a catechist.
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Pamela Ankunda: aptnews.ug
The "basement" in Katikamu-from where no one begged for justice or returned alive in 1985. It was a few meters from that old building that 4 men dug their grave, got shot in the legs and were burried alive. I met the shooter in 2023.
Pamela Ankunda: aptnews.ug tweet media
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Mr Blendz...
Mr Blendz...@DjSlideThru·
If you don’t like or connect with what I do why talk dirty about my works. Let’s not discredit people’s efforts! Just move away.
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A.Razak
A.Razak@Zaknight_·
You call me on video call surprisingly, I pick and then ask me why am I in the dark. What did you expect?
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Julius Mucunguzi
Julius Mucunguzi@j_mucunguzi·
For 83 years since 1943, Kazimingi Millers has been feeding the residents of Jinja with maize, millet and cassava flour. Today, I returned to these millers which for the time I lived in Jinja in the 1990s as a young boy, was my regular stop to buy posho, that we mingled and ate with sabulenya- deep fried Nile Perch fish sauce, the staple food mix for low income earners in the area at the time. It was nostalgic to be back here, and approach the selling counters to get myself 2kgs of the famous Mbale number 3 brand of maize flour. While a lot has changed since I last bought maize flour here in 1990, a lot has remained the same. In 1990, the place was also a stage for bicycle boda bodas and very ramshackled 404 Pegeout and Beatle/kikere taxis to Masese landing site where I lived. Personally I always moved on foot along the dusty road to Masese,passing Etats engineering company yard, through omunkima, a stretch overlooking Kirinya Prisons where there were many monkeys. I would then meander through the quary village, on to @nwscug pump station, before branching off to play street football with Mansuri and Kadumburi and finally going home near Munshumbusha mansion. Munshumbusha was a pointiof reference bcause he was the only person withac big 16 inch colour tv on which we watched the Italia World Cup of 1990. To be continued...
Julius Mucunguzi tweet media
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TOKO
TOKO@GodwinTOKO·
President @KagutaMuseveni has written an opinion piece in @Newsweek about Africa’s position on the wars in the world now & why African nations like Uganda will not take a stand to condemn or support either side in these conflicts. On the Israel vs Iran war, he says Iran must acknowledge that according to the Bible, the Jewish people belong to the land, and that Israel must also acknowledge Iran’s existence. newsweek.com/ugandan-presid…
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