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@_flexxy445

I'm a sucker for good things. GGMU Hustleprenuer

A Planet Called Earth เข้าร่วม Kasım 2023
732 กำลังติดตาม714 ผู้ติดตาม
𝐂𝐫𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐖𝐚𝐭𝐜𝐡 𝐙𝐖
Manager accused of losing US$10K company money on Aviator (Kandege) A 39-year-old manager from Harare is in court after being accused of using company money to gamble on an online betting game known as Aviator, also called “kandege.” Justine Ngoshi, who worked as an area manager for Farm and City Private Limited, is said to have used about US$10 200 that was meant for shop rent payments. According to reports, the money was collected over several months and was supposed to be paid to a legal firm. However, it was never paid. Instead, it is believed that Ngoshi used the money to place bets on the Aviator game. By the end of the period, all the money had been lost, and none of it has been recovered. Ngoshi appeared in court last Friday and remains in custody while waiting for a bail hearing.
𝐂𝐫𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐖𝐚𝐭𝐜𝐡 𝐙𝐖 tweet media
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Rutendo Matinyarare
Rutendo Matinyarare@matinyarare·
𝗭𝗜𝗠𝗕𝗔𝗕𝗪𝗘’𝗦 𝗩𝗢𝗧𝗜𝗡𝗚 𝗦𝗬𝗦𝗧𝗘𝗠: 𝗔 𝗕𝗨𝗜𝗟𝗧-𝗜𝗡 𝗦𝗔𝗙𝗘𝗧𝗬 𝗩𝗔𝗟𝗩𝗘 𝗙𝗢𝗥 𝗣𝗨𝗕𝗟𝗜𝗖 𝗙𝗥𝗨𝗦𝗧𝗥𝗔𝗧𝗜𝗢𝗡. I hear the argument that ZANU PF wants the people to elect parliamentarians who will, in turn, elect the President—but there are a few things that this desire overlooks. Our current electoral system has become a custom that allows the people, both legally and in practice, to elect their parliamentarians and their President separately in a harmonised election. What is even more interesting is that, in the last election, the electorate consciously gave 65% of their vote to ZANU PF MPs, but only 53% to the ZANU PF President. This was neither a coincidence nor a mistake, but it is an insight that could help parties make better decisions, because the harmonised voting pattern is, in fact, an effective form of communication by the electorate and a stress test that illustrates one of two things: 1. Zimbabweans are relationship-oriented people who have trust, affinity, and goodwill toward the parliamentarians and councillors of the revolutionary party that liberated them and gave them land, but they feel less affinity toward the leaders (executive), whom they perceive as aloof, disconnected and are not adequately empowering their local representatives to deliver on promises. 2. Zimbabweans vote for their MPs because they have real, tangible, and personal relationships with them—more so than with top leadership, from whom they feel increasingly alienated, especially when service delivery is lacking. However, the question remains: why does the electorate vote for the party’s MPs, but then give fewer votes to that same party’s presidential candidate—or even favour the opposition candidate more? Is this the electorate’s way of giving power to the ruling party while simultaneously using a protest vote to reduce the President’s vote share—signalling that the Presidency is not allocating adequate resources to their trusted representatives (MPs or councillors) for service delivery? Or do they simply find the opposition presidential candidate more appealing or relatable—perhaps due to age or personality? Or are they signaling a desire to have the opposition and their party unite to govern together? All these are the questions the ruling party’s think tanks should have explored scientifically over the past twenty-six years, through structured market research and contact groups, to understand the psychology of the electorate in order to deliver better outcomes. More critically, this two-way voting system has also been used internally within ZANU PF as a strategic instrument to air grievances, as MPs have been known to encourage their supporters to vote for them while quietly permitting them to vote for a presidential candidate outside the party. This is the well-known “bora musango” strategy, used by MPs and party structures to express discontent with the President without direct confrontation. Again, this should have been an opportunity for party leadership to assess how their internal structures truly feel—particularly in a party where grievances are not openly ventilated. However, as with the broader electorate, the party and its leadership have not been sufficiently perceptive to decode these subtle but powerful signals. One thing is clear: this disparity between presidential and parliamentary votes in our harmonised elections is a goldmine of feedback—from both the electorate and internal party structures—that should be used to better understand their needs and expectations. More critically, it is a pressure valve that has stopped people from dumping the ruling party in previous elections. It’s therefore important for ZANU PF to understand how this system has kept them in power by giving the electorate an outlet to signal dissatisfaction and issue warnings, before they close it down, leaving the electorate with no other outlet but to punish them at the ballot box or through civil disobedience.
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Mface we Zambezi
Mface we Zambezi@Nashienashe·
Zvepano ndazoona comment yekuti Marry for money neidzo shaya dzinenge munhu akutsenga mugoti 😂😂😂😂
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TEDIOUS MUSINACHIREVO
TEDIOUS MUSINACHIREVO@VMusinachirevo·
Ndakuita ndichidhakwa manje, i have to slow down because I can't go home before witnessing Bournemouth beating Manchester United tonight.
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🆁︎🅰︎🆂︎_🆃︎🅰︎🆆︎🅰︎ รีทวีตแล้ว
JIGGA 🦍
JIGGA 🦍@Makomborerol·
Experienced life at the lowest that l don’t judge people who commit suicide.
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🆁︎🅰︎🆂︎_🆃︎🅰︎🆆︎🅰︎ รีทวีตแล้ว
Stay with God
Stay with God@StayWithGod111·
God's Reminder... 🩷
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🆁︎🅰︎🆂︎_🆃︎🅰︎🆆︎🅰︎
Iri nani ikutombouya zvayo worked for ARDA Seeds for 2 months and nanhasi mari yacho haisati yatombouya.
Dandaro Online@DandaroOnline

#dandaroupdates Nurses at Harare Hospital are protesting over low salaries, raising concerns about working conditions and pay. The demonstration was captured on video by Masimba Makwembere, showing staff expressing frustration as tensions continue within the public health sector. Follow our WhatsApp Channel: whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va…

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🆁︎🅰︎🆂︎_🆃︎🅰︎🆆︎🅰︎ รีทวีตแล้ว
Mr Argumentum Ad-Hominem
Mr Argumentum Ad-Hominem@dungahermish·
@_flexxy445 There is no justification, we are being driven too far, we are being stretched
Mr Argumentum Ad-Hominem tweet mediaMr Argumentum Ad-Hominem tweet media
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Mr Argumentum Ad-Hominem
Mr Argumentum Ad-Hominem@dungahermish·
@_flexxy445 It seems Zimbabwe is the only country affected, the prices are normal in other countries
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Mr Argumentum Ad-Hominem
Mr Argumentum Ad-Hominem@dungahermish·
Zimbabwe isn't a normal country, petrol now at $2.17. People need to be protected. Two weeks ago we were told the country has enough fuel cover for 3 months, but prices have been hiked twice is less than 2 weeks. The communiting public is already at the receiving end
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'King-XIII'🤴🏽
'King-XIII'🤴🏽@ronaldmachipisa·
Somewhere in the Middle East, decisions are made. Here in Harare, we inherit the consequences. Fuel at $2 a litre… for a war we didn’t start, don’t control, and can’t escape.
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TEDIOUS MUSINACHIREVO
TEDIOUS MUSINACHIREVO@VMusinachirevo·
Most FUEL SERVICE STATIONS are operated by Zanu Pf members and there is nothing shocking about those insane price increases. Zanu Pf has never loved a common person in the streets, this is the most opportune time to empty our pockets. TICHANGWARA
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🆁︎🅰︎🆂︎_🆃︎🅰︎🆆︎🅰︎ รีทวีตแล้ว
Dev Bajwa
Dev Bajwa@ammandev·
My champions.
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