Liberty Christopher

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Liberty Christopher

Liberty Christopher

@owobusingye

Chevener @CheveningFCDO at @LSEnews |Political Economist |Educationalist |Social Impact Award Winner | Hult Prize Campus Director | Debater|Wikipedia Editor

London, United Kingdom Sumali Haziran 2013
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Defenders Protection
Defenders Protection@defprotection·
This Women’s Month, Sandra Acheng , executive director @wougnet shows that intentional giving creates real impact. Through Wikipedia, she amplifies the stories of African women, mentors young female editors, and leads International Women's Day initiatives. Her advocacy at the Commission on the Status of Women 70 also pushes for justice and dignity for women. By giving her time, voice, and knowledge, she continues to build community and purpose. Her works: Contributed to the @Wikipedia campaign by writing and translating profiles of African women, such as Maha Jouini (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maha_Joui…) and Josephine Ahikire (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josephine…), into Rukiga. #GivetoGain #Womensmonth2026 #March2026
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Unfiltered
Unfiltered@quotesdaily100·
Study these philosophers and think in ways most people never will: 1. Marcus Aurelius — on doing your duty without needing the world to notice 2. Epictetus — on freedom as something that begins and ends entirely in your own mind 3. Friedrich Nietzsche — on creating your own values when the old ones have collapsed 4. Simone de Beauvoir — on how oppression requires the quiet cooperation of the oppressed 5. Albert Camus — on finding reasons to live in a world that offers none 6. Plato — on the danger of the crowd and the price of seeing clearly 7. Arthur Schopenhauer — on desire as the engine of suffering and art as the only escape 8. Immanuel Kant — on treating people as ends in themselves rather than means to your own 9. Søren Kierkegaard — on the anxiety of being genuinely free and the leap it requires 10. Hannah Arendt — on how ordinary people become instruments of extraordinary evil 11. Michel Foucault — on how power operates through knowledge and who controls what is considered true 12. Bertrand Russell — on thinking clearly as a moral obligation not just an intellectual one 13. Simone Weil — on attention as the rarest and most generous thing one person can offer another 14. Jean Paul Sartre — on the terror and the dignity of being condemned to be free 15. Baruch Spinoza — on God, nature, and the emotion you didn't know was running your entire life 16. David Hume — on causation, identity, and why the self you think you are may not exist 17. Lao Tzu — on doing less as the path to achieving more 18. Confucius — on self cultivation as the foundation of every other kind of order 19. John Stuart Mill — on liberty, the harm principle, and where your freedom ends 20. Diogenes — on the radical freedom available to anyone willing to need nothing from society What is your score out of 20??? /20
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Felix Prehn 🐶
Felix Prehn 🐶@felixprehn·
If You Don't Understand the Petrodollar, You Don't Understand Money
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The Shift Journal
The Shift Journal@TheShiftJournal·
Malcolm Gladwell explaining why some people succeed and some don't.
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Chevening Alumni Uganda
Chevening Alumni Uganda@CheveningUganda·
As Uganda heads to the general elections this Thursday, we are reminded of the importance of exercising our constitutional right to vote. Every vote matters. That single vote might be what your candidate needs to win. #UgVotes2026
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KWIDUg.org
KWIDUg.org@Kwidug1996·
Happy New Year 2026! Thank you for being part of our journey in the past years. We wish you a year of continued growth, collaboration, and positive impact in our community.
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EH
EH@EHcomps·
Respect to Ian Wright for standing up for Jude Bellingham.
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BLACK FLAG 💨🏴🇺🇸
BLACK FLAG 💨🏴🇺🇸@FlagBlack007·
Change your mindset Black People . Thoughts 💭 ⁉️
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Ryanair
Ryanair@Ryanair·
the L in Ryanair stands for luxury
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Nva Kanyike Mawokota 🇺🇬
With the prime minister of the Batwa/ Pygmies Mr Kainta Wilson . The Batwa kingdom in Bundibujjo consists 168 people ,Geoffrey Nzito is the current King According to Anthropologiests ,they believe thse indigenous people have lived in this world 60,000yrs Vipers to Batwa Pple
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Phiona Kyeru
Phiona Kyeru@kyeruphiona·
No One Warns Immigrants About the Silence When people move to the UK, everyone says, “You’ll be fine.” But no one warns you about the silence. The kind that fills your chest when you come home from a 12-hour shift …too tired to cook, too broke to order food …and the walls don’t answer when you talk. Back home, in Africa, there was always noise …neighbours arguing, radios playing, kids laughing outside, boda guys shouting across the road. Here, even the air feels like it’s watching you quietly. At first, you think you’re strong. You smile through the cold, through the confused looks when you don’t catch the accent, through the “where are you really from?” that hides behind polite smiles. But it’s the small things that wear you down. Having to repeat your name until it doesn’t sound like you anymore. Being called “love” but never truly seen. Hearing your qualifications don’t count because they’re “not UK standard.” You start from scratch. Again. Washing dishes. Cleaning houses. Sending money home like it doesn’t ache. Telling your family you’re fine, even when you cry at the bus stop because your card declined. Still… there are moments. Catching the eye of another African on the bus and sharing a silent smile. Hearing an Afrobeats song in a corner shop and feeling your heart breathe again. Cooking familiar food in a cold kitchen and, for a moment, it smells like home. And slowly, life rebuilds itself. Not the way you imagined, but piece by piece ….quietly, stubbornly, beautifully. Because being an immigrant isn’t just about survival. It’s about learning to belong in a place that never expected you to stay… and still daring to call it home.
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Ndagije Richard II.0👑
Ndagije Richard II.0👑@ndagijerichie·
We celebrate Zohran Mamdani’s win with his tune 'Kanda' from 10 years ago. Uganda stand up!🇺🇬
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