Franco D'armour
27.4K posts

Franco D'armour
@toothcanlost
Just be good to me, and I'll be food to you



Dear Ugandans on X, I want to offer a sincere apology. My comment under Gen. Muhoozi’s post about Hon. Erias Lukwago was careless and insensitive. The timing was wrong, and the tone was wrong. I understand that many of you are worried, upset, and angry right now because of his arrest. This is a serious moment for our country, and for a family that is waiting for answers. In that context, my words about “a teacher of English” made light of something that deserves respect and concern. I see that now. I did not intend to hurt anyone or dismiss the pain people are feeling. But I’ve learned that intention does not change impact. My comment caused pain, and for that I am truly sorry. Ugandans deserve better from each other online, especially when we’re talking about freedom, justice, and human dignity. I’ve read your replies and I’m taking them to heart. I’m reflecting on how I show up in these conversations. We can disagree, we can debate, but we must never lose empathy for one another. Please accept my apology. I will be more thoughtful going forward. @lydiaavian256


Slowly, the elite class of Ugandan opposition politicians are regaining their lead of the ailing opposition. Now Nganda and Ssegona are outshining @HEBobiwine who now almost looks desperate trying to stay relevant! Museveni humbles everyone. Ani yali amanyi!





Abantu balina obusungu maani....


I apologize to my X followers ,Friends Family of Hon. Elias Lukwago. My earlier post about his arrest was poorly worded and caused pain. I regret it. I respect the law and Hon. Lukwago’s service to the public. I’ll be more thoughtful going forward.🙏




Dear Ugandans on X, I want to offer a sincere apology. My comment under Gen. Muhoozi’s post about Hon. Erias Lukwago was careless and insensitive. The timing was wrong, and the tone was wrong. I understand that many of you are worried, upset, and angry right now because of his arrest. This is a serious moment for our country, and for a family that is waiting for answers. In that context, my words about “a teacher of English” made light of something that deserves respect and concern. I see that now. I did not intend to hurt anyone or dismiss the pain people are feeling. But I’ve learned that intention does not change impact. My comment caused pain, and for that I am truly sorry. Ugandans deserve better from each other online, especially when we’re talking about freedom, justice, and human dignity. I’ve read your replies and I’m taking them to heart. I’m reflecting on how I show up in these conversations. We can disagree, we can debate, but we must never lose empathy for one another. Please accept my apology. I will be more thoughtful going forward. @lydiaavian256

Some of u people have turned serious national issues into a social media game. You rush to make reckless comments about injustice, governance, and the suffering of others not because u care, but because u want attention, likes, and temporary applause. The moment the backlash arrives, then u come out with apologies, excuses, claims that they were not intentional. If you are not prepared to stand by your words, think before you speak. Public discourse requires courage, responsibility, and conviction. You cannot mock people's pain today and hide behind apologies tomorrow. You cannot chase clout with one hand and demand sympathy with the other. The country deserves citizens who mean what they say and say what they mean. If you lack the courage to defend your position, perhaps you should have remained silent in the first place. Cc: @KarungiRach CC: @CarolPrim3



















