
I’m in the house on WIFI, then @Safaricom_Care sends me these two messages at once. How can I deplete 500MB of data when I’m on WiFi in less than a minute?
Siva
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I’m in the house on WIFI, then @Safaricom_Care sends me these two messages at once. How can I deplete 500MB of data when I’m on WiFi in less than a minute?


@muriaso When will things get better bro?? Look at all the stagnant industies, jua kali stuck at kutengeneza masufuria, we can't refine our scrap metal, entertainment industry choo, earphones tunaimport🤣 Boss na si ati wasee hawajitumi but leaders wetu ni old school design ingine yaani😑

Ultimately, Childbirth is the greatest sacrifice in a marriage.. the biggest offer that can be "brought to the table "



So if you marry you have to cook for your husband everyday? Like everyday, everyday, everyday?😭

Farmers struggle to find workers as immigration enforcement tightens 👀

In Benin Republic, A truck carrying soft drinks had an accident and people were actually helping them pack the drinks in place, I know a country where all the drinks will be looted in minutes 🤦🏾♂️

Before we compare Kenya to London and other “middle income countries”, let us examine our reality. Sit with Wafula, a boda boda rider in Gitaru, and walk through his day. From morning to evening, he might make 15–20 short distance trips. On a good day, he brings in about Ksh 1,500–2,000. Out of that, fuel takes a significant share, now add bike repayment or rent, a little for maintenance, and by the end of the day, what is left is barely enough to take care of his family needs, let alone save. This is the reality for many Kenyans. The issue is what fuel costs a Kenyan whose income has not kept pace, whose business depends on daily movement, and whose survival is tied to every shilling spent at the pump. In the UK, higher prices exist alongside higher incomes, reliable public transport, functioning healthcare, and social systems that return value to the taxpayer. Hapa Kenya, hizo mizigo zote ni za mwananchi, who already is stretched, with little cushioning and even less return. So the question remains, is fuel affordable for Kenyans, within our reality? The government must answer that without comparisons, but with solutions that ease the pressure on everyday lives.