Posts

The world burns around me, but my alarm clock insists on its own urgency

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  Epstein files, war in the Middle East, US, Israel, Iran, drones striking, missiles fired, civilians killed—kids, babies, families. Nuclear talk everywhere. Flash floods in Nairobi swallowing homes, drowning colleagues, washing away livelihoods. Corruption unchecked, looters laughing, government promises evaporating. Family struggling to pay rent. Friend posting about suicidal thoughts. Social media pings with “breaking news” every few seconds: famine, displacement, climate disasters, police brutality, school shootings. And still, I wake up. Brush my teeth. Make coffee. Prepare for Monday. The world burns around me, but my alarm clock insists on its own urgency. I check emails, attend meetings, nod at colleagues, answer calls, pretend the chaos in Syria, Iran, Sudan, Congo, and Gaza is somehow distant enough to ignore. But it’s not distant. It’s on the screen, in the notifications, in my heartbeat. It presses on my mind. Every headline is a weight: another child dead, another fami...

The Most Deadly Poison of Our Time Is Indifference

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  There are many things that threaten a nation: corruption, poverty, violence, and injustice. These problems dominate headlines and political debates. But beneath all of them lies something even more dangerous, something quieter and harder to confront. The most deadly poison of our time is indifference. Indifference does not arrive with noise or spectacle. It creeps in slowly, disguising itself as fatigue, resignation, or survival. It begins when people see wrongdoing and shrug their shoulders. It grows when citizens hear of corruption and say, “That’s just how things are.” Over time, indifference becomes the silent force that allows injustice to flourish unchecked. In Kenya today, this poison has seeped into many corners of national life, weakening the moral backbone that a functioning society requires. Consider how often stories of wrongdoing surface in the country. Scandals involving public funds appear with alarming frequency. Investigations are announced, commissions are forme...

Listening Without Fear: Why young people need safe, judgment-free conversations about suicide

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  In many societies today, conversations about suicide are still surrounded by fear, silence, and misunderstanding. The topic often triggers immediate alarm, moral judgment, or institutional responses that focus more on containment than understanding. Yet one idea has been gaining traction among mental health advocates: if we want to genuinely help people who are struggling with suicidal thoughts, we must first make it safe for them to talk about those thoughts openly. That means creating spaces where individuals especially young people can have real, judgment-free conversations about their feelings without immediately being labeled, dismissed, or automatically forced into hospitalization. The premise behind this approach is simple but profound. When someone expresses suicidal thoughts, what they are often seeking first is understanding. They want someone to listen without panic, accusation, or dismissal. Unfortunately, the reaction they frequently encounter is the opposite. People...

Bentley’s Law and the Question of Justice in Kenya

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  Every so often, a story emerges that forces us to rethink what justice should look like. One such story comes from the United States, where a grandmother in the state of Missouri is advocating for a proposal known as Bentley’s Law. The law is named after her grandsons, Bentley and Mason, whose parents and baby sibling were killed in a drunk-driving crash in 2021. In the aftermath of unimaginable loss, the grandmother began pushing for a policy that would ensure children left behind by such tragedies receive financial support from the person responsible. Bentley’s Law proposes something simple: if a drunk driver causes the death of a parent, they should be legally required to pay child support to the surviving children. Under the proposal, payments would begin about a year after the offender is released from prison and would continue until the child turns eighteen, or up to twenty-one if the child is still in school.  At its core, the proposal is built on a basic principle: a...

Together in the Water, Divided at the Ballot

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  During the weekend I saw an image that has refused to leave my mind. A group of about ten people were walking through floodwater that had risen to their necks in Nairobi, a sad sight indeed. They moved slowly, carefully, in formation, each person holding the hand of the next so that no one would fall or drift away. In that moment, survival depended on unity. No one was asking huyu ni tribe gani? No one cared whether the person beside them came from the mountain, the lake region, the coast, or the north. What mattered was simple and immediate: we get through this together, or we don’t get through it at all. It was a powerful reminder of something deeply true about Kenya. When crisis strikes when floods rise, when accidents happen, when tragedy hits a community, Kenyans instinctively come together. In those moments, we remember something fundamental: that we are human beings first. We help strangers push cars out of flooded roads. We contribute money for hospital bills through ha...

Patterns, Power, and the Myth of Youth

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  There is a quiet danger in the Kenyan society that refuses to recognize patterns. Events come and go, scandals erupt and fade, promises are made and broken, yet the cycle continues almost unchanged. The faces in power may shift, the language of politics may evolve, but the outcomes remain eerily familiar. In Kenya, this inability to recognize patterns, question systems, and act on what may seal our fate for more decades to come. For decades, Kenyans have witnessed the same political script unfold with remarkable consistency. Elections arrive with grand promises of reform and transformation. Candidates present themselves as saviors ready to dismantle corruption, revive the economy, and uplift the ordinary citizen. Campaigns are filled with energy, slogans, and hopeful rhetoric. Yet once power is secured, the familiar patterns re-emerge: public funds disappear, accountability fades, and policies that should serve the public are quietly reshaped to benefit the political class. The t...

Let the Kite Perch and the Eagle Perch: Greed, Power, and the Cost to a Nation

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  Chinua Achebe said,  You’ll have what is good for you and I will have what is good for me. Let the kite perch, and let the eagle perch too. If one says no to the other, let his wings break.  In those simple lines lies a philosophy of justice and coexistence. Achebe reminds us that a healthy society is one where everyone has space to live, grow, and survive. The powerful do not monopolize opportunity, and the weak are not pushed out of the sky. But when greed takes over, this balance collapses. The eagle begins to believe the entire sky belongs to it. This imbalance is not abstract; it has real, devastating consequences. Across many nations, political leadership has drifted from stewardship to self-enrichment. Public office, once meant to serve citizens, has increasingly become a pathway to wealth accumulation. When politicians place personal gain above public welfare, the damage spreads across every aspect of society, education, healthcare, infrastructure, and even the...