Tuesday, March 20, 2007

PCEA Church Man Claims That Parliament Has Failed Because It Is Full Of Satanic Symbols

There is another view concerning the real reason why our parliament hardly ever manages to achieve much. This view is that it all has to do with certain spiritual aspects.

A PCEA clergyman called a well-attended press conference yesterday to launch his book on Satanism in Kenya. In launching the book the clergyman pointed out the numerous satanic signs and symbols in parliament and said that they were part of the reason why our politicians did not achieve much.

He even went further to say that our leaders have defiled their God-given authority to rule Kenya because many of them regularly consult witchdoctors to help them solve personal problems (when they should be consulting God, who is one who gave them the authority to rule). He even touched on the fascinating history behind Harambee (the national call to pull together that is even embedded in our national court of arms).

When mostly coolies from India were building the railway line in the late 1800s, they would call on their god Ambhee when lifting the heavy iron bars. They would say something like Har Ambhee, which means "hail Ambhee." Spiritually sensitive Christians insist that it is instructive that Ambhee is a goddess with many arms, some of them hidden, the spiritual implications of this, they say, is that his is a goddess ruled by the spirit of taking and grabbing, hence the many hands.

Founding father Mzee Jomo Kenyatta took up this popular phrase in calling for a national effort to pull together in nation building and national development. And that is how the spirit of "Harambee" was born.

If what this clergyman and many others before him have said is true then it explains why Harambee funds have always been dogged by controversy with massive looting and diversion of funds. The whole concept of everybody pulling together and chipping in something small to achieve big strides for the entire community looks very impressive on paper but the whole thing culminated with District Officers and Chief seizing hens and other livestock and assets forcibly from homesteads that refused to make a set donation to a forthcoming harambee usually presided over by president Moi himself. An interesting aside here and food for thought; wht happened to the millions raised through several harambees by President Moi for the disabled in Kenya and also for youth development? Where did those harambee funds end up?

We really have very short memories as Kenyans, do we not?

Another interesting thing that spiritual Kenyans are now saying is that Kenya is a land that is ruled by the spirit of bitterness. There was lots of bitterness prior to the building of the railway across what is today Kenya, with the transportation of slaves (captured Kenyans against their will) to the coast for shipping to distant lands. Again there was plenty of "bitterness" imported into the country to build the railway line, in the form of the coolies who were virtually outcasts in the Indian class system.

Whether you believe this fantastic claims or not, it explains our politics a lot and even the abusive and very bitter comments that are being left in this blog and other forums that discuss Kenyan politics.

Wow!!

Many people don't know it, but there are plenty of genuine jobs and business opportunities available online. Get details on how you too can make money on the Internet or even earn a living. It does not matter whether you live in the remotest village in Kenya or anywhere else, all you need is a computer connected to the Internet. Read Kumekucha's fascinating report; Ways To Make Money Online

Regular violent wife rape by a dutiful husband.

Richard Branson Of Virgin Fame Is In Kenya

Sir Richard Branson of the Virgin group (it's not just the airline, theer are lots of products, even a Virgin Cola) is in the country to speed up arrangements that will see the launch of his Virgin airline in Kenya later this year (which will be a real threat to KQ's dominance in the region).

Branson is an example of an entrepreneur who built up a huge business from nothing. Exactly the sort of inspiration that Kenyans with an enterprising spirit must now draw from. Branson is proof that it can be done. As he said in an interview with the local press yesterday, the line between success and failure is very thin and there are many times when he would easily have permanently ended up on the other side.

The guy is surprisingly humble for the billionaire that he is t have talked like that. But what he said was the truth.

One of the potentially lucrative areas Kenyans can explore for business success is the Internet economy. The World Wide Web has amazingly put Africa and every previously downtrodden person on the same level with the privileged in the western world in terms of opportunities.

Interestingly Branson's first business at the age of 16 years was a mail order venture for popular music where he sold music through the mail. This was a huge success because popular music had just started exploding then, fuelled by the widespread playing of music on radio. There are those who view the Internet as an advanced version of the mail order business that revolutionized business for many decades. Many (including this blogger) are convinced that what radio did for popular music and the music business, the Internet will do (and is already doing) for many businesses and industries. (Read Kumekucha's article on how simple it is to launch an online money making venture).

Regular violent wife rape by a dutiful husband.