Sunday, 12 July 2026

"Are you saying we should not participate in 31 July Street Protest against CAB3?" Stop running around like a headless chicken! W Mukori

 “ARE YOU SAYING ZIMBABWEANS MUST NOT TAKE PART IN THE 31 ST JULY 2026 STREET PROTEST OF CAB3?”


STREET PROTEST WILL NOT BE PEACEFUL AND I OBJECT USE OF VIOLENCE BECAUSE END RESULT IS UNPREDICTABLE ESPECIALLY THE NON-VIOLENT OPTIONS ARE THERE IF ONLY ONE CAN THINK!


STOP RUNNING ROUND AND ROUND IN CIRCLES LIKE A HEADLESS CHICKEN. THINK! 


When you are "running around like a headless chicken", you are doing a lot of tasks frantically without direction. It often means panicking instead of thinking carefully.


Being a busy bee feels great, but running around aimlessly can be exhausting. This idiom actually comes from the gruesome, real-world observation that a decapitated chicken’s nervous system can cause it to run and flap erratically for a short time after its head is chopped off.


Mnangagwa should not be in State House, if there was ever any doubt that he is a ruthless thug that completely evaporated after the 2008 Operation Mavhotera Papi. He and Chiwenga crossed the double red lines and the nation did nothing. Why?

 

We have a lot of catching up to do and all a leader like Mnangagwa can do is hold us back because that is the only thing man like him know. If you cannot compete hold back the competition. Stifling debate and all meaningful democratic competition has help Zanu PF stay in power for 46 years but at a price - Zimbabwe is a failed state! 


Mnangagwa gave war veterans hundreds of thousands of cheap bicycles last years to bribe them away from Geza Revolution. Every one of those bicycles was imported. Whatever local industrial capacity the nation had in 1980 has largely been decimated.  


Ponzi scheme - for every dollar Chivhayo spends buying a car for some lucky individual he wasted millions on buying shoes, cars, mansions, plane and other luxuries. Where did he get the money from -robbing the nation blind!


@ Kenneth Mtata


For many, saying "No" is not merely an act of courage; it can mean sacrificing financial security, professional advancement, or even the well-being of one's family. That is why the politics of patronage is one of the greatest threats to freedoms and national development. It does not imprison the body; it quietly captures the conscience.


Scripture consistently warns that gifts can distort justice. "You shall take no bribe, for a bribe blinds the clear-sighted and subverts the cause of the righteous" (Exodus 23:8). The danger is not only in receiving an unlawful payment but in allowing one's moral independence to be exchanged for personal benefit.


Yet the biblical story also reminds us that God always preserves a remnant. When Elijah believed he stood alone in the face of the greedy and cruel king, Ahab, God declared that seven thousand had not bowed the knee to Baal!


Every generation has women and men whose convictions are not for sale, whose integrity cannot be purchased, and whose hope is anchored not in political favour but in God's justice.


Zimbabwe's future will ultimately depend not on those who receive the biggest gifts, but on those who refuse to sell their conscience. Nations are renewed when there remains a people who cannot be bought, who speak the truth without fear or favour, and who choose faithfulness over privilege.


Corruption is like a Ponzi scheme, for everyone who benefit hundreds of thousands are robbed! 


When some one in public office eaverget involved in corruption then the nation must not rest until the individual(a) are weeded out of office because the resources involved are staggering and, if allowed to spread, the cancer will spread and be overwhelming!


A Ponzi scheme is an investment fraud that pays existing investors using funds collected from new investors, rather than from actual business profits. Named after con artist Charles Ponzi, the scams inevitably collapse when the supply of new investors dries up, leaving the operator with the money and most investors with a total loss.

No comments:

Post a Comment