PERKS OF BEING A KENYAN
Forgetfulness
Kenyans are
the best humans suffering from amnesia. Nothing holds in this country mostly
curfews, ‘pop up’ laws and security alerts. Who remembers the famous Michuki
laws or better still Mututho laws? Michuki laws were at least as far as I can
recall the laws that stood for the longest time. There was a time our roads
were pretty with yellow lines on PSVs, seatbelts, speed governors and no excess
people. Well, to date we have the yellow lines and seatbelts. The functionality
of the belts in some vehicles is quite questionable. You can be a good citizen
and fast the belt but unfastening it will be a nightmare and the intervention
of the driver and his conductor is needed. In extreme cases, the belt is
dismantled. Speed governors, don’t even talk about these. They are present all
right but they’ve been ‘chocked’ so you could be driving at 200Km/ph. and it
would record a clean 140km/Ph.
Mututho laws
really caused a stir in the liquor industry (read mama pimas). The association
of drunk persons Ke. Was not very happy with these laws. Residents of Naivasha
even threatened their then MP. And told him point blank they’ll ensure he never
gets to parliament again. For a month or so, there was sanity in the local bars
then all of a sudden, it’s like the law never existed in the first place. And
that still holds to date. What happened to Mututho, nobody really knows, the
last time anybody heard of him, he was sacked as the NACADA boss, or was he
hired again. Nobody really remembers, we are Kenyans, we forgot.
Strike
All Kenyans
at one point in their lives have been part of a strike or knows friends who
participated in one where they themselves didn’t go because they are allergic
to tear gas or such. We are also a strikingly excellent nation when it comes to
go slows and strikes. Especially in January, we most often don’t usher the New
Year with a lot of tranquility especially in the public sector (refer to my
last article on the ghost of Christmas present). It starts with the teachers
demanding fulfilment of the promise the government made earlier the previous
year. Then almost suddenly, doctors will follow, then nurses then MPs will
threaten us. Solidarity forever is the new order of the day. Then as usual, MOUs
are signed after hot lengthy discussions with the SRC.
Then some
other group will follow. Trust me they will. Maybe the drivers of PSVs, whom I
strongly believe will concerning the new cashless system being introduced and
imposed by 31st of December this year, or vendors who are against
certain laws, or workers of a certain company. There is always a reason for
somebody to go on strike.
Subscribers
I’m not sure
whether this is worldwide, but I do know about my country. In the past, there
used to be actual one on one remedies to real time issues like a child crying
or a creative someone would draft a beautiful Christmas message and it will
miraculously circulate to the entire country. God bless whoever invented
technology. Nowadays, there are enough messages flashing on our screens giving
us certain codes to send to certain numbers. Some are for the most absurd
reasons like getting the meaning of your name to some more important ones like
getting directions. I appreciate the fact that they are bold enough to tell us
that the SMS rates for this particular texts are above normal rates and they
are kind enough to also offer an un-subscription path, just in case. The path
to unsubscribing though is normally very rough and full of thorns and pebbles
which leave Kenyans running to their service providers who receive all
bitterness on behalf of the “senders”.
I do not
mean to be judgmental or anything but some of these subscriptions that will
cost you about 30 shillings every time you try to access them are pretty much
free when you have internet access. But here in Kenya, with the beautiful
technology such as FAIBA optics lining our country, someone with full internet
access will still subscribe to these texts. Not that they really need it so
much, but because they are Kenyans, we are Kenyans. All of us have fallen for
this at one point in our lives, I know.
So that is
just it, being a Kenyan has its own unique perks. We Kenyans are actually born
and raised in this ‘traditions’ that we almost never notice we are doing the
things we do. But a closer study to the whole thing reveals that there are just
certain qualities common to all Kenyans, qualities that define us, the perks of
being a Kenyan.
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