Nonsense
I can’t stand this cunt.
Before he went to be with the Lord .
The Lord

Who is servicing her now after Allan left? I used to admire this woman back in 2002 to 2007 when I was a member of her church. She looked horny all the time.
Hii inakaa story ya jaba.
Lazima kuna kondoo kama @Ndovu mwenye hukula kwa malanye anakamua
No bank would ever reduce loan, story za jaba
Judge not, lest ye be judged as well.
It can on principal reduction
ni story ya jaba to inspire other bonobos to give even more to the church
Anything with X amount raised in Y hours is a crowdfunding affair. We saw it with Albert Onwang’, we’re seeing it here and we’ll be seeing it in the future.
Two things stand out to me from the comments on this post. First, we tend to have a negative mindset when it comes to debt, often equating it with poverty. For example, when someone secures a bank loan of 250 million, many immediately assume they’re poor. This reminds me of the case of Jamal Rohosafi, who was exposed by Edgar Obare for having a loan of over 100 million. People were quick to label him as broke, yet they overlooked the fact that he likely had collateral worth over 100 million or business ventures capable of generating such amounts — which is precisely why a bank would be comfortable lending him that money.
My second point is about our tendency, especially among Africans and African Americans, to heavily invest in churches. Why pour 490 million into a church? Imagine the potential impact if that money were invested in businesses- the returns, the jobs created, and the overall economic boost. While churches are meant to guide our morals, they offer little in terms of economic value. And yet, despite the growing number of churches, our societal values continue to decline.
Faith sells. Preachers are basically motivational speakers who sell hope to their congregants.
Guys like Joel Osteen have made millions from donations, subscriptions, and merchandise sales. Best part zero tax.
Am thinking of starting my own mega church here in Ugenya. Prophet Yugni.
That woman feltshe stood at a loss after using 0.5b to treat her husband without success. She had to use those fools to recoup some of that money.
I would do the same if I were in her shoes. Fools deserve to be taken advantage of
Most poor people do not understand the concept of leverage. I have never seen a wealthy person (someone worth 100M+) without a bank loan. People who never take loans never get rich because they don’t know how to leverage other people’s money. Wealthy people understand 4 things that must be leveraged:
- Other people’s money (loans).
- Other people’s energy/intelligence (employees)
- Technology (software)
- Social media (to lower customer acquisition costs)

This is true. Take the US as an example, their budget is around 6-7 trillion dollars but their national debt stands at over 31 trillion dollars but you don’t hear them worrying the way Kenya and many African countries are worried. I mean, their national debt is a concern to them but they don’t loose sleep about it the way African does. Africa just have a negative mindset when it comes to money and Debt. Like now, am not trying to defend Ruto, but many Kenyans think if we pay off all our debts, the country will be okay and the country will develop to the point it rivals Singapore. But how many people don’t have any debt but are still poor. They take their kids in public and think they are better than someone who has a bank debt of 2 billion yet their kids go to the best schools in the World. African need to understand how they use debt is what matters
