Joined September 2011
170 Photos and videos
Yaani Kila kutu inauzwa hii Kenya?
He put it down so well Our food sovereignty is at a major risk. They privatised Kenya Pipeline Company and next on line is the Kenya Seed Company. Dont forget they legalised GMOs in Kenya
1
19
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
He put it down so well Our food sovereignty is at a major risk. They privatised Kenya Pipeline Company and next on line is the Kenya Seed Company. Dont forget they legalised GMOs in Kenya
30
862
1,446
17,701
I love that Kenyans are not just sitting there and waiting for what will be, they are doing something about it. What are you doing about the situation in our country?
Meet Daniel Miringa, the Kenyan youth behind 'The People's IEBC'. His digital platform aims to allow citizens to independently verify and tally presidential votes in 2027. #FixingTheNationNTV @nationfmke @ericlatiff @mariambishar @Officialjmbugua
4
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
Meet Daniel Miringa, the Kenyan youth behind 'The People's IEBC'. His digital platform aims to allow citizens to independently verify and tally presidential votes in 2027. #FixingTheNationNTV @nationfmke @ericlatiff @mariambishar @Officialjmbugua
39
466
1,211
23,284
Yaani unless you are from mars not see how 1tam this people should be.
Make sure you watch this and retweet widely ๐Ÿ‘Œ๐Ÿฝ
5
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
Make sure you watch this and retweet widely ๐Ÿ‘Œ๐Ÿฝ
44
1,461
2,658
30,942
We all need to sound the alarm, sio kuzuri Wadau.
4
The heavy truth conveyed in the poem โ€œSound the Alarmโ€ is deeply saddening.Dan Mwangi..
12
630
1,363
20,394
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
20 Oct 2025
Ruto loves all of us equally
43
495
1,629
54,257
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช @Ellysavatia designed an app that translates speech into sign language using AI-powered 3D avatars. He was awarded ยฃ50,000 (Ksh8.6m) by the UKโ€™s Royal Academy of Engineering for winning its prestigious Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation
177
2,542
10,070
225,306
Vile inafaa.
A tweet for this Bishop Anaitwa Nani? Anafinya๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ
1
4
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
Louder man of God
17 Oct 2025
Prof. David Kodia, Bishop of the Anglican, Bondo Diocese: Baba never used the power of money to intimidate people. Today, we have bad manners among our politicians. They have taught our people the culture of handouts
150
2,915
10,766
229,837
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
We will push back # AlutaContinua
Itโ€™s really unfathomable and in bad taste to take advantage of a mourning nation to sign into law, legislation that violates the freedom of speech and other constitutional guarantees. The computer misuse and cybercrimes (amendment) law cannot be allowed to stand. Courts and streets must resist this attempt to muzzle free speech. Absolutely unacceptable!
133
2,613
6,816
177,867
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
People defending these bad laws keep waving the child abuse banner as if that single word ends the argument, yet anyone who understands how the modern internet works knows that the biggest platforms already run industrial scale detection, hash matching, escalation teams and global reporting hotlines that rip such material down fast and hand cases to investigators, which means the worst actors flee to closed channels and off-platform spaces while the public square remains visible and fixable, so when the government says this is what the new powers are for I hear a sales pitch and I see a fig leaf because the real target is loud citizens on social media who embarrass power and refuse to be quiet. On Wednesday 15 October 2025 the President delayed announcing the passing of Raila, to sign the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Amendment Act 2024 and the move felt less like a step into the future and more like a smuggling operation where rejected goods are carried back across the constitutional border under a fresh wrapper, because if you have paid attention to the last decade you have seen this story before, the labels change and the pamphlet is rewritten but the grip on speech is what returns to the shelf. We did not arrive here by accident and the record is not a blur, in 2016 the courts struck down the vague offence that criminalised so called improper or annoying messages, in 2017 criminal defamation fell because jailing people for defamation is not how a free society corrects error, in the same year the offence of undermining the authority of a public officer collapsed under constitutional scrutiny, in 2019 I filed the petition that brought down the obscenity provision in KICA which had been stretched to frighten critics, and in 2021 I filed the case that ended the colonial offence of alarming publications, so piece by piece the blunt instruments that punished online speech were taken out of the stateโ€™s hand and Kenyans learned to speak without checking over their shoulder every minute. Parliament did not abandon the project, it changed venue, and enforcement energy moved into the 2018 cybercrimes framework where the heaviest penalties already sat and where elastic phrases like grossly offensive or communications that cause fear or harm could be pulled wider by an angry executive, and now with this amendment the net is widened again and the levers sit closer to the centre, which is exactly how rejected ideas are smuggled back into law in a way that looks tidy on television but feels heavy in the real life of a citizen with a phone and a voice. I have also learned that these elastic speech tools do not only swallow your enemies when politics shifts, they boomerang on your friends, and the proof sits in your own house because Dennis Itumbi was dragged through a false publication case and only found air because the courts had already started tearing down those vague offences, and if we had not fought those battles earlier and if those bad clauses still sat on the books with full force then many more people on every side of politics would be paying a far higher price for ordinary speech today. So let us speak plainly to the Presidency without pretending that this is a clean fight against crimes that the platforms and modern tools already catch within minutes, the amendment is not a fresh dawn of safety, it is the old gag smuggled back under a new label, it is a crackdown in search of a justification, and it will meet the same response it always meets in a constitutional republic where citizens keep receipts, organise in daylight and insist that the Bill of Rights is not a suggestion. Again, we don't really know what Ruto is looking for from social media users but he will sure GET IT.
112
870
2,350
128,458
The term offensive is very vague and an open door to misuse.
People defending these bad laws keep waving the child abuse banner as if that single word ends the argument, yet anyone who understands how the modern internet works knows that the biggest platforms already run industrial scale detection, hash matching, escalation teams and global reporting hotlines that rip such material down fast and hand cases to investigators, which means the worst actors flee to closed channels and off-platform spaces while the public square remains visible and fixable, so when the government says this is what the new powers are for I hear a sales pitch and I see a fig leaf because the real target is loud citizens on social media who embarrass power and refuse to be quiet. On Wednesday 15 October 2025 the President delayed announcing the passing of Raila, to sign the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Amendment Act 2024 and the move felt less like a step into the future and more like a smuggling operation where rejected goods are carried back across the constitutional border under a fresh wrapper, because if you have paid attention to the last decade you have seen this story before, the labels change and the pamphlet is rewritten but the grip on speech is what returns to the shelf. We did not arrive here by accident and the record is not a blur, in 2016 the courts struck down the vague offence that criminalised so called improper or annoying messages, in 2017 criminal defamation fell because jailing people for defamation is not how a free society corrects error, in the same year the offence of undermining the authority of a public officer collapsed under constitutional scrutiny, in 2019 I filed the petition that brought down the obscenity provision in KICA which had been stretched to frighten critics, and in 2021 I filed the case that ended the colonial offence of alarming publications, so piece by piece the blunt instruments that punished online speech were taken out of the stateโ€™s hand and Kenyans learned to speak without checking over their shoulder every minute. Parliament did not abandon the project, it changed venue, and enforcement energy moved into the 2018 cybercrimes framework where the heaviest penalties already sat and where elastic phrases like grossly offensive or communications that cause fear or harm could be pulled wider by an angry executive, and now with this amendment the net is widened again and the levers sit closer to the centre, which is exactly how rejected ideas are smuggled back into law in a way that looks tidy on television but feels heavy in the real life of a citizen with a phone and a voice. I have also learned that these elastic speech tools do not only swallow your enemies when politics shifts, they boomerang on your friends, and the proof sits in your own house because Dennis Itumbi was dragged through a false publication case and only found air because the courts had already started tearing down those vague offences, and if we had not fought those battles earlier and if those bad clauses still sat on the books with full force then many more people on every side of politics would be paying a far higher price for ordinary speech today. So let us speak plainly to the Presidency without pretending that this is a clean fight against crimes that the platforms and modern tools already catch within minutes, the amendment is not a fresh dawn of safety, it is the old gag smuggled back under a new label, it is a crackdown in search of a justification, and it will meet the same response it always meets in a constitutional republic where citizens keep receipts, organise in daylight and insist that the Bill of Rights is not a suggestion. Again, we don't really know what Ruto is looking for from social media users but he will sure GET IT.
1
7
We need to always stay vigilant.
People defending these bad laws keep waving the child abuse banner as if that single word ends the argument, yet anyone who understands how the modern internet works knows that the biggest platforms already run industrial scale detection, hash matching, escalation teams and global reporting hotlines that rip such material down fast and hand cases to investigators, which means the worst actors flee to closed channels and off-platform spaces while the public square remains visible and fixable, so when the government says this is what the new powers are for I hear a sales pitch and I see a fig leaf because the real target is loud citizens on social media who embarrass power and refuse to be quiet. On Wednesday 15 October 2025 the President delayed announcing the passing of Raila, to sign the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Amendment Act 2024 and the move felt less like a step into the future and more like a smuggling operation where rejected goods are carried back across the constitutional border under a fresh wrapper, because if you have paid attention to the last decade you have seen this story before, the labels change and the pamphlet is rewritten but the grip on speech is what returns to the shelf. We did not arrive here by accident and the record is not a blur, in 2016 the courts struck down the vague offence that criminalised so called improper or annoying messages, in 2017 criminal defamation fell because jailing people for defamation is not how a free society corrects error, in the same year the offence of undermining the authority of a public officer collapsed under constitutional scrutiny, in 2019 I filed the petition that brought down the obscenity provision in KICA which had been stretched to frighten critics, and in 2021 I filed the case that ended the colonial offence of alarming publications, so piece by piece the blunt instruments that punished online speech were taken out of the stateโ€™s hand and Kenyans learned to speak without checking over their shoulder every minute. Parliament did not abandon the project, it changed venue, and enforcement energy moved into the 2018 cybercrimes framework where the heaviest penalties already sat and where elastic phrases like grossly offensive or communications that cause fear or harm could be pulled wider by an angry executive, and now with this amendment the net is widened again and the levers sit closer to the centre, which is exactly how rejected ideas are smuggled back into law in a way that looks tidy on television but feels heavy in the real life of a citizen with a phone and a voice. I have also learned that these elastic speech tools do not only swallow your enemies when politics shifts, they boomerang on your friends, and the proof sits in your own house because Dennis Itumbi was dragged through a false publication case and only found air because the courts had already started tearing down those vague offences, and if we had not fought those battles earlier and if those bad clauses still sat on the books with full force then many more people on every side of politics would be paying a far higher price for ordinary speech today. So let us speak plainly to the Presidency without pretending that this is a clean fight against crimes that the platforms and modern tools already catch within minutes, the amendment is not a fresh dawn of safety, it is the old gag smuggled back under a new label, it is a crackdown in search of a justification, and it will meet the same response it always meets in a constitutional republic where citizens keep receipts, organise in daylight and insist that the Bill of Rights is not a suggestion. Again, we don't really know what Ruto is looking for from social media users but he will sure GET IT.
5
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
Prof. David Kodia, Bishop of the Anglican, Bondo Diocese: Baba never used the power of money to intimidate people. Today, we have bad manners among our politicians. They have taught our people the culture of handouts
4
14
2,528
I just love this! Creativity on steroids.
Njugush with a skit concerning the Mama Samia Suluhu and Kenya situation ๐Ÿ˜‚
20
I just love vile Huwa huchelewi bro. King of injections.
15 May 2025
Mwenye kuuza dawa hata yeye ni mgonjwa
32
Ken Munew ๐Ÿ‡ฐ๐Ÿ‡ช retweeted
15 May 2025
Mwenye kuuza dawa hata yeye ni mgonjwa
126
805
3,458
77,229