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Mombasa Republican Council
alma
#51 Posted : Thursday, July 26, 2012 2:34:01 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/20/2007
Posts: 4,432
Maybe we forgot to read the constitution. The chapter on freedom of association.

Long gone are the days when some guys would sit somewhere and decide who should meet with who and talk about what. If the gov't hadn't read the constitution, I'm sure right now they are reading it.

What is wrong if someone wants to leave? There is already a process in this constitution that tells you exactly how to do that. It wouldn't be there if it was a sin.

So MRC have followed the constitution. They went to court unlike many of us, and they got their ruling. To me they are more constitutional than all these fellas saying it is a bad organisation.

Says who? The politician who has just realised that in the coast, it will not be business as usual. They will elect their representatives as they feel and no usual political games will pass there.

Good for MRC and too bad for guys who didn't read when they went to vote.
Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.
tycho
#52 Posted : Thursday, July 26, 2012 3:46:30 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/1/2011
Posts: 8,804
Location: Nairobi
FundamentAli wrote:
Me thinks garment has to think seriously about youth, be they in coast or elsewhere in the country. Youth can destabilise country. There is a lot of foreign funding for youth activity which needs to be monitored closely to avoid subversion.


How can the youth destabilize the country?

Please, lets own to our failures. How could there be such a great disconnect between the youth and the older members of society without the involvement of the latter?

Every day I see the youth being cornered in the name of retaining stability, but youth is part of the system, how can the system deny itself and retain its integrity?

If it be perceived by anyone that the youth are resisting, or fighting; then let it be known that this is a reaction to resistance, . . . denial.

Let me now say that it is the youth who can make any political sense now. They have the power to weed out tribalism, corruption, and insecurity.

tycho
#53 Posted : Thursday, July 26, 2012 3:52:14 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/1/2011
Posts: 8,804
Location: Nairobi
alma wrote:
Maybe we forgot to read the constitution. The chapter on freedom of association.

Long gone are the days when some guys would sit somewhere and decide who should meet with who and talk about what. If the gov't hadn't read the constitution, I'm sure right now they are reading it.

What is wrong if someone wants to leave? There is already a process in this constitution that tells you exactly how to do that. It wouldn't be there if it was a sin.

So MRC have followed the constitution. They went to court unlike many of us, and they got their ruling. To me they are more constitutional than all these fellas saying it is a bad organisation.

Says who? The politician who has just realised that in the coast, it will not be business as usual. They will elect their representatives as they feel and no usual political games will pass there.

Good for MRC and too bad for guys who didn't read when they went to vote.


This is confirmation of the Revolution that sneaked into the world like a thief in the night.


Sarrouniya
#54 Posted : Thursday, July 26, 2012 7:25:40 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 7/31/2008
Posts: 163
Location: Nirvana
Lakini when all is said and done, these guys have a point. One look at the greedy self serving leaders we have, the struggles we face, ati na wanarudisha pesa! I want to secede! ...to the mighty republic of Wazua where democracy reigns, resources are shared without prejudices or bias in an effort to improve each others lives, everyone loves everyone. Who's coming with me, baby?
|The Universe will correspond to the nature of your song ...
Kratos
#55 Posted : Monday, August 06, 2012 8:34:07 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 9/19/2011
Posts: 1,694
c&p

Quote:
The High Court, in its wisdom or lack of it, offered the MRC the option of becoming a political party. The MRC had not asked for that.

This Father Christmas jurisprudence of showering litigants with unsolicited goodies is surely a precedent in Kenya.

For their trouble, the judges have ended up being humiliated by the MRC. The group’s spokesman, a fellow called Hamza Randu, stated very clearly in a language no court clerk could fail to understand, that the MRC are NOT interested in becoming a political party or being part of Kenya’s political process. They simply want secession. Full stop.



“People will believe a big lie sooner than a little one, and if you repeat it frequently enough, people will sooner or later believe it.” ― Walter C. Langer
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