2012 wrote:Kusadikika wrote:maka wrote:FRM2011 wrote:Njunge wrote:kaka2za wrote:In the spirit of handshake,can we have David Ndii as CS treasury?
He already said long ago he can't serve under Uhuru. He is so full of himself and blinded by hate. Zero chance. BTW, such fellows don't make good servants of the people. They are at home peeing on parades. Any parade.
Ndii belongs to a university. He is brilliant no doubt but lacks the emotional intelligence that helps a leader get things done.
Would make a great unofficial economic advisor though. When a president needs that guy who will tell you the ugly truth without caring because he doesn't work for you.
Well said...
If I was president I would have him and Miguna as my advisers but I would not meet them face to face. I would build a small room like a the confession box that they have in Catholic churches. On separate days they would come in and sit where the priest normally sits and I as the president would sit on the other side with a pen and paper. I would ask, "How are we doing?" and then wait for the insults to begin. I would listen for as long as I can and then when I have had enough I would just walk away. They would continue talking and insulting me until a red light comes on to tell them to stop. They would be escorted out of State House in a hurry, they would never be offered even a glass of water but they would be highly compensated. I would have each of them come once a month.
The president doesn't need them. He knows everything that is happening. For me the question is, on which side of the fence does he sits? You cannot steal 60B without the president knowledge or maybe even blessings. If Rotich never goes to prison for over 10 years then it's easy to conclude that this was a well orchestrated plan from the top with everyone being a beneficiary.
Contrary to popular belief the president does not know everything. The president knows what he is interested in knowing. The NIS is like a library. Just because you have access to a library does not mean you are well read. I knew people who knew people who served in the NIS during Moi and Kibaki days and they said Moi and Kibaki got different briefings from the same NIS because they asked different kinds of questions.
Moi was interested in knowing who so and so was talking to and what they were discussing. Who was sleeping with so and so and such things. Kibaki was interested in knowing about road projects, prices of things etc. Kibaki took notes and asked detailed questions sometimes he would stop the presentation to interrogate the presenter on the geography of the area he was talking about just to see if he knew what he was saying.