There comes a time in the life of a country when silence becomes collaboration and polite language becomes a betrayal of truth. Kenya is standing at that dangerous point. It has become increasingly clear that this government is more comfortable surrounding itself with people who do not question, do not reason, and do not think independently. It prefers applause to advice, noise to wisdom, and blind loyalty to competence. That is why some of the arguments being pushed online in defence of power are not only shocking; they are deeply embarrassing to anyone who still believes this country deserves serious leadership.
A serious country cannot be governed by propaganda, sycophancy, and intellectual laziness. A serious country cannot be reduced to a theatre where every scandal is explained away, every failure is repackaged as strategy, and every critic is treated as an enemy of the state. When public debate is hijacked by people whose only qualification is obedience, then the nation is no longer having an honest conversation. It is being dragged through a deliberate collapse of reason.
The tragedy is not only that those in power tolerate this mediocrity. The deeper tragedy is that they appear to need it. They need people who will defend anything, excuse anything, explain anything, and insult anyone who dares ask difficult questions. They need citizens who will not ask why the cost of living is unbearable. They need online cheerleaders who will not ask why taxes keep rising while services keep collapsing. They need voices that will shout louder than facts, hoping that volume can replace truth.
But Kenya cannot be built by people whose politics begins and ends with protecting a politician. Kenya cannot be built by citizens who surrender their brains at the gate of political convenience. Kenya cannot be built by those who treat accountability as betrayal and public suffering as a public-relations inconvenience. A republic needs thinkers, questioners, builders, professionals, patriots, and citizens with enough courage to say: this is wrong, even when the people doing it are our friends.
The intellectual bankruptcy now being paraded online must be called out without apology. There are Kenyans who have become experts in defending national decay. They will defend wastage. They will defend incompetence. They will defend arrogance. They will defend broken promises. They will defend public humiliation. They will defend reckless decisions that place ordinary citizens in danger. They will defend anything as long as it comes wrapped in the colours of their preferred political camp. That is not patriotism. That is not strategy. That is not wisdom. It is stupidity dressed in party colours.
And yes, stupidity must be named when it becomes a public danger. This is not about insulting poor people, ordinary citizens, or those who lack formal education. Many of the wisest Kenyans never sat in elite boardrooms, never spoke polished English, and never carried big titles. This is about the deliberate refusal to think. It is about the educated person who knows the truth but chooses propaganda. It is about the loud political defender who sees a country bleeding but asks the wounded to clap for the knife.
That kind of stupidity is dangerous because it does not stay online. It becomes policy. It becomes appointments. It becomes public spending. It becomes national priorities. It becomes the reason serious professionals are ignored while noisy loyalists are rewarded. It becomes the reason incompetence sits in high office and calls itself leadership. It becomes the reason citizens suffer while the government hires people to explain why suffering is actually progress.
A government that values competence brings close people who can challenge it. A government that values truth allows uncomfortable questions. A government that is serious about the country welcomes expertise, evidence, dissent, and accountability. But a government that fears reason surrounds itself with flatterers. It prefers people who will clap before reading, shout before thinking, and defend before understanding. Such a government is not building a republic. It is building a cult of convenience.
This is why Kenya must stop normalising reckless commentary from people who are willing to sell their conscience for access, attention, or political proximity. The country is too important to be left to rented mouths. Public discourse is too sacred to be surrendered to those who confuse loyalty with blindness. Leadership is not supposed to be protected from truth. Leadership is supposed to be tested by truth.
Those pushing embarrassing arguments online must understand one thing clearly: Kenya is not personal property. Kenya does not belong to a president, a party, a tribe, a faction, a digital army, or a circle of paid defenders. Kenya belongs to its people. When the people ask questions, they are not begging for permission. They are exercising ownership. When citizens demand accountability, they are not being disrespectful. They are defending the republic.
The most dangerous citizen is not the critic. The most dangerous citizen is the one who sees decay and calls it development. The most dangerous citizen is the one who sees incompetence and calls it strategy. The most dangerous citizen is the one who watches public trust being destroyed and then attacks the people raising the alarm. Such citizens are not helping the government. They are helping bury the country under lies.
Kenya deserves better than this manufactured foolishness. It deserves leadership that values competence over loyalty, truth over spin, accountability over intimidation, and sober thinking over empty noise. It deserves public officers who understand that power is not a licence to behave recklessly. It deserves citizens who know that democracy is not maintained by clapping for leaders, but by questioning them.
The government must be told plainly: a country cannot be managed through intimidation, propaganda, and the promotion of intellectual laziness. You cannot insult citizens into silence. You cannot tax people into poverty and then demand praise. You cannot make decisions that affect millions and then hide behind online defenders who reduce national debate to abuse. Kenya is a real country with real families, real businesses, real pain, and real consequences.
To the Kenyans who defend everything blindly, this is the uncomfortable truth: your loyalty is not intelligence. Your noise is not courage. Your insults are not arguments. Your ability to repeat talking points does not make you informed. When you defend what you know is wrong, you are not being strategic. You are participating in the destruction of the very country your children will inherit.
There is nothing patriotic about switching off your mind for politics. There is nothing wise about defending every mistake because your side made it. There is nothing honourable about attacking citizens who are simply asking for accountability. A country grows when citizens think. A country dies when citizens outsource their conscience to politicians.
Kenya must therefore choose reason again. It must choose truth even when truth is uncomfortable. It must choose competence even when incompetence is politically connected. It must choose public interest over political theatre. It must choose citizens over sycophants. It must choose courage over cowardice disguised as loyalty.
The future of this country will not be saved by noise. It will not be saved by propaganda. It will not be saved by people who defend anything and question nothing. It will be saved by Kenyans who refuse to be intimidated, Kenyans who refuse to be lied to, Kenyans who refuse to clap for national failure, and Kenyans who still believe that leadership must be held to a higher standard.
When reason dies, a nation pays. When truth is mocked, citizens suffer. When stupidity is rewarded, competence leaves the room. Kenya cannot afford that road. Not now. Not again. The time has come to call out the nonsense, confront the intellectual laziness, reject the politics of blind loyalty, and demand leadership worthy of the people of Kenya.
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