system
November 30, 2018, 5:37pm
22
Mangele:
You definitely did not read the article. o_O
Of course, you have read that the wages have stagnated in the last ten years. People earn less now than they did in 2008.
I read the original article from May 2017, on Daily Nation. Poverty wages is the biggest financial dilemma of our time. It has dented most people’s purchasing power and their ability to offset inflation.
https://www.nation.co.ke/newsplex/real-income-wages-inflation/2718262-3184524-hqlbd4z/index.html
system
November 30, 2018, 5:55pm
23
Funny thing ruto and his tangatanga boys kama @spear are moving around with millions
Cunt relate - my employer anatambua Cost of Living Allowance (COLA)
This is a strange way to look at things.
First of all, there are too many entertainment outlets, secondly not all joints can make it on the weekdays, and lastly, the boom or whatever drove people to clubbing everyday of the week was superficial in my opinion.
I prefer the old days when joints were meant for the weekends, no one who works and earns their sweat, has the time to spend it all on entertainment. It just doesn’t make sense to have clubs operating on the weekdays.
mikel
November 30, 2018, 8:26pm
26
Siku hizi vijana wako na Wi-Fi kwa nyumba…
Very very true.
A bottle of beer costs Sh. 160 at Carrefour, and people have pretty good entertainment at home. Why go and pay 350 to a sour waiter who’ll rip you off if he gets the chance?
Wacha hiyo. A friend ananiambia ati akina b club Na Brew bistro beer Ni 500 tusker. Manze hata Kama Ni ambience hiyo siwezi. Hata Kama ningekuwa Na kakitu hii Ni extortion
Lucern
December 16, 2018, 2:32pm
29
I have kids sleeping na sitaki for them to pick some habits
Nyumba haina watoto sii ngumu kupata. Some of your drinking buddies must be single/divorced.
Lucern
December 16, 2018, 2:38pm
31
I interact with my kind. Can’t do lesser or more. It’s just a caste thing
Mangele:
[SIZE=6]Death of Nairobi nightlife confirms the economy is long collapsed, even the rich lost it! [/SIZE]
by Editor
By Silas N
In my free time, I roam in Nairobi at night, moving after one entertainment spot after another. It is part of my job.
I have been doing this for 12 years. And now I am deeply afraid. Gravely afraid. Guys, things are not right.
I got home at 1 last night and I have not slept.
Last week, we were at a popular entertainment joint in Westlands on a Wednesday. At 8.51 p.m. there were just the two of us.
Last night the same story. I patronized two joints on Mombasa Road and the places were deserted. Completely.
On a Thursday night. And it is end month. And it is a festive season. Then we went to Nextgen Mall. No 7.
It was empty, only one section of the expansive place was occupied.
Want to know the status of our economy? Look at the grim faces of waiters and waitresses.
This is not mere hating on Jubilee government. We no longer have the government since our leader joined it.
Of course, you have read that the wages have stagnated in the last ten years. People earn less now than they did in 2008.
Ephraim Njenga talked about the recession in the informal sector.
The government hardly cares about the informal sector and often it is the World Bank and white people with a mission who map out the informal sector.
Now, it has been hit by a serious cash crunch. A fishmonger probably sells less fish now than she did six years ago.
Because we stopped caring about Lake Victoria, now we justify importing fish from China.
That is one chain of business totally gone. Maize farmers, sugar cane farmers, coffee, no longer make a fortune from their sweat.
That is for the well-connected individual to import duty-free and sell all the while pocketing billions for 2022.
I can go on. Corruption, the foreign debts, exceptional incompetence in prioritization, have all done a number on all of us.
If Kenya was a European country, people will be living on the streets while others commit suicide.
We were here in the 1990s. Even wore with Aids. The SAPs made Kenyans adjust accordingly.
But in the 1990s, you could actually go back to the village and start over.
But right now how many of you can go to the village and start over? What is left in the village?
What does it mean for you for an economy to shrink right before your eyes?
Share your experiences from your sector. If it is doing well tell us. If bad tell us…
We are having home parties and orgies.