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Rank: Elder Joined: 2/26/2012 Posts: 15,980
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Siringi wrote:Quote:Nairobi is not flooding. rivers are just flowing The water is just joining the dots where private developers had interfered with nature   Its just that our media doesn't do a good job in going out there and getting the true picture otherwise if this was in the west, some demolitions and massive law suits would be taking place now. Tumezoea kukaliwa kama mayai. We need to get serious as a society. Someone should ask tough questions, like what the 50M is meant for and what do Kanju workers do. Do we have a sewage system? Who manages it? Anyone wondering why in 2015, a country claiming to be middle income is suffering from Cholera? If Ebola happened in Kenya we'd die like chicken. "There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore .
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Rank: Elder Joined: 6/8/2013 Posts: 2,517
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Rank: Elder Joined: 2/26/2012 Posts: 15,980
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With today's technology and expertise everything can be rectified we just have to use our brains. Otherwise Nairobi will be one big slum "There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore .
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Rank: Elder Joined: 3/18/2011 Posts: 12,069 Location: Kianjokoma
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Quote:I've said it before and I'll say it again - if you live in Nairobi don't earn a 7 figure salary or business income (or higher) per month, then you have no business being in Nairobi. That place is unbearable for the broke and the faint hearted. Gather courage. Move out. You might be surprised that the schooling or business you are doing might thrive even more in Meru, Malindi, Kitale or Kisii. Some Kenyans are just obsessed with living in a big city & indicating on their FB info bar 'lives in Nairobi, yet their quality of life is way worse than a shopkeeper's in kakamega or a restaurant owner in Machakos. Even for those working in parastatals & corporate organizations, ask for a transfer to another town & you'll be surprised at how much you'll enjoy life - peace, quiet, quality sleep for whatever number of hours you want, spending quality time with your family every morning & evening. . The list is endless. Personally, moving out of Nairobi is one the best decisions I've made in my life. Let's stop this obsession of living in a big city (where 61% of the population live in slums & informal settlements) and rural to urban migration. Life is not about how much you earn or how many skyscrapers you count (none of which you own) while in traffic on your way to work, it's about spiritual peace, good health, fresh air, quality time with loved ones, watching flowers bloom, enjoying the sunset etc. Think.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 3/27/2009 Posts: 1,437
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Lolest! wrote:Quote:I've said it before and I'll say it again - if you live in Nairobi don't earn a 7 figure salary or business income (or higher) per month, then you have no business being in Nairobi. That place is unbearable for the broke and the faint hearted. Gather courage. Move out. You might be surprised that the schooling or business you are doing might thrive even more in Meru, Malindi, Kitale or Kisii. Some Kenyans are just obsessed with living in a big city & indicating on their FB info bar 'lives in Nairobi, yet their quality of life is way worse than a shopkeeper's in kakamega or a restaurant owner in Machakos. Even for those working in parastatals & corporate organizations, ask for a transfer to another town & you'll be surprised at how much you'll enjoy life - peace, quiet, quality sleep for whatever number of hours you want, spending quality time with your family every morning & evening. . The list is endless. Personally, moving out of Nairobi is one the best decisions I've made in my life. Let's stop this obsession of living in a big city (where 61% of the population live in slums & informal settlements) and rural to urban migration. Life is not about how much you earn or how many skyscrapers you count (none of which you own) while in traffic on your way to work, it's about spiritual peace, good health, fresh air, quality time with loved ones, watching flowers bloom, enjoying the sunset etc. Think.
Sasa unataka tuende wapi? Naivasha, Thika, Limuru and Machakos are becoming a mess. Sample the Thika traffic jams one of these fine weekends and report back here.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 3/18/2011 Posts: 12,069 Location: Kianjokoma
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Iganamagana wrote:Lolest! wrote:Quote:I've said it before and I'll say it again - if you live in Nairobi don't earn a 7 figure salary or business income (or higher) per month, then you have no business being in Nairobi. That place is unbearable for the broke and the faint hearted. Gather courage. Move out. You might be surprised that the schooling or business you are doing might thrive even more in Meru, Malindi, Kitale or Kisii. Some Kenyans are just obsessed with living in a big city & indicating on their FB info bar 'lives in Nairobi, yet their quality of life is way worse than a shopkeeper's in kakamega or a restaurant owner in Machakos. Even for those working in parastatals & corporate organizations, ask for a transfer to another town & you'll be surprised at how much you'll enjoy life - peace, quiet, quality sleep for whatever number of hours you want, spending quality time with your family every morning & evening. . The list is endless. Personally, moving out of Nairobi is one the best decisions I've made in my life. Let's stop this obsession of living in a big city (where 61% of the population live in slums & informal settlements) and rural to urban migration. Life is not about how much you earn or how many skyscrapers you count (none of which you own) while in traffic on your way to work, it's about spiritual peace, good health, fresh air, quality time with loved ones, watching flowers bloom, enjoying the sunset etc. Think.
Sasa unataka tuende wapi? Naivasha, Thika, Limuru and Machakos are becoming a mess. Sample the Thika traffic jams one of these fine weekends and report back here. The guy who wrote that on his fb is a wazuan!
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Rank: New-farer Joined: 4/13/2015 Posts: 73
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Employers should have stepped up to the plate and given their employees a place to sleep for the night, given the weather warning for torrential rain. That's what they do in advanced countries. When there's a weather alert the company will offer a mattress or sleeping bag for whoever feels unsafe traveling to his/her home after work.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 2/26/2012 Posts: 15,980
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Floods of the 50's Nairobi River  "There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore .
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Rank: Chief Joined: 5/9/2007 Posts: 13,095
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Rank: Chief Joined: 5/9/2007 Posts: 13,095
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Lolest! wrote:Iganamagana wrote:Lolest! wrote:Quote:I've said it before and I'll say it again - if you live in Nairobi don't earn a 7 figure salary or business income (or higher) per month, then you have no business being in Nairobi. That place is unbearable for the broke and the faint hearted. Gather courage. Move out. You might be surprised that the schooling or business you are doing might thrive even more in Meru, Malindi, Kitale or Kisii. Some Kenyans are just obsessed with living in a big city & indicating on their FB info bar 'lives in Nairobi, yet their quality of life is way worse than a shopkeeper's in kakamega or a restaurant owner in Machakos. Even for those working in parastatals & corporate organizations, ask for a transfer to another town & you'll be surprised at how much you'll enjoy life - peace, quiet, quality sleep for whatever number of hours you want, spending quality time with your family every morning & evening. . The list is endless. Personally, moving out of Nairobi is one the best decisions I've made in my life. Let's stop this obsession of living in a big city (where 61% of the population live in slums & informal settlements) and rural to urban migration. Life is not about how much you earn or how many skyscrapers you count (none of which you own) while in traffic on your way to work, it's about spiritual peace, good health, fresh air, quality time with loved ones, watching flowers bloom, enjoying the sunset etc. Think.
Sasa unataka tuende wapi? Naivasha, Thika, Limuru and Machakos are becoming a mess. Sample the Thika traffic jams one of these fine weekends and report back here. The guy who wrote that on his fb is a wazuan! @Nakujua?
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