0 comments Monday, 28 November 2016
Book cover Research Methods for Sports Studies

Research Methods for Sports Studies





Information Retrieval





Thomas Wilds
The American Archivist
Vol. 24, No. 3 (Jul., 1961), pp. 269-282
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40290892
Page Count: 14



world bank publication on rural poverty














BITING ONE'S TAIL

0 comments Friday, 22 July 2016


BITING ONE'S TAIL

It is shame and pity when  I hear of open hatred, animosity and fighting on grounds of political, regional or tribal lines in Kenya . Time has come for us to evaluate themselves before jump-starting whatsoever be the ambitions or desires if it can be referred in such ways.

Do backup check on what you renounce and fight. It may turn out to be a fox biting its tail out of  anger thinking it's fighting its enemy. You may be fighting your own blood kins who in the crossed to the other end as a result of calamity or in search of greener pasture.

Hon. Museveni, the President of Uganda, is alleged to be Rwandese who settled in Uganda  and rose to power as luck had it. He cannot fight his kins in Rwanda  under any circumstances.

Some  key political figures in Kenya have mysterious origins.I know of one who is affiliated to the Sabaot community yet he is  a Luhya by origin.

Hence this notion of tribal boundaries and regions is vain. It might be that we are biting our own tails without knowing.


Action matters

2 comments Monday, 18 July 2016


Action matters 
By Yvonne Otieno

  

“Police rescues an alleged thief from the hands of angry residents” or “mob justice for an alleged thief in ‘X’ university”

These headlines have been common in Kenyan newspapers that people have become used to them that they do not bother to read the story behind them, eave alone the follow up on the cases.
Everybody deserves punishment for the wrongs they do. Before you through a stone to that thief, do you ever stop to imagine how the situation could have been if the thief could be your relative of a boyfriend/girlfriend?

Last week I watched an alleged thief being beaten and to be sincere, it was not worth watching. As the ladies were busy shouting “muue” (kill him), the men were busy doing as per the ladies requests.
It is important to know that the thief caught always has the first hand information hence evidence. If you kill the thief, it means justice will not be provided hence the problem will not be solved if it was a group thing, for example. 

Before you throw a stone to that thief, remember the pain his/her mother went through before finally delivering him/her. 

I am not trying to promote stealing, but rather to advocate for the write form of correction. Prisons are meant for criminals for correction. This means that if we take these matters in our hands and kill the thieves, then the prisons will be empty. Yes, empty. 

It is also important to note that no one is guilty of an offense unless proven guilty. This means that the person you beat is not a thief but a suspect. What if it turns out that you beat the wrong person. My point here is that you should not be quick to judge.