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a dependency syndrome and those we depend on are now also ailing. In a lockdown the government would be asking Wanjiku whether she wants to die of corona or of starvation. Matters will come to a head if Wanjiku also gets sick and she heads to our non-existent health facilities with no equipment or medicine not mentioning qualified personnel. Our leaders have so identified with the west that when they have a running stomach they board a plane to seek specialized treatment abroad. Their children do not know Kenya even though their expensive lifestyles are financed by the overburdened tax payer. In a lockdown the rich cannot escape to their usual playgrounds as they are not wanted there nor are their children. Suddenly the stack reality of our poorly developed health sector is facing us. If the facilities are overwhelmed how do we cope? Kenya did not seem to find it ironical that we would import doctors from Cuba, a third world, while our very own doctors are perennially on strike demanding fair working conditions and remuneration. The time of reckoning is nigh as we turn to the same people that we have trashed in the past. The tokenism of taking a pay cut during a disaster is actually insulting as it misses the point that the underlying structures for a sound economy are missing. A robust economy and a functioning healthcare system should not be optional. Kenyans work hard and they deserve better. The reduction of tax rates, which are still too high, is not an emergency response but an economic stimulus effort whose effect will be felt sometimes in the future. What Kenyans need at the moment is cash in their hands in the event of a lockdown. Kenyans have had no problems paying taxes, however unfair they are, the problem has always been with what is done with the collected funds. We fund a bloated government, allow its functionaries to steal the money with impunity and neglect basic services to Wanjiku. And no, divine intervention is not how we will run this country; we cannot be calling in the times of need to the same God that we transgress against daily. We lie and steal as a matter of course and somehow think we can hoodwink God since we manage to hoodwink his people every day. We need sincerity and integrity and a basic love for our motherland so that we can create a practical social safety net for not only our citizens but all those who reside within our borders. Surely, after fifty years of independence can’t we at the very least look after ourselves? This is our umpteenth wakeup call and unless we love being victims of fate we had better take control of our lives. Everyone is looking after their own; we too should be looking after our own before Kenya becomes the next failed banana republic while our money is hidden in the first world vaults. Where is all that money that has been flying around in harambees, political meetings, and churches now that we have a real crisis at hand that requires cash resources? Has reggae stopped with all the money that was splashed to run it? If reggae has stopped, corona hasn’t, we need to get real and act! This crisis will pass, at what cost we don’t yet know. Unfortunately reggae will restart and unless we are simply a cursed nation the agenda for the BBI had better be about how to create a sustainable welfare state where we face national emergencies with confidence not despair. What is certain is that whether or not we have a powerful prime minister with ten deputies will not put ugali on Wanjiku’s plate and if Wanjiku wishes to continue on that nonsensical dance of stupidity it is a choice she has made...