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The Useful Idiots: How Kenya was Sold to the New World Order as a Guinea Pig for Africa

“We are witnessing a change of the world order, and I think Kenya is going to be one of the swing states in deciding which direction the world is going to tilt, so I’m here to learn — Alexander Stubb, Finnish president during a visit to Kenya last year.

According to some interpretations of 1970s geopolitical thinking, the greatest threat to global stability was not nuclear war, economic collapse, or famine. It was the possibility that Africans might discover they were sitting on vast mineral wealth and decide to benefit from it themselves.

The remedy was to be very careful with aid. Good schools might produce critical thinkers. Clean water could create healthy citizens. As former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamed said in a New World Order meeting: “the intention is to reduce the number of people in this world. There would be a need to kill many billions of people and to starve them to death or to prevent them from giving birth.  

Vaccinate them instead. HPV vaccines which causes 37 times more problems is a good sterilization kit.

Industrialization could generate jobs and self-reliance. Before long, people might start asking dangerous questions about who owns the mines and where the profits go.

Commission feasibility studies to determine whether Africans are ready to do what other nations have been doing for centuries.

The continent possesses fertile land, abundant resources, and one of the world’s youngest populations. On paper, it should be an economic giant. Yet every time Africans discuss processing their own minerals, building industries, or controlling their economic destiny, an army of Western-funded experts appears to explain why the timing is wrong, the risks are high, and another donor-funded workshop is urgently required.

To control Africans, the West decided to hobble Africa’s progress by installing the most depraved and psychopathic members of society to govern their nations through rigging of elections. And recruit dictators, kleptomaniacs, lunatics, life-long presidents, with a blackmail file for security if they don’t tow the Master’s orders.

In Kenya, at least 70% of the bills passed in parliament since 2022 are for preparing the ground for the final takeover of the country by a Satanic mass-murdering cabal controlled by Jeffrey Epstein.

The formula is simple; Saul Alinsky’s eight points on how to destroy a country.

  1. Healthcare – Control healthcare and you control the people:

The first rule of governing a country into permanent submission is simple: create an institution that does not work and ensure it never works.

Take healthcare. First, unveil a grand reform wrapped in noble language. Call it Universal Health Care. Hold press conferences. Print glossy brochures. Promise dignity for all. Then quietly turn it into a machine that extracts money while delivering confusion.

The replacement of NHIF with SHA was presented as a revolution in healthcare financing. Yet hospitals complain of delayed reimbursements, patients are turned away because facilities are unsure whether claims will ever be paid, and private hospitals increasingly limit services or stop accepting SHA patients altogether.

The result is predictable: patients flood already overcrowded public hospitals where medicine shortages, under-staffing, and endless queues await them.

Healthcare becomes a lottery. Some receive treatment. Many receive apologies.

The beauty of the system lies in its complexity. Concentrate funding and decision-making in Nairobi. Add layers of bureaucracy. Ensure administrative costs grow fat while hospitals grow thin. Every form requires another form. Every approval requires another approval. Every problem requires another committee.

Meanwhile, the real business continues. Public money leaks through ghost facilities, fraudulent claims and procurement scandals. HIV, cancer, tuberculosis and malaria medication patients are told supplies are unavailable while medicine expires and gathers dust in government warehouses as clinics run out of essential drugs.

And whenever citizens complain, remind them they are lucky to have a modern digital healthcare platform. Never mind who owns it, where it is hosted, or why it costs a fortune. Those are details for another audit report.

In the end, the objective is not healthcare. Keep people sick enough to depend on the system, but never healthy enough to question where all the money went.  The agenda is to reduce (cull)  the population — which is a benchmark of the New World Order — without people having a clue.

2. Poverty – Increase Poverty levels as high as possible; poor people are easier to control and will not fight back if you are providing everything for them to live:

The first rule of governing a kakistocracy properly is simple: never wait for a project before borrowing money for it. Planning is for poor people. Visionaries borrow first and ask questions later. Sign loans for highways that exist only in PowerPoint presentations. Borrow for dams that will never hold water. The important thing is not what the money does. The important thing is that the money arrives.

Then make sure it disappears.

Next, attack the people who still have enough energy to survive. The small trader selling mitumba shoes and mitumba clothes. The mechanic under a tree, fundi wa kiatu in a shed. The woman running a kiosk. Let them build their businesses brick by brick. Let them dream for a while. Then arrive one morning with bulldozers.

Development, after all, requires sacrifice. Preferably somebody else’s.

At the same time, create an environment so confusing and hostile that investors develop a permanent headache. Introduce taxes on top of taxes. Change regulations every other day. Announce policies at midnight. Watch multinational companies quietly pack their bags while pretending to leave for strategic reasons.

More unemployment means more desperation which means more people hustling. A hustling population is useful because it spends all its time searching for rent, school fees, and bus fare. It has little time left to ask uncomfortable questions.

Never allow people to thrive because thriving is dangerous. People become independent and begin demanding services, accountability, and receipts. A hustling citizen worries about lunch. A thriving citizen asks where the trillion shillings went.

And that is unacceptable.

Create a country where every scandal is replaced by a larger scandal before the previous one is explained. Run the country down so thoroughly that beggars and goons become the fastest-growing sectors of the economy.

And somewhere, far away, the mzungu Master smiles. The boys are playing exactly by the rules.

3. Debt – Increase the Debt to Unsustainable Levels:

A successful state capture project requires one essential ingredient: debt. Not ordinary debt. Monumental, breathtaking, record-breaking debt. Debt so large that future generations will inherit it before they inherit their grandparents’ land.

With the enthusiastic assistance of international lenders and financial institutions, ensure public debt rises to heights previously thought impossible. If the debt-to-GDP ratio is already alarming, consider it merely a warm-up exercise. There is always room for more borrowing.

You must borrow from everyone willing to lend. Borrow from the East, and the West. Borrow from institutions with long names and impressive logos. If possible, borrow money to repay money borrowed to repay money borrowed earlier.

Once the loans arrive, remind everyone that development is underway. Whether the projects exist, are completed, or can be located on a map is a secondary matter. The important thing is the announcement. Groundbreakings are more important than actual buildings.

Treat public borrowing as a national rewards program for the politically connected. The money is not for factories, irrigation schemes, research centers, or productive industries. That would be wasteful. Instead, invest in the truly essential pillars of nation-building: luxury apartments in Dubai, sprawling mansions, shopping malls, private helicopters, holiday homes, and enough imported luxury vehicles to start your own motor show.

As the old saying goes, pesa ya sirikali haina mwenyewe—government money belongs to nobody and therefore to everybody important.

Naturally, somebody must eventually pay the bill. This is where the ordinary citizen comes in. Introduce new taxes. Increase existing taxes. Tax fuel, bread, airtime, digital transactions, and perhaps oxygen if technology permits. Explain that these measures are necessary sacrifices for economic stability. The public may complain, but patriotism is best measured by how much pain citizens can endure while officials prosper.

Scale up. Think bigger. Why stop at billions when trillions are available?

Most importantly, do not hide your success. Flaunt it. Nothing inspires confidence in leadership quite like conspicuous wealth. Build palatial residences with gates large enough to be visible from space. Purchase vast ranches and luxury properties. Arrive at public functions in limos and choppers.

4. Gun Control – Remove the ability to defend themselves from the government. That way you are able to create a police state.

Make civilian gun ownership so complicated that only the wealthy few can afford the privilege. After all, if the country is being quietly auctioned off, the last thing needed is a population capable of defending itself. Whenever citizens ask why they cannot own firearms, assure them that the nation enjoys world-class policing and unmatched security.

Then proceed to purchase armored personnel carriers, surveillance drones that can also shoot, gunship helicopters, patrol vehicles, enough ammunition for a small war, and a warehouse full of rungus and fimbos.

Police violence? A misunderstanding. Every baton, bullet, and abduction is merely a public service. Officers should be free to shoot, maim, and kidnap in pursuit of peace, and naturally be protected from prosecution because excellence must be rewarded.

As for activists, bloggers, and Gen Z protesters, treat their smartphones as weapons of mass disruption. Ignore armed criminals and rapists roaming freely; the real threat is a teenager posting memes and asking inconvenient questions online.

When public anger grows, deploy the traditional emergency response kit: hired goons, strategic looting, and carefully choreographed chaos. Once the smoke clears, declare that law and order have been restored.

And always remind citizens that they live in a thriving democracy, complete with constitutional rights, free speech, and the freedom to protest—provided none of those freedoms are actually exercised.

5. Welfare – Take control of every aspect of their lives (Food, Housing, and Income)

The future was supposed to arrive with a military boot on our neck, according to the author, George Orwell. Today, it will arrive in a PowerPoint presentation titled Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development.

In the old days, people were assets. More workers meant more production and more taxes. But technology has complicated matters. Machines do not ask for salaries, maternity leave or pension benefits. Suddenly, humans begin to look less like assets and more like expensive subscriptions.

You do not reduce populations with bullets. That creates paperwork. Instead, redesign the environment so people quietly eliminate themselves. Flood markets with cheap processed foods, poisonous pesticides, toxic vaccines, and GMOs. Make real nutrition expensive enough to require a bank loan. Let obesity, diabetes and cancer do the heavy lifting.

Turn hospitals into businesses, medicine into luxury goods and insurance into a monthly prayer. When citizens cannot pay, nature takes its course. No fingerprints. No crime scene.

To prevent anyone noticing, provide endless distractions: political wars, celebrity scandals and influencer dramas.

Housing follows the same logic. Tax people to build “affordable housing” they will not live in. Convince villagers to abandon their farms and move into concrete boxes advertised as modern living. Build schools, hospitals and police stations nearby and call it development. The skeptics call them chicken coops; the brochures call them smart cities.

Never mention that the land left behind is far more valuable than the apartments. Instead, repeat that the project will create jobs, stimulate the economy and uplift the poor. Repeat it often. Repeat it until repetition itself becomes evidence.

And, of course, every mega-project comes with a patriotic bonus: enough public money changing hands to ensure that nobody in the political class goes home empty-handed.

6. Education – Take control of what people read and listen to – take control of what children learn in school.

First, remove history and mathematics from the curriculum. Tell parents that history is useless because it does not create jobs and mathematics is too confusing for little minds. Why should children learn where they came from or how to count when their future role is simply to obey instructions?

Don’t teach. Program them like a computer software until it becomes a predictable and controllable automaton unit. Train them to be ignorant.

After all, educated and enlightened citizens are dangerous. They ask uncomfortable questions about land ownership, wealth distribution, and why a handful of white people occupy vast estates while millions are squeezed together like omena drying in the sun. Breed out creative thought.

Next, introduce a revolutionary new system with an impressive name. Call it the Competency Based Curriculum (CBC). The name must sound so sophisticated that nobody dares ask what it actually means. Then ensure that parents, teachers, students, and education officials cannot understand it.

Good education creates independent thinkers. Independent thinkers become disobedient citizens who question authority and challenge injustice. They refuse to clap on command. Naturally, this cannot be allowed.

School should therefore focus on conformity rather than curiosity. Teach children to memorize, repeat, and comply. Imagination is dangerous because it encourages creation. Curiosity is dangerous because it encourages questioning. The ideal citizen is one who can fill forms perfectly but cannot question why the forms exist.

The CBC story followed a familiar script. Experts produced alarming reports. Consultants multiplied. Conferences flourished. Acronyms expanded. Media houses amplified the message. Everyone spoke in impressive jargon, that the less ordinary Kenyans understood, the more successful the reform appeared.

Whenever critics pointed out flaws, the response was predictable: more committees, more workshops, more presentations, and more expensive PowerPoint slides.

Meanwhile, classrooms remain overcrowded, teachers remain frustrated, and learners became guinea pigs in a national experiment as many schools struggled with severe teacher shortages while education officials continued unveiling ambitious plans.

Redesign University education to become a luxury item , like a private jet. Why should every ambitious village child be burdened with dreams of becoming a doctor, engineer, or scientist? Such aspirations only create unnecessary competition.

By making university fees comfortably out of reach for ordinary families, the nation has discovered a far more efficient development strategy. Young people can now proceed directly into the global labor market as domestic workers, security guards, and assorted exporters of human resilience.

The beauty of this arrangement is that the country saves money on educating its youth while proudly counting the remittances they send home.

7. Religion – Remove the belief in the God from the government and schools.

Becoming a pastor is one of the few professions where you can promise heaven, collect cash, and never issue refunds. Learn the sacred art of declaring every political victory a miracle. If a politician wins, God did it. If he loses, God is mysterious.

Make prayer rallies become political rallies with better music.

Let the clergy tell the faithful that voting against your preferred politician is voting against God Himself. Then comes the hard part: governing. When you misgovern, the clergy who you bought, who’s voices once thundered from the pulpit suddenly will discover the spiritual value of silence. No fiery sermons against injustice. No prophetic outrage. Just polite statements about peace and carefully choreographed photographs with power.

The young people noticed. Now many are abandoning the Church in droves, but not God; they are abandoning institutions that bless oppression while collecting offerings from the victims of their greed. 

8. Class Welfare – Divide the people into the wealthy and the poor. This will cause more disconnect, and it will be easier to tax the wealthy with the support of the poor.

The oldest trick in the political handbook is beautifully simple: never allow people to notice who emptied the granary. Instead, convince them their real enemy is the neighbour.

Build a society around them that those who have money benefit and those who don’t fail. Make money their main focus but make it difficult to accumulate that they remain in constant struggle.

Set the nduthi rider against the motorist. Turn every road accident into a class war. If a wealthy driver’s car knocks down a poor man, let the crowd burn the vehicle. If a boda rider is involved, let everyone choose sides before asking what actually happened. Keep the anger flowing sideways instead of upwards. A united public asks difficult questions; a divided public merely shouts.

Meanwhile, quietly destroy the industries that once created decent jobs. Factories close. Small businesses suffocate. Manufacturing shrinks. Employment becomes a lottery. The distance between the rich and the poor stretches wider every year, until they no longer seem to inhabit the same country.

Then comes the debt.

Many people stash their money in SACCOs, raid and then destroy them. The goal is to follow the script handed by the Lords of Poverty — the World Bank and IMF. Every pool of citizens’ savings begins to look irresistible when a government runs out of easy borrowing. The real question is no longer whether the country will struggle under debt, but who will ultimately be left holding the bill.

The script rarely changes. Governments borrow until lenders hesitate. They tax until households have nothing left to squeeze. They lean on banks until private credit dries up. Then the burden quietly migrates into pensions, savings and domestic capital, before citizens are informed that “shared sacrifice” is the highest form of patriotism.

That is why the SACCO story should concern every Kenyan. SACCO money is not government money. It belongs to the ordinary Kenyans who are teachers, police officers, nurses, farmers, matatu operators, boda riders, mama mbogas, artisans and countless workers who saved patiently, believing their contributions belonged to their future.

The result is a nation where biashara struggles to breathe even as public debt continues to grow.

The perfect ending to this script is not prosperity but distraction. Keep the nduthi rider blaming the motorist. Keep the motorist blaming the hawker. Keep workers blaming one another. As long as citizens remain divided, they are less likely to ask the uncomfortable question that every debt-ridden nation eventually faces:

Who benefited from all the borrowing—and who is expected to pay for it? And this is how Kenya is being demolished for the takeover by Western goons.

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