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42,546 次观看 • 3 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

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This morning I was just walking my son to school like any other day. A woman stopped me. I know her face. She called me by my nickname. She was shaking. Cold. Tired. Not the normal tired the kind that tells you life has been pushing someone for too long. She told me her children slept hungry. She had walked almost an hour just to reach me. I didn’t even think much. I just dropped my son at school and went with her. When I got there… it was bad. No food. Children just there. Waiting. Quiet. That kind of quiet that hurts. We went and got milk and mandazi. Small thing. But those children ate like it was a gift from heaven. She hugged me. And I just stood there thinking… this is Kenya right now. Not the Kenya we hear in speeches. The real Kenya is mothers going to bed praying children sleep without crying from hunger. Fathers turning into problem-solvers every morning with empty pockets. Children missing school because there is no lunch, no fare, no hope for that day. Sick people choosing prayer because hospital bills are too heavy. It is happening quietly everywhere. In estates. In villages. In towns. People are surviving, not living. We need God in this country. Seriously. Because things are tight. Too tight. And we also need to start seeing each other. Even if you don’t have money, don’t ignore people. Talk to them. Encourage them. Hug them. Let them feel human again. Sometimes that is all someone has left. Lord have mercy on Kenya.

𝙋𝘼𝙐𝙇. 𝐎. 𝐍𝐄𝐊𝐎

24,646 次观看 • 1 个月前

Lyn Ulbricht: A Mother's 12-Year Fight to Free Ross Ulbricht | Free The Money Ep. 30 Lyn Ulbricht joins Free The Money to share the extraordinary story of her 12-year fight to free her son, Ross Ulbricht, founder of Silk Road. She reflects on the shock of Ross's double life sentence plus 40 years without parole, why she believes the punishment was politically motivated, and how a grassroots movement ultimately helped secure his freedom. We also discuss the War on Drugs, the prison industrial complex, and the devastating impact harsh sentencing has on families and communities. Lyn explains why she founded Mothers Against Cruel Sentencing and why her advocacy continues even after Ross returned home. The conversation then turns to the growing prosecution of privacy technology developers, the future of financial privacy, free speech, and innovation in America. From Ross Ulbricht to Roger Ver, Tornado Cash, and Samourai Wallet, we discuss how these cases are making examples of individuals whose ideas, technologies, and beliefs threaten the existing system. This is a powerful discussion about faith, perseverance, freedom, and a mother's endless love. Cruel sentencing policies have made the U.S. the biggest incarcerator in the world. To find out more about MACS or to help, visit: Sign up for iTrustCapital using my link for a $100 funding bonus and see why more people are opening tax-advantaged Crypto, Gold & Silver IRAs to diversify and protect their future wealth: Check out my favorite privacy coin, Zano and follow Zano for updates. You can buy Zano seamlessly on MEXC using a VPN, or browse the full list of exchanges where Zano is available here: You can also find educational content, tutorials, and interviews on the official Zano YouTube Channel: 0:00 Introduction: 1:22 Ross Ulbricht's Life Sentences: A mother’s perspective 5:59 The War on Drugs.. Life in Prison for Marijuana 8:00 The Prison Industrial Complex: Who Profits from Mass Incarceration? 12:15 Was Ross Made an Example? Politics, Bitcoin & Harsh Sentencing 14:50 Atlas Shrugged, Ron Paul & Ross's Libertarian Roots 15:59 Zano 18:35 Faith, Prayer & Never Giving Up Hope 21:53 Why President Trump Couldn't Believe Ross's Sentence 23:07 Mothers Against Cruel Sentencing: Lyn's New Mission 26:37 The Hidden Victims: Families Torn Apart by Prison 29:22 Crypto Developers Under Attack: Privacy, Code & Freedom in America 35:41 iTrustCapital 38:50 Lyn's Message to President Trump on Crypto Prisoners 44:27 How Angela McArdle Helped Secure Ross's Freedom 47:48 Roger Ver, Gag Orders & the Fight for Free Speech

Bri Teresi

27,567 次观看 • 1 个月前

Look at this video. More than 15 armed police officers descend on a single defenseless young man in Kiamaiko. He is unarmed. He is overpowered. He poses no visible threat. Yet the blows keep coming. What is even more disturbing is that many of the strikes appear directed at his back and spinal area. Why? What purpose does that serve other than to inflict maximum pain and possibly permanent injury? Who is teaching our brothers and sisters in uniform that force must continue long after a suspect has been subdued? When did arrest become synonymous with punishment? When did law enforcement become an exercise in humiliation, maiming, or killing? A young man surrounded by more than 15 armed officers does not require such violence to be arrested. He requires restraint, professionalism, and respect for the law. I want to ask the Inspector General of the National Police Service, Douglas Kanja, not just as the head of law enforcement, but as a father: When you watch this video, what do you feel? If that young man being beaten was your son, would you be satisfied with this conduct? Would you call it justice? Would you call it policing? Every Kenyan child is someone's son. Every Kenyan child is someone's hope, someone's prayer, someone's future. The uniform should inspire safety, not fear. The badge should symbolize protection, not brutality. A nation cannot claim to uphold the rule of law while turning a blind eye to such scenes. Kenyans are not asking for special treatment. We are asking for humanity. We are asking for accountability. We are asking that those entrusted with power remember that the people they police are human beings whose lives matter. The tears of mothers who watch their children brutalized by those sworn to protect them should trouble the conscience of this nation.

𝙋𝘼𝙐𝙇. 𝐎. 𝐍𝐄𝐊𝐎

28,092 次观看 • 15 天前