In short Njuri - dont aim for jobs - aim to be gov supplier or private sector player.
I have read your long essays with much interest you have explained in detail and elaborated in length but you fall short of 2 critical things and assumed that,
- All kenyans can do business
- All Kenyans have capital
As you know even if an environment is created that you mention,(basically thats utopia). Not everyone will thrive with business. We cant all be business men and women.
My 10,000 civili service is to get new people to occupy from the middle ranks to the higher ranks in all civil service,these ranks are very crucial in government achieving its mandate. For example laws are made but its up to the officials involved in a certain area to effect them.
Most of the ranks I mentioned are occupied by dynastic tentacles,you will find on a particular position previously it was occupied by your grandfather,then your dad then you,thats how civil service is much to the detrimental effect of operations since the workers there feel no need to work harder. After all their offsprings are assured of same position. This chain NEEDS TO BE VAPORIZED. some ministries are actually hostage to this phenomenon than others.
My plan is simple we have 290 constituencies multiply that by 10 we get 2,900 new hustlers in government of course they will be placed according to their education,once there they need to call the short and chart a new path, Pundit for example with your good IT skills we can even place you in IEBC as deputy chair imagine the current one is a primary school teacher but because she serviced joho now she beat you to that position.
Many hustlers are educated but have no means government has to be the stepping stone for them,all governments in the world act as incubators for future great business people etc.
Pundit you cant confine Hustlers to business as I repeat again, yes we NEEED 10,000 HUSTLERS TO OCCUPY GOVERNMENT SOONEST POSSIBLE,there will be no impact on low level civil jobs thise are hustlers too but we beed new people to give government a meaning and understand what the commoner goes through.