Precisely. Notice, beside listening to these youngins mnuguniko, Oldun never offered mentorship or investment on these young people ideas. Bure kabisa.

Like some of those hazy-eyed youngin's who thought I was speaking Greek the whole time, some won't gerrit and perhaps never will. I gave those youngin's nuggets enough for a lifetime in that brief discussion. The one who was meant to gerrit did and is thriving. The youngin' selling kuku hapo juu came from zero and has worked his way up bila minung'uniko (thanks for reminding me of that word😅) ama?
It's funny how in 2025, a shockingly large swathe of humanity still does not understand that
Capitalism is simply the ownership of Capital. And that capital can only be acquired in two ways. Theft. Or hard work. Iyo tu. For some of us who were not looters, we had no other choice but to sweat.
Just like many of my Kwiinyan colle buddies in USGay who were too lazy to pull triple shifts and save their way through it all to get through school -- some of who are now proper alcoholic dropouts with criminal records longer than Manute Bol -- when it comes to capitalism, not everyone will gerrit.
Saving for example is something that completely eludes many. The day that my destiny changed was at age 18 fresh out of high school when I read the book The Richest Man in Babylon.That book opened my eyes in a way no other single book has either prior or afterwards. It's biggest lesson wasn't a financial one, but a destiny one. You are 100% responsible for how far you will go in this life. Nobody owes you nada!
I have long been able to spot a born loser among my employees very quickly.
-- Minung'uniko about life froflems fweeeh 24/7
-- very shoddy quality of work - no sense of ownership or diligence even on the tiniest and easiest of tasks
-- Looking forward to the utopia in their minds where gava will resolve all their problems including impregnating their wives for them.
-- Fombe and/or addiction of one sort or another is huge undeniable corollary here in majority of the cases.
It's always someone else's fault, not theirs
Contempt/disdain for learning/acquiring new skills every day is their portion. You would rather meet a bear robbed of her whelps than a fool in his own folly who rejects clear-cut, concrete, actionable solutions presented in their face!
I suppose this is and has always been, the iron curtain between the only two regiments of humanity;
-- The prosperous and the impoverished
-- The rulers and the ruled
-- The employees and the employed.
And in any case the latter are always needed by the former, so it will never change. Mind you there's nothing wrong with being ruled or employed, but unless you are disabled, a helpless senior citizen or have a terminal disease that prevents you from working, there is something VERY wrong with being poor if you have a mind to think with and two hands to work with daily. Especially if you are educated!
Perhaps the only other group that can be excused for their poverty are those humble citizens with absolutely nothing - no land, no education, no resources whatsoever, no income/no job & no access to a market system. Those ones definitely need assistance/help/mentorship and education of some sort.
What is always in flux is what side of the table human beings choose to be on.
I love what Njenga Karume (RIP) used to say about success. He said the day he realised he could make a shilling by buying a few books and pencils at a far away market and coming to sell them to fellow students at a tiny profit is the day the beautiful opportunities in the world of business opened up to him and life was never the same afterwards.
Remember, this was a guy who became a MULTIMILLIONAIRE BEFORE INDEPENDENCE when Kenyans were being thrown into detention camps and banned from having bank accounts! They weren't allowed to grow cash crops. He was arrested and detained several times just for existing. How did he do it? He WORKED LIKE A DOG, burning charcoal in the forests in Molo and Elburgon and transporting the same to urban centers everywhere. While his peers were nungunikaring about Serekali ya Msungu not letting them breathe.
If Njenga,
with his standard 5 education did it then in such dire circumstances, what's anyone's excuse now?
But as usual, only a few will gerrit.
In my own family I have some of the LAZIEST relatives on this planet.
When I was busting my bee-hind applying to go to unis hambload as a 17 year old with zero resources, not even knowing where the maney for the Kwiinyan passport or plane ticket would come from, they were spewing minung'uniko about how tough life was 24/7, while doing zero to move forward.
When I was saving every shilling working odd jobs after high school, they sneered at me saying those were tasks that paid peanuts and were "reserved for illiterates."
When I kept applying to all sorts of unis hambload they laughed me to scorn saying "we are older than you, smarter than you, we tried and all failed to go hambload. Who are you to even dare!"
Long story short, by God's grace and by several miracles of epic proportions and unbelievable work put into piecing everything together, I landed at LaGuardia on a cool early August night to start my new journey there (with almost nothing in my pocket!) and the rest is history.
To this day, the same same relatives are whining ngweeh about how tough and painful life is.
I already narrated hapa about the one I helped set up a biz and it crumbled to dust because of his laziness.
Juzi I attended a family lunch and it was still the same thing after all these decades.
Whining about everything outside of their control.
Fombe fweeeh lazily done daily.
To wake up before 9am is anathema to them.
Let alone to do any sort of physical work of any sort.
Isapite.
When I point out how much I had to bust my behind with nothing given on a silver platter, the answers are predictable;
Oooo you were lucky
Oooo back then US visa rules were easier
Oooo you were able to accumulate capital majuu. Kenya has no opportunities.
Ooooo you came back when the economy in Kwiinya was not that bad
Oooo ooo oooooooo...
Followed by another round of fombe + empty talk about nothing of substance for hours on end.
Gen-z's, if you are not careful, that is your future too!
Ni hayo tu