Indeed. It started with the "we shall revisit", the fake JSC smearing petitions and all you have mentioned. Still, people had faith the judiciary was holding its own, refusing to be intimidated, until 25th. The 25th is when doubts entered many people. Personally, I totally disagreed with the case before the court (I didn't see it as a constitutional problem but a political problem that the court could not appropriately resolve) but I firmly expected all the judges to be present, hear the matter, and then decide basically that the court was absolutely the wrong forum for the types of solutions sought. What I did not see coming was the Houdini. I can't blame any judge, personally. It's surely a miracle that they have shown the courage they have so far.
My view too. The court should have sat and thrown out the petition. As it is, Jubilee has now learned that it can cow the judiciary. I don't expect it to end there. We can expect that in the next few years the same methods will be applied to lower courts.
Also, it is not just with the judiciary that Jubilee has learned some "useful" lessons. Corruption is another, and the lesson is that no amount of noise, from wherever, will make any difference. I expect some serious "kula nyama" in the next five years.
Generally, numerous institutions that were supposed to make a difference have turned out to be totally useless: IEBC, NCIC, IPOA, ... all costly jokes. No need to get into the deep-rooted, but generally tolerated, incompetence that defines the entire civil service.
Countries tend to go to the dogs in a "small small" way, and Kenya seems to have embarked on "forward to the dark past" path. And, because it is and will be "small small", most people will go along until it is too late.
For a student of history, what is happening is actually fascinating in a way. One often wonders "just how did this country get to this deplorable point? why were such bad choices and decisions made at this or that junction? etc.". Now we get to see it happening "live". And what is especially fascinating about the Kenyan version is that we have been there before, decided that we'd had enough and wanted something quite different, but we are now "rebooting" to disaster.