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I am teaching your history for free.
What you're describing is the agricultural/pastoralist dichotomy.
Nearly all pastoralists have an almost universal disdain for manual labour.
They consider digging to a rat life.
For them the ultimate life is spend time almost doing nothing except manage things.
The tending of cows and goats was mostly done by kids.
Once someone became of age (circumcized) they were suppose to remain almost "idle" except during wars.
Their main job being to manages the boys to take care of cows and the women to take care of home.
That is why we really looked forward to go to MTC.
After all that trouble - nobody will ever again give your instructions - you're also free from any labour - including tending to cows.
All Kalenjin men after MTC did (and some still do) - wake up, maybe slash their compound, and go to river, take a shower, and go look for girls.
Come for lunch and super - and continue - zero work done - you're a man.
Manual labour NO.
But now poverty is grounding people.
OH brother we will go in circles just like Robina with politics stuff, you believe what you want but reality is different, Bantu have managed to make it in a large way, surpassing peoples who were established way before them, they are even Bantus in Somalia surviving there despite all the hardships and persecutions. Kalenjin had very arable land but you depend on hard labor from Bantus mbauhyas mogusii and okuyu who eventually take over your lands and women.
Pundit let me use you as an example where your nilotic thinking comes into play and fails, we were discussing once about farming and I said Merus just till their land and tea farms as family units but you said because they can't afford to employ laborers in their tea farms they are poor. You see this is Not the case as I told you nature of Bantu is to till their land and just like Chinese and Indians most of this work is done by families you will rarely find them employing people from far areas. Once Nilotes delegated this duty their also waved their land rights to the foreigners, just as masaai and Kalenjin have.