The motherland has had a breath-taking sense of history, victory and  tragedy - read Kenyatta, Moi and Kibaki, obviously in that order of  respect. I had a session of 'special moments of clarity and  acknowledgement' a couple of days ago in which it was revealed to me  that in retrospect - bar the legendary infamy - the great toothless  dictator-for-a-quarter-century has to be my favourite Kenyan prezzo of  all time.
Sure that's a little like saying that my wife is the most loyal woman in  the world much in spite and malice of the fact that I found her tits up  in someone else's trash, with a sign around her neck saying '50p or  nearest offer', but then we're talking Politics - Kenyan Politics at  that - and not reason. I say this with all due respect to Kamau wa  Muigai - for I knew him not - none at all for Mr. Jackson Ngechu, and  completely disregarding Mr. Lucy.
In all seriousness however, the man did rule for 24 solid years with  what am sure Raila Odinga must recall as an iron boot, or at the very  least a pair of Doc Marten's up his tender thendecular region - as one Basket Case I know would put it - Tr. i.e. posterior orifice for those that may not comprehend the most romantic language in the world as pioneered by G Kyuk and Mresh Mumbi. 

You can keep all your Nyereres, Kuffuors and Annans; what Kenya has  needed for the past 7-odd years is an aristocrat, a true leader and not Obakoo,  a phantomesque persona whose greatest and most arbitrary achievement  post-his-election has to be that he is somehow still alive despite  having his not-much-better half on the one hand, and the full force of  political impedimenta on the other. The only flaw in that logic of  course being that were he a phantom, you might actually be tempted to  fear him. I would to a great deal even posit that the man, since that  accident whose nature and effect are as yet under wraps to anything but  our eyes and ears [think any of Kibaki's speeches], has no ambitions whatsoever beyond wiping his thendecks after a stately visit to Waterloo. And that is a wide assumption in itself.
One man I have no doubt would have commanded chief terror the likes of  which may have avoided -dare I say- the fardage that the  post-election-violence contrived to dump on our laps, is one  'head-in-your-hands-with-delirious-fright' Michuki. Yes. Every serious  Ministry he has graced with his aura has left any unfortunate  offenders(in his eyes of course) so befuddled and dumbfounded that a  select few, as was the case with the Mt Elgon slaughter of man,  involuntarily choose to remain permanently in that blood clot state.
Let me state, clearly off the record in lieu of what is about to unfold,  that no one will ever fill / feel up Mr Moi's managerial wellingtons  again. I can imagine it, but it'll never happen. That said, this  certainty hardly dents my imagination, though in all fairness she barely  has to work overtime with the current political status quo. In my  dream, Kibaki suffers a massive coronary, cause as yet unknown. For a  time nobody even notices any difference with his unusual self, and unconfirmed reports suggest he had been cooped up in stately satins, smoking dried Omo with Schtundu  foam plus, as he watched Ross Kemp's: A Kenya Special. Apparently, the  many courses of action he could have but did not take to quell that  iniquitous situation finally dawned on him with a ferocity the  equivalent of Tyson's first round Knockout of Hector Mercedes (she was  not a girl), and the rest is as they say, her story. Lucy's.

Subsequently, the Kenya Team - for this is how my vision interpreted the  Cabinet - had to deliberate on a new manager. By unanimous vote, it was  reached upon that they would only settle for a player-manager; the new  tactician himself however - le boss - took less unanimity of ideology  and expectation to choose. In fact the players present seem to grimace  at each other so hard it is obvious in their expression that their  enzymes, worms, burps and intestines are wielding placards screaming  that popular if hackneyed refrain, 'Haki yetu!' But in the end two  racehorses emerge from the rough and tumble: one Rod 'Ginger' and Don 'Mitch' .
Here the pick was eased by Rod's past history of getting majorly, if not  royally screwed, and this being the default from which my dream draws  its njuithez (juice), the dominant force emerges once more from  the slopes of Mt Kenya, sending chills running along the Kano plains to  Kano market in west Africa, summiting as you may imagine in the inclines  of Mt Elgon.    
Needless to say, which is why I say it, Rod is still working on  renovating his global image, and decides that a fight for ‘Haki yangu!’  is in the long run more damaging to him than acceding to the rig and  retaining his seat as Assistant Manager while working behind the scenes on a suitable  rebuttal. As they hurriedly make McKarucy exit Stately Home (no mean  feat by the way) and swear Don in before the incumbent awakes from his recently aggravated  slumber, I wake up and stare back at myself in the mirror; scaffold at  my bedside, fresh paint dripping off it, my eyes are all hazed up à la  Isaac Mendez. As the fog clears up, I make out a rather strange looking  ‘creature’ lying naked beside me in bed, but that – my good peeps – is a  story for another day.
The canvas contains the picture of a man, elegantly dressed, clutching a  club with a double-end – such that from the other end sprouts a fly  whisk  –  waving triumphantly over his head to a small group of  'disciples' and flanked by one Marda Karwa à la Jesus and Magdalene in The Last Supper. The other painting is better displayed than described.

Beyond that, the only other detail I care to recall is MK4. The mystery that is MK4......
To read the next "Kenyan Politics" dreampost, click here.

 
 
Super!
ReplyDeleteThanx sis ;)
ReplyDelete'...it is obvious in their expression that their enzymes, worms, burps and intestines are wielding placards screaming that popular if hackneyed refrain, 'Haki yetu!' Classic. I'm impressed.
ReplyDelete@ Kibz. Not more impressed than I am my dear. Finally u arrived at the blog! Now tune in every week as I try to match this piece...but with Kenyan politics am sure there'll be a klutz or two here and there to spice the pieces up! Thanx 4 the plaudits dear :)
ReplyDeletewah! I mean,articles on Kenyan politics always hav their way of sending me to sleep but this is just out of this world! N I like the pimping on 'Gikuyu' n 'Mumbi'. Mad props bana. Waiting for the delivery of the next edition. Am hoping it's already writhing in labour!!!
ReplyDelete@ Sis. Thanx for FINALLY reading it :)
ReplyDeleteYaani mpaka jus to prove you actually read it umenisetia quote kama za "Merchant of Venice" :D
The next edition, as you very well know, is simmering in the pot, just dying to be released into the blogosphere...in due time my dear.
Cheers!
i dint jus read it,i liked it too
ReplyDeleteSawa basi Miss Moneybags...you did indeed :) You just wait for the sequel Thursday ;) I know I can't!
ReplyDeleteSalutations Tulu. I was gonna ask what the hell you were on when you commented about protection and ungreased release on my blog, then I realized you were probably on some poor little unlubed up Miss Mount Everest indulging in that bad habit of releasing without protection. :-D Snap! Cheers mate. Na usifreak bila sox...no diggity kama Red Sox utatrip!
ReplyDeleteI may be wrong, but I think you may have commented on the 'Sequence' badala the 'Sequel'...wherein I mentioned the Hellon Earth that ruins our already bruised image of the Red N Blue. And yes I feel repulsed to the bone marrow's bone marrow; which is why I intend to fight for at least one deserving youth to seat in Parliament come 2013. That'd be a step in the million and eleven we need to veer into the right direction for me
ReplyDelete