Out of Touch Elites Speedrun Another Crisis: Kenya Passes Terrible Bill Two Years After Burning Down Parliament
In an absolute masterclass of political tone-deafness, lawmakers decide that the best way to honor dead Gen Z protesters is to pass the exact kind of legislation that started the riots.

Look, you really have to admire the sheer, unadulterated audacity of the Kenyan political class. Exactly two years after angry Gen Z mobs literally stormed and set fire to the Parliament building over predatory economic policies, the suit-and-tie brigade decided it was the perfect time to run it back. Yes, you read that right. In a move that can only be described as a speedrun to another national crisis, the Kenyan legislature has officially passed yet another highly controversial bill, completely ignoring the fact that people actually died the last time they tried this stunt.
The history here is pure clown world material. Two years ago, we witnessed the legendary "Gen Z protests"—an absolute masterclass in decentralized, internet-fueled rage. It wasn't your grandpa's organized political march; it was a TikTok-driven, WhatsApp-coordinated flash mob that bypassed every establishment filter and marched straight to the seat of power. The state's response was as predictable as it was brutal: live ammunition, arbitrary abductions, and a massive body count. But instead of reading the room, the ruling regime has apparently decided that two years is the statute of limitations on public anger.
Let's talk about the actual mechanics of this absolute circus. Under the Kenyan Constitution's Article 118, there is this hilarious legal fiction called "public participation." The theory is that the government is supposed to ask the peasants for their opinion before taxing them into oblivion. In practice, however, "public participation" consists of politicians hosting a couple of half-empty town halls, ignoring the actual feedback, and checking the box so they can please their international overlords. This latest bill is no exception; it was pushed through the legislative pipeline with the kind of haste that usually suggests someone has a loan repayment deadline to meet.
And who are those international overlords, you ask? None other than the global financial cartels—the IMF and the World Bank. The narrative is always the same: "We need fiscal consolidation, we need structural adjustment, we need to balance the books." Translation: the elites ran up massive debts on vanity infrastructure projects, and now they expect the working-class zoomers to foot the bill. The state's economic plan seems to rely entirely on squeezing blood from a stone while praying the stone doesn't throw a brick through the window.
The absolute disconnect between the regime and the demographic reality of Kenya is staggering. Over three-quarters of the population is under 35, facing astronomical unemployment rates, and possessing zero loyalty to the post-colonial political dynasties. The establishment is playing a high-stakes game of chicken with a generation that has literally nothing to lose and already knows how to bypass state media filters using VPNs. You can't make this stuff up.


