
You saw her. A 6-year-old girl in a school sweater, eyes barely open, stuffed into a bus at 5:40 a.m. like a factory worker heading to a shift she never applied for. This isn’t education. This is warfare against childhood.
Kenya’s education system isn’t building genius. It’s building obedience.
It’s not nurturing brilliance. It’s grinding it out before dawn, feeding kids into a system that worships grades but buries creativity.
By the time they’re teenagers, most are burnt out, joyless, over-tested zombies—trained to chase papers, not purpose.
Wake up, Tribe.
Our children weren’t born to be sacrificed to a broken colonial curriculum that still trains them to memorize, submit, and obey.
They were born to build. To hunt. To lead.
And it’s time we tore this rotten system apart before it eats them alive.
DESIGNED FOR SERVITUDE: Why Kenya’s School System Was Never Meant to Produce Leaders

Let’s tear off the mask.
Kenya’s education system is not failing—it’s doing exactly what it was designed to do:
Create obedient, replaceable workers who never question authority.
- Colonial Roots, Same Chains
The Kenyan school system wasn’t built to uplift Africans. It was built to train them to serve the colony.
Memorize. Follow orders. Fear mistakes. Speak only when spoken to.
That same blueprint runs today—new faces, same mission:
Produce clerks, not chiefs.
Produce workers, not warriors.
Produce beggars for jobs, not builders of empires.
- No Real Skills. Just Regurgitation.
13 years of schooling and most kids:
Can’t plant a banana.
Can’t manage money.
Can’t lead, build, question, or survive without a system.
But they can recite rivers in Western Kenya and define osmosis.
They graduate with papers but not power.

- Fear-Based Learning = Mental Slavery
From nursery to university, the Kenyan system is driven by one fuel: fear.
Fear of canes.
Fear of exams.
Fear of failure.
Fear of teachers.
Fear of shame.
This is not education. It’s domestication.
You don’t raise lions by whipping them into obedience.
You raise lions by unleashing their instincts—not suppressing them.
- No Room for Builders or Rebels
The system punishes:
Curiosity (“Stop asking so many unnecessary questions!”)
Creativity (“Stick to the marking scheme!”)
Courage (“Who do you think you are to challenge your teacher?”)
The only students who thrive are those who submit.
The rebels? The creators? The risk-takers?
They’re either expelled, labelled failures, or forced to fit in.
Yet those are the very people every tribe needs to survive.
- After All That… You Beg for a Job
Imagine this:

You wake up at 4 a.m. for 14 years.
You pass KCSE.
You do a 4-year degree.
You come out at 23… and then you beg on LinkedIn for a job that pays 30K per month.
That’s not education.
That’s a pipeline to poverty.
What’s my point?
The Kenyan school system doesn’t create tribal chiefs.
It creates timid, overworked, underprepared civilians—trained to fit into a rigged game, never to change the rules.
BURNT OUT BEFORE PUBERTY: How Kenya’s Education System Is Destroying Our Children’s Health
This system doesn’t just kill dreams. It kills bodies.
Kenyan children are being starved of sleep, sunlight, movement, and joy—and no one seems to care, as long as they pass exams.
What we call “education” is, in truth, a systematic attack on the physical and mental health of the next generation.
Look at these things;
- Sleep Deprivation = Brain Damage
Waking up at 4:30 a.m. for years is not discipline—it’s child abuse.

Children need 9–12 hours of sleep for brain development, memory, hormone balance, and immunity.
Kenyan pupils average 5–6 hours on school nights.
This creates chronic fatigue, stunted growth, poor concentration, and long-term neurological damage.
They’re not lazy. They’re sleep-deprived prisoners. Face That Truth!
- No Sun = Weak Bones, Weak Immunity
From the bus to the classroom to tuition, these kids never see enough sun.
The sun is needed to make Vitamin D, which is crucial for:
Bone strength
Hormone production
Mental health
Immune function
Proper sleep
Instead, we raise pale, hunched, weak children with low immunity, poor posture, and chronic fatigue, and we call it “excellence.”
- Sitting All Day = Slow Death
Children are meant to run, climb, dig, play, and move. But in Kenyan schools:
They sit for 10+ hours a day.
P.E. is a joke.
Play is dismissed as a distraction.
Any movement is punished or ridiculed.
This leads to:
Poor blood circulation
Obesity or underweight bodies
Weak muscles and bones
Early-onset lifestyle diseases like diabetes and hypertension
We’re raising children who can pass exams but can’t squat, jump, or run.
- Junk Food, No Nutrition
Most school diets are trash.
Cheap margarine and white bread.
Sugary drinks and colored juices.
Greasy chips and boiled cabbage.
No liver, eggs, bone broth, or real ancestral food.
The result?
Malnourished children with high sugar intake, insulin problems, dental decay, poor concentration, and stunted immune systems.
But hey—they’re revising chemical formulas and balancing chemical equations, right?
- Chronic Stress = Broken Spirits
Constant tests. Pressure to perform. Fear of failure.

Children are chronically stressed before they’ve even developed emotional regulation.
This:
Weakens immunity
Increases cortisol (which leads to belly fat and brain fog)
Creates long-term mental health disorders—anxiety, depression, apathy
Destroys self-worth and creativity
It’s not discipline. It’s psychological warfare.
What’s being done in the name of “education” is turning healthy African children into sick, anxious, pale, obedient adults who hate learning, fear risk, and accept low-quality lives.
This is not the future of a strong tribe. This is systematic genetic sabotage—and if we don’t tear it down, we’ll be raising the last free generation.
EDUCATION FOR EMPIRE: What Real Learning Looks Like for a Rising Tribe
If we want lions, not sheep—builders, not beggars—we must burn the colonial blueprint and build an education system from the ground up.
Not for grades. Not for jobs.
For power. For health. For legacy.
- Teach the Body First
Before algebra, a child must master the body.

Daily movement: climbing, crawling, squatting, running
Strength training: bodyweight drills, lifting, carrying
Sleep and sun: non-negotiable
Food education: how to cook real meals, understand ancestral nutrition
A strong body is the foundation of a strong mind. We don’t raise soft warriors.
- Real Skills for Survival and Sovereignty
By age 10, a tribal child should know:
How to cook and preserve food
How to plant, hunt/catch animals, and fish
How to make and sell a product
How to defend themselves
How to lead others
Let them build a fire, build a shelter, build a brand—not just memorize definitions.
- Replace Exams with Mastery
No more cramming. No more “pass or perish.”
True education is not passing a test—it’s demonstrating skill in the real world.
Can you sell?
Can you lead?
Can you negotiate?
Can you create value for others to solve problems?
That’s what earns respect in the tribe—not a KCSE certificate.

- Mentorship, Not Indoctrination
Children need mentors, not masters.
Real-life leaders.
Successful artisans.
Fierce mothers and fathers.
Tribal chiefs who walk the talk.
Each child should be guided, not scolded—sharpened, not silenced.
- Every Child Is a Warrior, a Healer, or a Builder
Education must reveal the path, not force one.
Some are meant to heal (medicine, herbs, therapy)
Some are meant to fight (security, defense, leadership)
Some are meant to build (business, tools, systems, technology)
Let them specialize early, explore deeply, and rise fiercely.
Your son should start coding at 7 years.
Our children are not test subjects.
They are weapons, wombs, and wisdom for the next generation.
If we raise them right, we don’t need protests, prayers, or politicians.
We build power from the ground up—one sharp, unstoppable young lion at a time.
WHAT EVERY TRIBAL CHILD MUST KNOW BEFORE ADULTHOOD (By The Time They Hit 18)
If your child hits 18 and all they know is how to pass exams and fear authority, you failed them. BIG TIME!
By 18, they must be battle-ready—physically, mentally, emotionally, and economically.
Here’s what every tribal boy or girl must master before they are unleashed into the world:

- Master Your Body
How to cook real food (meat, organs, broth, roots)
How to train for strength, endurance, and mobility
How to fight (grappling, striking, situational awareness)
How to heal (first aid, herbs, injury management)
How to fast, detox, and self-regulate hormones
No tribe survives with weak, fat, dependent civilians.
They must become their own doctor and their own bodyguard.
- Build and Sell Something
How to identify problems and solve them
How to create a product or service
How to price, pitch, sell, and close
How to use money: earn, save, invest, multiply
How to work for value, not for applause
If they can’t make money without a boss, they are still slaves.
- Think Like a Warrior
How to think critically and ask the right questions
How to lead teams, read people, and speak with power
How to handle rejection, failure, loss, and betrayal
How to stay calm under pressure and make hard decisions
How to stand alone if the crowd is wrong
Mental toughness beats academic brilliance—every time.
- Live With Honor and Strategy
How to spot liars, manipulators, cowards, and traitors
How to build alliances, choose friends, and select the right mate
How to protect family, tribe, territory, and legacy
How to keep promises, defend boundaries, and demand respect
How to live by a code of honor, not approval-seeking
No morals, no tribe. No tribe, no future.

- Connect With the Land and the Ancestors
How to grow food, build shelter, and survive in nature
How to understand their lineage and carry the legacy forward
How to live close to the land, not trapped in concrete cages
How to worship the divine through action, not submission
Disconnected children become easy prey for global culture. Rooted children become unshakable.
Therefore by 18, your child must be ready to lead a family, defend a home, grow wealth, and fight for freedom.
Not just sit in class hoping to be hired. Raise them like they’ll never be rescued.
10 RUTHLESS DUTIES OF A TRIBAL PARENT: How to Raise a Free, Fierce, and Functional Child

If your child ends up weak, lost, and dependent—it’s not the system. It’s you.
The State will not raise warriors. Only the Tribe will.
Here are 10 things every tribal parent must do—starting now—to raise children who can build, fight, and lead by 18:
- Control the Morning
No phone before sunlight.
Give them water, fat, protein—not sugar and junk.
Get them in the sun. Get them moving.
Mornings must be for strength, not screens.
- Cut the Screens
No TV, TikTok, cartoons, or YouTube dopamine slavery.
Give them books, animals, tools, instruments, nature.
The screen must be a computer where they learn coding, video editing, copywriting, digital marketing and graphics design.
If a screen raises your child, don’t cry when the world owns them.
- Give Them Real Work
Chores. Cooking. Fetching. Farming. Helping you build.
If they don’t sweat now, they will suffer later.
Hard work is not punishment. It’s protection.
- Train Their Body Like a Soldier
Teach them to run, fight, lift, swim, climb, endure.
Make movement a normal part of life.
Soft bodies = weak minds.

- Talk Like a Mentor, Not a Dictator
Let them speak. Ask questions. Debate ideas.
Teach them how to think, not just what to obey.
Fear-based parenting breeds liars, not leaders.
- Feed Them Ancestrally
Eggs, liver, bone broth, meat, fermented foods, herbs.
Ban sugary snacks, margarine, soda, seed oils.
No nutrition = no brains, no courage, no future.
- Expose Them to Money Early
Let them see you sell. Give them small ventures.
Teach them how to save, invest, and multiply.
Children who don’t learn money early will worship those who have it.
- Kill Entitlement
Let them feel hunger, rejection, failure.
Let them earn everything. Never over-reward.
If they never suffer, they’ll never respect strength.
- Protect Their Environment
Remove toxic relatives, soft teachers, cowardly friends.
Create a circle of masculine men, feminine women, and serious values.
Environment programs the soul. Guard it.
- Let Them See You Lead
Build your body. Master your finances. Control your home.
Let them watch you fight, build, teach, and stand firm.
You are their blueprint. If you’re weak, they’ll copy it.
No school will do this. No syllabus will cover this.
It’s on us. And the future of the Tribe depends on it.
