Saturday, 8 August 2015

Hey Governor Tunai; A hint on Public Health Sector; We need Toilets

"Public health is purchasable. Within a few natural and able & concern leadership and important limitations any community can determine its own health"

I don't mind paying a doctor more for helping to make me healthier. To help me live a longer life with more well-being. I'd pay them gladly. My problem is paying someone repeatedly to simply treat my symptoms, because they aren't actually compensated to solve my problem.

Too many people fall short of their potential in the leadership game, and also fail to enable or enhance the
leadership circles to(of) others.

Mr Governor My passion for good leadership often leads me to observe
and reflect on what happens in the grassroots, workplace for individuals and teams. I listen out for mixture of comments and frustrations, and have concluded that there are some
common misunderstandings about leadership issues

One of them being the need for public defecation in nourishing and civilised society. People need not only toilets but decent public toilets. I know many of these problems are systemic. They are old. And we will need considerable long periods of time and loads of energy to counter them. I believe we must start from somewhere.

The battle to end open defecation in kilgoris and in narok county needs to be fought on two radical fronts; on the ground with toilets and sanitation infrastructure, and in the hearts and minds of the people by repositioning toilets so that latrine use becomes the norm.

Mr. Governor, you have a golden
chance to brash ink your public name in our hearts and minds. Just build toilets!

Until we drive demand for toilets, we will not see the uptake and usage of toilets in narok county, even as toilets
become available.

We need to understand what motivates people, and position toilet use as aspirational, associated with a sense of pride and dignity, in order to encourage toilet use as a personal preference, and drive demand for toilets.

As a county we all measured for greatness by the virtue that we regard setting asside the place for defecation. Equivocally, We need to give priority to toilets and cleanliness.

Ever wonder why good leaders turn into bad ones almost over night or in a twinkle of an eye?

Or why an otherwise good person goes to public office genuinely committed to becoming an authentic public servant, only to emerge a short-time later as a totally self-interested, self-absorbed, pure-play politician?

You are there, calm as I brush you that it all makes sense. Not necessarily what you and I might call good sense, but sense enough for us to understand.

To understand, so that we can then nurture a new generation of leaders that don't do this. This is a short-version cheat-sheet on why even good
leaders step-in-it , and as a result, why the kenya we live in is increasingly all screwed up by politicians who think right outcast of their circles of who-we-know

This is also a short-form leadership bulletin on what you and I can do about it .

To sum up leaders should talk the say and walk the say to evidently work out devolution cries of our people.

Sadly and needless to say its hard to get someone to agree to the truth, when the lie is paying their paycheck.

Aspiring leaders must Create and nurture a new generation of young leaders that (i) know who they are, (ii) mean what they say, (iii) say what they mean, and (iv) actually do what they believe.

Governor Tunai a toilet is the tarting point of serious and committed public health.

WE NEED TOILETS

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