[kictanet] Day-time Vulgar Conversations on Kenya Media
Sammy Buruchara
buruchara at me.com
Mon Jul 1 20:23:51 EAT 2013
Well put Yawe,
We need to take responsibility in parenting and especially regulation of
what our children watch.
Regards
Sammy
From: robert yawe <robertyawe at yahoo.co.uk>
Reply-To: robert yawe <robertyawe at yahoo.co.uk>
Date: Monday, July 1, 2013 7:45 AM
To: Sammy Buruchara <Buruchara at me.com>
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke>
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Day-time Vulgar Conversations on Kenya Media
@Matunda,
I spend at least 3 hours a day with my children on weekdays and more over
the weekend they then spend the next 9 hours in school 90% of which is with
their peers & another 9 hours is spent sleeping
I did not take my children to boarding school, I do not frequent those
places where men claim they have gone to discuss issues on national
importance, I do not play golf on Saturday morning, I do not take the car
for washing at conveniently located car washes and I only read the paper
after they have gone to bed.
Note, finding time to be with your children is a matter of choice so we need
to stop abdicating our responsibilities to the government, schools,
churches, house help (whose retirement we have refused to fund), parliament,
the senate, the judiciary, governors, matrons, television and radio, maybe
we should also have abdicated the process of creating them also.
But that is besides the point, you need to inculcate the right values in
your children after which you can safely release them into the world knowing
that they are armed to face the temptations of this world and come through
unscathed. There is a clear reason why the government says that the
children are you responsibility until they get to the age of 21 after which
your abilities as a parent shall be tested by the society at large, our
failures are visible in Kamiti and Asumbi.
On the other end many of us are the decision makers in organisations that
support the vulgar media through advertising revenue then we twit about the
content,
We claim to be a faith based society, my foot, yet the presenters of those
vulgar shows appear in the mosques, churches, temples and tents during the
sabbath and are accepted with open arms, hypocrites is what many of us are.
If you feed anything be it a habit, animal plant or virtue it will
inevitably grow.
Regards
Robert Yawe
KAY System Technologies Ltd
Phoenix House, 6th Floor
P O Box 55806 Nairobi, 00200
Kenya
Tel: +254722511225, +254202010696
From: Matunda Nyanchama <mnyanchama at aganoconsulting.com>
To: robertyawe at yahoo.co.uk
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke>
Sent: Friday, 28 June 2013, 17:01
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Day-time Vulgar Conversations on Kenya Media
Two comments
- Kudos Robert Yawe for the you take in the presence of vulgar stuff. Good
for you. That said, ask yourself how many hours you spend with your kids in
a day. If you are as busy as most parents are, you will find that your
children are spending more time with other people than with you. And those
that interact with, what they do when together, what they share when they so
interact you probably wouldn't know. But eh! You are doing the best in
challenged circumstances!
- Peter Kenduiywo: Even in societies (like in the west with a high degree of
liberalism) there are guidelines on these matters. Everything that is shown
on TV, theatre, etc.has a code and (where necessary) there are warning
before and during the show asking those that don't want such content to
switch channels or choose to watch. In fact, there are strict guidelines on
in public, even when people know it happens. Peter: there is no absolute
freedom; indeed, yours ends where mine stops. That said, social mores and
what is acceptable in public or not changes with time. For instance I recall
debates regarding women wearing trousers, mini-skirts and the like, which
today will likely look out of order. Finally on homosexuality, former
Canadian PM (the late Pierre Trudeau) had it right: what two consenting
adults do in the privacy of their homes is their business. Just don't shove
things in others' faces. Vulgar material in Kenyan media is like the latter:
shoving stuff in our faces, regardless of our feelings.
Kudos CCK for the initiative. I hope the process will be speeded up.
Have a good weekend.
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Agano Consulting Inc.; www.aganoconsulting.com
<http://www.aganoconsulting.com/> ; Twitter: nmatunda;
<http://twitter.com/#%21/nmatunda> Skype: okiambe
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