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Interesting things to know about the towel

How often do you wash your towel? Some people wash once a week, while some, once a year. The towel is a fertile breeding ground for millions of microbes, especially those found on human skin and on the gut.  No wonder the towel is one of the objects that facilitate fecal-oral contamination (literally connecting the two ends of the gut).  Worse still, most people keep towels in the bathroom (near the toilet). Every flush of the toilet sends mist with millions of microbes, ranging from H.pylori,  salmonella and other deadly bacteria and viruses. When you wash your hands ready for a meal, and dry them with your body towel, there's high chance you are directly ingesting your fecal matter, or, if in a shared lavatory, someone else's faeces. Unless cleaned well, viruses such as human papillomavirus (causes warts, anal cancer and cervical cancer) can be transmitted when towels are shared with infected individuals. So, what to do? 1. Launder towels once a week. 2. Use hot water and det...

Cocoa Bean And A Bar Of Chocolate





A Togolese man held a COCOA BEAN in an ITALIAN CHOCOLATE FESTIVAL and asked the participants what it was, no one could tell.
He travelled back home and held A BAR OF CHOCOLATE to COCOA FARMER in a remote village and asked them what it was, no one could had an idea.
The difference between this two groups of people is how they handle education.
When Togolese government takes education to those remote villages, they would rather teach kids the parts of an insect rather than how to make chocolate from cocoa beans.
The idea is foreign to africans, you are led to believe that making chocolate is a technology reserved for the whites, while in reality making a bar of chocolate is easier than farming a cocoa bean.
Young people leave Africa, some die trying to cross Mediterranean sea and when they hit European borders, the fish at these shores are more important than them, yet they have left the one who owns gold to go work for the black smith who melts gold.
Our education system should be about us not them.
A student who graduates from Murang'a should be able to know how to treat coffee and add value, The one who graduates from The Maa community should be aware of how to trade meat in the International market, while the one from nyandarua should know how to produce insecticide from pyrethurum.
Each county should have programs within their education system that seeks to create wealth from resources found within UNLESS someone shows me empirically the significance of uniform core subject across the country especially under CBC program.

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