noun \ˈsnich\
Simple Definition of snitch
: a person who tells someone in authority (such as the police or a teacher) about something wrong that someone has done : someone who snitches.
There are many folks who thrive in an environment where the only way to dispense value is by snitching. Heads of institutions love playing divide and rule by employing the use of snitches to ensure enemity in their deluded view that it will minimise the risk of collusion to defraud.
Instead of companies adopting Google’s strategy of enhancing productivity of the workforce by promoting harmony and team-building activities, Kenyan heads of state, company bosses and others, have viciously deployed the use of snitches in-order to advance their sinister agendas.
In Nairobi, the most famous corporate snitch is Joey Mugweru. Mugweru is said to have had a history of snitching, and thrives in the mediocre Nairobi corporate environment where merit is the last consideration. He is said to be suffering from a post-highschool hangover under the Moi-developed 8-4-4 system which encouraged snitches to gain worthless praise by equally mediocre teachers.
In corporate Nairobi, as longs as you bootlick your boss, snitch against your colleagues and exhibit redundant traits of sycophancy, you’re almost guaranteed job security, reason why you will never hear of someone transferring from Kenya to say Dubai or New York office of their parent-company because the productivity of the Kenyan workforce is below par.
Mugweru works for MultiChoice-Supersport as a producer and many of his colleagues claim that his work is to parambulate around Nairobi hangouts, to spy on colleagues in their social element. This he is said to execute to precision. He then files periodic reports with his white masters, much to the dismay of his colleagues who have had to endure the wrath of warning letters and even dismissals.
You all have to realise that snitches are heartless scumbags whose only concern is self-preservation, without any second thought as to the longterm repurcussions of their “snitchery” after instigating job losses. These characters care about themselves and their careers.
They are similar to officials of Kenya Airline Pilots Association (KALPA) who were bribed to call off a strike, meant to pressure the CEO of Kenya Airways Mbuvi Ngunze out of office, a move that would have saved the airline from total collapse. Now they want him to remain in place, and finish what’s former CEO Titus Naikuni left, after looting it to its knees. Pathetic young Kenyans we have today.
We are also reminded of Boniface Chitayi, Wambui Waithaka who were bribed to call off a doctor’s strike in 2011, industrial action that would have changed the future of healthcare in this country. The sort of young pathetic living organisms prowling this earth, who have no honor or shame who only think about their stomachs.
Why are Kenyans like these?