The moral policeman says that he stumbled upon the group
when Kenyans online started tagging him on posts that they thought should be
brought to his attention as the regulator.
”I think Kilimani Mums deserve a Cabinet post. The
conversations there can inform national policy. I got into the group by
default. Guys started tagging me staff that they thought requires my attention
as a regulator. “Has Mutua seen this?” Wait until the moral police gets wind of
it… bla bla bla! So every so often I get a notification on Facebook and on
checking I stray into some very strange but useful conversations,” he said on
social media.
The group, he says not only provides comic relief but
represents Kenya in its diversity; ‘the serious, the funny, the peculiar, the
intelligent.’
Unlike Twitter, Kilimani mums does not have any political
leanings and is a good stress reliever.
”And unlike Kenyans on Twitter, another robust army of
netizens with opinions on all subjects under the sun, Kilimani Mums has no
political inclinations. I think the President should consider a Cabinet slot
for this hilarious group of Kenyans who provide such stress relief and humour,”
he said.
”But most importantly, we can work with the minister to
provide guidelines for classification of Kilimani Mums content on a
self-regulatory model!” he opined.