Now he’s out here telling Bobi Wine: “My son, you don’t understand Kaguta Museveni.”
Translation? “You’re arguing with the architect before reading the blueprint.”
Musevenomics isn’t witchcraft, my friends it’s economics with a village conscience. It simply says: “Before you build a mansion in Kampala, build discipline in your home.”

It’s not Marxist. It’s not capitalist. Let’s call it Muzeevist a fusion of faith, common sense, and ekibaro (calculation).
It’s why every parish is now a business class, every SACCO a mini-IMF, and every boda stage an MBA in survival economics.

Crispin Kaheru wrote that Uganda’s renewal has four pillars: Operation Harmony, Humanised Progress, Heritage, and Hope. Translation for my village aunties: Stop fighting on Facebook and X and start farming, forgiving, and forwarding value.

Because you can’t tweet your way out of poverty; you must budget your way out.
Even Heaven had a budget, that’s why it saved for nine months before your arrival!
Now, of course, the usual suspects will say, “Ah, she’s bum-licking again.”
But before you diagnose patriotism as sycophancy, at least withdraw from socials, read some history, study the doctrines, and understand where Uganda’s future is actually headed.
Some of us are not clapping for personalities, we’re clapping for principles that have kept this country standing when others fell. ( I won’t come back to defend this statement-you know)
Meanwhile, Saleh is like that uncle who may look quiet at the burial but owns half the goats.
He speaks once, and suddenly every economist in Kampala starts Googling Musevenomics for dummies.
Let’s give credit where due — this philosophy moved Uganda from war-economy to welfare-economy, and now from welfare to wealth-creation.
From subsistence to spreadsheets.
From borrowing sugar to exporting coffee.
So before you call the family names, first understand the doctrine. Musevenomics is not about worshipping a man; it’s about mastering a mindset: gratitude, stewardship, and governance.
Because in the end, politics retires. But principles build legacies.
The Writer is Dr. Okello Sharon Nagenjwa, the Girl From Oyam, Wildlife Conservationist and development activist.
Check it out here https://x.com/girlfromoyam/

