Critical analysis of የበቄ/ሖረስ thought by ጫት-ጂቢቲ!
Horus’s primary weakness lies in his tendency to pursue an idealized vision of Ethiopia that often overlooks the country’s complex and fragile realities. While he promotes unity, strength, and national resurgence, he frequently glosses over entrenched issues like ethnic federalism, political fragmentation, economic inequality, and governance failures. His arguments are typically broad, symbolic, and heavily self-referential—anchored in recurring “prophecies” and ideological declarations rather than grounded policy or nuanced analysis. This leads to a perception of grandiosity, with critics pointing to his rigid framing, confrontational tone, and limited engagement with opposing views. In aiming for prophetic clarity, Horus often misses the messy, incremental, and deeply human nature of Ethiopia’s socio-political evolution.
Re: Critical analysis of የበቄ/ሖረስ thought by ጫት-ጂቢቲ!
A final nail on the dead man already in the casket. Oh, my God!Odie wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:36Horus’s primary weakness lies in his tendency to pursue an idealized vision of Ethiopia that often overlooks the country’s complex and fragile realities. While he promotes unity, strength, and national resurgence, he frequently glosses over entrenched issues like ethnic federalism, political fragmentation, economic inequality, and governance failures. His arguments are typically broad, symbolic, and heavily self-referential—anchored in recurring “prophecies” and ideological declarations rather than grounded policy or nuanced analysis. This leads to a perception of grandiosity, with critics pointing to his rigid framing, confrontational tone, and limited engagement with opposing views. In aiming for prophetic clarity, Horus often misses the messy, incremental, and deeply human nature of Ethiopia’s socio-political evolution.
There is a kill with a bullet in between the eyes and there is gruesome beheading with a sharp kitchen knife. This is it, Whorus. You asked for it!!


Re: Critical analysis of የበቄ/ሖረስ thought by ጫት-ጂቢቲ!
The most serious thing of whorus life is blood-corridor, political green park and political wheat export. Also, political digital whatever! He does not care who owns Ethiopia but like a young man who loved unreachable beautiful girl, he will continue his infatuation of Ethiopia instead of addressing practical problems of that country. He does not care if PP drones his own village as he is out of touchDama wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:51A final nail on the dead man already in the casket. Oh, my God!Odie wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:36Horus’s primary weakness lies in his tendency to pursue an idealized vision of Ethiopia that often overlooks the country’s complex and fragile realities. While he promotes unity, strength, and national resurgence, he frequently glosses over entrenched issues like ethnic federalism, political fragmentation, economic inequality, and governance failures. His arguments are typically broad, symbolic, and heavily self-referential—anchored in recurring “prophecies” and ideological declarations rather than grounded policy or nuanced analysis. This leads to a perception of grandiosity, with critics pointing to his rigid framing, confrontational tone, and limited engagement with opposing views. In aiming for prophetic clarity, Horus often misses the messy, incremental, and deeply human nature of Ethiopia’s socio-political evolution.
There is a kill with a bullet in between the eyes and there is gruesome beheading with a sharp kitchen knife. This is it, Whorus. You asked for it!!
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Re: Critical analysis of የበቄ/ሖረስ thought by ጫት-ጂቢቲ!
Odie wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:58The most serious thing of whorus life is blood-corridor, political green park and political wheat export. Also, political digital whatever! He does not care who owns Ethiopia but like a young man who loved unreachable beautiful girl, he will continue his infatuation of Ethiopia instead of addressing practical problems of that country. He does not care if PP drones his own village as he is out of touchDama wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:51A final nail on the dead man already in the casket. Oh, my God!Odie wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:36Horus’s primary weakness lies in his tendency to pursue an idealized vision of Ethiopia that often overlooks the country’s complex and fragile realities. While he promotes unity, strength, and national resurgence, he frequently glosses over entrenched issues like ethnic federalism, political fragmentation, economic inequality, and governance failures. His arguments are typically broad, symbolic, and heavily self-referential—anchored in recurring “prophecies” and ideological declarations rather than grounded policy or nuanced analysis. This leads to a perception of grandiosity, with critics pointing to his rigid framing, confrontational tone, and limited engagement with opposing views. In aiming for prophetic clarity, Horus often misses the messy, incremental, and deeply human nature of Ethiopia’s socio-political evolution.
There is a kill with a bullet in between the eyes and there is gruesome beheading with a sharp kitchen knife. This is it, Whorus. You asked for it!!
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We have witnessed his croc tears for the 40 Kistanes burnt to death in their sleep, some shot to death and others maimed and succumbed to their injuries. Some thing wrong with our Gurage brothers.


Re: Critical analysis of የበቄ/ሖረስ thought by ጫት-ጂቢቲ!
Correct!Dama wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 18:05Odie wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:58The most serious thing of whorus life is blood-corridor, political green park and political wheat export. Also, political digital whatever! He does not care who owns Ethiopia but like a young man who loved unreachable beautiful girl, he will continue his infatuation of Ethiopia instead of addressing practical problems of that country. He does not care if PP drones his own village as he is out of touchDama wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:51A final nail on the dead man already in the casket. Oh, my God!Odie wrote: ↑12 Jul 2025, 17:36Horus’s primary weakness lies in his tendency to pursue an idealized vision of Ethiopia that often overlooks the country’s complex and fragile realities. While he promotes unity, strength, and national resurgence, he frequently glosses over entrenched issues like ethnic federalism, political fragmentation, economic inequality, and governance failures. His arguments are typically broad, symbolic, and heavily self-referential—anchored in recurring “prophecies” and ideological declarations rather than grounded policy or nuanced analysis. This leads to a perception of grandiosity, with critics pointing to his rigid framing, confrontational tone, and limited engagement with opposing views. In aiming for prophetic clarity, Horus often misses the messy, incremental, and deeply human nature of Ethiopia’s socio-political evolution.
There is a kill with a bullet in between the eyes and there is gruesome beheading with a sharp kitchen knife. This is it, Whorus. You asked for it!!
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We have witnessed his croc tears for the 40 Kistanes burnt to death in their sleep, some shot to death and others maimed and succumbed to their injuries. Some thing wrong with our Gurage brothers.
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Pragmatism and realism gone bankrupt
