Christiana Agyapong, stop the clever talk you failed. How would you despise morality for pretense? How can a woman like you be disingenuous? “When you hear Kennedy Agyapong fighting on the radio, he’s fighting for party members”? Please! That kind of twisted moral logic doesn’t fool anyone. You’re trying to baptize bad temper and violence as loyalty. No moralist will ever be comfortable with that.
You couldn’t manage your own intemperate husband with all your sweet talk, now you want to manage public perception? Spare us with this posture defence. You are blamable for pushing Kennedy Agyapong to wallow deeply in the mud that no amount of cleansing can ever make him clean again. yet no amount of scrubbing, sanctimony, or holy water can wash off the mud he so proudly wallows in. God have Mercy!
And where are the other 4 wives and seven baby mamas or they’re not allowed to speak? “Where Are The Other Nine ?” Jesus asked. What would their testimonies be like? Because Kennedy Agyapong isn’t a one-woman man — he’s a man of twelve wives and counting, a reason why he professed to Islam in the early 2000s and emotionally driven for sensational condemnation of Christianity. He started playing the fine Christian gentleman, when he saw he would be contesting with Muslim.
Thus, Mrs. Christina Agyepong on a “clean-up mission”, polishing Kennedy’s image like brass before a parade. She’s everywhere, smiling, sanitizing, softening the tone, and preaching her husband’s “new chapter.” But Ghana knows detergent can’t wash character.
If love truly advises, then where was that advice when the man was collecting wives like political constituencies? A true partner would’ve whispered, “Honey, one nation, one wife policy, please.” But instead, here we are, five wives, seven baby mamas, and 22 children, each one named after a business empire. Family planning by government contract, not by conscience.
Now the same man, whose empire was built on the labor of grassroots and grease of government deals, wants to preach discipline and patriotism. His supporters call it success; the streets call it monopoly and others call it greed. .
And Madam is there, smiling through it all, rehearsing her First Lady look. But no matter how well you sweep, you can’t clean a storm. You can manage image, but you can’t manufacture integrity. Ghana has seen enough political laundry to know when someone’s washing dirty linen in holy water.
The “Father of Indiscipline” doesn’t need a PR wife, he needs repentance.
Osɔfo Nii Naate Atswele Agbo Nartey

