Dearest Gentle Scrollers,
In the quiet corridors where the safety of our kingdom is decided, a conversation is vibrating through the web. I have been observing the discourse surrounding our security agencies those pillars of the Ministry of Interior and it seems the silk of our national stability is being tugged by the clumsy hands of political interest. SKC Consultant Richard Kumado, has shed light on a truth that many in the “Market Square” have long suspected: the sanctity of service is being traded for political capital.

If we are to weave a future where our recruitment exercises are draped in transparency and trusted by the public, the “Silent Observer” notes four essential reforms that must be enacted with royal precision:
- Silence the Politicians: Those in high office must remove their hands from the recruitment process entirely.
- Cease the Chatter: Let the political class stop using these exercises as fodder for their own campaigns.
- End the Commerce of Ambition: We must stop charging our youth and commercializing the path to national service.
- Restore the Autonomy of the Uniform: Allow the security agencies themselves to manage their own ranks.

onsider the military a bastion of discipline that understands the art of the “Silent Observer”. We all remember the tragic vibrations of the El-Wak stampede and the cacophony of political noise that followed. Yet, while the politicians shouted, the military quietly restructured, mobilized, and completed their recruitment without a single unseemly headline.
They did not seek the spotlight; they simply performed their duty. This is the standard of resourcefulness that our other agencies must adopt. When the politicians step out of the space, the true work can finally begin.

As we look toward the horizon, we must also be creative about our productive environment. The climate crisis, while a challenge, is also a loom that will weave countless new jobs for our people and government agencies if we have the grace to be proactive. Without this vibrancy, our economy will lose its “boozum,” and the web will grow fragile.
Yours Truly,
Your Silent Observer