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Meria

Elder Lister
Staff member
A 27-year-old Solomon Kiplimo traveled 350 kilometers to kill his 23-year-old wife for cheating on him with a man named Dan Mwangi.

The suspect was informed of his wife’s continued infidelity by neighbors and he decided to make the journey from Nairobi to Iten just to eliminate her for ‘’shaming’’ him.

Nairobi-based Solomon traveled to Iten to confront his cheating wife after being informed about that she was having an affair with a man who would at times visit her in their matrimonial home.

Solomon arrived home in the evening and couldn’t find his wife. He asked neighbors to direct him to where his wife’s lover Dan Mwangi stayed.

He then proceeded to Mwangi’s home where he stormed into the house and found his wife in bed with him.

An enraged Solomon attacked the cheating pair; Mwangi managed to escape and left the poor woman to be attacked by her husband.

Keiyo North Sub-County Police Commander Tom Makori confirmed the incident, revealing that Solomon ultimately killed his wife using a kitchen knife.

“In the wee hours of Monday morning, he stormed Mwangi’s house in Kapsho Estate and found his wife in bed with the man. He, immediately, began assaulting the two. Mwangi, however, escaped. The suspect, thereafter, whipped out a kitchen knife and stabbed his wife 8 times in the stomach and chest,” Makori told the press.
 

upepo

Elder Lister
One of the questions I intend to answer before I die of old age: What are the biopsychosocial factors that push males to react dispropotionately when dealing with cheating partners? Why would you not react the same way if you, say, found someone using your bucket to fetch water? Or maybe when you discover a neighbor has stolen your soap?
 

Meria

Elder Lister
Staff member
One of the questions I intend to answer before I die of old age: What are the biopsychosocial factors that push males to react dispropotionately when dealing with cheating partners? Why would you not react the same way if you, say, found someone using your bucket to fetch water? Or maybe when you discover a neighbor has stolen your soap?
Coz hujui msemo usemao
It's just your turn its not yours
 

Aviator

Elder Lister
One of the questions I intend to answer before I die of old age: What are the biopsychosocial factors that push males to react dispropotionately when dealing with cheating partners? Why would you not react the same way if you, say, found someone using your bucket to fetch water? Or maybe when you discover a neighbor has stolen your soap?
Matters of the heart are not logical. Even the law acknowledges that.
 

The.Black.Templar

Elder Lister
Staff member
One of the questions I intend to answer before I die of old age: What are the biopsychosocial factors that push males to react dispropotionately when dealing with cheating partners? Why would you not react the same way if you, say, found someone using your bucket to fetch water? Or maybe when you discover a neighbor has stolen your soap?
It is called simping and a pussy scarcity mentality
 

Pakashume

Lister
One of the questions I intend to answer before I die of old age: What are the biopsychosocial factors that push males to react dispropotionately when dealing with cheating partners? Why would you not react the same way if you, say, found someone using your bucket to fetch water? Or maybe when you discover a neighbor has stolen your soap?
Why would a whole man ask such a question? How much time and money have you invested on a water bucket or soap in comparison to your WIFE??
 

upepo

Elder Lister
Why would a whole man ask such a question? How much time and money have you invested on a water bucket or soap in comparison to your WIFE??
In you could answer a half of that question in less than 15 years, your future generations may never need to work for a living.
 
One of the questions I intend to answer before I die of old age: What are the biopsychosocial factors that push males to react dispropotionately when dealing with cheating partners? Why would you not react the same way if you, say, found someone using your bucket to fetch water? Or maybe when you discover a neighbor has stolen your soap?
Emotional attachment
 

wrongturn

Elder Lister
One of the questions I intend to answer before I die of old age: What are the biopsychosocial factors that push males to react dispropotionately when dealing with cheating partners? Why would you not react the same way if you, say, found someone using your bucket to fetch water? Or maybe when you discover a neighbor has stolen your soap?

Because we're animals, even lions fight for females, it's just natural instinct , you would like to protect what is yours , you won't want to imagine another male shagging her.
 
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