Gossip

Singer Juliana Kanyomozi at crossroads over her political allegiance

By Drone Reporters 

Kibaluma singer Juliana Kanyomozi is at crossroads over her political allegiance.  The Drone Media has gathered that Kanyomozi who is enthusiastically and emotionally attached to the National Unity Platform (NUP) President Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobi Wine; has a boy child named Taj, whose father is an NRM historical and supporter.

This has put the Kibaluma singer in a spot of bother every time she feels like bursting out to yell the slogans morale boosting NUP, something tickles her: “Taj’s milk will stop flowing.” the voice in Kanyomozi echoes.

Well, Kanyomozi has taken over 7 years without active singing and stage performance, but her upkeeps are reportedly maintained by the NRM historical, who is the father of Taj. This state of affairs puts Kanyomozi at tenterhooks.

For instance whenever she posts such statements on her pages she will spend sleepless nights over her child’s milk.  “Every time you push and test people’s tolerance, there will be a breaking point!!!! Uganda is better than this. Stop the violence,” Kanyomozi posted on her facebook page.

Juliana Kanyomozi holding her child-Taj

“You have come a long way @HEBobiwine, and yet you are still standing. You have inspired an entire generation. To say I’m proud of you is an understatement. I take my hat off for you! Big thank you to Brbie for always being your rock. Continue to walk in your calling. Be safe,” again Kanyomozi posted on her pages.

Reading her posts you realize she is emotional stuck; she reminisces her old days of “Mama Mbire” and “Taata Wabaana Yaanni” songs; which drives her back to Bobi Wine.  But then, the historical?  Who is the milk provider!

Well, you ought to forgive Kanyomozi for her emotions. She is emotional attached, like any other woman as research indicates below:

It is widely believed that females outperform males in emotional information processing. The present study tested whether the female superiority in emotional information processing exists in a naturalistic social-emotional context, if so, what the temporal dynamics underlies.

The behavioral and electrophysiological responses were recorded while participants were performing an interpersonal gambling game with opponents’ facial emotions given as feedback. The results yielded that emotional cues modulated the influence of monetary feedback on outcome valuation.

Critically, this modulation was more conspicuous in females: opponents’ angry expressions increased females’ risky tendency and decreased the amplitude of reward positivity. These findings indicate that females are more sensitive to emotional expressions in real interpersonal interactions, which is manifested in both early motivational salience detection and late conscious cognitive appraisal stages of feedback processing.