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{
    "id": 905778,
    "url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/905778/?format=api",
    "text_counter": 239,
    "type": "speech",
    "speaker_name": "Sen. (Prof). Ongeri",
    "speaker_title": "",
    "speaker": {
        "id": 124,
        "legal_name": "Samson Kegeo Ongeri",
        "slug": "samson-ongeri"
    },
    "content": "If I had weighed in earlier during the debate, when the issues of argument that were coming out, I would have simply told you that more than 75 per cent of Kenyans suffer from depression. Depression need not be illness in itself because it may be something that affects your mood, thinking and behaviour. All these three elements put together on a higher proportion, you can safely say that somebody might be suffering from a mental illness. It does not mean the kind of mental lunacy that we talked about earlier. It does not mean the violent behavior, but even a temporally destabilization of the mood, behaviour and thinking of a person. Just imagine how many times you go through many changes in mood. How many times do you experience certain queer behaviour either within or outside your family or in a class or a debate like this? There are many occasions that you go through these behavioural changes. Also, how many times do you change your thinking? When you want to do a, b, c and d, suddenly, midway, you change it? That does not mean that you are suffering from a catastrophic mental disease; far from it. It is only that at that time, your mind may not be in a state that you can argue properly."
}