YoniZ

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Everything posted by YoniZ

  1. I have chaged the heading bit as I have seen the video again. Hope I was wrong!
  2. Thanks Adam, If you sure that is the case and those are not kids but in their 20s. I am still not confinced about the ages though and hope you are right and it is me who panicked.
  3. I have came across a terrible video image at Somali tube website called Fiirso.com in what seems a child molesting case which involves up to five Somali kids. The girls ages seem between 10-15 and you can see clearly at the last part of the video a white man in his 50s wearing English national football t-shirt. The guy is sitting on the bed with 4 of the girls showing them what seems graphical scenes in a laptop, you here at back ground a 5th girl taking the video footage. I have posted the link of this video to the UK’s child protection unit police. Bros and sisters, I don’t know if I am panicking for nothing (I ask Allah that to be the case) but if you see this as a serious matter, please help these poor girls and the only why we can help is to inform the right authority who can deal with this case and please avoid the culture of condemning and shaming because that wouldn’t help them. Walllahi I am still shaking when I have seen this. Anyone who can take this matter to the right direction please feel free and proud to take to the authority. I do appologise if I have caused any stress for the Fiirso.com I guess they not feel the gravity of this matter as I think. I have already posted to comments asking them to refer this to the right authority. Here is the link: http://www.fiirso.co m/fadaro-xishoodkii- katagay-waxaan-dadba y-ku-aftirsadaan/voi p-free-calls-video_5 ec25dcb0.html Peace, Yoniz
  4. Here the Article( it is quite long) The Arabs Between fitna, fawda and the deep blue sea. Jan 10th 2008 | CAIRO From The Economist print edition Why George Bush, touring the Middle East this week, is finding the Arabs in a gloomy mood IT IS not easy to be an Arab these days. If you are old, the place where you live is likely to have changed so much that little seems friendly and familiar. If you are young, years of rote learning in dreary state schools did not prepare you well for this new world. In your own country you have few rights. Travel abroad and they take you for a terrorist. Even your leaders don't count for much in the wider world. Some are big on money, others on bombast, but few are inspiring or visionary. These are gross generalisations, of course. Huge differences persist among 300m-odd Arabic speakers and 22 countries of the Arab League. With oil prices touching record highs, some Arab economies are booming. The gulf between a Darfuri refugee and a Porsche-driving financier in Dubai is as great as between any two people on earth. Yet to travel through the Arab world right now is to experience a peculiar sameness of spirit. Particularly among people under 30, who make up the vast majority of Arabs, the mood is one of disgruntlement and doubt. Factors that contribute to the gloom include the discombobulating impact of one of the world's fastest population growth rates, failing public-education systems and the resilience of social traditions often illsuited to the urban lifestyle that is now the Arab norm. But it is politics above all that shapes this generation's discontent. In the world at large, things have not looked good for the Arabs for a long time. The generation that emerged after the second world war came to believe in the inevitability of an Arab renaissance after centuries of domination by Ottoman Turks and European imperialists. Within this scheme of Arab progress, the problem of Palestine stuck out like a troublesome nail. Defeat in the 1967 war with Israel shattered many dreams. Yet even after Israel's victory Palestine remained a touchstone for Arabs everywhere. Sooner or later, it was felt, justice would be done. That confidence has taken a beating of late. Few Arabs expect the peace initiative George Bush launched in Annapolis last November to achieve anything. And the schism between Hamas and Fatah has shaken underlying assumptions. If the Palestinians cannot unite in their own cause, why should other Arabs help them? And which side to support? For fellow Arabs, as for alestinians themselves, the clash between a heart that cries “resist” and a head that counsels compromise has seldom been more perplexing. As in Palestine, so in Iraq. In 2003 America's invasion produced all but universal Arab outrage. From afar, Iraqi “resistance” looked both natural and noble. But as Iraq has grown messier, the rights and wrongs have grown harder for Arabs to disentangle. There are few heroes in a cast that includes mass killers from al-Qaeda, brutal Shia militias, criminal gangs, Kurdish separatists and corrupt politicians as well as the American occupiers. Elsewhere in the region, it has become harder for thoughtful Arabs to blame the government-inspired slaughter in the Darfur region of Sudan or the stalemate between Lebanon's religious sects on a nefarious American foreign policy. Many Arabs still see Mr Bush's “war on terrorism” as a crusade against Islam. But many also note that al-Qaeda-style jihadism has killed more Muslims, from Morocco to Saudi Arabia to the squalid Palestinian refugee camps of Lebanon, than “infidels”. In past decades, Arabs looked to leaders for guidance. Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser and Anwar Sadat, Tunisia's modernising secularist, Habib Bourguiba, and Kings Hussein of Jordan, Hassan II of Morocco and Faisal of Saudi Arabia were all flawed men. Yet they, and even monsters such as Saddam Hussein and Hafez Assad, enjoyed some popular appeal as nation-builders. Most of today's leaders, by contrast, lack an inspirational project. Nor is any single country a natural leader of the Arabs. Egypt under the 26-year-long rule of Hosni Mubarak is no longer the champion of “Arabism”. Saudi Arabia has vast oil wealth but a mixed record in diplomacy: its attempt last year to reconcile Fatah and Hamas unravelled with humiliating speed. It may be a good thing that the personality-based leadership of the 1960s and 1970s has fallen out of fashion. Unfortunately, it has not been replaced by more institutionally-based systems of rule, let alone— for all the aid and speechifying of Western do-gooders—by democracy. Elections are more frequent and opposition parties and the press somewhat freer. But this is often a case of adopting the outward shape of reform without the substance. Regimes point to the existence of parliaments, while hiding the tricks used to pack them with friends and exclude real opposition. They can trumpet privatisation programmes that reduce the role of the state, while obscuring the fact that many of the beneficiaries are regime cronies. The marginally freer press makes for more colourful news-stands. But some opening was probably inescapable, due to the impact of hard-to-block new media, via satellites and the internet. Governments have simply switched from absolute control of information, for example through state television monopolies, to enacting laws that criminalise “spreading false information” or “disrespecting state institutions”. The supposedly liberalising, pro-Western governments of Morocco, Jordan, Tunisia and Egypt have all used such means to stifle dissent. Syria under Hafez Assad used to hurl dissidents into prison without much ado. His “modernising” son Bashar has them tried first. But they still end up in the slammer. Stratagems such as these suck the vitality out of politics. Morocco is one of the bolder Arab reformers. Yet despite rising prosperity, a relatively free press and multi-party elections, Moroccans have grown increasingly sceptical of a political process that remains tightly, if elegantly, circumscribed. As a result, voter turnout has steadily declined over the past two decades. In Egypt, fewer than one in ten voters bothered to turn out for recent polls. Political scientists have long blamed oil wealth—and the rentier economy that so often goes along with it—for the survival of Arab authoritarianism. No taxation without representation, said America's revolutionaries. Arab governments have inverted this refrain: by appropriating national energy resources and other rents, they neatly absolve themselves of the need to levy heavy taxes and therefore to win the consent of the governed. 'The devil you know' A less obvious source of state power is a pervasive fear of what might happen in its absence. In many Arab countries loyalty to the state is weaker than loyalty to a sub-grouping based on kinship, ethnicity, religion or region. This is hardly a unique problem; many successful democracies still struggle with it. But Muslims have, in addition, yet to resolve the essential question of whether laws should emanate from the people or from God. Such points may seem abstract but they have practical consequences. In most Arab countries, regimes hold power by virtue of tradition or through military-backed movements that claim to represent the will of the masses. Where top-down authority collapses, as it did in post-Saddam Iraq or in the Palestinian territories after Arafat, it has been very hard for bottom-up politics to repair the damage. In such circumstances, it is not surprising that people prefer the devil they know to the fitna (communal strife) or fawda (chaos) that seem all too likely to replace it. This makes Arabs suspicious not just of Western advocates of democracy but also of parties such as the Muslim Brotherhood, which advocate change in the name of Islam. It is instructive to note that when such movements are confronted with bread-and-butter issues they tend to split between pragmatists and ideologues, leaving supporters befuddled. Even Egypt's highly disciplined Muslim Brothers, for example, are riven by tensions between older hardliners and younger liberals. The bleakness of political prospects is only one aspect of the current Arab malaise. The rigid social structures and strong family ties that form part of the cohesive strength of Arab societies have negative consequences too. Sex out of wedlock remains taboo, yet the cost of lavish weddings, hefty dowry payments and the bridal requirement of a furnished, paid-for home have pushed the average age of marriage in many Arab countries into the 30s. The resulting frustration is an underlying cause of troubles from youth delinquency to religious extremism. Paternalistic social norms hold women back, even though their legal status is improving. 'Let them learn about the world' Much fanfare has surrounded the release, over the past few years, of a series of UN-sponsored reports on human development painting a picture of Arab shortcomings that range from women's treatment to the feeble trickle of translation into Arabic of new knowledge. An oft-quoted statistic from the reports is that the amount of literature translated into Spanish in a single year exceeds the entire corpus of what has been translated into Arabic in 1,000 years. If there is a common thread in many of these failings, it is poor education. Studies show a strong link between levels of schooling and attitudes to women's rights. Harder to prove, but equally valid by anecdotal evidence, is a link between breadth of reading and tolerance of diversity. Religious texts still out-sell every other form of literature in most Arab countries. This may promote punctilious practice of the faith, but hardly equips people for a bewildering world of ever-increasing choice. Although the proportion of Arabs with university degrees is growing rapidly, quality lags far behind. An annual ranking of the world's top 500 universities, compiled by Shanghai's Jiao Tong University, includes only one Arab institution compared with seven universities in tiny Israel. Some Arab governments are at last responding. Qatar and Saudi Arabia have hired well-known consulting firms to revamp public-school systems designed in the 1950s. Even Syria has relaxed the state monopoly of higher education. Private universities are flourishing everywhere, sometimes with generous state aid. Dubai's Sheikh Muhammad Maktoum has pledged $10 billion to create a foundation to advance knowledge. Saudi Arabia has committed some $3 billion to build what officials promise will be a world-class postgraduate institute that will be beyond the supervision of the religiously conservative education ministry, and where men and women will be allowed to mingle. Another cause for hope, just now, is the rapid growth of most Arab economies. For each of the past six years the Arab world has, by some estimates, grown faster by at least a percentage point than the world as a whole. Record oil prices have helped a lot. So has demography: birth-rates are falling after a period of high growth, increasing the proportion of wage earners to dependants. This has boosted consumer industries, as have reforms to ease investment and trade. Give me five more years of 7% growth, one Egyptian minister is fond of saying, and many of our other problems will fade. Maybe.
  5. It is really sad to know how Arabs never learn from their past mistakes and they are still played(adversely) against each other and against their neigbours. Last month I came across 'The Economist' article headed "ARABS Between fitna, fawda and the deep blue sea". What amazed me most (though I disagree on many aspects in the article) was the depth knowledge of the Arab psyco politics in that article. If somebody knows you that well! you better start worrying how much do you know about them?
  6. Originally posted by Northerner: [QB] The $14 Million License Plate Last weekend, a man paid $14 million for a license plate at a charity auction in Abu Dhabi. A very smart way of milking ****** tight-businessman who rather spend to fulfil his lame- fantisies than donate to good causes and charities. Kudos to that particular charity Charities need to adopt more of those creative stratigies and attract the attention of more sophisticated (Fat Cats) in an entertaining format.
  7. Somali: When I want get straight to the point. Arabic: When I feel Overly-emotional. English: To to sound like emotionless professional
  8. Well put Xubeer, Afka caano geel lagaaga qabay
  9. The whole topic seems to me as a well-orchestrated and well-aimed rant(Smash and Grab jealousy-style), rather than feeling sympathy for the above mentioned wife. I hate to say that, but today Faarixs have the luxury to marry a newly graduated Raaliyo from back home, and it won't take more than a year for her to understand life in the West at the sametime hold firm to her somali culture. The only advice I will give to the sister who started this topic, and ofcourse the whole Westrenized Xalimos Brigade (who feel some how threatened) is to give up the "superiority complex" idea, and appreciate a little bit more in your culture.
  10. Lily, Smacking remains legal where I live, as the majority rightly oppose the presence of the Big Brother State in their living rooms.
  11. What is wrong with smacking kids as a form of dicipline? It could also show affection towards the wife if she got smacked occasionally.
  12. Originally posted by Buuxo: [QB] do people actually get paid to do these research ? Exactly. A feel-good factor kind of study Atkins Diet will be proud of this. Nowadays those kind of studies are easily manipulated so as to mislead. They are usually designed to give some pressure groups or sometimes individuals the cutting edge they are after. This looks like the scientific version of Mika's "BIG GIRL (YOU ARE BEAUTIFUL)"
  13. By the time someone achieves to think/plan about those 90 points, it will be too late to get married. You need only very few points to know the person you can life with. Marriage is some how a risk taking process, and that is why divorce come as an option though the last resort one.
  14. There survey could be flawed by not using a fifth choice of "neutral/I dont know". Overall it is interesting idea.
  15. Economic Left/Right: -6.88 Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: 1.59 very interesting findings!
  16. Yaaaaaaaaaaaabka aduunka, :eek: This board should be rated as an over 18.
  17. Congrats to founder of this bank. Islamic banks are doing a great job to serve their communities. Being a Muslim living in the West, it is impossible to not have a bank account because of the payment system in these countries. If that is the case, Hypothetically speaking: Will I use Westren banks founded on Riba and Greed that will not hassitate to make profit by any means possible even if they claim that, they have a Shariah compliant accounts! or an Islamic bank where I am assured, my money will not be used in unethical manner(relegion wise) and have their Shariah complience board(among them Scholars that have a weight in the Muslim World). The choice is simple, I will choose in any occation the Islamic bank although they are not perfect.
  18. What an inspiring story! Through education, people can overcome so many hardships and prove themselves agaisnt all the odds. This shows that, nothing is unachievable in this world. I am very pleased to see the touching story of the brother. And equally overwhelmed to know that despite the harsh living of our brothers in those Kenyan camps, there a hope. His father is "truly a hero".
  19. Waa la isku wareersan yahay meeshaan :confused: Gulf of misunderstanding separates Faraxis from Xalimos today and the "vice-versa". Educated Xalimos tend to sell their credentials in cheap inta uusan wiishka ku yeerin. Where Farax Geeks normally scared of the former to out-smart & out-shine intentionally look for someone that may appreciate ookiyaalaha weyn iyo xeyraanka laga dhaxlay buugaagta. This topic is an ideal project for the someone aiming to study Sociology in their Postgrads.
  20. CIID WANAAGSAN DHAMAAN BAHDA SOLers.
  21. Good boy. Atleast he is trying hard enough to share his Essays with Nomand Youtubers. Kudos to him.
  22. YoniZ

    Waa lasoo furay

    Raginaan kalmada Furitan kaftanka ka dhigaya, inaysan kaftan galin miyaaney la socon. "Gabdhaha aqaladooda jooga dheeldheel ha ku furina". Midda kale waa Ramadan ee laqwiga hala yareesto saxibayaal. Ramadan Karim dhamaan
  23. Originally posted by me: Ok stop this xalimo feel good topic! Its WAR! between males and females. A full scale open-ended WAR, Xs vs Fs before the Ramadan truce. Although, who will land the KO is open to discussion, it is clear though that Xs camp are leading the score in 6 to 5 rounds. Roobleh, Older women Rock, and dont forget "those who Rock live longer"
  24. There is an immense difficulties finding a reasonable and at the sametime ready-for-commitment individual(both genders ofcourse) in whole UK. If you are educated in your mid/late 20s and don't want give-in to the family choice temptation, there is a sense of powerless and frustration all the time. However, that doesnt mean to give-up looking for your choice. The worst case-scenario is, to end-up in a kind of frustration/protest marriage. Good luck to anyone in the same boat. :confused: