Mooge

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Everything posted by Mooge

  1. don't be fooled by beard and khamees niyoow. Islam is internal character.
  2. ONLF will stop this niyoow. it will never materialize. Iley and his friends know that this is impossible.
  3. lol@ the presidency was a loan and the loan should be returned to our sub-clan. our horse is ready to run. loool. niyoow somaliland has many characters. i couldn't resist.
  4. The original owner of the house speaks out. Warsaxaafadeed:Drs Kiin Xirsi Faarax oo Aabaheed 1973-dii Maxamed Siyaad Barre ku dilay Xabsi gudahiisa,wuxuuna Aabaheed ahaa Maamulihii Hoteeladda Jubba iyo Shabeele: Anigoo ah Drs Kiin Xirsi Faarax, degan dalka Suudaan, waxna kadhiga Jaamcad dalka suudaan ku taal, kasoo shaqeeyey Safaarada Soomaaliya ay ku leedahay dalka Sudan oon ka ahaa Qunsulka marna Qeybta Ganacsiga ( Commercial Attaché), sanadihii udhexeeyey 2007-2013. . Waxaan dhawaan ka maqlay baraha internet ka in la isku haysto dhul dawladii Soomaaliya ee Madaxweyne Maxamed Siyaad Barre ay kala wareegtay aabahay, markii hore wax loogu yeeray dan guud, markii dambana lasiiyey qof shakhsi ah oo ahaa darawalkii Maxamad Siyaad Barre: Xaashi Furre, kadibna uu dhistay dhulkaas aabahay lagala wareegay. Aabahay Xirsi Faarax Ciise , wuxuu ahaan jiray Maareeyaha hoteelada ay dawladu lahayd oo kala ahaa Jubba iyo Shabeele, Kadibna waxaa xirtay xukuumadii Maxamed Siyaad Barre (1970-1973), waxaana aakhirkii lagu dilay xabsigii uu ku jiray sannadku markuu ahaa 1973. . Waxaan beryahan maqlaynay gabdho jooga magaalada Muqdisho oo sheegtay inay yihiin ilma Xirsi Faarax, dhulkaasna iyo guriga kadhisanna ay leeyihiin oo laga dhacay aabahood! Waxaan cadayneenaa in gabdhahaasi ay been tahay sheegashadooda oo ah inay yihiin ilma Xirsi Faarax iyo in dhulkaas laga dhacay. Dawlada Soomaaliya iyo gaar ahaan xafiisyada ay arintani khusayso waxaan ku wargalinayaa in sheegashada gabdhaha ku andacoonaya inay yihiin ilma Xirsi Faarax lagana dhacay dhulka uu dhistay Xaashi furre, kuna yaal degmada Cabdicasiis ee magaalada Muqdisho aysan lahayn gabdhaha hada ku dacwinaya gurigaas. Dhulkan asalkiisana waxaa iskalahaa aabahay Xirsi Faarax dawladii Maxamed Siyaad Barre ayaana xoog uga qaadatay, sidaas awgeed waxaan cadaynayaa anoo ku hadlaya magaca reer Xirsi Faarax oo hada ku kala nool Sudan, Canada iyo USA in aabahay uu lahaa cid aan anaga ahayna aysan dhulkaas ku qabsan karin ninkii dhistay dhulka oo magaciisa iyo muuqiisaba aan kadaawanay shaashadaha isagoo laga waraysanayo. Waxaan si deg deg ah uqabsanaynaa Qareen namatala oo faragalin deg deg ah kusameeya arintan, una dhaxeeya Xaashi Furre Oo dhulka ay siisay dawladii Maxamed Siyaad, dhistayna iyo ilma Xirsi Faarax oo anaga ah aniguna aan ku hadlayo magacooda waa walaalahay ilma Xirsi Faarax Ciise. Hadaba Shacabka Soomaaliyeed iyo dawladaba, waxaan ku wargalinaynaa gabdhaha dacwoonaya inaysan xaq ulahayn inay sheegtaan inay yihiin ilma Xirsi Faarax iyo inay dhulka leeyihiinba oo ay been abuuranayaan, ooy rabaan anagoo nool inay sheegtaan inay yihiin ilma Xirsi Faarax taasoo aad nooga fajicisay umadii soomaaliyeed oo maqashayna ay aad ulayaabanyihiin boobka Muqdisho kasocda heerka uu gaarsiisan yahay. Waxaa arinta gurigan iyo dhulkan la isku haysto ee kuyaal xaafada Cabdicasiis, lagana saaray Xaashi oo darawal u'ahaan jiray madaxweynihii hore ee Maxamed Siyaad Barre, waxaa kawada hadli Kara oo qura Ilma Xirsi Faarax oo anaga ah, iyo Xaashi Furre iyo qoyskiisa oo qura. Waxaa layaab leh qof intii ladilay, oo xaqdaro lagu dilay, wuxuu lahaana oo dhanna laga dhacay, dhulkiisiina darawalkii Maxamad siyaad lasiiyay, haddana ay kuhaystaan gabdho si been abuura kusheeganaya inay yihiin ilmihii ninkii dhulka laga dhacay!. وَاتّقُواْ يَوْماً تُرْجَعُونَ فِيهِ إِلَى اللّهِ ثُمّ تُوَفّىَ كُلّ نَفْسٍ مّا كَسَبَتْ وَهُمْ لاَ يُظْلَمُونَ Waxaa la igala soo xiriira karaa: Tell :00 249 922 355 566 / 00 249 911 960 838 Email: kinhersi1@gmail.com Drs Kin Hersi Farah Isse Shacabkamedia-Beyra-Puntland Runta Kama-Xıshoono Email:Shacabkamedia@live.com
  5. Ibrahim is a former rapper who managed the family’s grocery business in California. lool. from a rapping lyrics to wrapping sandwiches in a New York dungeon. the culinary revolution is here niyoow. lol
  6. Mooge

    Hot In Here

    blueleey, don't be tricked by the tahriib Wayre who was recently returned at the Slovenia border, he will have to wait a little to get to your destination. lool. i think he is back to Serbian cave camps now. things are tough for our friend Wayre. things are tough. lol
  7. ^^ Tallaabo wants to see your reaction. lol. don't fall for his tricks. he is exactly what he described himself but want to see how Blueleey insults people like him. haha.
  8. Balondey, niyoow silanyo is using and abusing the chest-beating SL herd. Saalax figured it out a long time ago, but I guess some are still in the dark. long live SL. looool
  9. Deep-rooted structural realities means that Saudi Arabia is indeed on the brink of protracted state-failure, a process likely to take-off in the next few years On Tuesday 22 September, Middle East Eye broke the story of a senior member of the Saudi royal family calling for a “change” in leadership to fend off the kingdom’s collapse. In a letter circulated among Saudi princes, its author, a grandson of the late King Abdulaziz Ibn Saud, blamed incumbent King Salman for creating unprecedented problems that endangered the monarchy’s continued survival. “We will not be able to stop the draining of money, the political adolescence, and the military risks unless we change the methods of decision making, even if that implied changing the king himself,” warned the letter. Whether or not an internal royal coup is round the corner – and informed observers think such a prospect “fanciful” – the letter’s analysis of Saudi Arabia’s dire predicament is startlingly accurate. Like many countries in the region before it, Saudi Arabia is on the brink of a perfect storm of interconnected challenges that, if history is anything to judge by, will be the monarchy’s undoing well within the next decade. Black gold hemorrhage The biggest elephant in the room is oil. Saudi Arabia’s primary source of revenues, of course, is oil exports. For the last few years, the kingdom has pumped at record levels to sustain production, keeping oil prices low, undermining competing oil producers around the world who cannot afford to stay in business at such tiny profit margins, and paving the way for Saudi petro-dominance. But Saudi Arabia’s spare capacity to pump like crazy can only last so long. A new peer-reviewed study in the Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering anticipates that Saudi Arabia will experience a peak in its oil production, followed by inexorable decline, in 2028 – that’s just 13 years away. This could well underestimate the extent of the problem. According to the Export Land Model (ELM) created by Texas petroleum geologist Jeffrey J Brown and Dr Sam Foucher, the key issue is not oil production alone, but the capacity to translate production into exports against rising rates of domestic consumption. Brown and Foucher showed that the inflection point to watch out for is when an oil producer can no longer increase the quantity of oil sales abroad because of the need to meet rising domestic energy demand. In 2008, they found that Saudi net oil exports had already begun declining as of 2006. They forecast that this trend would continue. They were right. From 2005 to 2015, Saudi net exports have experienced an annual decline rate of 1.4 percent, within the range predicted by Brown and Foucher. A report by Citigroup recently predicted that net exports would plummet to zero in the next 15 years. From riches to rags This means that Saudi state revenues, 80 percent of which come from oil sales, are heading downwards, terminally. Saudi Arabia is the region’s biggest energy consumer, domestic demand having increased by 7.5 percent over the last five years – driven largely by population growth. The total Saudi population is estimated to grow from 29 million people today to 37 million by 2030. As demographic expansion absorbs Saudi Arabia’s energy production, the next decade is therefore likely to see the country’s oil exporting capacity ever more constrained. Renewable energy is one avenue which Saudi Arabia has tried to invest in to wean domestic demand off oil dependence, hoping to free up capacity for oil sales abroad, thus maintaining revenues. But earlier this year, the strain on the kingdom’s finances began to show when it announced an eight-year delay to its $109 billion solar programme, which was supposed to produce a third of the nation’s electricity by 2032. State revenues also have been hit through blowback from the kingdom’s own short-sighted strategy to undermine competing oil producers. As I previously reported, Saudi Arabia has maintained high production levels precisely to keep global oil prices low, making new ventures unprofitable for rivals such as the US shale gas industry and other OPEC producers. The Saudi treasury has not escaped the fall-out from the resulting oil profit squeeze – but the idea was that the kingdom’s significant financial reserves would allow it to weather the storm until its rivals are forced out of the market, unable to cope with the chronic lack of profitability. That hasn’t quite happened yet. In the meantime, Saudi Arabia’s considerable reserves are being depleted at unprecedented levels, dropping from their August 2014 peak of $737 billion to $672bn in May – falling by about $12bn a month. At this rate, by late 2018, the kingdom’s reserves could deplete as low as $200bn, an eventuality that would likely be anticipated by markets much earlier, triggering capital flight. To make up for this prospect, King Salman’s approach has been to accelerate borrowing. What happens when over the next few years reserves deplete, debt increases, while oil revenues remain strained? As with autocratic regimes like Egypt, Syria and Yemen – all of which are facing various degrees of domestic unrest – one of the first expenditures to slash in hard times will be lavish domestic subsidies. In the former countries, successive subsidy reductions responding to the impacts of rocketing food and oil prices fed directly into the grievances that generated the “Arab Spring” uprisings. Saudi Arabia’s oil wealth, and its unique ability to maintain generous subsidies for oil, housing, food and other consumer items, plays a major role in fending off that risk of civil unrest. Energy subsidies alone make up about a fifth of Saudi’s gross domestic product. Pressure points As revenues are increasingly strained, the kingdom’s capacity to keep a lid on rising domestic dissent will falter, as has already happened in countries across the region. About a quarter of the Saudi population lives in poverty. Unemployment is at about 12 percent, and affects mostly young people – 30 percent of whom are unemployed. Climate change is pitched to heighten the country’s economic problems, especially in relation to food and water. Like many countries in the region, Saudi Arabia is already experiencing the effects of climate change in the form of stronger warming temperatures in the interior, and vast areas of rainfall deficits in the north. By 2040, average temperatures are expected to be higher than the global average, and could increase by as much as 4 degrees Celsius, while rain reductions could worsen. This would be accompanied by more extreme weather events, like the 2010 Jeddah flooding caused by a year’s worth of rain occurring within the course of just four hours. The combination could dramatically impact agricultural productivity, which is already facing challenges from overgrazing and unsustainable industrial agricultural practices leading to accelerated desertification. In any case, 80 percent of Saudi Arabia’s food requirements are purchased through heavily subsidised imports, meaning that without the protection of those subsidies, the country would be heavily impacted by fluctuations in global food prices. “Saudi Arabia is particularly vulnerable to climate change as most of its ecosystems are sensitive, its renewable water resources are limited and its economy remains highly dependent on fossil fuel exports, while significant demographic pressures continue to affect the government’s ability to provide for the needs of its population,” concluded a UN Food & Agricultural Organisation (FAO) report in 2010. The kingdom is one of the most water scarce in the world, at 98 cubic metres per inhabitant per year. Most water withdrawal is from groundwater, 57 percent of which is non-renewable, and 88 percent of which goes to agriculture. In addition, desalination plants meet about 70 percent of the kingdom’s domestic water supplies. But desalination is very energy intensive, accounting for more than half of domestic oil consumption. As oil exports run down, along with state revenues, while domestic consumption increases, the kingdom’s ability to use desalination to meet its water needs will decrease. End of the road In Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Egypt, civil unrest and all-out war can be traced back to the devastating impact of declining state power in the context of climate-induced droughts, agricultural decline, and rapid oil depletion. Yet the Saudi government has decided that rather than learning lessons from the hubris of its neighbours, it won’t wait for war to come home – but will readily export war in the region in a madcap bid to extend its geopolitical hegemony and prolong its petro-dominance. Unfortunately, these actions are symptomatic of the fundamental delusion that has prevented all these regimes from responding rationally to the Crisis of Civilization that is unravelling the ground from beneath their feet. That delusion consists of an unwavering, fundamentalist faith: that more business-as-usual will solve the problems created by business-as-usual. Like many of its neighbours, such deep-rooted structural realities mean that Saudi Arabia is indeed on the brink of protracted state failure, a process likely to take-off in the next few years, becoming truly obvious well within a decade. Sadly, those few members of the royal family who think they can save their kingdom from its inevitable demise by a bit of experimental regime-rotation are no less deluded than those they seek to remove. - Nafeez Ahmed PhD is an investigative journalist, international security scholar and bestselling author who tracks what he calls the 'crisis of civilization.' He is a winner of the Project Censored Award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism for his Guardian reporting on the intersection of global ecological, energy and economic crises with regional geopolitics and conflicts. He has also written for The Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz, Prospect, New Statesman, Le Monde diplomatique, New Internationalist. His work on the root causes and covert operations linked to international terrorism officially contributed to the 9/11 Commission and the 7/7 Coroner’s Inquest. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye. Photo: A photo of Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz taken earlier this year in Riyadh (AFP) - See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/columns/collapse-saudi-arabia-inevitable-1895380679#sthash.Fsp8Xflq.rTzWEh0D.dpuf
  10. it would save them untimely death too. lol. people are dying in Hajj like sheep niyoow.
  11. sad for silanyo niyoow. cirro is becoming new SL bulldog. he is not joking around physically and policall. lol. what if cirro punched siilanyo in the face? what would happen? that would be the best drama niyoow.
  12. this is unfortunate fighting niyoow and Ali galaydh is always pushing clan wars and he is 100% behind the escalation this time. believe me I have facts. niyoow if you don't know where qoriley is, see map. abdulahi yusuf's clan extends its reach to Sool region and it was like that for 100s of years. they populate that area all the way to Galkacyo. people lived together peacefully and dagaal-oge shameless Ali khalif Galaydh is creating rift between people who are family. he thinks that if he can turn sool region people against puntland, it will benefit him. he thinks the best trick he can use is inter-clan war to tell the poeple of SSC who refused to endorse his project that puntland is using clan warfare to kill SSC people.
  13. Mooge

    Hot In Here

    lol. blueleey, no I am not into feisty women. i am into blueleey style confident women. feisty = insecure. lol
  14. Blue, most people who use Khaat are crazy because it ruins their teeth and sleep. why do it. I always knew you were a good girl. stay away from khaat addicts and dealers.
  15. Mooge

    Hot In Here

    Wayre joined the Syrian refugees in Croatia I think? niyoow that brother always wanted to leave Arabia for Europe. this must be best his best chance. lool.
  16. Gooni, no Puntland governors don't drive in hoards to the border to say nacamtu niyoow. Somaliland is way ahead of everyone on that niyoow.
  17. blueleey, the secret is keeping the weight off. that is the biggest thing for somali women. The weight gain is just crazy. look at iman. She has same somali face but her figure is still proportional.
  18. but Somaliland regime seems to be the most obedient. niyoow i never heard in my entire life sending every governor and militia leader to a wacyigelin. it is fact.
  19. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8EaW6iQoOWU