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Everything posted by Holac
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The spread of liberalism and the extermination of religion
Holac replied to DoctorKenney's topic in Politics
<cite> @Tallaabo said:</cite> The western world privatised religion and made it a personal issue many centuries ago so any Muslim who is uncomfortable about the satanic way of life enjoyed in these heathen countries should stop whining and just get the f:ck out. If it is private issue, why is Islamic veil banned in Western countries like France? -
A single bridge on the outskirts of Kirkuk has become a focal point of the resistance to Islamic State forces, with Kurdish peshmerga and jihadis locked in a stalemate as both fortify their respective sides of the river. http://www.aina.org/news/20140903135555.htm
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Gaandi is old. He needs to retire
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Abdel-Majed Abdel Bary (Arabic: عبد المجيد عبد الباري born in c.1990) is a British-Egyptian rapper from West London also known as Lyricist Jinn and L Jinny. After circulation of video footage related to the decapitation of the American journalist James Foley, the British intelligence has reportedly centered on three suspects who might be the militant individual in the footage dubbed "Jihadi John", putting a knife to Foley's throat and later on boasting his beheading. The main suspect for being the "Jihadi John" is Abdel Bary himself, with the other two being Abu Hussain Al-Britani, 20, a computer hacker from Birmingham, and Abu Abdullah al-Britani, in his twenties from Portsmouth.[1]
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Somalia has tried secularism in the 60s (apart from the socialism years) and it worked very well.
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Lines between countries used to have little importance in Africa's most dynamic region. How times have changed. Economic growth, energy exploration, Chinese-funded infrastructure, and American- and European-funded security operations have given Northeast Africa’s states the means and ambition to conquer the frontier. The goal is clear: capture the resources that will sustain economic growth. But this attempt to expand the state is setting governments across the region against the inhabitants of the frontier, who have spent the last century attempting to escape state control. A closer look at Kenya and Ethiopia helps explain the pattern. The recent violence in Lamu in Kenya is the most obvious manifestation of this new trend and is indicative of the ways in which this regional process is being overlooked by an emphasis on either global terrorism or local politics. Although the attacks in Lamu by militias linked to al Shabaab in June and July are clearly tied to both the situation in Somalia and local politics, Lamu has long been the site of tensions between Kikuyu migrants from central parts of the country and communities with much longer histories of residence on the coast. But these tensions are intensifying because of new infrastructure developments around Lamu, particularly the construction of a new $5.5 billion port. Construction of the port, which is supposed to become an export hub for oil from the wider region, has inflated local land values over the past two years, sharpening existing inter-ethnic conflicts in Lamu and its neighboring counties. (In the photo above, Lamu residents protest the port construction project, chanting, "Our land, our rights!") Tension between communities in the borderlands used to be met most commonly with indifference by the government in Nairobi. But Kenya’s once-marginal northern region has become critical to the achievement of the double-digit growth promised by the current government. Northern Kenya hosts the country’s onshore oil reserves. It is also the site for the ambitious Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia (LAPSSET) transport corridor connecting Lamu’s new port and oil refinery by road, rail, and pipeline to the Northeast and Central African interior. http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/08/06/why_east_africas_borders_are_blowing_up
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhl0fLdBK2IU
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Can Somalia disarm its militias? Aljazeera Inside Story
Holac replied to Che -Guevara's topic in Politics
Clan will always complicate any effort to disarm militias. -
Bannaanbaxa Baydhabo loogu soo horjeedo dowladda dhexe
Holac replied to Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar's topic in Politics
<cite> @Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar said:</cite> The prime minister and Qaramada Midoobay envoy, Nicholas Kay, were secretly planning to visit Baydhabo on yesterday (Monday). But locals got wind of it and started an abrupt demonstration against them. Then two protesters were shot by militia under 'police' attire. One died, the other seriously wounded. The prime minister and the UN envoy immediately cancelled their trip. They were against them because the prime minister, along with the UN envoy, support the three-gobol maamul goboleed, which they want to force the natives to accept. The natives support the already functioning lix-gobol dowlad goboladeed, Koonfur Galbeed. If saan ku socoto xaaladda, it will get much worse. I hope in si nabadeed lagu xaliyo, but dad yar calooshood u shaqeystiyaal ayaa lagu shaqeysanoyaa oo Xamar laga soo diray, albeit being few and overwhelmingly facing a vocal native opposition. That makes sense. People's demands should not be dismissed. I hope the perpetrators of the bloodshed are brought to justice. People have the right to demonstrate. Why shoot at them? -
lool@ SEVEN times. That is waali.
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<cite> @Tallaabo said:</cite> For a month or so they leave behind their ghettos and under class status in the west and lead a middle class lifestyle in relatively poor Horn of Africa. Best comment in this thread. I am impressed by your keen observation.
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Bannaanbaxa Baydhabo loogu soo horjeedo dowladda dhexe
Holac replied to Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar's topic in Politics
Why are they protesting against the Prime Minister? I don't know the details. -
Well you didn't know Malistar2012. Somali websites are all shady.
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lol@khasab ba laygu keenay. This man sounds he is handicapped.
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Good job to the courts. The bloody terrorists who murder innocent poeple must be condemned to death.
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So you are telling me I can get a strawberry jam and butter for my morning toast? Great!
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I think that is Kenyatta airport Malistar. I don't know why that website is misleading people. Hopefully Mogadishu airport will be better than that.
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I wonder how things are today after Al-shabaab terrorists increased their attacks
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loool. This is mashalah video.
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Blue, I know when you reach 59 in 40 years, you will look just like Iman. Somali faces are forever young.
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The most current slacktivism trend that is sweeping social media is the Ice Bucket Challenge. In all the conversations about this, it took me two days before someone mentioned in their post that it was for ALS – Lou Gehrig’s Disease. On my personal pages, I’ve not come across a lot of these posts because I started removing people a long time ago who participated in what I and many others call “slacktivism” — something that makes a person feel good, but has no actual effect on the cause they are promoting. When something like this invades pop culture, there’s always a debate about whether the viral nature of the stunt outweighs any benefits to the actual cause. Currently, the ALS Foundation states that since the Ice Bucket Challenge campaign, they have raised $15.6 million, which is nearly nine times more than what they raised during June, July and August of 2013. Other ALS charities have stated that their donations have increased substantially by these ice bucket challenges, and at the end of the day, isn’t that the goal? Why do we even care what someone posts on Facebook if, when all is said and done, someone is spurred to donate money to a good cause? Why do I remove someone when I see yet another acquaintance post “why is no one around whenever I’m horny?” Well, because there’s a difference between actual donations or awareness and being sucked up into a social media popularity contest. Breast Cancer awareness is the most prevalent “cause” taken up by slacktivists. The above mentioned quote comes from the most recent breast cancer chainmail that was sent around for 2014. Most of these messages stem from that one time when women posted a color (the color of their bras! Gasp! Soooo risque!) on Facebook statuses worldwide in an effort to flummox men. Oh yeah, and of course, raise awareness for breast cancers. When the trend was picked up by news outlets, it ensured that each year, women will be messaged by by their Facebook “friends” in a gotcha moment: You liked the chain mail status! If you truly care about people and aren’t a horrible person who would like to watch the little tiny babies of Africa starve, then of COURSE you’ll play this simple, stupid, and obtuse game — as long as you don’t tell anyone! Remember: It’s for breast cancer awareness! Just make sure that you share that. Even more insulting, the emails usually include the title of “20XX Breast Cancer Game.” That’s right — breast cancer has been so successfully marketed that most people don’t see breast cancer as a fight; rather, they see raising awareness as a game. However, survivors and victims don’t. Lisa Bonchek Adams, a woman who has been fighting breast cancer for years, has written two posts that summarize my feelings of frustration at slacktivism that I am unable to eloquently articulate. http://theflounce.com/values-slacktivism-ice-bucket-challenge-cynicism-social-media/
