QansaxMeygaag

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Posts posted by QansaxMeygaag


  1. Haatu;981276 wrote:
    Abbass,

     

    I know I've posted this in another thread, but the message of the song is more suited here. It starts at 50s.

     

    Soomaalay is aamina

    Abti I didn't know the M/Bulls were supporting the Owls...


  2. nuune;980860 wrote:
    Yaa
    Qansax
    , Cuba saad ogtaheyba waxaa saaran cuna qabateen lagu darey cuna qabateen kale, marka no Western government will allow its pharmaceutical companies to market any of Cuba's breakthroughs.

     

    It was only last month that Cuba released the World's First Lung Cancer Vaccine, they made the discovery back 2011, and were researching and patenting what would be one of the greatest cures for cancer related..., and that breakthrough didn't even made into world headlines, that says enough!

    But the same western companies go to the world's worst authoritarian and/or conflict zones to harvest other natural resources...I have not known anything to stop the greed of western transnationals....not even sanctions and large-scale civil war...


  3. nuune;980721 wrote:
    - Malaria vaccine is available in Cuba as the vaccine originated there and was invented there

    - HIV/AIDS vaccine is available in Cuba as the vaccine originated there and was invented there

    - Cancer cure vaccine is available in Cuba as the vaccine originated there and was invented there

    - Many of the world's diseases that could not be cured at all, thanks to Cuba, it is available now.

     

    The Western world, including their poodles of UNICEF, MSF, and others such as WHO don't want to market these vaccines which could save many lives.

     

    The Western world economy will collapse if these vaccines are introduced, which can result the loss of 8 million pharmaceutical jobs in Europe, North America & Australia.

     

     

     

    Dr Haatu,
    go to Cuba sxb, and come back loaded!

    Nuune are you serious? Cuba would have been flooded by western pharmaceutical companies by now no? And would have made billions of dollars?


  4. Even Nuruddin Farah stopped traveling on the Somali passport after years of valiantly trying to use it - harrowing, harrowing. He wrote movingly about it, I forget which essay it was.

     

    It is difficult enough if you are Somali and traveling on other passports....


  5. Alpha Blondy;979925 wrote:
    do you even understand this, abti?

    Yes, waan fahmay sarbeebtada oo aad ku qarin haysa sawaaxilka; caadi ma tihid ninyahow, pure marxist....father ate, son eating now...is the general thrust of your dialogue...

     

    Also amazed at your politico-cultural references to what's a la mode in Kenya, like Michela Wrong's book "Its our turn to eat".

     

    You are good AB; very good.

     

    Laakin point of correction; don't lump the sins of the father on the son; he is nin geesi ah whichever way you look at it and besides you don't know him so don't judge and don't demean his geesinimo or begrudge him what he achieved...


  6. Alpha Blondy;979907 wrote:
    conversation with Abdul Haji and Alpha B.

     

    Alpha:
    Habari Abdul Haji Utapenda kunywa nini?

     

    Abdul Haji:
    really wa nilikula. no really wa nimekula. as you can see i'm ninakula. and as i said i'll nitakula BIG TIME, my father is nitakula, too. he's a minister.

     

    Alpha:
    huu hapa wali, samaki, mbatata, na saladi. Nitakuletea keki baadaye?

     

    Abdul Haji:
    like i said abtinika wa nilikula. ileen i'm a hero eh.

     

    Alpha:
    astante the nation's hero, Mr.Tembo. Unakwenda wapi?

     

    Abdul Haji:
    Westgate Mall.

     

    Alpha:
    ok. good luck.

     

    Looooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool. LMAO

     

    Crazy AB trying his hand at Sawaaxili


  7. Haatu;979649 wrote:
    Yeah his dad looks like a normal Somali:

    Yusuf_Hagi2013.jpg

     

    Btw, Somalis aren't mixed. They're a distinct ethnic group.

    Pray, what does a "normal Somali" look like?

     

    Somalis have a range of hair texture (and even looks) from Yusuf Haji's here (bis), to even softer versions of this (bis qooley) to balwayn (slightly thicker than this but wavier, like harder indian version) to gardho (the thick woolly hair in old pictures of geel-jires)