Sharmarkee

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Everything posted by Sharmarkee

  1. ^^ Well my sword goes back to its scabbard I take back my comment! Warya Oday Zafir raali ahow :cool: North stop itching niyow sheekadaasi waa dhamaaday.loool. bal xoqashada joogi
  2. ^^ @ NG is that for me or for Nothern, will you Clarify old man. meesha ciyaal ma joogo ya Ngonge. Ghanima, To Ghanima, Islam is revelation, inspiration, legalization and scripture, so many millions love and respect and look up to it, but if any one here in SOL is bright, highly educated, and superstar in the mindset, well organized and atheist or whatever, and don’t believe anything of that kind its all well and good, BUT please let that person don’t denigrate Islam , Muslims or their believes , for that cleverone, let me say to him/her when you feel hungry you will eat, when you feel tired you will go to sleep, and when your life is finished you will die, Then "Sa turuduuna ila caalimal qaybi wa shahaadah, thuma yuni bi’akum bima kuntum tacmaluun – so you will turm back to the world of seen and unseen and you’ll be told what you have done in the earlier Life. This place needs people with hard core convictions like Alle-U-Baahane, and for your information am not a daaci or a preacher I don’t have that knowedge, am still recalling little things I learned when I was young. But inshaAllah one day I will be real daaci but also we all need to enjoin the good and forbid the evil don’t you agree with me inaaar.
  3. ^^lool I wash my hands off from those somali-south affairs, I wouldnt like Mohammed dheere of jowahar as my next door neighbour, neither yay nor geedi, a punch of cannibals to say the least. a dim wit hordes. the damage to the women and children, a million people displaced, and how much is dead, and life geos on as nothing happened. you need to take a leap to occasion.
  4. ^^Adeer US's nose is in the mud by Sunnah iraqs who are less than 30% of all iraq, so dont managifie US importance, while arabs give up all iraq because of scaring of USA. Sunnah iraqis showed that usa is a paper tiger, to come back on this top on hand, Somaliland stands on its on feet, i was from it but against the standing alone, boy i was wrong, let somaliland move in that direction and somaliland all the way.
  5. This not only in somalia but all muslim countries there is an execessive package and bad culutre comes to it. Islam has nothing to do with that. al naasu ka asnaan al misdhd, people are like combing teeth all same length and breadth, but its the taqwaa which makes the difference. kulakum min aadam wa adaamu min turaab - you re all from adam and adam is from the dust. I got a job to do. bye
  6. Originally posted by Kashafa: Heer waxay gaartay 'ilbax-nimada' la iska raad-raadinaayo in Nabiyul Islaam horteena lagu caayo. Ar Internet-ka dad geesi maxuu ka dhigay, lol. Kaash, blasmephous comments are rampant those days, a wise oromo man once said : Somali Dheragtay Alxamdulilaah ma taqaan. blame the chiro books. lool
  7. ^^a similar rubbish that guy called Duke bombard this site day in day out since last few good years i can rember of. I never saw you protest about him ya LLPP, and that is the tone most of these people in here are proud of. let peace must prevail.
  8. ^^Lool Thiery, check it out this cartoon, I think that was a jolly good sting. guardian cartoon
  9. Originally posted by Red Sea: quote:Originally posted by Xubeer: no not yet - only injury time left oh shidh, bool shidh! I don't give flying pig about soccer, but did England lose that game? ooh well... lol@xubbeer oo xanaqay.. let me tell ya reddy, that I never liked this guy called Xubeer, if he's not playing his guitar or ood, he is listening his collection of classic african blues, if he's not scrambling a few maanso here and there, he's is writing his own lyrics, otherwise he's a footie mad englander, I'am so jaleous about his bohemian. lifestyle.
  10. They sack Mclaren the england coach, he got the boot this morning. i personally quit footie long time but probably they are saying now - the english holigaans - oh we'll let him go the usless twit.
  11. ^^Sir North, I think Revenue ayaa lacagta ismariyay, cos how come they dont have any backup in the servers or else where such a database,tuug tuugi dhashay.
  12. Val, where is all this motivation came from, you laying down the law of success here gabadh, i hope you dont read Ngonge's self-help manuls or would i say dreams,after he consumes some cheese,it ends up in shambles at the end.looooooooooool. oh i get it, it was that trip to down under, most likely made you a ball of fire.
  13. Good stunt, they both look westerners, what would they say,if they are, or someelse on the other shoe,such as arabs and locals,they would have been laughing saying silly things .... look the camel drivers. I think they dont even have driving licence from their own countries, but get lates jags on the expenses of the badouins, who think they came from jupitar.
  14. Sharmarkee

    Tacsi

    Inaa Lilaah wa inaa ilayhi rajicuun, May Allah give you hope ya Bob, encouragement and faith, Lilaahi ma acda wa lilaahi ma akhad. Its God's own what he gives and God's own what he takes back.
  15. Originally posted by Northerner: Edit Af carabiga dee wu igu yara adagyahay,,,, LOOOL Waar waxaan moodayay inaad af-carbigii baratee, meesha Duabi miyaad dhex taagantahay uun.
  16. ^^^^Jazaaka Allahu khairn Ya mutawa, Qad aflaxal muuminuun fi salaatihim khaashicuun. some people think its funny to joke about dee, while its not funny at all. SOL MUTWA IS QAYUURUN FI DIINIHI. LA YA KHAAFU LOOMATA LAA'IM.
  17. ^^^^I think you getting mad now, from LoooooooooooL to knikcers baa iga dhamaday, maanta taana keentay - Who's is the prettiest girl in SOL, I think we need to get your next of kin meesha ha kaa qabtee intaanad maryaha dhigan loooooooooooool mise awalba maryo maad sidan.
  18. Miracle in a test tube as human skin is turned into heart and brain cells By Steve Connor, Science Editor Published: 21 November 2007 Heart muscle and brain cells have been made for the first time in a test tube from human skin, marking a breakthrough in stem-cell research that could end the need to clone human embryos. Scientists believe the development could soon lead to the growing of "spare part" tissue from a patient's skin cells for transplant surgery, which could lead to new treatments for a range of incurable illnesses, from Parkinson's to heart disease. It may also resolve the controversy over the use of human embryos for medical research, because the findings could eventually end the need to use human eggs for creating stem cells in so-called "therapeutic cloning" – which has been opposed by powerful bodies ranging from the White House to the Vatican. Two independent teams of researchers have shown that a relatively simple technique is able to turn skin cells from adult volunteers into apparently functioning nervous tissue and beating heart muscle. Other tests have shown that the stem cells are just as good as those derived from early embryos and that they can develop into any of the 220 specialised tissues of the body, such as mature nerve cells for mending spinal-cord injuries. Creating so-called "pluripotent" stem cells which can be used to produce many different kinds of specialist tissue has been a holy grail of medical research. If the technique can be refined and made safe, it will mean anyone who needs replacement tissue for transplant surgery could have the necessary cells grown in the laboratory from their own skin and transplanted a few weeks later with little risk of tissue rejection. It could also provide scientists with an unparalleled opportunity to create human tissue banks from patients suffering from a spectrum of incurable diseases in order to study each condition in detail and so open the way to developing new drugs and treatments, and provide new alternatives to animal testing. The work was carried out by Shinya Yamanaka, of Kyoto University in Japan, whose findings follow a previous study published a year ago showing that stem cells can be derived from the skin of mice. His latest study on skin cells taken from a 46-year-old woman is published in the journal Cell. Professor James Thomson of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who conducted the second study confirming the findings, which is to be published in the journal Science, said: "The world has changed because of this new result." Both teams of researchers took adult skin cells and genetically engineered them with four human genes that almost miraculously "reprogrammed" them back to the state of being a stem cell from an early embryo with the power of developing into any specialised cells of the body. "The induced cells do all the things embryonic stem cells do. It's going to completely change the field. The idea of cells becoming things they don't normally become suddenly becomes viable," Professor Thomson said. "The new results may not eliminate the controversy [over cloned human embryos] but it may be the beginning of the end of that controversy," added Professor Thomson, who in 1998 was the first person to isolate stem cells from human embryos and so began the controversy over embryonic cloning. The scientists warned, however, that further work was needed before the technique could be used widely in medicine. In the meantime, it would continue to be necessary to use stem cells derived from human embryos. "They are the gold standard we need to compare against," Professor Thomson said. Specialists in the field said the breakthrough was very important and could lead to new ways of studying the genetic causes of disease as well as bringing closer the day when stem-cell transplants became a routine part of treating incurable conditions. "It is relatively easy to grow an entire plant from a small cutting, something that seems inconceivable in humans," said Professor Azim Surani, a stem-cell expert at Cambridge University. "Yet this study brings us tantalisingly close to using skin cells to grow many different types of human tissues," Professor Robin Lovell-Badge, a developmental geneticist at the National Institute for Medical Research in north-west London, said the findings came much sooner than anyone had predicted and they could accelerate the pace of developing human stem cells in all sorts of fields. "It doesn't remove the need to do the cloning approach but if it really works as well as it might, it's going to make it a lot easier to make pluripotent, patient-specific stem-cell lines," Professor Lovell-Badge said. "We always said there was a hope that research would lead to direct reprogramming to avoid the use of embryos. This has just come sooner than any of us thought. This unpredictability is one of the fantastic things about science, and it is the reason that research avenues should always be open
  19. Originally posted by Naden: quote: Those whom were alive during the period between the Prophet Isa (Jesus pbuh) and Prophet Muhammad pbuh. What about the period between Prophet Musa and Prophet Jesus? Or the period before Prophet Musa? There was always prophets in between Musa(cs) to Jesus, in fact all the prophets of bani-Isreal was there starting from Harun his brother then Dulkifil, Daud or king david, his son King solomon, Iyas, Alyas'a, Jonah or younis,Zakariya, john the paptist or yaha, then Jesus, although even between times or between main prophets there was a pious people who used to lead people too,like that guy talut who was fought against Goalith his name in Quraan was talut, and aslo Cuzair, who was from bani-isreal too and they worshiped him personally out of love duty his mircales - the guy was passing by an un-inhabitant village with his donkey, and said to himself:"oh how Allah or God will recreate this romte village" and he was dead 100 years for that word, and when been asked he said iwas asleep either a day or half day.(The story is in the quraan). Of the prophets pointed to in the Quran and not named, do you think Buddha might be one?Adeer Nadine Budda was an idol worshipping, he was never been a prophet regarding Quraan and sunnah, and never mentioned so please save such littel nonsense. Just another question, since Nabi Ibrahim is referred to as one of the first muslims, do you think that the designation of muslim to today's followers of Mohamed (csw) is accurate? This Ducawah of La Ilaha ilaa ilaah is called dacwat Nuux or prophet Nuh, and that is what all prophets and messengers were calling to their poeple and here is the proof from the Quraan: 2:133 Were ye witnesses when death appeared before Jacob? Behold, he said to his sons: "What will ye worship after me?" They said: "We shall worship Thy Allah and the Allah of thy fathers, of Abraham, Isma'il and Isaac,- the one (True) Allah. To Him we bow (in Islam)." :132 And this was the legacy that Abraham left to his sons, and so did Jacob; "Oh my sons! Allah hath chosen the Faith for you; then die not except in the Faith of Islam." 3:52 When Jesus found Unbelief on their part He said: "Who will be My helpers to (the work of) Allah." Said the disciples: "We are Allah's helpers: We believe in Allah, and do thou bear witness that we are Muslims. 3:80 Nor would he instruct you to take angels and prophets for Lords and patrons. What! would he bid you to unbelief after ye have bowed your will (To Allah in Islam)? 3:84 Say: "We believe in Allah, and in what has been revealed to us and what was revealed to Abraham, Isma'il, Isaac, Jacob, and the Tribes, and in (the Books) given to Moses, Jesus, and the prophets, from their Lord: We make no distinction between one and another among them, and to Allah do we bow our will (in Islam)." 3:102 O ye who believe! Fear Allah as He should be feared, and die not except in a state of Islam. 5:111 "And behold! I inspired the disciples to have faith in Me and Mine Messenger. they said, 'We have faith, and do thou bear witness that we bow to Allah as Muslims'". 21:108 Say: "What has come to me by inspiration is that your Allah is One Allah. will ye therefore bow to His Will (in Islam)?" 27:81 Nor canst thou be a guide to the blind, (to prevent them) from straying: only those wilt thou get to listen who believe in Our Signs, and they will bow in Islam. 29:46 And dispute ye not with the People of the Book, except with means better (than mere disputation), unless it be with those of them who inflict wrong (and injury): but say, "We believe in the revelation which has come down to us and in that which came down to you; Our Allah and your Allah is one; and it is to Him we bow (in Islam)." May Allah Guide us and lead us to the right path.
  20. Over-used Qaat which is also ethopia's own produce and major import to somalia, creating abject poverty, that aslo creating rivalary and who will control what resources. Ethopia just came in now as multi- headed hydra, as Drug/aids/Qaad pushers, getting rich and grabbing any money, on the otherside it's capret-bombing some somalis, militarly crashing those in the capital in a show of force, and smiling for some others , the fox was in the chicken house for a long time. the final collapse is just in the air.
  21. Britain is a US client state and should not forget it, says the neocons' oracle As Brown reins in critical colleagues, one American stays refreshingly candid about the nature of the special relationship Geoffrey Wheatcroft Monday November 19, 2007 The Guardian The past week has not been a happy one for those who held what Robert Harris, writing in the Guardian 18 months ago, called the "peculiar - one might almost say touching - view prevalent on these pages that Brown, once he becomes prime minister, is suddenly going to provide an entirely different kind of Labour government". First came the bullying of Admiral Lord West into an about-turn and "Aye, aye, sir!", then the humiliation of David Miliband when Downing Street tipped off the Sun that the foreign secretary's Bruges speech on Europe had been blue-pencilled by the prime minister's office. A different kind of government? The end to spin that Gordon Brown himself promised last summer? Tony Blair and Alastair Campbell at their worst couldn't have displayed greater brutality or trickiness. But for Kremlinologists trying to analyse what's happening inside the Brown politburo, there was a still more fascinating moment after the prime minister's own speech on foreign affairs at the Lord Mayor of London's banquet, when it was discussed on Newsnight by Denis MacShane and Dr Irwin Stelzer. MacShane need not detain us: the Labour MP has a permanent hangdog look and no doubt a good deal to be hangdoggy about, though he still evinces a loyalty to the government that is rather touching when you think of the way Tony Blair hired him and fired him. He is surely nothing like so interesting or influential as Stelzer. On the face of it no more than an expatriate American economist, this clever, genial old chap is a seriously powerful figure in our political life: professional eminence grise and oracle of the neoconservative movement - he edited an anthology called Neoconservatism, which very properly included a contribution by Blair and a jacket puff by Stelzer's good friend Brown. He is also, in Andrew Neil's chillingly jocose phrase, Rupert Murdoch's representative on earth. It was he who brought instructions to Downing Street in 2004 that Blair must promise a referendum on the European constitution or lose the support of the Murdoch press, and the promise was duly given - which left Blair and now Brown wriggling. Stelzer denied having uttered any such threats, it should be said. But then he has also said that "Mr Murdoch doesn't tell the Times or Sunday Times what position to take because he has an undertaking not to do that when he acquired the papers", and anyone with even the most cursory knowledge of Murdoch who could say that with a straight face deserves the Nobel prize for chutzpah on top of his other academic distinctions. What's so refreshing about Stelzer is his candour. Whenever he talks about the Anglo-American relationship there's never any namby-pamby pretence that the United Kingdom is in any useful sense of the words a sovereign country. You're a client state and don't you forget it, says the doctor. Nothing displayed this more clearly than his ferocious reaction - shown by the Washington neocons in general but in particular by Stelzer, who returned to the theme last Tuesday - to one particular appointment of Brown's. "First prize for appalling goes to Mark Malloch Brown," Stelzer wrote at the time. While Washington understood that Brown had to make the occasional gesture of sham independence, "inviting Malloch Brown into this 'government of all the talents' is to include one talent too many". It was the voice of the KGB rezident in Sofia 40 years ago, reminding the Bulgarian government in comradely but firm tones that the promotion of suspected "rotten elements" could not be regarded by Moscow as a purely internal matter. Seltzer could have been echoing Brezhnev's minatory words to Dubcek in Prague: "Your frontiers are our frontiers." The deviationism or thought crimes of which Malloch Brown stood accused were his support for the UN, where he used to work, his criticism of the Bush junta, and his opposition to the Iraq war. The fact that all these views are broadly shared by the British electorate is neither here nor there. It's no part of the job of any British minister to insult the imperial power. Now the voice of the rezident has been amplified by others. There was a ferocious hatchet job on Malloch Brown in the penultimate Spectator, nowadays the epicentre of Anglo-neoconservatism. (It was co-written by Claudia Rosett, "journalist-in-residence" at the "US-based Foundation for Defence of Democracies", whose website explains that it was originally sponsored by a group of rich philanthropists who wanted to "offer Israel the kind of PR that the Israeli government seemed unable to provide itself".) And those denunciations have done the trick. Last summer Malloch Brown mused out loud that London and Washington might not in future be joined at the hip, but he has now been induced to make a recantation worthy of a Soviet show trial. In his speech on Tuesday the prime minister himself said ingratiatingly: "I am a lifelong admirer of America. I have no truck with anti-Americanism in Britain or elsewhere in Europe and I believe that our ties with America founded on values we share constitute our most important bilateral relationship." Those are interesting and thought-provoking words. Is it "anti-American" to regret that we were dragged into the Iraq adventure purely to demonstrate Blair's - and Brown's - fealty to our most important bilateral partner, or even to wonder occasionally whether the last few years may not have raised questions about the fitness of the US for its role as hegemonic superpower? Does the prime minister have in mind the "shared values" of Guantánamo Bay and Abu Ghraib? Of "extraordinary rendition" and "enhanced interrogation"? When Brown visited the US last summer his manner was less than effusive, which predictably enough disappointed Seltzer. Remarking that people in the White House had complained to him that the new prime minister was curt and surly - hadn't they ever heard anything about him? - Seltzer contrasted this with the gloriously opportunistic display just given in Washington by Nicolas Sarkozy. And he played yet another riff on the terrible danger from Europe that the British blindly fail to recognise. To which the answer is that the European Union has many failings, and plenty of room for criticism, but that it was not the commission in Brussels or parliament in Strasbourg that led us into a needless, criminal and catastrophic war. One other thing has worried Seltzer about Brown in the past: his "domestic priorities and priorities about eliminating poverty - he has some sort of bell that goes off in his head when he sees poverty anywhere". But then Brown spent one weekend recently with Murdoch, and Stelzer is a regular visitor to Downing Street. With a bit of luck and guidance, that annoying bell can surely be
  22. Good job welldone! Farah Aden, hope the tfg snippers wouldn't get him so soon.
  23. Originally posted by Northerner: quote:Originally posted by General Duke: [qb] Adeer what is in a prediction? There is more stability, order and governnace than at anytime these past 17 years. This is why he is not taken seriously. The man fancies himself as a spin doctor but is not very articulate. The tigre indiscriminate masscare is a great feat for him, sad what somalis become.
  24. ^^Lool kan kaa koreeyo waa khatar ee iska eeg, he usually entices new comers so watch out ... you have been warned buuxooy imikaba ha odhan odayga waxaan moodayay nin miskiin ah. Ghanima, to be honest, Odayaashan aad kor ku qortaye, nobody cares about them aan ahayn islaamahooda. Waxaan meeshan la nimaadno ayaaba lays waydiinayaa,ee na dhexdhigay dhalinyaradan so koraysaa. I need to sign off my membership very soon giving the chance the coming young guys.