Faarax-Brawn

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Everything posted by Faarax-Brawn

  1. nuune;790831 wrote: Kaaseeyto Af Soomaali miyaa abti Mayeee- Waa af NFD. LOL....it is the same as shuqul xumo aka kazi mbaya lol. Eegan afar qaadka(waad garan sowmahan?.lol) iga leexi baan ku dhahay abteee
  2. ^Haa dee. Ina adeer/ Somali qalad ka fahmeen friend. unless aad marki horeyba aad qafal xumo usocotay, if u are daacad, and mean it well, any body can be friends...i am friends with my cadaan and madow co workers. maxaa jira?
  3. Dr_Osman;790419 wrote: Anyone living in the diaspora that knows the Puntland citizens be it through social life, studies, or work or any other aspect in life, can you please provide your comments on what the Puntland people are like. Are they hugeeeeeeee pro puntland with flag blazing or are they more subtle and somalia orientated. I know my family love puntland to death and make sure it's peaceful and they always get concerned if a battle begins however as far as government is concerned their of the old school mentality the government seat is in mogadishu. I know some puntland people who are real extreme here like the minister of finance he was always like that in melbourne, he was well known in the cafe hide-outs in heated debate defending puntland, farole was a different kettle of fish all together in melbourne he was known to have a very bad attitude but he was always of the mentality that Puntland doesn't need mogadishu and you can see it clearly in his policies. So for all the SOL members what are puntlanders like in your city, are they up in your face about puntland or do they not care much. I know for a fact that since farole took power the diaspora has become alot more puntland focussed as far as social events are concerned something that did not occur as much under the previous presidents I wouldnt know the difference between Puntlanders and some of the northerners...until they tell me. To me yall sound the same. But, the few i meet/interact with are not suprisingly dyspeptic as often described by most Somalis. In regards to Puntland mania, I think it is fair to say they are not as antagonistic or ultra patriotic as our beloved brothers from the North. Infact, I am even gonna go a step further and say, they are more "Nationalist" than they are "regionalist"- The former more obvious if and when only one of their beloved sons is at the top- Hint, Abdilahi Yusuf - So in conclusion- Puntlanders are not as regionalistic as Landers-but are fairly happy to be from Puntland...
  4. Gheelle.T;790229 wrote: You mean "hair" i guess? Unless you meant "you cover the Hijab with another Hijab." Anyway, I don't know about that Hadith, but how is the hair more cawrah than the body? Allah knows the best. oh yeah. Did i say Hijab?- wtf? of course i meant the hair jaale Gelle. Like i said, i thought i heard that unless i was high on shah sanjabil leh or half a sleep or a combination of both. I think of the the hair, the hands and the legs-the hair is the most important one to cover. like i said, i dont remember a lot but vaguely. so i need to be corrected
  5. Why is she wearing a hijab? ...my guess is she had a bad hair day? I dont know. But, i remember listening to a hadith one time the preacher said,the most important cawra to cover is the hair?(someone needs to verify this for me tho')- Besides of course the more obvious cawrahs ya know...
  6. Dude is Crazy......L0L@Obama is President line....
  7. Che -Guevara;790101 wrote: No Seconded! Whoever told you that sh1t is full of sh1t. Honesty is the best policy.
  8. Malika;789923 wrote: ^What is the difference - erm when it comes to drug abuse or drug dealing? There is no difference at all. I dont remember reading nor hearing of sins that are prescribed for one sex and not the other.. I didn't see what the poster's point was - it sure isn't anyone one else's business what those women are doing or do. I think what ppl are reffering to is, the sharaf daawac part of this and not sins etc. waa foolxumo(for lack of a term) to see hablo qayilaya oo sigaret fuuf kasiinayo.
  9. Narniah;790057 wrote: She looks like a Man. Doesn't look like a Somali either, her features look very manly. I think you are right. she does have habashi and oromo-ish features. ..the Manish features you see, are because of the way she is holding the sigareet.
  10. Needless to say, i am following the chief on twt now@Chubaka. Bob. Watu ya ushago and Kenya in general are crazy about twt. I cant even catch up with my slow internent connection on my 2g phone(yeah i know,i am behind).
  11. Maaddeey;789911 wrote: As Eastleigh is meel bus 'Boodh', wasaq 'xashiish' & cariiri 'is buudhasho' badan, asee aan looga maarmin Ehelka & Asxaabta joogta darteed, thread-kan waxan ugu talagalay ' see xeego loo cunaa ilkona u nabad galaan' !camal nooh. Stay tuned, I'll post pictures * Off to Lake Nevasha .* Quick correction. It is Lake Naivasha aka Lake Nai'posha, in KiMasai..,.Enjoy the wonders of the rift valley. its amazingly breath taking. Enjoy Eastleigh as well. It is dustfully amazing
  12. Ducaysane;789698 wrote: Wacdarahaan dhigay waaba la ogaa. Booto. Xaad suubisay?
  13. Urgent tweets as new crime fighting tool in Kenya village: Help, brown and white sheep missing This was an interesting story on today's Wapo. East Africans are different breed. From Alshabab tweeting to this chief...here, read it for yourself By Associated Press, Updated: Wednesday, February 15, 10:05 AM LANET UMOJA, Kenya — When the administrative chief of this western Kenyan village received an urgent 4 a.m. call that thieves were invading a school teacher’s home, he sent a message on Twitter. Within minutes residents in this village of stone houses gathered outside the home, and the thugs fled. “My wife and I were terrified,” said teacher Michael Kimotho. “But the alarm raised by the chief helped.” The tweet from Francis Kariuki was only his latest attempt to improve village life by using the micro-blogging site Twitter. Kariuki regularly sends out tweets about missing children and farm animals, showing that the power of social media has reached even into a dusty African village. Lanet Umoja is 100 miles (160 kilometers) west of the capital, Nairobi. “There is a brown and white sheep which has gone missing with a nylon rope around its neck and it belongs to Mwangi’s father,” he tweeted recently in the Swahili language. The sheep was soon recovered. Kariuki said that even the thieves in his village follow him on Twitter. Earlier this year, he tweeted about the theft of a cow, and later the cow was found abandoned, tied to a pole. Kariuki’s official Twitter page shows 300 followers, but the former teacher estimated that thousands of the 28,000 residents in his area receive the messages he sends out directly and indirectly. He said many of his constituents, mostly subsistence farmers, cannot afford to buy smart phones, but can access tweets through a third-party mobile phone application. Others forward the tweets via text message. “Twitter has helped save time and money. I no longer have to write letters or print posters which take time to distribute and are expensive,” Kariuki said. A recent report said that Twitter is enjoying big growth across Africa. It said South Africans use Twitter the most, but Kenya is second in usage on the continent. The research by Kenya-based Portland Communications and Tweetminster found that over the last three months of 2011, Kenyans produced nearly 2.5 million tweets. More than 80 percent of those polled in that research said they mainly used Twitter for communicating with friends, 68 percent said they use it to monitor news. Beatrice Karanja, the head of Portland Nairobi, said the findings show that the use of Twitter is part of a revolution for governments that want to open dialogue with their citizens and businesses that want to talk with their consumers. When a man in his late fifties in Kariuki’s village fell into a pit latrine in December, the village administrator’s tweets mobilized area residents and saved him. Rachel Bremer, a spokeswoman for Twitter, said her company wasn’t aware of Kariuki and his innovative use of Twitter, but she called it “a great one.” “We are constantly amazed by the ways people all over the world are using Twitter to communicate,” she said. She said that the company has a web page dedicated to telling stories about the unique uses of Twitter. The page highlights how one man in Pakistan live-tweeted the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, how a father and daughter reunited after 11 years, and how a man raised funds to save a dog’s life. Erik Hersman, a co-founder of internationally acclaimed Ushahidi, a nonprofit technology company, said Kariuki’s use of Twitter is a great example of how Kenyans in even the most remote areas can embrace social media. “If a chief in upcountry Kenya is able to use and have an impact with his constituents by using tools like Twitter, it’s not too long before we see a massive movement in the country with these types of social media,” he said. Kariuki, 47, said that he has been able to bring down the crime rate in Lanet Umoja from near-daily reports of break-ins to no such crimes in recent weeks. He also uses Twitter to send messages of hope, especially for the young and unemployed. “Let’s be the kind of people that do good for others whether we get paid back or not, whether they say thank you or not,” one recent tweet said. Kariuki said he intends to use Twitter to promote peace as Kenya prepares to hold another presidential election in the next year, it’s first since the 2007-08 postelection violence that killed more than 1,000 people in Kenya. Kariuki said that when he was first appointed the administrative chief of Lanet Umoja he asked himself how he could tackle the region’s problems. First was solving the region’s poor communication infrastructure. He said he is currently setting guidelines to help him sift through the information he gets so that he does not send out incorrect tweets. “Information is power, but information can also be destructive. What we are trying to minimize is destructive information,” Kariuki said. ___ On the Internet: Chief Kariuki: https://twitter.com/Chiefkariuki
  14. *Had to really double check the picture again*.
  15. L0L! these are gems. Thanks Nin Yaaban, am now wasting precious minutes on this
  16. ^ L0L....Thats why he is a young bad azz. Coz he does not expet apoliges L0L.
  17. We call them Qad-heads@Narniah. Ps. Your avator, is that a pale white chick with a ruler?
  18. Qofta diraca baluuga ah sidata oo geeska jirta,(oo laanta fiiqeyso)... malaha she is new @this..she looks more decent than the first 2 for sure on the forefront of the pic. What do i think? Shiishada iyo sigarka qiiqiisa, indhaha kama gubo miyaa?
  19. Xaaji Xunjuf;789343 wrote: Run ma doonaysan yartu nin bay u bahantahay wabay khafiiftay video after video maalin dhawayd waxan arkayey iyado iska dhigeysey inay mid ay jaar yihin ay la hadlayse calashaan telefoon been been ah. yarta wax mashquuliyey u bahantahay boring ba dilay war halo doono nin rog roga xiliyada qaar.Hadana yartu maha tu foolxun wa iska yam yam rag badan ba duu duub ku qadan laha allow hablaha noo astur. L0L. that is funny @Xaji Canduuf...Yes i know ur name is xunduf but i call u canduuf. Bob-Uncoo...kisomali changu ni cha Internet with waamo mixed up with
  20. Inshallah weey soo hagaageysaa. Nothing to get worked off bro, just wondering wixi dhalay iyo wixi la dhashay iyo af lagaadinimadeeda. Koleyba if i were her bro, bustaan ka qasi lahaa
  21. Gabadhu af adkaaa? Is she using the F word? and the B word mise waa dhagaheyga? Aaway wixi dhalay tani yari? Oo wiilal la dhashay majoogan miyaa?- aloow yaa dhangad uqaata oo shawda ka qaraa!!!
  22. Somalia;788154 wrote: No. She seemed like a broken person though, Bobby smacked her around too much, I hate violence against women. You obviously did not know about W.H before B.Brown & the drugs...youtube some of her sh1t and u will be mesmerized. Anyway, I dont know if i have a FAV Wh.Houston, i think to say such is but an insult to her talent. ALL her songs(including that miserable heart break hotel), were fantastically fine. Bobbi Brown(the daughter), will be a gazzilionaire in a couple of years as she will be making money post humously. X
  23. Che -Guevara;787448 wrote: Faarax..They have never officially said they were part of AQ though they shared same ideology. oh well- birds of the same feather
  24. I thought they were already alligned with one another yaa che?