Che -Guevara

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Everything posted by Che -Guevara

  1. ^^^I like women, but don't wanna be one. Anyway, isn't this discriminatory. Iam sure they would be violating some labor laws.
  2. How does one become a lifegaurd at these all Muslim swimming pools.
  3. Originally posted by Jaylaani: ^^ok. Duqa. Lol@intent Why don’t you go ahead and urinate in your local masjid. Yeah tell ALLAH it wasn’t your intent. He will understand. LooooL....Duqa you are trying inextricably tied the Tawxiid to the Sland flag. Saying if one burns the SLand flag, you are burning the Tawxiid is childish. Let's disentangle the issues here. Their protest is agianst the state of Somaliland. Their intent is to disavow the Sland state as it relates to their land. Red...Ma ku fahmin.
  4. Duqa Nasiib kaliya waaye. If that suicide bombing didn't get him. I don't think this will. How is he gonna stay Xamar without the Amxaaro.
  5. What's P license. Seems like something I wouldn't be interested in.
  6. when political opportunists who had hijacked the good objective of the Courts had designs on using Islam to capture the country for them. Is that the reason stop supporting the courts? Surely, you could have advocated change within the courts, and not right switch the to the TFG side. As for Beled Xaawo, My bad on that actually, I commend for their good work.
  7. ^^^I think Ethios will eventually have to leave all of Somalia if some sort of all inclusive goverment takes shape in the capital. All depends on how things turn out in our capital. Lets hope for the best.
  8. You mean clan courts Good job though. This would spare us Aarsasho.
  9. This is good news if it is actually true. Now the question is would the stooges in Xamar riegn in on the warlords, or is it gonna back to the old "golden" days for these warlords.
  10. LooooL@Devil Dear, have you confused with your hand holder. I guess you haven't slapped him today. n that's little violent. I was thinking something like stick up to scare da "odd" folks.
  11. Zu...Ninka ha waalin...Afro in laga gubu maa rabtaa running in the street like Richard Pryor on fire.
  12. ^^^Put dat gun to some use
  13. Pujah...Who in their mind would support a man with three wives. I just don't see a hardworking maryooley in the west supporting these guy's bad judgements. it comes for auditioning for "Who wants to become my 5th Husband" role, you don't want to miss all the fun now, do ya , do ya... I thought that list would have been full by now with your boy Socod Badne on da top spot followed by Jaylaani. As for Hargeysa, Nah I already got wife, a mistress, and gal friend. Technically I did it before these guys.
  14. ^^^Seriously, how in the world would in man in Somalia be able to support three women ( the likely offsprings) even if he is rich ( by Somali standards). That's just one too many on his plate. And couldn't these women find other ways of making their own money.
  15. ^^^Haduu buhol kaboo dana maka daba booday
  16. Why do you feel sorry for the gals? As far as we could tell, they are willing participants.
  17. It is about intent duqa. Their protest is agianst a secular, and has little to do with the Tawxiid imprinted on your flag.
  18. What does this accomplish anyway. Mara xun dab laqaadsiiye in response to what some dimwit said.
  19. By Sue Pleming Wednesday, January 17, 2007 WASHINGTON, Jan 17 (Reuters) - The United States criticized Somalia's government on Wednesday for supporting the ouster of the country's dissident speaker of parliament and said the act was at odds with the spirit of reconciliation. Assistant secretary of state for African affairs, Jendayi Frazer, urged Somalia's transitional government to be more "inclusive" and not to dwell on the past. Earlier on Wednesday, Somalia's parliament ousted Speaker Sharif Hassan Sheikh Adan, who for two years opposed the president and prime minister and angered them late last year with peace overtures to Islamist rivals. "The point about the speaker is that what happened in the past should be very different from what happens going forward. And the going forward requires one thing, it requires reconciliation," Frazer said at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank. "The speaker is a member of the transitional federal institutions ... the symbol of the president and the prime minister backing a move to push him out is counter to that spirit of reconciliation." Adan's ouster is seen by many as a move by President Abdullahi Yusuf and Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi to consolidate power and exact revenge against him. "We are advising the government, as supporters of the government, to demonstrate something different going forward," Frazer said. Idd Beddel Mohamed, the charge d'affaires at the U.N. permanent mission of Somalia, said at the same event that he supported Adan's dismissal and asked Frazer to do the same. "What goes around comes around," he said of the speaker. "I hope the international community will respect this decision and the sovereignty of Somalia." Frazer said her government respected the sovereignty of Somalia, but that the speaker's ouster would have a negative impact. However, she said recent statements by the speaker were "not helpful." "The speaker himself has to do more to reach out," she said. The weak transitional government was pushed out in June from the capital Mogadishu but was restored to the capital after Ethiopian troops helped with the ouster of the Islamists before the New Year. Frazer said the Islamists should not be allowed to be "reconstituted" as a political entity, but she urged the transitional government to reach out to moderate Islamists as well as business and clan leaders and women's groups. "This dialogue must move forward very quickly," she said. Source: Reuters, Jan 17, 2007
  20. NN....Saaxib, you could perhaps questioned the ill-fainted attempt by courts to oust the TFG, it was a big blunder on their part, but the initial war to oust the warlords from Xamar enjoyed tremendous public support likes of which was never seen in Somalia. No one was forced to fight against warlords.
  21. This is from a man Amxaaro u ala laasaaye....aduun
  22. NN...If you believe the courts was making of particular sub-sub clan, why do think it was so succesful in chasing the warlords away?. And why would the people Mogadisho fight for them? As for beliefs, It doesn't have to be particular ideology. As long as we Somalis don't follow clan leaders into political oblivion, it is fine by me. It was an oppurtunity for Somalis to mature politically, not just be tied down by the blind loyalty to the clan.
  23. The courts gave Somalia an oppurtunity to move beyond the clan system. It was far from perfect, but it had the making and the potential to take Somalia into new era where people's loyalties stem from their beliefs rather than their lineage.
  24. LoooooooooooL@Moderate Sky....N what are you..ultra liberal Yonis...who is we?