Changed

Nomads
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Everything posted by Changed

  1. u had me going for a while bro but i lost me on the quote below.... could u explain that to me please 4)UNTIL WE BELIEVE KISMAYO, MOGADHISHU, GEDO ETC SHOULD COME BACK TO THE CONTROL OF ITS OWNER, NO PEACE FOR SOMALIS!!!!! lets just pray that is all we can do for somalia at this time :rolleyes:
  2. Conscious Manipulation i viewed this article before and walaahi this is what we somali's need to know about our country ... the freaking euthopians attack ogadenia for the uranium reasons :eek: and the united stares government does not stop them somalis dont take that into consideration but instead worry about tribalism....we dont even think about helping the people in ogadenia out instead we worry about how many gun we have and if we should ask for qaraan to buy another tang of weapons The reason America voluntered to help Somalia out was not for a humanitarry reason but for oil and uranium...and the guy did not mention it this ==> during the in the mid seventies mr siad bare payed for a germans to dig for oil but when they were half way ,he stopped the process and it had something to do with somalia not being able to affort for the germans. Barre was won over as an American puppet i agree with him on that, no islamic person in his right mind would kill 7 mullah at one time ..correct me if am wrong , i dont remember the exact number. BUT then somalis are to blame too..we could have taken our country back and re-build it, we can actually re-build it now but there is not a single educated , none tribalist , and liberal person that wants wants to volunter, the volunters that we have are war lords that want nothing but the little money they get from the community they rule and yes since they are all phyco's they get to kill for free and actually be appriciated for killing innocent somalis :eek: ... ALL in ALL........MAY ALLAH TURN SOMALIA BACK TO NORMAL AGAIN AMEEEN
  3. this is crazy they had a different pic of him in the news and nowt they are have a totally new pic in the website boycot gave us .......
  4. SUBXANA-ALLAH my mom told me a long time ago and i never payed attention :rolleyes: ......but its is true if u really look into it .....may allah save us from the wrath of the none muslims and bless all of us ameeen
  5. better late then never ! wlc to the nomad family
  6. better late then never ! wlc to the nomad family
  7. ar waa yaab.......i hope bush knows of ur hard work he will do u a favor by getting u in the army and making sure in die in action.....
  8. ASALAMA CALEYKOM ...... BARWAAQO AM GLAD U FIGURED OUT THE DIRECTION...AM IN USA MN........ HOPE Y'LL HAVE A GREAT TIME ....AND PLEASE POST THE REVIEW IF Y'LL ATTEND ......INSHA ALLAH U WILL HAVE A BLAST
  9. MAY ALLAH BLESS HIS SOUL.AMEEN I JUST SAW HIS DEATH ON CHANEL FOUR AND THEY HAD HIS PICTURE THERE ,HE WAS REALLY YOUNG I BET HE WAS IN HIS MID 20'S AND HE LEFT BEHIND A WIFE 2 YEAR OLD KID AND REMIND U HIS WIFE WAS FIVE MONTHS PREGNANT ..HE PICKED THE SUSPECT FROM DOWNTOWN AND DROPPED HIM OFF AT PEN AVE WHERE HE WAS SHOT THEY SAID IF IT WAS ROBBERY THEY DID NOT ROP MORE 20 DOLLAR CUZ TAXI DRIVERS ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO CARRY MORE THAN $20 BUCKS .. ALLAH JANATUL FARDUWSO HA GEYO
  10. I VOTE FOR BATUULO HER AVATOR AND HER NAME ARE PERFECT FOR EACHOTHER..
  11. SUP BABY GIRL ........HOW ARE U DOING ...AM CHILING ...LOL..
  12. To all the resident IN UK........There is a conference coming up in UK LONDON Conference 2003 Sat. 12th to Sun. 13th July "Islaam Is The Sunnah, And The Sunnah Is Islaam" Imaam al-Barbahaaree (died 329H) Main Guest Ash-Shaykh Fawzee Al-Atharee Student Of Al-Allaamah Ibnul-Uthaymeen (rahimahullaah) Other Speakers Abu Hakeem Bilaal Davis Abu Khadeejah Abdul-Waahid Hasan As-Somaalee Abul-Hasan Maalik al-Akhdar Abu Iyaad Amjad Rafiq London Venue Sarah Bonnell School Deanery Road London E15 4LP (Off Romford Road, East London) Cost £3.00 per day adults Children under 12 - FREE Stalls & Enquiries Tel. 0793 - 994 4320 email: info@al-athariyyah.com http://www.salafitalk.net/st/
  13. Originally posted by Che-Guevara: Oooway....Lagtaahay bohot maryooley loog bollywood filmi basan kartaahay....lol My fav Indian movie has to be Dil....Remember lacag...Having spent in my teen yrs in Pakistan, i couldn't posibbly aviod Hindi movies n Cricket. aree kia baat hee tu pakistan see ayahe .masag mad karo na yar .... kia saj boltahe tu :confused: tu pakistanse...hai allah yahatu bohot pakistani luq he
  14. OH my GOD......ALLAH U NAXARISTO.......bismillah.......
  15. oooh masha allah........that was a fabolous ......
  16. Aryaada we still blessing america .....acuudka this guy never give's up ALLAh bless IRAQ ..............ilahoow GAALADA JABi say it after me AMEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEN AMEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEN..............war ila dhaha ........ILAHOOW GAALADA JABI :cool:
  17. that is sad ........when will all this ****** notion of killing eachother end :confused: ........my god bless his soul..
  18. I swear wa laba laboday :mad: why point side's.....Why blame the north and south :confused: the war was not about north and south it was about south and south........Ya Rabi and dont blame the people of the south for what was done to the North when the former president was in charge ..i hear my mom say how unfair he was back in the 70's to somalis in the north and she is from the south.......its not time to point hands and am not saying we should unite the north and the south cuz i gave up on that notion but can we all be somalis and not point fingers brothers fight yet love eachother and that is what we need to do........we should focus on how we could make somalia is peacefull since somaliland is already peacefull and masha allah prospering ... I Personaly think the southners should be happy for our brother and sisters from the North.. And the northerners should support the south not critise on their downfall and mistakes .......rubbing mistakes to their faces wont help! but increase the tention ^^^^^^^ that was my opinion ladies and gents zadiqa..........walaaalo..........dont blame the somali citizen from the south they were not happy with it ..if they were happy why is he not rulling somalia at this time ? may god bless his soul but ALLAh said to forgive ..........remember ALLAH is gafuuro raxiim and he also is shadidul ciqaab so those people that did anyone wrong will pay for it ........i suggest u not blame the somali people cuz they had no share in it ........its like blamming american citizen for the war on Irag we all know more than half prottested the war but bush did not listen i bet it was like that ..........let me add i was not born at that time and the best of my knowledge is what i heard from my mom and her freinds discuss
  19. The Roots of Islamic Backwardness by J. Bradford DeLong The war in Iraq is over. But the battle to transform the economies of the Middle East--the only hope of preventing fanaticism from claiming a generation of young unemployed Arabs and Iranians--is only beginning. That struggle goes beyond development strategies and touches the roots of Islam. "The people of Iran," the late Ayatollah Khomeini is reported to have liked to say, "did not make the Islamic Revolution to lower the price of watermelons." By that logic, capitalism and Islam are incompatible. Are they? History may provide some guidance here. The Industrial Revolution started in the English midlands and Belgian forests--regions endowed with coal, canals (along which barges could carry the coal), and skilled metalworkers (who could build coal-burning steam engines). Coal, canals, and metalworkers were the foundation for building, installing, and using the automatic spinning machines, power looms, and railway locomotives that were the first modern machine industries. Steam power, factories, markets, and industry quickly spread throughout northwest Europe and its settler colonies. By the end of the 19th century, Turin, Vienna, Prague, Wroclaw, Essen, Paris, Lille, Liege, Lyons, and Barcelona in continental Europe, much of Britain and the United States, parts of Canada and Ireland, and Melbourne, Buenos Aires, and Johannesburg (plus, of course, Tokyo) were centers of modern industry. Beyond these limits, however, the fires of the Industrial Revolution barely smoldered, if they burned at all. For two centuries, far-sighted Ottoman viziers had argued for the need to spur Turkey's economic and technological development: back in 1453, Sultan Mehmet II's armies had conquered Constantinople, because Mehmet had built the most technologically advanced and powerful artillery in the world. In the early 19th century, Egypt's Mehemet Ali looked at the global balance of economic and military power, and decreed that Egypt must industrialize, fast. He feared that unless Egyptians could learn modern industrial technologies and develop an economy prosperous enough to support modern industrial armies, his descendants would be mere puppets of British and French viceroys. His decree went nowhere: Egypt did not industrialize, and Mehemet Ali's great grandchildren did indeed become puppets of the British and French. Today's 70 million Egyptians live much better than their heavily taxed cotton- and grain-growing predecessors of Mehemet Ali's time. But the gap between the economies of the Arab Middle East and Western Europe--in (non-oil sector) productivity, technological capability, and standards of living--is wider than it was a century ago, and vastly greater than at the start of the Industrial Age. In many respects, the slow pace of the Islamic world's economic development has been a matter of choice. The Prophet Muhammad was a merchant, and the Quraysh (Mecca's ruling tribe at the time of the Prophet) lived by guiding caravans from Arabia to the Fertile Crescent. But the affinity between Islamic attitudes, rulers, merchants, and craftsmen that made Cairo, Damascus, Baghdad, and Samarkand jewels of High Medieval urban civilization vanished long ago. Industrialization means novelty and change. If those who hold power fear that change may bring unpleasant consequences, they will systematically obstruct it, which rulers in the Middle East proceeded to do for centuries. But slow and distorted development in the Islamic world is the result of blocked opportunities as well. Wouldn't Pakistan be much better off if it exported more of its textiles to the rich industrial world? Wouldn't waiving Pakistan's quota under the Multi-Fiber Agreement have been a very good and important step for the US government to take in reciprocation of the Pakistani government's help as US-led forces attacked Al Qaeda bases in Afghanistan? No doubt it would have been. Wouldn't prospects for economic development in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia be much more promising if European governments would let EU citizens buy more North African oranges? Of course. But other key reasons for the slow pace of economic development in the Islamic world reflect the standard dilemmas of poor governance. "Protect property rights and enforce contracts," say Western economists. But property rights and contracts are threatened at many levels. They are threatened by roving bandits, by local notables, and, most of all, by government functionaries who use their offices to extort extra income. Simply put, a weak state cannot enforce contracts and property rights, while a state that is strong enough to enforce them must control its own bureaucrats. However, the most important reasons that the Islamic world has done worse than Latin America or Southeast Asia seem to be focused around education. There can be little hope for sustained economic development where the educational system is at least one generation--and possibly three generations--behind other regions in terms of its commitment to universal literacy, and where higher education largely ignores the skills and subjects needed to enable people to master technology. After all, blocked export opportunities, weak government institutions, and high levels of corruption are worldwide problems. Even political and religious leaders hostile to change and industrialization are not uncommon. But as we compare patterns of development throughout the world, more and more evidence is piling up that universal literacy and a large class of people with industrial-technical skills are key resources that determine whether countries are able to break free from the grip of backwardness and poverty. what do y'll think? .......do u agree and do u disagree? ....please give out ur reason for agreing and disagreing ...
  20. Originally posted by DeadlyVision: Adress that last line if ur mind is not hum_ Somethin like a moryaan wit' a gun_ Good one .. oo kalay ileen somali ba aheed.... :confused:
  21. ina alilahi wa ina ilahayhi rajicuun....walaalo there is no way this would have been avoided cuz allah had it all planned out and it was their day to go.......even the vain would not have been clotted there would have been another reason ......i personally think at 29 it was a little to late to dare take a surgery and also in iran where the doctors are not that well trainned :eek: ..... did y'll hear of the two puerto rican kids that just separated somewhere in the usa........they are still alive but one was in critical condition the last time i heard about him
  22. lol silent........... u are lucky should kiss ur lucky stars why do all most all somalis go for law school, medical school, computer (recently) and busniss :confused:
  23. oh hell no.....ur dad is not paying for u wedding .....u will pay for it .....now get a job og girl and start earning big dinnero .....