Ms DD
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Everything posted by Ms DD
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Rudy needs a chimp, not a woman to train. Duqa i know you got hurt by a chick, but easy on the calaacal and making other ladies pay. Orodoow, get on your fatuuro kuuseey.
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I think Islamically, long distance relationship is better. Less of xagxagasho.
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^^ Looking forward to it. PS. I dont believe everyword people tell me. For instance, I dont think that you are good football player...so there :rolleyes: Trolling: There is a funeral parlour near where I work. I saw 2 dead coffins pass me by today only. Sometimes beautiful horses carry the dead. Why ..i will never know.
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Is it true bikers have such nice buns? Or is it just a myth?
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Ghanima This person is still employed by employers. Wicked employer who implied inaan ka dhaxli doono eventually Lily I am also bag lady. I have everything except food there. I have an ipod, mobile, 2 small Quran (one with translation), xisnul-muslims, small arabic dua book, walkman, pads, lip bum, set of keys, car radio, wallet, small back-up tapes for work purposes, tablets for every occassion i.e headache, period, hayfever. People (reads sister/husband) get fed of my bag, when I ask them to carry it for me.
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lol Down boy!
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Skipper Salaam aleykum and welcome I have never been in a long term relationship ..unless you count the puppy love at my teenage years Anyhow, You are seeing the girl this December..not long to go so dont worry about what other say. You can have pretty good idea of where the whole relationship stand when you meet each other and you will take it from there. Also pray salatul Istakhaara. http://www.al-baz.com/shaikhabdalqadir/Books_and_Text_of_Wisdom/Special_Prayers/Salat_al-Istikhara/salat_al-istikhara.html
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lol@suuro. Lily canjeero with dalac bilaash..top. MMA I do love muufo Baraawe. I remember markaan ku fuuqsan jirey maraq kaluun with muufo Baraawe at the Baraawe beach. Memories Walle. I love muufo oo lagu rafaajiyey macsaro,moos, iyo maraq hilib with spot of liin dhanaan and bisbaas cagaar. Mistakenly i thought I could get this in Boosaaso, but i didnt find one place that makes proper muufo in the whole city. Khasaaro for them. They have no idea what they are missing truly. Truly fingerlicking experience
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What is tube and bike? That is for common people. The last time i was one of those was back in my student days. As for the bike, I only get on that thing for leisure at the gym. La dida
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Originally posted by Legend of Zu: ^^ Disagree...a 34 year old xaliimo with maturity and sensuality will give alot of the younger xaliimos run for their money... Cheers Oh dear..someone ayaa la soo saqiir suujiyey.
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Ngonge War niyahow uunsigayaga inoo daa. Qashqashaada daayo. Odd to see a man who hates catar and uunsi!
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The IVY? that the place they put a leaf on your plate for dinner? Gimme baasto and bariis anyday! Zen darling Being footie widow must be hard. Imagine 90min oo dhan oo attention lagu siineyn! oh the horror!
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Jim Davidson is the director of the Dubai Comedy Festival? erm why? I dislike the bloke for some reason.
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Not every girl is in her 20 Shar ma arkow.
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Football fan. I would hate to be the wife a footie fan!
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Well everyone on SOL by now knows my solution to this problem. I will save them from saying it out loud
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Wa aleykum salaam Post more details The mother of Zakariyaay. Although the idea of memorising Quran cos of cash seem bit..i dont know..iffy.
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Neph Menace on the road. Let us know when you are leashed on the road
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Why are we feeling yuk? Is it because we are conditioned to think this way? On the practical side, a lot of women wey nafisi lahaayeen.
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Has your employer prevented you from using social networks, even in your lunch hour? If people are performing and hitting targets and deadlines, what’s the big deal? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6969791.stm The most enlightened of employers realise that people who spend large proportions of their day commuting and working need to be able to organise certain aspects of their private lives whilst at work. But some businesses want it all their own way and pay only lip service to the concept of good work-life balance.
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There are certain words that cant be said on air and certain discussions are off limits. Isn't censorship sometimes necessary? Some European countries propagating information deemed to be racist or harmful to society is illegal. Inciting the murder of groups or individuals is illegal. In an Islamic country, The insulting of reverred figures such as the prophets would be no -go area. However they can say all they like about Islam and its adherents. They can even be liberal in their thinking. The time of the prophet (saw), people used to call him all sorts of names (Read the Quran for references). But in the above context, we are talking about the issue of airing people's view and whether censorship is necessary. According to Khayr, it is. Unfortunately, preventing people from being aware of the often sophisticated arguments used by non-religious, makes them vulnerable to those arguments when they do eventually encounter them.
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I honestly dont know whether it is a joke or not. But it made me sick to my stomach.
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Salaam Khayr SO you are suggesting that all views that is contrary to and not in line with any govt should be buried? I think views can be challenged as long as they are expressed publically. Naqaska dadka lagu celinayo was never the way of the prophet (saw). Curbs of this nature, imposed by a community or a state, will ultimately produce a society of hypocrites. No sincere person can ever flourish in such a repressive atmosphere. It is only freedom of thought and expression which can save man from hypocrisy. You can still follow Allah's laws whilst letting others have their say. Of course as with everything, there are limits but to completely drive these views underground? Just see what is happening and the mess we are in in majority of muslim countries.
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The World's Most Powerful Women Muslim Women In Charge Elizabeth MacDonald and Megha Bahree 08.30.07, 6:00 PM ET Dr. Nahed Taher, the first woman chief executive of Saudi Arabia's Gulf One Investment Bank, has been increasingly busy these days. The former senior economist at the National Commercial Bank has been immersed in plans for financing public sector projects, including expansion of the terminal that handles Mecca pilgrims at Jeddah's King Abdulaziz International Airport. Dr. Taher has also been overseeing financing for a water desalination plant for Saudi Arabian Airlines, as well as Saudi copper, zinc and gold mines. Taher is unusual in a country where women are prohibited to drive, vote or hold high-level government office, and in a region where poverty and tradition deprive many women of control over basic choices, from what to wear to when to get married. But business women like Taher are gaining power despite these unusually tough odds. Despite the barriers, 10 women executives from the Middle East made our World's 100 Most Powerful Women ranking this year. How are they managing to break through the glass ceiling? Good old-fashioned capitalism has played a role. The economic liberalization of several Muslim countries in recent years, and the privatization of large chunks of government-run companies, have helped Muslim businesswomen get a greater foothold. "Now opportunities are open to everyone," says Laura Osman, the first female president of the Arab Bankers Association of North America. "The private sector runs on meritocracy." In fact, banking in the Muslim world is populated by a growing number of women, even in the historically all-male executive suite. Sahar El-Sallab is second in command at Commercial International Bank, one of Egypt's largest private banks. There are more women climbing the ranks behind her. Today, four out of 10 of Commercial International Bank's employees and 70% of its management staff are women. Similarly, Maha Al-Ghunaim, chairman of Kuwait's Global Investment House, has steadily grown the investment bank she founded to now manage more than $7 billion in assets. It recently won permission to operate in Qatar and next wants to establish a presence in Saudi Arabia. Muslim businesswomen now also sit at the top ranks of mega-conglomerates. Imre Barmanbek (No. 88) runs one of Turkey's largest multinationals, Dogan Holding, which recently went through a shift in operational focus from finance to media and energy. Lubna Olayan helps oversee The Olayan Group of Saudi Arabia, one of the biggest multinationals in the Middle East with investments in more than 40 companies. And the top ranks of the conglomerate run by the Khamis family of Egypt include several women. Originally from India, Vidya Chhabria (No. 97) is chairman of the United Arab Emirates' Jumbo Group, a $2 billion multinational that operates in 50 countries, with interests in durables, chemicals and machinery products. It also owns Jumbo Electronics, one of the Middle East's largest distributors of Sony (nyse: SNE - news - people ) consumer electronics, as well as worldwide brands in information technology and telecom products. In the government sector, Muslim women are also winning posts. Sheikha Lubna Al-Qasimi (No. 99), minister of the economy in the United Arab Emirates, has cracked down on stock market shenanigans with tougher rules, transparency and corporate governance. In March 2007, the Supreme Judicial Council of Egypt, the country's highest court, chose 31 women to be judges, 30 of whom now work at courts around Egypt. Afghanistan's constitution reserves a quarter of its seats in its lower house and 17% in the upper house of its parliament for women--a higher percentage than the number of women now in the U.S. Congress (14%). None of this means that the going is easy for Muslim professional women as a group. In 2002, the first Arab Human Development Report, issued by the United Nations Development Programme, found that women occupied an average of only 4% of all seats in the parliaments of Arab countries, compared with 11% in sub-Saharan Africa and 13% in Latin America and Caribbean countries. The report blamed these figures in part on women's inequality under the law, and also noted that just one in every two Arab women can read and write. By delivering the bad news, though, the report may have had a galvanizing effect. It "really shocked everyone in the Arab world because it came from within," says Dr. Nailah Hamdy, assistant professor of mass communication at the American University in Cairo. That meant that the report's criticism of women's second-class status "could no longer be perceived as a foreign idea," she says. For a lucky and determined few, opportunities do exist. "Just being a woman in our part of the world is quite difficult," says El-Sallab of Egypt's Commercial International Bank. "But if you have the proper education, credibility and integrity in the way you handle your job, intelligent men will always give you your due." source The first somali powerhouse woman is coming from where? or must we first wait for our male counteparts to reach these dizzy heights?