Holac

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Everything posted by Holac

  1. Galbeedi, this is overshadowed by Trump's win. What is your opinion on racist Trump and his stunning win?
  2. I feel bad for Obama. He put his reputation and legacy on the line. He should not have campaigned so hard for Hillary. She was a flawed a candidate as Trump, but Trump was a new face and a change candidate.
  3. The "hidden Trump voter" was always there. They just weren't telling the pollsters. I sympathize with the White working class. Wikileaks has exposed a lot about how the globalist corrupt elite run the country and watch out for their interest. If you are a poor White person who lost his job, you want to "take your country back". It is simple.
  4. Thanks Blue. I will try the 23andme kit as well.
  5. ^^ That is an uplifting result Bluelicious. It gives me hope that there is someone out there that is 100% Somali.
  6. Faadumo Dayib This lady is busy building a fake profile using Western media. She is not the first Somali woman who run for President and quite frankly it means nothing to run for office in Somalia.
  7. In the Facebook video that he claimed to have shot, Todd Orr’s face was covered in blood. A chunk of flesh hung from his arm, like melting butter. A crescent gash above his ear was deep as a canyon, and another fold of flesh appeared to hang precariously from his skull. “Yeah, life sucks in bear country,” the 50-year-old said. What a tremendous understatement. Because of Orr’s presence of mind, though, he lived to tell his tale. “He did everything he was supposed to do,” Madison County Sheriff Roger Thompson told the Montana Standard. In a Facebook post Sunday, Orr told his full story. It began in the black Saturday predawn, when he ventured into the untamed Montana wilderness to scout for elk. He hiked nearly 5 kilometres into Madison Valley, about 160 kilometres south of Bozeman. Every 30 seconds, he would stop and “holler out, ‘Hey bear,'” in an attempt to “not surprise any bears along the trail.” Orr was no amateur, though, so he didn’t merely rely on audible warnings. Hanging from his side was a holster, a pistol snug inside. More importantly, in his bag was a canister of bear spray, a pepper spray made to repel bears that Chuck Bartlebaugh, founder and director of the Center for Wildlife Information in Missoula, Mont., told National Geographic is “the single most important innovation to emerge for both hunters and hikers passing through grizzly country in the last 50 years, if not ever.” Studies have shown it can stop a bear charging at 56 kilometres per hour. Orr was prepared for anything, or so he thought. Despite his bear-warning cries, he came across a sow (female) grizzly bear with her cubs in the middle of a grassy meadow. It was just before the 7:26 a.m. sunrise flooded Montana’s mountains with light, but still he could see the bears from across the field. He yelled the refrain, “Hey, bear!” and the sow seemed to take the hint. She began wandering away with her furry babies. It must have been a relief – female grizzly bears, after all, can weigh up to 800 pounds and stand as tall as 8 feet. To make them better diggers, they have rounded humps on their backs because of an extra mass of muscles attached to their backbones, which makes them stronger, and longer claws on their front paws, according to the National Wildlife Federation. Then, she turned. The bear, Orr wrote, “charged straight my way. I yelled a number of times so she knew I was human and would hopefully turn back. No such luck.” Still composed, the hiker whipped out the bear spray, that game-changing invention that proved useful for so many, and unloaded a “full charge” of coral spray at “about 25 feet.” He might as well have used a water gun. “Her momentum carried her right through the orange mist and on me,” he wrote. As he tells it, he was thrown to the ground, the great beast mounting him, viciously attacking with her teeth the way a mother would to protect her cubs. Orr threw his arms around the back of his neck, praying she wouldn’t hit an artery as her teeth repeatedly punctured his unprotected skin. “The force of each bite was like a sledge hammer with teeth,” Orr wrote. “She would stop for a few seconds and then bite again. Over and over.” He just lay there, calm as possible. Eventually, after “what seemed like an eternity,” the bear stopped, turned heel and “disappeared.” I couldn’t believe this was happening a second time. Why me? He assessed the situation – blood poured out of “numerous bleeding puncture wounds on my arms and shoulders.” It wasn’t great, but “I knew I would survive.” His truck was parked nearly 5 kilometres downhill, so he summoned the strength he had left to half-hike, half-jog down the trail. Since he thought the bear might still be around, he didn’t want to stop and dress his wounds just yet. Orr just needed to reach this truck. The nightmare was almost over. “I knew I would survive and thanked God for getting me through this,” he wrote. About 10 minutes later, though, he realized the nightmare had just begun. The bear burst through the tree line. The sounds of tree branches cracking and breaking cut through the serene Montana morning, and Orr turned around to find “the Griz bearing down at 30 feet.” He didn’t know if the bear followed him or accidentally happened back upon him. At the moment, he didn’t much care – Orr was convinced he was about to die. In a ferocious flash of fur and teeth, the bear pinned him back down to the ground. “I couldn’t believe this was happening a second time,” Orr wrote. “Why me?” And so for a second time in 10 minutes, Orr threw his arms around the back of his neck, praying the bear wouldn’t hit an artery as her teeth repeatedly punctured his unprotected skin. Following the advice offered by the National Wildlife Federation, he tried to remain silent and still. “Playing dead” doesn’t work with black bears, but it signals to grizzly bears that you aren’t a threat. His silence was quickly broken, though. “One bite on my forearm went through to the bone and I heard a crunch,” Orr wrote. “My hand instantly went numb and wrist and fingers were limp and unusable.” Against his own will, he flinched and gasped for breath. “The sound triggered a frenzy of bites to my shoulder and upper back,” he wrote. “I knew I couldn’t move or make a sound again so I huddled motionless.” The bites moved to his head. At one point the bear tore through the flesh above his ear, “nearly scalping me.” Orr had learned, though, and he “didn’t move.” “I thought this was the end,” he wrote. “She suddenly stopped and just stood on top of me,” he wrote. “I will never forgot that brief moment. Dead silence except for the sound of her heavy breathing and sniffing. I could feel and hear breath on the back of my neck, just inches away. I could feel her front claws digging into my lower back below my backpack where she stood. I could smell the terrible pungent odour she emitted. For thirty seconds she stood there crushing me. My chest was smashed into the ground and forehead in the dirt. When would the next onslaught of biting begin? I didn’t move. “And then she was gone.” His vision was utterly obscured by blood. Knowing the bear could return at any second, he reached down for his pistol. It was gone. “The bear’s ferocious bites and pulling had ripped the straps from the pack and the holster attached to it,” wrote Orr. After wiping blood out of an eye, he looked around to discover no sign of the bear. “Blood was still dripping off my head and both elbows and my shirt was soaked to the waist and into my pants,” but Orr was convinced he could reach the truck, which was still about 45 minute away. Somehow, he found more strength, and began jogging toward the truck. Once there, he recorded the video and began driving, hoping he wouldn’t bleed out before he had cell service and could call a hospital. Luckily, he came upon a rancher who called the hospital for him. Then he drove 27 kilometres to Ennis hospital, where he underwent “eight hours of stitching to put me back together.” Covered in blood, suffering from a broken arm, skin turning a deep purple in the places the bear’s attack didn’t puncture the skin – Orr was beat up and broken, but he would make it. He closed his post with another understatement: “Not my best day, but I’m alive.” And that he hoped to clean his truck out soon. “My girlfriend says it looks like I had gutted an elk in the driver’s seat,” he wrote. “She just seemed to lose interest because he was playing dead,” Sheriff Roger Thompson told the Montana Standard. “Then she just wandered off. Bears can be that way when they have their babies with them.” Added Thompson, “It’s like being struck by lightning twice in the same day; you don’t get attacked by the same bear in one day. . . . I think he should go out and buy a lottery ticket now.” Currently the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks is determining if anything will happen to the bear.
  8. The Shabab militia didn't want the US to help Puntland dismantle the suicide/IED making network based in Galmudug. The mission of the militia that night was to overrun the American/PIS base on the outskirts of Galkaio and kill everyone. If the terrorist succeeded that night and killed the Americans and PIS members, I am very positive Galmudug would be singing a different tune, distancing itself from the incident.
  9. UPDATE: U.S. self-defense strikes in Somalia On September 28, in coordination with the Federal Government of Somalia, U.S. forces conducted a self-defense strike against al-Shabaab, an al-Qaeda-associated terrorist group, in Galcayo, Somalia. During a Somali-led counterterrorism operation to disrupt an al-Shabaab Improvised Explosive Device (IED) making network, a group of armed al-Shabaab fighters attacked, threatening the safety and security of the Somali force and their U.S. advisors. Somali forces returned fire in self-defense. The U.S. conducted a self-defense strike to neutralize the threat, killing nine (9) enemy fighters. We have seen reports alleging non-combatant casualties as a result of this defensive strike. We have assessed all credible evidence and determined those reports are incorrect. As with all such allegations, we take this one seriously. Once an allegation of non-combatant casualties is reported, we conduct a review of all available relevant information. The review includes all relevant and credible information provided from numerous sources, including reports posted to social media. If the allegation is initially determined to be credible, additional levels of assessment are conducted. The U.S. remains committed to our partners in eliminating terrorism and advancing security in the region. Violent extremists endanger the safety and stability of the Somali people; countering these threats remains in our common interests. (UPDATED as of 6:15 p.m. Sept. 29, 2016) http://www.africom.mil/NewsByCategory/pressrelease/28423/update-u-s-self-defense-strikes-in-somalia
  10. This is most likely the beginning of the end. Ethiopia is unraveling at unprecedented speed. Will Ogaden declare independence?
  11. Galmudug has become a lawless enclave and a base for Alshabab terrorists and sympathizers. It may not be a crazy idea to Build a temporary wall between Galkacyo and Galmudug district within Galkacyo. The terrorists setting up shop in Galmudug to conduct suicide attacks on Puntland will never relent because there is no authority in Galmudug that can put pressure on these terrorists. The best solution is to separate the communities and let Galmudug deal with monsters it is nurturing. These snakes will eventually bite them hard.
  12. Puntland has a point. Galmudug and Alshabab work together. There has never been a terrorist attack in Galmudug side of Galkacyo. Don't tell me the "infidels" according to Alshabab, live only in the north side. Truth hurts.
  13. UAE must deal with the federal government directly. Having said that, something tells me Culusoow is mad because he didn't get his cut of the deal. It is all about the Benjamins.
  14. Tallaabo is a racist for attacking Burco people. Barwaaqo, Thank You.
  15. These low intelligence grown-ups want to please their Arab master Al-Baghdadi by stabbing innocent people. Shameless terrorists.
  16. http://nypost.com/2016/09/14/hillary-hates-obama-for-beating-her-in-2008-hacked-powell-email-reveals/