Alpha Blondy

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Everything posted by Alpha Blondy

  1. Apophis;957429 wrote: That song from Pulp Fiction brought me back. KLASSIC stuff!! And lets give a virtual beatdown to this warsaame troll, nigga is too upitty :D YEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH, that's what i'm talking about, inaar.
  2. ^ what's your problem? who are you? what do you want? why are you attacking 'us'? lets negotiate?
  3. warsamaale;957399 wrote: You just kashifaad yourself, C & B is your script most definitely, i will tell admin you have two accounts asap. you're a little vermin, inaar. why are you being vulgar? i don't have a problem with you, waa kuu sidee, dee? WHY are you inciting hatred and foul-month-nimo on this thread? please account for this behaviour.
  4. ^ you're just being silly now. i don't have time for trolls, ma garatey?
  5. ^ inaar, who the hell are you and why are you on this thread? we have a procedure in place in this thread, ma garatey? :mad: can you LEAVE immediately. :mad:
  6. D.O.C;957330 wrote: Inaaar jimce wanaagsan al. Inaar you telling me I am cousins to these guys in the video:eek:? This is highly unlikely we share the same lineage and because of that we as Axmed stones are/ will not allowing these hooligans and reckless human beings to come to our door steps for this so called somaliland football tournament, would you? inaar, xalaadu was rubuuc iyo falaad, ma garatey? when my uncles, the xamaaliinta iyo geeleyaasha dekeda Berbera made the famous gabay about Geele Arab in the 1970s......''sodan aan jiray iyo sodan an siiday, sonkaar arab sidow, saka wa kow''....they weren't wrong...ma istidhi? nor, do i think Ahmed Dhagax's offspring will be ready to host a national tournament for another 30 years.....ee sida uula soco. :cool: LOOOOOOOOOL@hooligans and reckless human beings..........laakin, the famous arabite poet Faraax Nuur muxuu yidhi to the arab............''lix meeshad ku joogtaan, dagaal labta ka ogaada''.........:D:D:D
  7. Apooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooow, reason #55 why you should NEVER quit this thread. its has a ''Tarantinoian'' quality about it, ma garatey? LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
  8. i bought this in 2011. its dated 2010. its now 2013. its value has increased, i reckon. mind you, i bought this piece in an auction, during the opening ceremony of Hargeisa's first ever art gallery. i paid a ridiculously extortionate amount for this work. i was forced to, you see. i would've haggled but i had to keep up appearances, since i was among the elite, that day. i want to commission several private works of art in the next couple of months. balse, the somali art scene, is very much under-developed, insofar, as selling to art collectors. i reckon there is a niche, for Al, to carve out a tidy little profit, as a art dealer/middle-man. what y'all think? Al
  9. ^ good riddance, ma istidhi? you were after all older than the majority of the thread 'members'. good luck bro. i'll be joining you soon.
  10. The hypocrisy of "aid" to Africa (there's a reason the fiercest defenders of aid are invariably white) by Siji Jabbar Does it piss you off the way Africa is written about in connection with development aid? It does me. It's not so much the mere fact of writing about Africa and aid that does it, but more the way Africa is portrayed as a continent whose inhabitants survive purely on the benevolence and generosity of the West, continent as bottomless pit, a place that takes and takes and takes, and what is omitted from this portrayal of Africa. Development aid ought to be criticised and phased out, but it's annoying when critics take aim at the wrong target. It's even more annoying when the critic is African. The most recent article I came across on the subject was a one republished here and here with the title: "Why Western Aid to Africa Is a Waste". I'll take a look at what's left out of most articles about aid-to-Africa in a minute, but first a brief look at an idea put forward in the article that does a huge disservice to Africans. The idea is that Western donors come from societies that have scaled Maslow's hierarchy of needs, and now exist at the very top where the only needs they're concerned about are those of self-actualisation, whereas Africans are at the bottom of the pyramid, struggling to satisfy their basic needs of food, water, shelter and warmth, needs Western donors haven't had to think about in a long time. This is to write about Europeans and Africans as homogeneous masses, rich Westerners, poor Africans. Aside from the argument that people tend to span multiple layers of the hierarchy at the same time, Google shocking poverty in Europe and you will quickly discover that there are millions of Europeans who have a lot more on their minds than self-actualisation. But even more dangerously misleading is the idea that all or most Africans exist at the lowest level of Maslow's hierarchy of needs, all struggling desperately to survive, so that Western donors and their development projects are "attempting to pull peasant minds still grappling with physiological needs up to self-actualization when they haven't yet figured out how to achieve safety, love/belonging or self-esteem." It is because of writing like this that many people I have come across in Europe find it hard to grasp the idea of a socio-economically diverse African population, and even harder to believe there are ordinary middle class people in Africa with similar concerns and a similar sense of responsibility to that of middle class people elsewhere in the world (and I'm not talking about the Africa Bank of Development's patronising redefinition of "middle class" as those spending between $2 and $20 per day. Just normal middle class people who have been to university, hold down regular jobs, occasionally go on vacations and worry about getting their kids into good schools.). In the last few decades, the size of this middle class has contracted and expanded with the fortunes of the different countries on the continent, and when things have gotten particularly bad in any country, those who could leave did so, but the class does exist, and didn't just spring into existence with the publication of that Africa Bank of Development report. When Europeans encounter Africans abroad, do they think we'll all refugees? I imagine some must. On some occasions when I've reminisced about my own childhood, I've been told I must have been among the "upper class", whatever that is. All the middle class professionals, the doctors, engineers, architects, university lecturers and professors, lawyers, all these people don't exist in the minds of many people outside Africa because they did not grow up on a media diet that depicted such Africans. Thus, outside of the music pages, Africans are either desperately poor, helpless, gullible and easily exploited, or they're obscenely rich because they're corrupt. Europeans and Westerners may be seeing a wider variety of Africans in their newspapers and magazines since the Economist published its mea culpa in 2011 and "Africa Rising" became the new mantra, but it's probably going to take another couple of decades of balanced representation of Africans in the international media (and in popular culture) for the conditioning to be checked and reversed. Okay, let's talk about development aid. Development aid is not free money There's a type of argument known as 'Proof by assertion'. It is an argument in which a proposition is repeatedly restated regardless of contradiction, and continues to be repeated until challenges dry up and the assertion is accepted as truth, even if it is a lie. That's what has happened to the aid-to-Africa story. It has been told and keeps being told in a way that seems calculated to paint a false picture of Africa and its relation to aid. And this is what the blog post about Western aid being a waste is guilty of. When a European or American grows up hearing and reading about aid to Africa, year in year out, it's understandable if this repeated association affects the way they see Africans, in the abstract or in day-to-day life. I wonder if it's a continuous source of bafflement to such individuals that no African they meet ever appears grateful for all this money given to Africa by generous Westerners. Or maybe Europeans believe they shouldn't expect gratitude because the money is a form of penance for the sins visited on Africans by their forefathers. The word "aid" itself is a misnomer, hiding the fact that development aid is not free money. When you read articles like this one in Forbes magazine, you are led to believe it's free, but it isn't. Unfortunately, this is the way aid is usually written about, so people in the West (but also in Africa) think their respective governments are "giving" Africa and other developing regions money to waste as they desire because, I don't know, Westerners are too generous for their own good or something. It's a nice story, and no doubt, it makes people in "donor" countries feel good about themselves. But it's not quite true. Here's Dambisa Moyo (author of Dead Aid) writing in the Wall Street Journal: Even after the very aggressive debt-relief campaigns in the 1990s, African countries still pay close to $20 billion in debt repayments per annum, a stark reminder that aid is not free. In order to keep the system going, debt is repaid at the expense of African education and health care. Well-meaning calls to cancel debt mean little when the cancellation is met with the fresh infusion of aid, and the vicious cycle starts up once again. By the 1980s, money was being lent to countries all over the world. High interest rates were increasing to levels where debts became impossible to pay. “Almost inevitably, higher international interest rates led to worldwide recession” (Moyo, 2009, p.18). As countries were defaulting their loans, the only solution seemed to be through restructuring the debt owed. Since government involvement was perceived to be the cause of growth decline, privatized institutions such as the IMF’s Structural Adjustment Facility provided more loans to countries to pay off previous debts. CONTINUE READING.....................HERE http://www.thisisafrica.me/opinion/detail/19902/the-hypocrisy-of-aid-to-africa-there-s-a-reason-the-fiercest-defenders-of-aid-are-invariably-white#.UafzL1_3sgA.facebook ------------- interesting read. ------------
  11. jimco wanagsan oo wacan akhyarta sharafta leh.
  12. Apophis;957091 wrote: Not everyone in London lives in high rise, low rent like you did sxb what's this suppose to mean? :mad: I think I was, indirectly, responsible for the departed bird's fate. You see, I've been leaving food outside for them which inevitable turned to bait. The butterfly effect bird killer......! - i don't think Poirot would've solved this. I'm a simple man with simple views. You don't have to be Freud to figure that out. "Do I lie to myself to be happy?" quote from memento film....applies here, i reckon.
  13. D.O.C;957087 wrote: Al, the b'boom cousin, how ru doing today ?Are you preparing to attend the somaliland regions football tournament? I guess it's gonna exciting. waar habar qaloocooooooooooooooow, inaar iska waraan. so dhag iyo nus maaha xalaadu? the tournament was supposed to held in daanta arab-ka (Gelle Arab Statium) but they cancelled........ due to Haqsoor upraising, after the elections. they could have held it in Berbera's new stadium. now, i know y'all arab dhaan dhagax's have an inferiority complex, balse, lets think outside the box, for once. :cool: LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
  14. i could write a small book about your question wadaniga dhabtaoooow, balse that's bound to be BS. this is the truth: cilmi aan caqli laheyn =Diaspora/Returnee caqli aan cilmi laheyn = Reer Somaliyeed/local
  15. Cambuulo iyo bun;957081 wrote: :mad: This thread is an embarrassment ... Is this a wanna be troll shaah thread? Alpha Blondy this thread isn't what it use to be SMDH :mad: I think i'll start my own thread y'all are a effing disgrace ee sida ula socda ''concentrate your energies and unleash a powerful attack'' - Oba R.I.P (via the PMs to Al) indeed. lest we forgot, you know. truer words haven't been spoken since the maxruum departed. i hate this thread more than y'all. i hate it walahi. i really do. honestly. looking back, its been amazing BUT we've still got a long way to go. we have to defeat the troll shaah thread. its ABSOLUTELY imperative. there is a generational war on SOL and we can do it, ma garatey? LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
  16. Apophis;957079 wrote: I'm in a quagmire alright. Someone or something killed a bird in my garden and I've been looking for the culprit since Thursday. I don't have the body but there's plenty of bird feathers to suggest a murder, most foul, has taken place. look at this ''twerking twerker'' baal. since when did you have a garden? inaar, every inch of land is sacred ee just make sure you don't over step the boundaries. we know what y'all jubbalander are like, ma istidhi?. that west london cul-de-sac, you inhabit, is NOT up for grabs ee sida uula soco. Re: Bird Mystery - you ought to play an eposide of Poirot to get you in detective mode? you know, its crazy but i know you more than you care to admit...caadi maha. subtle insights via volunteered information, on these boards, can reveal so much about people, ma ila garatey, abti? LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
  17. ^ oo wayoow, inaar? is everything alright? maxa dhacaay dee?
  18. Apo, do you want to join me for a troll session to discuss your life and the way out of your quagmires. Al. LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL
  19. the best thing about this thread is......you can use it to write whatever you like, whenever you like. its all purposeful, you know.
  20. Jacaylbaro;957021 wrote: PINK ?? ,,,, ;) oh for goodness sakes JB, ma saasa? :mad:
  21. Chimera;957010 wrote: Welcome. Post some more. thanks for the welcomes, appetite it. ^ i couldn't possibly post any shows from as far back as you. you see, we didn't have a television in those days and i recently broke my duck in 2001...ee sida uula soco. but i use to catch a peek of Chucklevision at my uncle's house.