Alpha Blondy

Nomad
  • Content Count

    11,284
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    22

Posts posted by Alpha Blondy


  1. <cite>
    said:</cite>

    Oh it is sad you can't read the Holy Quran. If some Christian crusaders were to do the same and I was in the bus, I can probably get away unharmed by reading from the Bible with an added hallelujah :-D

     

    Oi,

     

    do you mean to tell me you can read the quran. Don't insult my intelligence, abti.

     

    the only things you read are glossy magazines. LOOOOOOOOOOOOOL

     


  2. <cite>
    said:</cite>

    Oday galbeedi bal u kaadi istiqaalada ha dhiibine...What kept SOL respectful for more than a decade is constant moderation by admins, to err is human, Marmar laftooda way ka yara qaloocataa, laakiin ma xuma nimanku.

     

    Alpha ahaa, Salaan sare.

     

    Cooofle,

     

    waxaad iga gudoonta salaan sare too. hope all is well.

     

    far too many folks looking for sympathy, if you ask Alpha. MODS have continually abused my musings on SOL in the most vacarious way. i don't complain. its futile, you know.


  3. have you heard about the Kenyan bus siege. apparently they dividedd the passenagers into Muslim and gaal. what was particularly impressive was the method they employed to differeniate between muslim and gaal.......they had to read the quran. thats ingenious. LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL

     

    i'd probably fail.so too would Dr Kenny.

     

    Kenny,

     

    You douchbag

     

    Whats your beef with Alpha?


  4. serious political infighting across the Somali pennisula.

     

    in Somaliland, there were demostrations against an attempted coup by the Kulmiye Zionist Criminal Regime.

     

    in Somalia, where infighting is a regular occurance, there's been some emerging development in the recent infighing between the PM and villa Somalia. i heard some mumble jumble on the BBC.

     

    meanwhile, we're all just continuing to survive amidst the evil


  5. serious political infighting across the Somali pennisula.

     

    in Somaliland, there were demostrations against an attempted coup by the Kulmiye Zionist Criminal Regime.

     

    in Somalia, where infighting is a regular occurance, there's been some emerging development in the recent infighing between the PM and villa Somalia. i heard some mumble jumble on the BBC.

     

    meanwhile, we're all just continuing to survive amidst the evil


  6. <cite>
    said:</cite>g

    Alpha, hope all is well warya.

     

    Ps, apart from one, I'm better than all those SL players
    :D

     

    waraa NORF,

     

    maxaa cusub. all is well here.

     

    kadir is probably the greatest SL player of all time. We played against his team and he was just excellent. Back in those days, when i still haboured ambitions of playing professionally, i'd often base my style of play on claude makalele lol.after suffering a serious injury, i was forced to retire prematurely, you know. football was never the same......

     

    you may continue to play but you sort of remind me of attilio lombardo. ;p


  7. <cite>
    said:</cite>

    So why is this story being posted?

    Are we being told that a good Somali women

    is one that is:

    1. Employed in a white collar job and

    2. Is married to a Non-Somali?

    3. Is assimiliated and has adopted an American (first) identity over other identities?

     

    you're just a hater. an islamist thug like you is a waste of time. I don't even know why i bothered to response to you.


  8. so..... i don't know if i told you guys but i have my own school or 'private' as they call it here. it's been open for 4 months now. we have about 45 students at the moment. it's been crazy walahi. best and worst 4 months of my Somaliland adventure.

     

    i've been teaching all day. luckily S05E05 of The Walking Dead is currently downloading..... that's all i can look forward to.....................Synopsis: Beth finds herself in an operational hospital in Atlanta after being abducted in the previous season. Beth discovers that the hospital is under a brutally enforced system, and slowly plans her escape.....

     

     


  9. people01pix.jpg

     

    The lives of the filthy rich African presidents

     

    The phrase “let them eat cake” is widely attributed to Marie-Antoinette (1755-93), the queen consort of Louis XVI. She is supposed to have said this when she was told that the French populace had no bread to eat.

     

    This statement perhaps best exemplifies the insensitive nature of the lifestyles of African leaders.

     

    There are many ways of gauging the vanity of some African leaders. You could count the monuments, universities, football stadiums, hospitals, statutes, highways and schools that bear their names or are dedicated to them.

     

    When it comes to lifestyles, some African leaders have no inhibitions. They spend lavishly on birthdays, anniversaries, statues and even weddings.

     

    The money ranges from direct siphoning from government coffers and public agencies, to forcing contributions from officials, friends, corporate organisations and kickbacks from multinationals keen on securing deals for infrastructure development, oil and gas and other natural resources exploration.

     

    The lifestyles of African presidents and their families reflect the tragedy of resource-rich African countries where the leaders spend millions on luxury items, as the ordinary people live in abject poverty, lacking access to basic amenities and services such as clean drinking water, health care and education.

     

    Recently, the Angolan government spent $35 million (Shs94 billion) to mark president José Eduardo dos Santos’s 72nd birthday. The money is said to have been spent on various activities that were undertaken in the country, including sporting activities, a state dinner and a talk by the president.

     

    Hosting international public figures

    Angolan media reported that the country’s culture ministry spent more than $6 million (Shs16.2 billion) on hosting international public figures to talk about the president. Among the invited leaders were former Nigerian president Olesegun Obasanjo, the United Nations Secretary-General’s representative in Angola Magareth Anstee and former Namibian president Sam Nujoma.

     

    It was also reported that international hockey and basketball tournaments were organised at the cost of $1.5 million (Shs4 billion) each, while the country’s defence ministry organised a talk on the president’s commitment to the pacification of the Great Lakes countries, at a cost of $600,000 (Shs1.6 billion).

     

    About 500 guests were also hosted to a lavish dinner in honour of the president at a cost of $1 million (Shs2.7 billion).

     

    President Dos Santos, Africa’s longest serving leader after Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang’ Nguema has been in power since September 1979. In 2013, the president’s daughter, Isabel dos Santos, gave a personal loan to the government of Portugal when it was facing a credit crunch.

     

    According to Forbes magazine, over the past decade Angola has been one of the world’s fastest-growing economies. Its gross domestic product grew at an 11.6 per cent annual clip from 2002 to 2012, driven by a more than doubling of oil production to 1.8 million barrels a day. The government budget stands at $69 billion (Shs186 trillion), up from $6.3 billion (Shs17 trillion) a decade ago.

     

    Priorities

    Interestingly, even with its oil windfall, 70 per cent of Angolans live on less than $2 (Shs5,400) a day, while recent Angolan government estimates show that 10 per cent of the country’s population are staring at a famine, due to drought and bureaucratic neglect.

     

    Angola’s defence is allocated more funds from the budget than health care, education and agriculture combined.

     

    In 2012, the International Monetary Fund reported that at least $32 billion (Shs86.5 trillion) from oil revenue went missing from the federal ledger between 2007 and 2010. The country is also faring badly on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, with the latest findings ranking it 157 out of 176 nations.

     

    -----

     

    READ MORE HERE.....

     

    http://www.monitor.co.ug/Magazines/PeoplePower/The-lives-of-the-filthy-rich-African-presidents/-/689844/2506922/-/item/1/-/2wysyw/-/index.html -

     

    ----

     

    i hope i don't become corrupt like these other Presidents.