burahadeer

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Everything posted by burahadeer

  1. such a concentration of so much beautiful girls...Imagine one million somali girls in one place..WOW the world get crazy few on youtube:D
  2. Jacaylbaro;849525 wrote: I still think Carafaat and Burahaadeer have some scriptive relationship ,,, take that as compliment...carafaat the cool:D waryaa ayoub "fiqi tolkii kama jano tago"...abtigiis won't ask if you xaaji before he shoots.
  3. ^^ fact is all those againest are not even 1%......why both you & others don't go their with probably JB and international observers & see for yourself the people you counting.Fine If they want their few villages but why claim a vast swath of land for pure propaganda reasons...what you expect from otha side then?.You think it's not known they working a coalition to destroy somaliland.Let me tell you this....prisoners caught in buuhoodle were from ONLF & others i don't need to mention here now.It's bigger agenda than you think and if real war comes it will be winner take all.So everybody sit tight & wait your luck.
  4. Abtigiis;849439 wrote: Everytime I read Burahaader's blind idealism, I am struck by its sheer semblance to the chantings of a fascist! "peanuts", he says! A litle bit of doubt in what you believe in helps! and "wet backs" for those who cross border
  5. ^^ what content ? how is it different than talking about his crumbling house! I'm not guessing his intentions,you & me know his clannish outbursts,just responding to him living in glass house.....you make sure your dignity intact(abtigiis) when you accusing someone of the same crimes you hold so dear....why not be in bed with otha somalis in Galbeed if you resisting ethiopian oppression?Why trying to take ova the jubas(kismayo) and start anotha cycle of violence when you know damn well that natives will take up arms againest you?How you envision fighting & winning againest ethiopian gov't(80million) with strongest army in africa when you just small fraction of somalis in the region?then how he can accuse somaliland of treachery when the one himself under foreign domination dividing somali galbeed in the hope his clan governs & fight single handedly in a conflict that he neva hope to win, destroying completely the constituency supposedly he fighting for! Give me a break....
  6. I used to have 6 pack + everyday when I was young..thought couldn't go without it..it was obsession.I quit when grew up,get married & have children...what I mean here is , found later I was trying to fill a vacuum,trying to compensate something missing inside me.Mr. abtigiis have lost the battle in ethiopia,onlf alienated otha somalis in Galbeed to the extent that no one want to identify with them...those otha somalis went along with their lives & built their cities.Now abtigiis is running around to grasp that lost ego,trying to find what went wrong but in the wrong places.Sometimes it's the women of somaliland,otha times it's long gone snm,sometimes Azania & how all his lot will atlast rest in the place of their own at the expence of legitimate natives and more often nostalgia about his great days of uncle Siyaad.He dreams too much about the destruction of certain clans & entities... but only if dreams could turn true in such large scale!!!??
  7. ONLF stalled : you could have liberated onlf with the pen:D
  8. Biscuits & candy the next big investment opportunities in Africa. http://www.howwemadeitinafrica.com/biscuits-and-candy-%e2%80%93-the-next-big-investment-opportunities-in-africa/14993/ Large quantities of packaged food consumed in Africa are currently being imported. This presents major opportunities for local manufacturing. “If you take Ethiopia. Ethiopia is a big consumer of biscuits – they love biscuits. 60% to 70% of the annual consumption of biscuits in Ethiopia is imported. There is one small company based in the UAE . . . that has quadrupled its earnings within three years by exclusively exporting biscuits to Ethiopia,” noted Waseem Khan, Silk Invest’s head of private equity
  9. Ruanda best place to do business. http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=ruanda%20best%20place%20to%20do%20business&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CFIQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fallafrica.com%2Fstories%2F201110210694.html&ei=w-j4T5nIB6aU6QHoxfS_Bg&usg=AFQjCNFGYWMpWw-OVnXvSC4wC9atQOy9oQ
  10. uganda tops in advanced information technology. http://allafrica.com/stories/201207060480.html
  11. http://www.howwemadeitinafrica.com/how-some-entrepreneurs-are-abandoning-silicon-valley-for-africa/16541/ Kenya. Ben Lyon adds: “There is a possibility I could stay here permanently. Kenya has an exciting future ahead of it and I feel obliged to contribute to that future. I am also interested to see how the IT space in South Sudan and Somalia develops in the next five to ten years.”
  12. oba hiloowlow;849066 wrote: Absolutely it should, the only city that can replace Xamar is Baraawe. :D:D taasaa laleeyay ha israacdo...the only thing you object to federalism is Mogadishu is the capital & all power should rest on it out of clan strategic reasons...otha thing please go beyond mogadishu up north & see ...Baraawe will be a village...cos it was seat of gov't ,many otha somalis have seen down south prior 1990 , but you guys don't have the least idea anything beyond Beledweyn..venture out & see.
  13. RaMpAgE;849026 wrote: No one knows the true meaning of the word ""Mogadishu", theirs no histroical documentation of the meaning of the word. The term "Seat of the Shah" as Mogadishu was one created by colonial powers because they believed that Africans couldn't build cities rather it was outsiders, and many so called acadamics both Somali and Non somali ran away with the word. exactly..we only believe what we are told by ...if white journalist stays for 2 weeks & tell us hargeisa means water,then we make divine truth & run away with it.
  14. presidents get tired of him turning around within hours.This is "don't come back" put down.
  15. wow that's hilarious, why not cut the camera!
  16. ^^^ ye could be even thou lot false information out flanked truth in history..or maybe somalis didn't like the real meaning:D Somali philosopher;848968 wrote: ^burahadeer there are a lot of places that would sacrifice many things for the capital status. and where did you get muuq disho. muqdisho is either Maq'ad-i-Shah ("The seat of the Shah"} persian or as the other one the governor explained in the video know many will sacrifice for status but that doesn't mean locals should be walked ova.People suffered cos everyone was fighting for the capital & what comes with it disregarding the destruction and the human tragedy...what am emphasizing here is they have as much right as otha regions to look after their interest in light of the fact that many in high echelons of power were outside the city & seem not to care & instigators of much that happened. muqdisho=muuqdisho muqdisho=maqad i shah which one of the above is closer to truth...I was actually told that by elderly man.
  17. Mogadishu people must neva again leave the command of the army to president or anyone in executive branch.The governor who should be from locals must have the last word & the ultimate decision on the forces in the capital...that way he can save guard his constituency.Look how somaliland and puntland have their own.You should not be tricked to lose your divine rights cos you'r the capital. Federal forces can stay in remote regions & away from capital so could not be used againest you. *** you aware that every region has its own militia? *Mogadishu is somali =Muuq disho(means image killer).how it came about was when the proud nomads come to the city & told by white skinned people that they can not go certain area or humiliated. history repeats itself...guess not coincidence how it destroyed somali image last 20yrs( have nothing againest victims ,just high-lighting the place itself).
  18. and who is killing them and why none r caught,am still at loss here..something big fishy here!
  19. even kenya acting the white shark.......aduunyo:mad:
  20. killing humans is the worst crime imaginable,but how it sits well with 40 yr old man committed such crime & compensate for 100 camels(that's actually around $ 10,000),may be less if you count the geel kees. These kids r paying more.
  21. Are Teenagers Big Children—or Little Adults? The police state's mission creep has spread to our primary schools. A. Barton Hinkle | July 4, 2012 America can’t make up its mind. This should not be surprising in a nation of 314 million people, half of whom can’t make up their minds about what to have for dinner. But dinner is inconsequential. How we treat children is not. And when it comes to the treatment of children, society’s approach is wildly incoherent. Last week the Supreme Court ruled, correctly but far from unanimously, that mandatory life sentences without parole for juvenile killers are wrong. That ruling followed another two years ago saying the same thing about crimes other than homicide. Five years before that, the Supreme Court ruled against executing juveniles. These wise rulings build on our growing understanding of the adolescent brain and how long it takes to reach full development. Advances in neuroscience show that in a host of areas from impulse control to thrill-seeking, humans do not reach full maturity until their early 20s. (Some never do.) So executing teenagers for serious crimes is like spanking toddlers for wetting the bed. Yes, they should know better – but there is more to the question than that. Meanwhile, more and more children are being arrested and charged with criminal offenses for behavior that used to earn them detention – or less. Twelve-year-old Sarah Bustamantes was arrested at Fulmore Middle School in Austin, Texas, a while back because she sprayed perfume on herself after being told, “you smell.” According to a study of the Texas educational system, more than 1,000 pupils have been hauled into court for offenses as minor as “making an unreasonable noise.” In one instance, a pupil was arrested for throwing a paper airplane. You might think: Well, that’s Texas for you; they’re old-school down there. But it’s the same story in many parts of the country. The Justice Department says roughly half of all public schools have police officers patrolling the halls. According to an ACLU study, law enforcement is replacing traditional school discipline in Massachusetts’ three largest school districts – Boston, Springfield, and Worcester – where more arrests are being made for “misbehavior previously handled informally.” State officials don’t have to agree with the Supreme Court’s view of adolescence. But they ought to be able to agree with themselves. Yet in many cases, they do not. Take Texas. Not only does Texas slap kids with criminal charges for classroom antics, it also allows children as young as 14 to be charged as adults for certain felonies. On the other hand, Texas sets the age of consent for sexual activity at 17. This means that, in the Lone Star state’s eyes, a 16-year-old is a fully culpable adult if he robs a gas station – but a defenseless child if he loses his virginity. What’s more, Texas also requires both parental notification and consent before a minor can have an abortion. So in the state’s eyes, some 14-year-0lds who commit crimes have the maturity and judgment of fully grown adults, but no 17-year-old has the maturity and judgment to make a medical decision for herself. Those two positions cannot be reconciled. Texas isn’t alone. Virginia law takes the same two positions. In Mississippi, children as young as 13 can be tried as adults not only for violent felonies, but for any criminal offenses whatsoever – and they must be tried as adults for some felonies, including capital crimes. But both parents must agree before a Mississippi girl just shy of her 18th birthday can have an abortion. In Kansas, the discrepancy is even more stark: 17-year-olds must obtain consent from both parents for an abortion, and the age of sexual consent is 16 – but children can be charged as adults for any sort of crime starting at age 10. Some of this incoherence is driven by ideology: Parental-consent laws are as much about hostility to abortion as they are about concern for young women. Some of it is driven by experience: Events such as the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School have encouraged a get-tough-on-crime approach in the schools. And after several high-profile suicides such as those of Jamey Rodemeyer and Phoebe Prince, who were bullied until they couldn’t take it any more, it has become apparent that childish behavior still can have horrific consequences. (Hence every state except Montana now has a state anti-bullying law.) The recent harassment of New York bus monitor Karen Klein and a general coarsening of adolescent culture also contribute to public support for tougher discipline. Many Americans clearly think the kids are not alright. Now if only they could decide who they think “the kids” are. A. Barton Hinkle is a columnist at the Richmond Times-Dispatch, where this article originally http://reason.com/archives/2012/07/04/are-teenagers-big-childrenor-little-adul