commonsense

Nomads
  • Content Count

    152
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by commonsense

  1. How about B-days. I actually get upset if someone forgets my birthday. I've been celebrating it for as long as i can remember.
  2. Ethiopian women are cute, you can go for one if you can handle eating Canjeero la qamiiriyey two years ago.
  3. I don't if this counts, but i never leave home without wearing Halo~Angel by Victoria Secret. It's a perfume ppl, get your mind out of the gutter.
  4. Sagal that was beautiful sister. I'll go and open every single Kutub in my house. Lol, just kidding. Kheyr ilaahay ha ku siiyo.
  5. lol Indhadeeq, I work with # 5 anoying as hell boyyyyy!
  6. Okey we wanna go back home sometime right. So if i'm a size two and go to Soomaaliya they'll throw rocks at me an say " ala, carara Aids bay qabtaa" You fellas get real none of you would date a model @ size 0
  7. Where is Cartan? We need your help.
  8. Casabalbalare HODAN I'm home sick too.
  9. Ex-Dane here is the rest Fuad Ismail spent the first 18 years of his life in Yemen. During the early 1980s, he moved to rural Somalia with his parents, but left in 1984, and entered the United States on a student visa. After a few months in Galveston, Tex., he moved to the state of Washington, where he attended Skagit Valley College. He was an average student; according to his transcript, he had a modest 2.94 grade point average, but earned top marks in such courses as developmental English, international relations and introduction to ethics. After graduating in 1986, he bounced around the state, taking odd jobs and living hand to mouth. He also began using drugs and alcohol. "I was a drug addict," he says. In 1994, he was convicted for unlawful use of drug paraphernalia and jailed. In September that year, an immigration judge in Seattle ordered him to be deported to Somalia, a country he barely knew and where he had no family. Ismail appealed the judge's order; the appeal was dismissed in January, 1996. In November, 1998, Ismail was released from jail under an "order of supervision," which meant he was free to move about the country but was still considered a criminal and eligible for immediate deportation. People in such circumstances are often allowed to remain in the United States for years, as long as they do not break the law and they follow INS instructions. But the axe can fall at any time. Ismail was required to check in with INS in Seattle every month. He also entered a six-month rehabilitation program at the Salvation Army. "He was determined to get better and he did," says Samuel Southard, a Salvation Army Major who befriended Mr. Ismail in 1998. "He is one of the most gentle, religious people I've ever met." Within months, Ismail was made manager of the Salvation Army's "clean and sober house," a transition residence for recovered addicts. He landed his job at the yacht club, and in less than three years had socked away US$30,000 in a bank account. "I was doing great," Ismail says. Then the INS came calling. - - - Russ Bergeron is the INS's chief press officer. Reached at his office in Washington, D.C., he sounded utterly unfamiliar with last month's large-scale deportation mission to Somalia. (The story has received almost no attention in the Western media.) Even so, it did not surprise him. "Deportation movements take place all the time," he told me. "They're often planned weeks, if not months, in advance. Charter flights are certainly not unprecedented. Somalia does not have routine commercial air service. Sometimes, we'll wait until there are a significant number of people to be deported to one country, and then they will be removed together. This sounds like a rather routine removal process." The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigration Responsibility Act, passed in 1996, allows the INS to immediately deport non-U.S. citizens guilty of felonies or crimes of "moral turpitude," including drunk driving and domestic abuse. But Bergeron could not, however, recall a similar event in which 27 Somalis were deported in shackles and dumped en masse in the middle of Mogadishu. Last year, 47 Somalis were deported from the United States. In 1999, 30 Somalis were deported. I asked Bergeron if the growing number of removals has anything to do with the heightened terrorist concerns after Sept. 11. He bristled at the suggestion. "I have no information whatsoever that that has any sense of credibility," he said. "It's ludicrous." According to Citizenship and Immigration Canada, the joint removal at Niagara Falls was the fourth such operation organized by Canadian and U.S. officials, all since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Three previous operations involved removing even larger groups of immigration violators, to the West African nation of Nigeria. "In my opinion," says the Salvation Army's Southard, "Fuad was deported because of Sept. 11." Southard has wired his friend enough cash to purchase a temporary visa to the United Arab Emirates. "If he can get to the Emirates, he can access his bank account in Seattle," Southard says. Even so, he doubts he will ever see Ismail again, because he is no longer welcome in the United State. "It wasn't illegal to send him to Mogadishu, even if the INS people wouldn't even venture there themselves," Southard says. "Fuad had run out of appeals. But I'm positive that what the INS did was immoral and unjust." He was a criminal, counters INS press officer Bergeron. But the same cannot be said for all of the deportees. Two of the six Somalis removed from Canada have not been convicted of any crime. No matter. It is "a normal situation for [deportees] to be repatriated to their home country," says Bergeron. "Our responsibility is to turn them over to the legal authorities there. We did that. If the Somali authorities chose to abandon these people, well, you'll have to ask them why."
  10. Somalis with nuclear weapons....naaah We wouldn't be here right now, they would have use it on the neighboring qabiil already.
  11. I only saw eight, does the damn dog count or only ppl?
  12. i'll vote for Libaax(mayee libaax lugo ka dabre) Miskiin(madaxaaga ilaahay ha ku shubo) Xoolo nool(yaan lagu qalan) Naag qaawan(dhar xiro abaayo) qaxooti computer heshay(walaahi waa tahay) jano doon (ilaahey ha kuu furo albaabada)
  13. Jamaal you found some of my long lost cousins. Walaahi one girl looked like we're related.
  14. Tupac Shakur is as dead as the cat I accidently threw at the meat grinder 10 years ago.
  15. Tupac Shakur is as dead as the cat I accidently threw at the meat grinder 10 years ago.
  16. Tupac Shakur is as dead as the cat I accidently threw at the meat grinder 10 years ago.
  17. Lady L i'll be honest, it makes me sick. I actually know a couple who met like that. Your brothers best friend is pretty much your brother too in my opinion. He has been around for years, all of the sudden you're romatically involved, iiieeww! Just like ppl who date their own cousins................whatahellisthatabout!
  18. Hey lulla self-love is also called something dirty that ppl do with their...you know. I read it from an article.
  19. Okay MisL you're right, this type of Shhhhht happens everyday. A guy gets dissed by a girl, so to get even or to be spitefull and get revenge he has ruin her rep. Well think about it if he does this to every girland believe he willhis own pals will be like maaan stop the BS. In other words it will catch up to him, because decentsy goes a long way.