wyre
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Everything posted by wyre
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In badan baa lagu sugaaye warka quf waryee:D
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Najis:D and dirty mind
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War JB hilib geel iyo caano baa ku dhaafaye soo dhowow Warkaad inoo sidayna haddaan idil nehe soo tabi:D Garaad A&T adiga kaama uusan dambeyn sxb, halkeed ku dhunteen:D
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MMA bro I left there june 2010
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War sidaad xalwo iyo cake isugu waddeen baad 3 beri hurdadi ka kici la'dihiin bisinkee iska kala yareeya bahasha:D Aniga I like xalwo more than cake, xalwo kusoo dara meesha
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Waan ogaa inaadan wax quman soo wadin:p
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Looooooooool@ warming up her feet:D
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Jb soo dhacye:D War sxb halkeed ku maqneyd? maxaa laguu waaye, Kolley war SOL buuxiyo waad noo waddaa baan filayaa:D
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Girls, what turns u off when it comes to a somali brother?
wyre replied to Shankaroon's topic in General
No it's this one yaa showqi:D -
Then who's this xiteer:confused:
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So your brother's name is xiteer? or it's your sister:D
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That guy with the mic looks like me:D
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Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar;696218 wrote: Grand Royal Hotel . This was in process when I left Kenya:D
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Showqi;695937 wrote: Mise Waaq waa Waaqla: Hoheey Waaqlaan u baxayoo cidlaan weehaabayaa........ Waaq is His So-called god:p
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Somalina;695794 wrote: lol@thread... I'm one year older than Husni Mubarak. Nina
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Rudy:D ay may isang web kasama na ang pangalan? Mareeg I'm 3 years older than my sister and two years younger than my brother;)
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Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar;696042 wrote: Today's blog: Lies, damning lies and Islii. One fact a person who visits and is not famliar with Islii would immediately realize in his/her stay from the get-go is lies. The pathological lies. The lie doesn't have to be important, dadka wey u barteen. Minor, nothing, major, unimportant lie -- dadkiina lying and liars u wada eg. An example is, you would call a person and without even asking where he is at, he would tell you he is at Mombasa or somewhere while at the same time uu Islii ku rafanaayo. He didn't need to tell you that, especially since you didn't even ask him meeshuu joogo on that time. Since a pathological liar forgets the more he lies, he forgets telling you this lie and unaware of his lie, he might even visit you at home ileen isma ogee. Haddaa ku qabatidna ku leeyahay, hadda, hadda soo galay, another damning lie. Masoo buubay. Wax loo baahneen been laga wada sheegaa. I guess it is another side of buufis. :D:D june 12 2010 markaan kenya kasoo tagaaye aan mid sxbo nahay wacay oo xeryaha qoxootiga buufis ka gaad gaadaaye, Indeed I dint say hi for so long time, waan u xiisa qabay, waxaan dhahay sxb caawa ayaan ku qoranahay flight ka Ksa ma is arki karnaa haddaa joogto Nai, kulahaa (sxb aniga canada aan joogaa kitchener Laakiin sxb nabad allaha kugu geeyo,) sxbkaa waayahay aan dhahay sababtoo ah Qaxootiyada kenya mala isku halleyn karo qofka shalay asoo kula sheekeysanaaye aa arkee tel mareykan ama canada haddana kaasoo wacaayo, waqtiga salaadda duhur markaan Airport malik abdallah kadegay aan gabar walaashey oo xerada qaxootiga ifo joogto wacay oon u sheegay inaa nabad tegay (nageeye aa kusalaamaayee mala hadlee) kuteh, bisinka Canadana ma la iska soo tarxiilaa:D
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Magandang umaga. msta ang buhay natin.? Chimera ur dream comes true:D
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Facebook's role in the Egyptian revolution can't be overestimated, and would seem to be a perfect marketing opportunity for the world's largest social networking site. But oddly, Facebook appears to be staying mum about that, and seems to prefer it that way. The reasons? It doesn't want to be viewed as a political football, for one thing, and for another, there are business concerns. A report in The New York Times says that Facebook: ... finds itself under countervailing pressures after the uprisings in the Middle East. While it has become one of the primary tools for activists to mobilize protests and share information, Facebook does not want to be seen as picking sides for fear that some countries — like Syria, where it just gained a foothold — would impose restrictions on its use or more closely monitor users, according to some company executives who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were discussing internal business. The site also doesn't want to change its policy requiring users to use their real identities and not aliases, despite such a request from a U.S. Senator Richard Durbin. The Illinois Democrat wrote a letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, asking that the site change that policy "to protect the human rights of your users." Durbin said in the letter: I commend you for providing an important tool to democracy and human-rights activists. However, as millions of people around the world use Facebook to exercise their freedom of expression, I am concerned that the company does not have adequate safeguards in place to protect human rights and avoid being exploited by repressive governments. Facebook's communications exec Elliot Schrage "declined to discuss Facebook’s role in the recent tumult and what it might mean for the company’s services," the Times said. "In a short statement, he said: 'We’ve witnessed brave people of all ages coming together to effect a profound change in their country. Certainly, technology was a vital tool in their efforts but we believe their bravery and determination mattered most.' " As msnbc.com's Wilson Rothman wrote recently: ... few doubt that much of the momentum built in June 2010, when a Google employee named Wael Ghonim anonymously started a Facebook page to commemorate the death of Khaled Said, beaten to death by police for flaunting drug possession online. The wildfire flame of social networking burned quickly. In just a few weeks, Ghonim's page — We are all Khaled Said — had accumulated 130,000 fans, according to the New York Times. Ghonim this week said that the page has 375,000 followers. (The English-language site visible to U.S. Facebookers has just over 71,000 followers.) In a country with around 5 million Facebook users, that is a large percentile, and doesn't count Facebook users who may visit the page without "liking" it. And Facebook's role in political change is far from over, as other revolts brew in Libya, Yemen and Tunisia, with Facebook being a digital venue for protesters in those countries. Ghonim, who was kidnapped and detained by authorities in Egypt during the protests there, was asked in an interview with CNN's Wolf Blitzer: "First Tunisia, now Egypt, what's next?" Replied Ghonim: "Ask Facebook ... I want to meet Mark Zuckerberg one day and thank him, actually." Whether that happens —and whether Facebook uses that meeting to marketing advantage — remains to be seen. By Suzanne Choney
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Ma Funny exit baa u taal waaba la dilee:D:D
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Ngonge read the third time:D فعله غير مباح. قلت: (( لا بأس به‘ كان أبو هريرة يفعل مثله ‘ ولم يرغبه النبي عن ذلك)) صححه البرميثس Loooooooooool@nuune:D
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Nuune:D in 2002 you were 14yrs and now:confused:
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