peasant

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Everything posted by peasant

  1. ^ Why would you do that? is it you would like to conform to other cultures?
  2. hello Van Crocodile and meet Van Hyena. It is cool how people of certain country have something before their last name. For Mauritanians they put Ould before their last name and is equivalent to the Ben or Bin of the Arabs. I once asked a Mauritanian and his answer was they would not want to be mistaken for jews as they too use the Ben like the arabs. For somalis Ina is enough i guess, though it is only used conversationally.
  3. tol is useless and if people were very individualistic then i think we would be in better position than we are today in somalia. This tol thing is what breeds corruption and disorder in society and if people would not go beyond their nuclear and immediate family our situation would be lesser or better. A somali is first loyal for his tol and then the country comes next and etc.
  4. May be women would appreciate if all men were like that.. lol
  5. ^waryaa pray for me i will pray for you that we both get very good wives.. amen
  6. peasant

    ssssss

    ^you are not the only one wanting to know what just happen..too bad i guess we just missed it.. better make it on time next.
  7. ^ I diagnose you with extreme Ophidiophobia.... Treatment: delicious snake soup from a local oriental restaurant will fix your phobia. Once you eat something you wont be scared of it anymore. Source: The book of the samurai(Hagakure)
  8. ciyaalka maad runta u sheegtan in aabe iyo hooyo ay habeenki bugta iska khasaan. sheekada sidaa bay ku dhamaan lahyd...
  9. ^ you must have too much xaax thoughts then
  10. ^ dhuxul, water and little bit of a tree resin to increase viscosity..hope that helps..
  11. I have only seen the dolphins up until i have read the pic info..Does that make me a perv?
  12. Money bro, you are very creative mansha,allah a, great stuff and keep up the cool work. we hungry for some more . I liked the characters Ali atoore and fadumo gaabo and hope you dont eliminate these two characters too early.
  13. ^ I dont buy this unless there is something wrong with these two people.
  14. (AP) -- Erik Youngdahl and Michelle Garcia share a dorm room at Connecticut's Wesleyan University. But they say there's no funny business going on. Really. They mean it. Erik Youngdahl and Michelle Garcia surf the internet in their room at Wesleyan University. They have set up their beds side-by-side like Lucy and Ricky in "I Love Lucy" and avert their eyes when one of them is changing clothes. "People are shocked to hear that it's happening and even that it's possible," said Youngdahl, a 20-year-old sophomore. But "once you actually live in it, it doesn't actually turn into a big deal." In the prim 1950s, college dorms were off-limits to members of the opposite sex. Then came the 1970s, when male and female students started crossing paths in coed dormitories. Now, to the astonishment of some baby boomer parents, a growing number of colleges are going even further: coed rooms. At least two dozen schools, including Brown University, the University of Pennsylvania, Oberlin College, Clark University and the California Institute of Technology, allow some or all students to share a room with anyone they choose, including someone of the opposite sex. This spring, as students sign up for next year's room, more schools are following suit, including Stanford University. As shocking as it sounds to some parents, some students and schools say it's not about sex. Instead, they say the demand is mostly from heterosexual students who want to live with close friends who happen to be of the opposite sex. Some gay students who feel more comfortable rooming with someone of the opposite sex are also taking advantage of the option. "It ultimately comes down to finding someone that you feel is compatible with you," said Jeffrey Chang, a junior at Clark in Worcester, Massachusetts, who co-founded the National Student Genderblind Campaign, a group that is pushing for gender-neutral housing. "Students aren't doing this to make a point. They're not doing this to upset their parents. It's really for practical reasons." Couples do sometimes room together, an arrangement known at some schools as "roomcest." Brown explicitly discourages couples from living together on campus, be they gay or straight. But the University of California, Riverside has never had a problem with a roommate couple breaking up midyear, said James C. Smith, assistant director for residence life. Most schools introduced the couples option in the past three or four years. So far, relatively few students are taking part. At the University of Pennsylvania, which began offering coed rooms in 2005, about 120 out of 10,400 students took advantage of the option this year. At UC Riverside, which has approximately 6,000 students in campus housing, about 50 have roommates of the opposite sex. The school has had the option since 2005. Garcia and Youngdahl live in a house for students with an interest in Russian studies. They said they were already friendly and didn't think they would be compatible with some of the other people in the house. "I had just roomed with a boy. I was under the impression at the time that girls were a little bit neater and more quiet," Youngdahl said. "As it turns out, I don't see much of a difference from one sex to the other." Garcia, 19, admitted: "I'm incredibly messy." Parents aren't necessarily thrilled with boy-girl housing. Debbie Feldman's 20-year-old daughter, Samantha, is a sophomore at Oberlin in Ohio and plans to room with her platonic friend Grey Caspro, a straight guy, next year. Feldman said she was shocked when her daughter told her. "When you have a male and female sharing such close quarters, I think it's somewhat delusional to think there won't be sexual tension," 52-year-old Feldman said. "Maybe this generation feels more comfortable walking around in their underwear. I'm not sure that's a good thing." Still, Feldman said her daughter is partly in college to learn life lessons, and it's her decision. Samantha said she assured her mom that she thinks of Caspro as a brother. "I'm really close to him, and I consider him one of my really good friends," she said. "I really trust him. That trust makes it work." http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/wayoflife/05/02/coed.dorm.rooms.ap/index.html
  15. ^ First, the so called european jihadis that are locked in Gitmo are people with various ethnic groups and are predominantly non white. Secondly, the reason they are getting better treatment than the other folks is because their governments are fighting for their rights behind the scenes while other nationals like pakistanis and Yemenis are handed over by their very governments to the americans in the first place. So if your government is handing you over and not actively following your situation while you are locked then you are prone to be mistreated badly but there is little to suggest that race is a factor in here.. fare enough i am a parrot and you are a bigot let us just stop the name calling right there..
  16. ^ You are bitter and racist, i never knew that...
  17. ^waa daroogo laga isticmaalo wadamadan oo khatar ah..mar haduu qofku barto lagama goyn karo sida aan ku maqlay..
  18. ^ I heard this shitt is serious and there is no comeback or second chance like other drugs. Once you get hooked on it, you are hooked for life i heard.
  19. I have read about Ghana were entire village, people refused to hand shake each other for fear of loosing their winky. I say that is another form of terrorism far more serious than the bombs
  20. peasant

    Not in the mood

    ^drop a pill in the drink and she will be all over you. that sounds cool...
  21. ^ that is disgusting ..... did you take a bite though before you discovered?
  22. there are some slow chat handlers that are integrated with the discussion board..I saw one on a site i often download from pirated software.
  23. thanks jb...no everyone is alive but the site was offline due to technical glitches i guess..