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Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2013 2:11 pm
by Nolol cusub
AbdiWahab252 wrote:Have you changed your mind about the Ayatollah, the blessed Majlis and the Qaddriyah ?
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Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Thu Sep 26, 2013 2:16 pm
by GIJaamac
:snoop:

Nolol cusub = somali-transporter. I don't know how stupid snetters can be not to notice it. Meeshaan xoolo caadi ayaa ka buuxo.

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Sat Sep 28, 2013 4:11 pm
by FAH1223
GIJaamac wrote::snoop:

Nolol cusub = somali-transporter. I don't know how stupid snetters can be not to notice it. Meeshaan xoolo caadi ayaa ka buuxo.
No match

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Sun Sep 29, 2013 10:01 am
by Lamagoodle
Nolol Cusub is the first intellectual on Somalinet to use the dialectical method of Marx to analyse the problems of Somalia. I remember reading your work when Somalinet was at the infancy stage.

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Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Sun Sep 29, 2013 10:09 am
by Jam Street
Yeah, this guy used to write tons of useless essays.

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Sun Sep 29, 2013 10:10 am
by Lamagoodle
Jam Street wrote:Yeah, this guy used to write tons of useless essays.
Jaamow, saaxib ii waran? Isma wareeysanine.

Actually, Nolol Cusub wrote essays that were great but few of us understood them. He could analyse somalia''s problems in a way that was complex; he provided also solutions.

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Sun Sep 29, 2013 10:39 am
by Jam Street
Lamagoodle

I like James Carville, the political commentator/strategist who used to work for CNN, primarily because when addressing an issue or answering a question he goes direct to the point. Now, this guy Nolol Cusub is a good essay writer, I give him that. But ask him a direct and straightforward question and he will write 3 pages of essay which most of it is irrelevant to the question.

Otherwise things are good on my side, brother. Nowadays I am based in East Africa, making frequent travels to Mogadishu, Nairobi and Mombasa.

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Sun Sep 29, 2013 9:05 pm
by Lamagoodle
Jamoow, saaxib James Carville is a cool guy. I remember watching him when he had some hair. I hope you stay safe saaxib considering the events of last week.

Nolol Cusub wrote some seminal work on how Southern and Central Somalia could rise from the ashes in the late 1990s.

Alot of his suggestions have now become a reality. Ask Abdiwahab; he provided the philosophical undertones to a framework that is pervasive in fadhi-ku-dirir politics.

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Tue Oct 01, 2013 3:14 am
by Nolol cusub
Lamgoodle wrote:Nolol Cusub is the first intellectual on Somalinet to use the dialectical method of Marx to analyse the problems of Somalia. I remember reading your work when Somalinet was at the infancy stage.

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My pleasure,


I don't think you can achieve deeper understanding of Somali politics without stumbling on Ibn Khaldun's Muqadima or Marxist observation of capital.
------


Somalineters, who are the brightest new comers here?


I may have few more days to write up couple "time wasting" articles.

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Tue Oct 01, 2013 3:22 am
by OjOO
^Only Lamagoodle, the rest are brain dead.


:dj:

Re: What has changed here? Been 3 years since

Posted: Wed Oct 02, 2013 6:32 am
by AbdiWahab252
Nolol Cusub,

I spent time touring Somalia from Hargeisa to Muqdisho. What I saw leads me to be believe, the only hope for Somalia is a Mao kind of leader who will implement a ruthless Cultural Revolution that will liquidate tribal politics, eliminate the religious Pharisees, destroy backward culture and promote national cohesiveness. I am thinking of a secularist Hassan Dahir Aweys can of character but one with nothing except the zeal of nationalism.

As for your masses essays, you were way off the mark. The masses in Somalia are not ready for revolution. They are simply too poor,surviving on the margins and being preyed upon by political predators. Their feeble minds can not fathom 'revolution', uprisings except when the hawala lifeline is closed. We are in need of a benevolent dictator to save the Republic and may Allah bring him as soon as is possible.