1man-
Admittedly, I am a little protective of Grandpa. He is a young brother, highly articulate, very well educated but some of his political views leave me with concern. Then what should be the case done? That a younger Somali brother of that intellectual caliber is that heavily affected by tribal malice as well as extremist religious stained political movements is a blight on our Somali society and one we had recently learned is a dangerous shadow sub-culture of our larger culture. Should we attempt to censor Grandpa? Make it harder for him to defuse some of the negative qualities he expresses in this more peaceful setting?
My solution is give them the space to express themselves. This not only helps defuse the constraining internal negative attributes in a peaceful setting but it also allows for positive feedback and important discourse to ensue from a majority of young Somali individuals around the world who do not subscribe to such attributes.
Censoring him isn't the solution, taking his views head on is.
Yung, clearly you are upset. I beg of you to recollect yourself brother; I am one of your greatest fans in this forum.
