The truth seeker
Life , liberty , and the pursuit of happiness
Oromos in America are very nice folks don’t start anything it’s usually Somalis getting in trouble with law enforcement
@TaintedloveWe get along well all over North America really especially the youth hangout a lot I’ve never felt any tension with them I know a lot of them and grew up with many @Keep it a boqol can confirm community relations are very chill
It shows Somali should have taken a back seat with the Floyd campaign because look @ all those hateful comments saying Somalis did not protest.
She is not wrong, Somali youth turned out in high numbers to participate in the protest. I remember it and the funny part about is that there was even black leaders saying at the time ''You are our greatest ally''
To me the whole ordeal was embarrassing to be participants in because all they did really was damage Somali businesses.
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1,500 Minnesota Stores Damaged in 2020 Protests Could Take Years to Rebuild
A report from the Star Tribune details the difficulties that businesses damaged during the protests have faced.www.newsweek.com
You saw something similar happen in Kenya and Britain. I really cannot comprehend it , how is destroying the local economy and businesses of regular people supposed to be a front to power?
I have seen a lot of Somali protests and demonstrations by the public(not foreign organized/funded militias) it never results in us destroying businesses.
Even the whole boycott this and that makes no sense. Are you going to boycott food? Then what are you going to eat? You boycott electricity also?
So if they decided to stop shopping at Walmart, who suffers more Walmart (which supplies all of America), or African Americans that own no stores that supply them with their basic needs. So it is not really power at all. Its like the sign of confused people without power or any real agency.
Why not just spend your money with your race or your own communities? and start your own retail stores. Simple, you don't have to boycott or destroy anything.
How many Somali businesses actually got destroyed during the George Floyd campaign??
I'm curious now because I've seen this take brought up numerous times.
I don't know how it is in the UK, but the impression I get from some parts of the US like where I am is that the two groups do very much associate with one another. Every majorly Somali settled neighborhood here in Boston like Alewife or Roxbury seems to also be an Ethiopian and Eritrean hotspot and the communities seem cordial toward one another.
Was in a Somali oday's halal meat shop a while back and I remember a Xabashi woman coming and talking to him for a good while, catching up like they'd known each other for years before she began placing her order. I've not gone over to Minnesota yet but I've heard Oromos in particular settle quite close to Somalis and even vote for Ilhan? This woman is pretty much coming at it with that kind of perspective, as far as I can see. There isn't really all that much or any animosity between the two communities in the diaspora. As far as I've seen, anyway.
I live in the Seattle area and the Horner communities are so intertwined with one another anything community/social services related we are put down as one category. Only time we get separated is when we have our own qabil functions.I don't know how it is in the UK, but the impression I get from some parts of the US like where I am is that the two groups do very much associate with one another. Every majorly Somali settled neighborhood here in Boston like Alewife or Roxbury seems to also be an Ethiopian and Eritrean hotspot and the communities seem cordial toward one another.
Was in a Somali oday's halal meat shop a while back and I remember a Xabashi woman coming and talking to him for a good while, catching up like they'd known each other for years before she began placing her order. I've not gone over to Minnesota yet but I've heard Oromos in particular settle quite close to Somalis and even vote for Ilhan? This woman is pretty much coming at it with that kind of perspective, as far as I can see. There isn't really all that much or any animosity between the two communities in the diaspora. As far as I've seen, anyway.
@Taintedlove
Your avg Somali teenager isn't some Somali supremacist that hates all Ethiopians.
Somalis would have showed up to the protests regardless. Most of us grew up low income and live along side African Americans. Our street niggas deal with the same BS most madow street niggas deal with.
I've made it out. Sadly I'm afraid a decent amount of our brothers and sisters that weren't raised right won't make it out.good luck in the ghetto abti. Hope you make it out
I find it rather odd how a Somali resturaunt get fire bombed by madows. instead of dealing there frustration with the people who harmed there community, but they come after the people with the least to do with the issue but rather feeding the community as awhole. This why I always advocate that Horners should be there own people or Somalis just deal with Arabs and other minorities .Not sure about the exact number, most of the businesses were probably Somali because it was the street with Somali businesses that was hit the hardest
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For Somali-owned businesses damaged in riots, relief effort takes off
Mowlid Jigre heard gunshots as he left Jigjiga Business Center two days after the killing of George Floyd. He worried the chaos that had swallowed a stretch of East Lake Street less than a mile away would reach Jigjiga soon, and he was right: When he returned the next morning the building had...hiiraan.ca
This shows photos of the type of damages.
God bless AfricaI've made it out. Sadly I'm afraid a decent amount of our brothers and sisters that weren't raised right won't make it out.
Here is another Ethiopian using our name to get views, in this video she says that they are 150k Somalis in Rwanda which is wrong I’ve been there like 3 times and we don’t even crack 5kWhenever Ethiopians try to worm themselves into anything relating to Black conversations, they have to drag Somalis into it.
Every time.
Saw a clip recently of a group of Ethiopians being interviewed by a AA guy and when asked about whether they identify as Black, they flipped it to Somalis instead of answering the question.
If it’s something positive, they claim to be right there with us. If it’s anything negative, they throw us under the bus.
I can see your point we do get along irl but they are quick to stab us in the back or they push all negativity towards usI don't know how it is in the UK, but the impression I get from some parts of the US like where I am is that the two groups do very much associate with one another. Every majorly Somali settled neighborhood here in Boston like Alewife or Roxbury seems to also be an Ethiopian and Eritrean hotspot and the communities seem cordial toward one another.
Was in a Somali oday's halal meat shop a while back and I remember a Xabashi woman coming and talking to him for a good while, catching up like they'd known each other for years before she began placing her order. I've not gone over to Minnesota yet but I've heard Oromos in particular settle quite close to Somalis and even vote for Ilhan? This woman is pretty much coming at it with that kind of perspective, as far as I can see. There isn't really all that much or any animosity between the two communities in the diaspora. As far as I've seen, anyway.
Ik. I never actually knew that somalia itself had beef with ethiopia until recently. I had a lot of ethiopian friends at primary school.@Taintedlove
Your avg Somali teenager isn't some Somali supremacist that hates all Ethiopians.
Somalis would have showed up to the protests regardless. Most of us grew up low income and live along side African Americans. Our street niggas deal with the same BS most madow street niggas deal with.
ExactlyI can see your point we do get along irl but they are quick to stab us in the back or they push all negativity towards us
this is the case for most somalis tbh, many don’t know much about horn of africa politics weirdly enough.Ik. I never actually knew that somalia itself had beef with ethiopia until recently. I had a lot of ethiopian friends at primary school.
The beef is mostly a thing back home or for people too online. In reality most somalis and ethiopians get along in america and both Somalis and ethiopians have friends from the other group.Ik. I never actually knew that somalia itself had beef with ethiopia until recently. I had a lot of ethiopian friends at primary school.
I think it’s a generational thing. Because millennials and up know about it. And if you’re not from Galbeed or regions where Ethiopia has directly affected your people you wouldn’t know. Though growing up I was never close with like Ethiopians it was mainly a religious divide. They were Coptic Christian and we were Muslim.this is the case for most somalis tbh, many don’t know much about horn of africa politics weirdly enough.
It is not necessarily about beef. Somalis, generally speaking, are open with their feelings and operate in a binary world. Other communities are often better @ not discussing ethnic politics openly or hiding their feelings.The beef is mostly a thing back home or for people too online. In reality most somalis and ethiopians get along in america and both Somalis and ethiopians have friends from the other group.
I find it rather odd how a Somali resturaunt get fire bombed by madows. instead of dealing there frustration with the people who harmed there community, but they come after the people with the least to do with the issue but rather feeding the community as awhole. This why I always advocate that Horners should be there own people or Somalis just deal with Arabs and other minorities .