Ashraf
🌊🐫𐒅𐒔𐒖𐒂 𐒅𐒘𐒐𐒐𐒗𐒇🇸🇴🪽
Man said butters I ain’t heard that since 2017Mums she's actually Butters
Man said butters I ain’t heard that since 2017Mums she's actually Butters
Yeah we use meady now. Genuinely though she'sMan said butters I ain’t heard that since 2017
British monarchs used to larp being decended of Hebrews. Richard the lionheart was in Palestine for a reasonIt is worth mentioning in 1840 the london foreign office wrote that anglo Saxon white people were a part of the lost tribes of Israel and must librate the holy land
the problem with there story was that there was never a lost tribe of Israel even Jews like Noam Chomsky know that .
These people are planning something big imam Mahdi will be cutting off a lot of anglo heads
They larp as Jews for a reason it’s all part of the Babylon prophecy in which the secret religion will be revealed and the golden age will returnBritish monarchs used to larp being decended of Hebrews. Richard the lionheart was in Palestine for a reason
This women is the definition of house-slave. She said something a long the lines of “The people that deamend compensions for slavery and all the atrouse cause by it are scammers WE are the good guys that banned it and dont get fold by it”. Just images what the britts did and a black women of all is trying to defending them is just fucking pathetic. The Jews get billons every year and the poor people that was affected was her own people and now she is even draining her own people down.View attachment 349619
Kemi Badenoch has stood by her past comments about Nigeria, after the vice-president of the West African country accused her of denigrating it.
The Conservative Party leader, who was born in the UK but mostly raised in Nigeria, has repeatedly described growing up in fear and insecurity in a country plagued by corruption.
On Monday, Nigerian Vice-President Kashim Shettima suggested Badenoch could "remove the Kemi from her name" if she was not proud of her "nation of origin".
Asked about Shettima's comments, Badenoch's spokesman said she "stands by what she says" and "is not the PR for Nigeria".
"She is the leader of the opposition and she is very proud of her leadership of the opposition in this country," he told reporters.
"She tells the truth. She tells it like it is. She is not going to couch her words."
During a speech on migration in Nigerian capital Abuja, Shettima said his government was "proud" of Badenoch "in spite of her efforts at denigrating her nation of origin."
Shettima was met with applause when he said: "She is entitled to her own opinions; she has even every right to remove the Kemi from her name but that does not underscore the fact that the greatest black nation on earth is the nation called Nigeria."
He compared Badenoch's approach to that of her predecessor, Rishi Sunak - the UK's first prime minister of Indian heritage - as "a brilliant young man" who "never denigrated his nation of ancestry".
It is unclear which comments Shettima was referring to, but Badenoch has frequently mentioned her Nigerian upbringing in speeches and interviews.
Born Olukemi Adegoke in Wimbledon in 1980, she grew up in Lagos, Nigeria, and in the United States where her physiology professor mother lectured.
She returned to the UK at the age of 16 to live with a friend of her mother because of the worsening political and economic situation in Nigeria, and to study for her A-levels.
After marrying Scottish banker Hamish Badenoch, she took her husband's surname
At the Conservative Party conference this year, Badenoch contrasted the freedoms she experienced in the UK to her childhood in Lagos "where fear was everywhere".
She vividly described the city as lawless, recalling hearing "neighbours scream as they are being burgled and beaten - and wondering if your home will be next".
Last week during a tour of the US, she described her home city as "a place where almost everything seemed broken".
Her experiences helped shape her conservative ideals and set her against socialism, she said.