There’s bunch of sickos on the internet but this guy takes the cake. I understand if you do it on forums but on a public platform like Twitter???Just because it's a year old or he 'apologized' for it doesn't mean that it isn't representative of his character. This is from this month.
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This is just how he posts. Ninkaan inkaar weyn bu qaba.
@Cigaal Timacadde
Indeed, AUN Hodan no one should mock the dead, but the funny thing is the girl who tweeted this was boasting about her uncle Tukeh not too long ago. So she is the last one who should cry about comments landers made.
WaLLahi on twitter they always post anti MJ shit they make so much lies about us aswellHodan was apolitical she didn't involve herself in politics Aun
The qabilism of ****** and hawiya are making neutral mjs tribalistic - which is great to see wallahi
He's actually like 40.and this guy is probably born in 2003, raised watching disney channel and cartoon network.
U gotta be jokingHe's actually like 40.
Nah, f*ck that wecel, this is beyond some dhulbahante vs isaaq nonsense. Hodan was a diapora sister trying to paint a good image of Somalia beyond the regular poverty and destruction that is portrayed.
I was on twitter the night she died and he wrote that and almost didn't believe he wrote that, he needs his ass beat and put in the hospital at the very least.
I forgot to add to my post, if Hodan was Isaaq and that despicable dude was dhulos or even MJ, Id feel the same way.Do you just as easily get angered/disgusted at people who make fun of the SL mass graves or the atrocities committed in the north or committed recently in Gaashamo (Something many on this very forum do). Somehow I think not.
As with all things we Somalis do, this is motivated by Qabiil on all sides. We want sympathy for our dead and make fun of others.
Also when a bomb goes off in Xamar, or hear stories of civil war atrocties from rival clans, I look at it like how I look at the news. Distant and out of my life. It's so commonplace that I don't think much of it. It's a disconnect for me.Do you just as easily get angered/disgusted at people who make fun of the SL mass graves or the atrocities committed in the north or committed recently in Gaashamo (Something many on this very forum do). Somehow I think not.
As with all things we Somalis do, this is motivated by Qabiil on all sides. We want sympathy for our dead and make fun of others.
He is almost as old as my dadHe's actually like 40.
Also when a bomb goes off in Xamar, or hear stories of civil war atrocties from rival clans, I look at it like how I look at the news. Distant and out of my life. It's so commonplace that I don't think much of it. It's a disconnect for me.
I felt different when Hodan died through terrorism and elwad. It felt more real because I come from places they come from. And whatever their qabil is didn't and doesn't register. Which is why I told @Finesse its beyond some dhulbahante vs isaaq shit. These girls weren't all that different to sisters, cousins, and friends we grew up with.
Places we come from, I meant Canada, America, UK. That's the connection I was making. Not Somalia/Sland.Appreciate the honesty. But isn't the fact that you come from the places they come from, a qabiil connection as well? Perhaps I didn't get the exact meaning of what you were saying there.
In the spirit of honesty, I'll admit that I'm more disgusted at people who can make fun of the Gaashamo massacre of innocent civilians then the Al Shabaab killing of Hodan Nalayeh and Saado Cali. I recognize that any rationalization I base on that is probably ignorant. However, my rationale is that I feel less connected to people who are targeted because of their celebrity/power status, than I do innocent civilians who are mowed down because of the qabiil they are.
It doesn't change the fact that I think those who made fun of Hodan Nalayeh's death are absolute scum of the earth.
Got it, I figured I misunderstood your original meaning.Places we come from, I meant Canada, America, UK. That's the connection I was making. Not Somalia/Sland.
It's natural to feel more for your people back home, that's another disconnect that plagues Somali people despite being mostly homogeneous. But for some reason I separate people raised in the diaspora and the ones back home. Their deaths register to me far greater than someone dying over there, whether they belong to my tribe or not. But back home where its more neutral and all things equal, yeah MJs over anyone lol.