My issue is that whilst it’s great to read a lot and look at data and texts, you only get a real feel of a culture via speaking to elders and locals and that’s what I think is missing when it comes to her. I respect her optimism, I need to take a leaf out of her book, but it becomes empty relying on financial reports and articles if you’re struggling to understand Somali daqan on a deeper level and are using a Western lens to call Somalis racist for calling groups like Somali Bantus Jariirweyne and other groups descriptive terms and thinking it’s a social media phenomenon. She is clearly projecting Western social norms on Somalis and because this doesn’t fit neatly into her obsession of glossing over Somali issues, she denies it.These are colloquial terms, yes. You won't find them in historical texts. But I think you're reaching a bit, walaal, if you're trying to argue Somalis didn't historically, on the street, use them to refer to foreign groups. You can interview dozens of ayeeyos and awoowes across Somalia who'd show you otherwise.