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[quote author=Jenifa_ link=topic=590933.msg7663316#msg7663316 date=1296777919]so, what about Kilode?![/quote]Who're you stalking? Me or FStranger? ![]() |
Fact is all the hand-wringing about "African Savages" and "Vigilante Executions" was nonsense, since it was already mentioned in the original article in the opening post that the police's primary suspect was the deceased man's roommate. Looks like the murderer is a career criminal. Anyway, here is the full article in the new link provided by Viewlekan above: Male love-peddler killed Uganda gay activist: police (AFP) – 5 hours ago KAMPALA — A Ugandan gay rights activist was killed after reneging on an agreement to pay for sex, the country's police chief told journalists Thursday. Inspector General of Police Kale Kayihura said Enoch Sydney Nsubuga, 22, had confessed to killing activist David Kato, and "there is nothing concrete to suggest" the murder was "a hate crime." "According to the suspect , he negotiated with the deceased to be paid money as he was being used as a sexual partner, but that the promise was never fulfilled," Kayihura said. Nsubuga, presented briefly to the media Thursday, confessed that after realising Kato did not intend to pay as promised, "he picked a hammer from the bathroom and hit (Kato) on the head," and robbed him, Kayihura added. Police believe the two had a prior relationship since Kato stood as surety for Nsubuga during a January bail hearing where Nsubuga was released on remand after an arrest for theft, according to Kayihura. Following his release from prison, Nsubuga, who has a long criminal record, began working on Kato's property doing domestic labour, Kayihura said. Kayihura added that police were "not dismissing" the hate crime theory and cautioned the public and Uganda's media against "intolerance." Last year Kato was named and pictured by an anti-gay tabloid called Rolling Stone in a story that carried the headline "Hang Them" in reference to gay rights campaigners. "Whoever is talking about hanging, we are going to have to take them on. It is absolutely unacceptable," Kayihura said. Kayihura also admonished Anglican priest Thomas Musoke for anti-gay remarks made at Kato's funeral last week. "You don't make such statements at a funeral," he said. "God accepts everybody , you must be sensitive." Although engaging in homosexual sex is listed in Uganda's penal code, Kayihura said investigating such cases in not a top priority. "At this moment in time, there are bigger crime categories that we are focusing on," he said. http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5ihVH6Ahnbnhdo3CqrEDT3mCBknKg?docId=CNG.9057dbf4f3db02f92ea39216b26eb623.8a1 |
Cont. Protesters Clash Again on Cairo’s Streets The violence on Wednesday and Thursday seemed to have hardened the protesters’ demands, going far beyond the ouster of Mr. Mubarak. “The people want the execution of the president,” some chanted. “Mubarak is a war criminal.” Some low-level clashes continued, but nothing on the scale of the volleys of rocks and Molotov cocktails of the earlier fighting. Early Thursday, the square was littered with rocks and makeshift barricades, with smoke drifting overhead. Troops guarded the Egyptian Museum, Cairo’s great storehouse of priceless antiquities dating to the time of the Pharaohs and a huge emblem of national pride. As the fear of further clashes gripped Cairo, foreigners, including many Americans, continued their exodus. In a statement, the American Embassy, which has ordered the compulsory evacuation of some diplomats and their families, said that more than 1,900 American citizens had been flown out of Egypt since Monday and more would leave on Thursday. There was no indication that the antigovernment side was in a mood for retreat. On Thursday, the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood — the biggest organized opposition group — again rejected a government offer to negotiate once the protesters had left Tahrir Square. Essam el-Erian, a senior leader of the Islamist organization, told Reuters the movement was calling for the removal of “the regime, not the state.” “This regime’s legitimacy is finished, with its president, with his deputy, its ministers, its party, its Parliament. We said this clearly. We refuse to negotiate with it because it has lost its legitimacy,” he said. Only two days after the military pledged not to fire on protesters, it was unclear where the army stood. Many protesters contended that Mr. Mubarak was provoking a confrontation in order to prompt a military crackdown. Mohamed ElBaradei, who was designated to negotiate with the government on behalf of the opposition, demanded on Wednesday that the army move in and protect the protesters. The deployment of plainclothes forces paid by Mr. Mubarak’s ruling party — men known here as baltageya — has been a hallmark of the Mubarak government, and there were many signs that the violence was carefully choreographed. The preparations for a confrontation began Wednesday morning, a day after Mr. Mubarak pledged to step down in September while insisting that he would die on Egyptian soil. The president’s supporters waved flags as though they were headed to a protest, but armed themselves as though they were itching for a fight. Several wore hard hats; one had a meat cleaver, and two others grabbed the raw materials to make firebombs from their car. Some of the Mubarak supporters arrived in buses. When they spoke with one another, they referred to the antigovernment protesters as foreigners or traitors, and to Mr. Mubarak as Egypt’s “father.” The anti-Mubarak demonstrators had organized themselves to try to avoid violence. Men held hands in long chains to keep the two groups apart. Others, with effusive apologies, searched those entering the square for weapons. Some stepped in with whistles to break up arguments that had started to grow heated. Several people interviewed independently said that ruling party operatives had offered them 50 Egyptian pounds, less than $10, if they agreed to demonstrate in the square on Mr. Mubarak’s behalf. “Fifty pounds for my country!” said Yasmina Salah, 29. Then, suddenly, at exactly 2:15 p.m., arguments between pro- and anti-Mubarak demonstrators around the square turned into shoving matches. “We don’t know who is with us and who is against us now — we are lost,” said Abdel Raouf Mohamed, 37, before he was interrupted by a burly young man who shouted: “I love Mubarak! I need Mubarak!” Seven minutes later, Reda Sadak, 45, said, “In 10 minutes, there will be a big fight here — it is an old game, the oldest game in the regime.” In fact, before he finished speaking, rocks and sticks began to fly from the pro-Mubarak forces into the crowd of anti-Mubarak demonstrators. Even then, many tried to avoid retaliation. A line of a half-dozen unarmed men stood quietly, waving their hands in the air while the pro-Mubarak forces rained rocks down on them. At 2:50 p.m., as hundreds of rocks flew past the Egyptian Museum, two tanks started up. Anti-Mubarak protesters who had been standing on them jumped off and the crowd cheered with delight. “The people and the army are one hand!” they chanted. The tanks rolled to create a barricade between the opposing groups, and for a while the soldiers encouraged both sides to calm down. But then the soldiers seemed to retreat, and soon the anti-Mubarak forces began hauling scraps of metal to build a barricade around one tank. A soldier on top of another tank fired live ammunition into the air to push back a surging group of pro-Mubarak protesters. A couple of men jumped up on the tank and started to kiss his feet, and for a moment the soldier, weapon in hand, began to cry. A higher-ranking officer climbed up, and the anti-Mubarak protesters begged him to protect them. “But aren’t they Egyptian?” the officer replied. “You want me to fire at Egyptians?” And for the rest of the day the soldiers did nothing, telling anti-Mubarak protesters who begged them to engage that they “had no orders.” Then, about 3:15 p.m., the battle was joined. Abandoning any attempt to avoid violence, thousands of anti-Mubarak protesters used scraps of steel to rip up the pavement into pieces, carrying them in milk crates and scarves to hurl back at their attackers. “They want to take the revolution from us,” said Mohamed Gamil, a 30-year-old dentist in the crowd of antigovernment protesters. “We are ready to die for the revolution.” Pro-government demonstrators chanted, “With our blood, with our souls, we sacrifice for you, oh Mubarak.” Eighteen charged their foes on horseback and two on camels. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/04/world/middleeast/04egypt.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp |
Other Foreign news: Watched a lot of tv coverage on Egypt last night. However, newspapers tend to do a better job of breaking it all down. The article below is a must-read! http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/04/world/middleeast/04egypt.html?_r=1&hp Protesters Clash Again on Cairo’s Streets By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK and ALAN COWELL Published: February 3, 2011 New York Times CAIRO — The Egyptian government broadened its crackdown on Thursday to the international media and human rights workers, in an apparent effort to remove witnesses to the battle with anti-government protesters. Armed supporters of President Hosni Mubarak attacked foreign journalists, punching them and smashing their equipment. Men who protesters said were plainclothes police officers shut down news media outlets that had been operating in buildings overlooking Tahrir Square. An informal center set up by human rights workers in the square was seized, and a group of journalists was stopped in their car near the square by a gang of men with knives and briefly turned over to the military police, ostensibly for their protection. Two reporters working for The New York Times were released on Thursday after being detained overnight in Cairo. The concerted effort to remove journalists lent a sense of foreboding to events in the square, where battles continued between the protesters and the Mubarak supporters, who human rights workers and protesters say are being paid and organized by the government. In the afternoon, the fighting spread beyond the square to the October 6th Bridge, which rises above the Egyptian Museum. That followed a night of gunfire and a day of mayhem Wednesday that left at least five dead and more than 800 wounded in a battle for the Middle East’s most populous nation. Sounding a highly unusual note of public contrition among Egypt’s elite, the newly appointed prime minister, Ahmed Shafiq, apologized on Thursday for the violence and vowed to investigate who had instigated it “I offer my apology for everything that happened yesterday because it’s neither logical nor rational,” he said. A government spokesman, Magdy Rady, denied that the authorities had been involved in the violence. “To accuse the government of mobilizing this is a real fiction. That would defeat our object of restoring the calm,” Mr. Rady told Reuters. “We were surprised with all these actions.” Officials in Mr. Mubarak’s National Democratic Party were at pains Thursday to absolve the president of any role in the violent crackdown Wednesday on the anti-government protesters. Speaking with one voice they blamed the violence on thugs hired by a group of rich businessmen eager to support the government. But opposition leaders dismissed that explanation as a smoke screen, saying it was highly unlikely that anyone would take such a fateful action without the approval of the president himself. The outcome of the widening unrest is pivotal in a region where uprising and unrest have spread from Tunisia to many other lands, including Jordan and Yemen, forcing their leaders into precipitate concessions to their suddenly vocal foes and stretching American diplomacy. In Sana, the Yemeni capital, on Thursday, thousands of protesters assembled, some for and some against President Ali Abdullah Saleh. The demonstrations were peaceful, in marked contrast to the chaos that ruled in Cairo on Wednesday when Mr. Mubarak struck back at his opponents, unleashing waves of supporters armed with clubs, rocks, knives and firebombs in a concerted assault on thousands of antigovernment protesters in Tahrir Square. Calls for new protests in a number of Middle East countries were circulating on Twitter, including: Algeria, Feb. 12; Bahrain, Feb. 14; and Libya, Feb. 17. In the clashes on Wednesday, the Egyptian military did nothing to intervene. But on Thursday for the first time, a thin line of soldiers backed by tanks and armored personnel carriers appeared to have taken up positions between the combatants and to be urging Mr. Mubarak’s supporters, numbering in the hundreds, to avoid confrontation. For their part, several thousand antigovernment protesters, far fewer than in previous days, called for peaceful protest. “An Egyptian will not attack another,” some chanted from behind makeshift barricades thrown up to seal access to the square. “No bloodshed.” When one man shouted an insult at a Mubarak supporter around 100 yards away, another, Mahmoud Haqiqi, told him: “Don’t say that. Stay quiet. Tell them we are here for their sake.” After hours of bloody clashes starting on Wednesday with rocks, iron bars and petrol bombs into the night, the confrontation seemed to escalate early Thursday morning when the staccato rattle of automatic gunfire rang out over Cairo. It was unclear whether the shots came from the pro-government demonstrators or from the military forces stationed in the square. Two people were killed by the gunfire and 45 people were wounded, said a doctor at a nearby emergency clinic set up by the antigovernment demonstrators. After the initial volleys, soldiers fired into the air, temporarily scattering most of the people in the square. More than 150 people have died in the uprising, human rights groups say. By midmorning on Thursday, as the protesters’ numbers again began to swell, the antigovernment side held its ground in Tahrir, or Liberation, Square — the focus of the clashes — milling around and chanting slogans on the 10th day of the campaign to oust Mr. Mubarak. Volunteers arrived carrying water, yogurt, bananas and medical supplies for the makeshift clinics that sprung up to tend the wounded. In the absence of any municipal services or authority, others tried to sweep the square of debris, using brooms, shovels and sheets of cardboard. Cont. |
Nigeria Abroad news: Update on deceased footballer Uche Okafor Uche Okafor to be buried February 17 The burial ceremony of late Super Eagles defender, Uche Okafor is scheduled to now hold February 17 at Umuabali, Ubomiri in Mbaitoli LGA of Imo State. According to the spokesman of the family, Ugo Nwokoro, the new date was agreed to by members of the Okafor family. In the meantime, friends of the murdered football star, have agreed to float a Diamond Bank Trust Fund for the family which the deceased left behind. Beneficiaries of the Fund include wife Ify and 15-year-old daughter, Tochukwu. According to Nwokoro, Nigerians, desirous of supporting the Okafor family can do so through the Account name of Tochukwu & Ify Okafor. Account number 0251060023442, Diamond Bank Plc, Adeola Odeku Street, Victoria Island. Speaking on the burial plans, Nwokoro said clips of the high points of Uche Okafor’s career will be shown on a big screen, adding that all necessary logistics are being put in place for the ceremony. http://www.vanguardngr.com/2011/01/uche-okafor-to-be-buried-february-17/ |
[quote author=tpiah* link=topic=590933.msg7655211#msg7655211 date=1296671522]Are you not oyinda? ![]() if you are, that's why debosky is having issues with you, imo.[/quote] dayokanu:Didn't have a lot of time to peruse Ms. Oyinda's posts to get a feel for her. Ironically, she is the spitting image of an Haitian friend of mine. Dreads and all. Okay, to the nitty-gritty. Just glanced 2 of her posts. First thing I notice: She writes, "please," in Yoruba as, "jor." I never ever ever never never never ever, even though I've seen a lot of NLers write it that way. I will write "jo" or most likely "joo." I do not understsand where the "r" comes from? Are we egun from Benin? ![]() Anyway, I'm sure she's a lovely upstanding sort. But we are not the same person, you paranoid people! Good night! ![]() |
dayokanu:34-page thread about Ugandan guy. Don't worry; nothing bad. And it was all in jest anyway. I'm switching off. Prob watch Cairo coverage til I fall asleep. Crazy stuff! |
fstranger1:Stranger, I'll be up for a while since I fell asleep before. ![]() P.S. Still watching Cairo implode. I am so proud of these Egyptians! You think we would fight that hard if we needed to? Imagine if they switch off internet and wireless phone access countrywide in Naija? I think even my dear ol' mom would riot if she couldn't use her cell phones. ![]() |
dayokanu:DK, did you see your name on "the list" in the gay thread? hehehehe fstranger1:So, did I do something to cause that? Don't think so. Hey, some troublemaker named Debosky was here this afternoon; egging on DK - telling him I am somebody else. ![]() Anyway, you're on top of that list in the aforementioned thread cos I know you have a sense of humour. How was your day? Also wanted to ask you how a couple things went - something we discussed on SOTU night, and the health followup of older friend of mine that she refused to pay for. Have a nice night. P.S. I think I'm supposed to check the profile of a poster named Oyinda. |
fstranger1:Katsumoto - I did nothing; he's just playing Bluetooth - Don't think so; he's just playing OAMJ - He's a tard ; he's just playingDayoKanu - We've been thru this; he's a troublemaker ![]() Buzegee - He's my buddy ![]() |
dayokanu: ![]() I'll mock your team too. Never you worry. |
fstranger1:I dozed off for a couple hours before so now I won't be able to fall asleep until 1 or 2am. Are you crabby? P.S. I am watching developments in Egypt. |
dayokanu:Why? Because only Nairalanders play on Arshavin's name? Only NLers know RVP was arrested for rape? So was CRonaldo, in 05(?) btw. DK, you're losing your coolness. Probably never had it all along. 'Twas. . . a mirage. Hmm mmm mm. How the mighty have fallen. |
Found this article in another thread where twins are discussed. It's interesting to contrast other tribes' (negative) beliefs about twins with Yorubas, for example. https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-385178.64.html Kenyan mother 'cursed' with six sets of twins Most women would struggle to cope with six sets of twins but for Gladys Bulinya it is even more difficult - as many people in her part of Kenya think twins are cursed. Her relatives will have nothing to do with her, and her husband left her, fearing she was jinxed, after the sixth pair of twins arrived last year. So the 35-year-old lives alone with 10 of her 12 children in a one-roomed grass-thatched house, a few miles from the shore of Lake Victoria. Sitting outside her small home in the village of Nzoia, she recites the birthdays of her children with ease. "John and James were born in 1993," she starts, shading her eyes from the sun's rays. She explains that she got pregnant at high school - but her boyfriend was too young to marry her. Her sorrow then turned to shock, when her own family ordered her to leave the babies at the district hospital for adoption. They told her that the Bukusu people, to which her family belongs, believe twins bring bad luck - and that unless one of them dies, it means certain death for one or both parents. The Bukusu tradition of eliminating the second twin is no longer practised, though occasional cases of infanticide are still reported in rural areas of western Kenya. Forced Marriage Luckily, Ms Bulinya says, when her boyfriend's father learned the twins had been abandoned, he took them in and has cared for them ever since. (He is from a different ethnic group, the Kalenjin.) But her troubles did not stop there. Five years later she fell in love with and married a primary school teacher. She was living with his family when she gave birth to her second set of twins, Duncan and Dennis. Fearing she had brought them a bad omen - and that someone would die - her in-laws chased her away. "I was put on a motorcycle taxi with my twins and sent to my father's home," she says. Yet again, however, her family had no sympathy. Still considering her cursed, they did not allow her on to their property. Instead, they quickly organised another marriage for her, to a man 20 years her senior. He agreed to the alliance, she says, as he had not expected to marry at his age. But more twins followed. "Mercy and Faith were born in 2003 and Carren and Ivy in 2005, Purpose and Swin in 2007," Ms Bulinya says. It was the arrival of Baraka and Prince last year, that led to her husband walking out. "I now have to do lots of odd jobs to feed my 10 children because I do not know where he is, and he is also too old to work even if he were around," she says. 'No regrets' A few of the children attend the local junior school. The five-year-old girls take it in turns to care for five-month-old Baraka and Prince, while their mother is out weeding plots or doing washing for neighbours. Eleven-year-old Dennis has been given a scholarship to a private boarding school nearby, while his twin Duncan looks after the livestock for a retired teacher. "I have decided to sponsor one of them - that is all I can afford," Margaret Khanyunya, director of St Iddah Academy, told the BBC. Duncan's monthly ration of maize for his herding duties is enough to feed the rest of the family. So the family of twins, often ostracised by the community, just about scrapes a living. But even Ms Khanyunya, a benefactor, is critical of Ms Bulinya's situation. "The lady should have undergone sterilisation after discovering that men were using and dumping her," she says. Ms Bulinya says she has no regrets and sees all her children as God's blessings. However, she admits that she has now reluctantly been sterilised, "against the wishes of my church", as she could not cope with any more children. "I am a Catholic. When I made the decision I asked for God's forgiveness and I am sure God understands and will forgive me for doing that." The one thing that really upsets her, she says, is the absence of her 17-year-old twins. She weeps when she recalls their last meeting, two years ago, at their circumcision, a ceremony which marks a teenage boy's rite of passage to a man. At the gathering, each parent must hand over their son to the community elders for the circumcision. "I was invited to the occasion and asked twice to pick my sons from among the crowd of 30 boys," she explains. "In both cases I picked the wrong children and my heart still bleeds each time I think of that day." http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12280109 How Likely Is It? Dr Maggie Blott, a spokesperson for the Royal College of Obsetricians and Gynaecologists, says: The chances of having six sets of twins is extremely low, though once you have one set of twins, you are more likely to have another - and once you have two sets, you are more likely to have a third. If a woman repeatedly has non-identical twins, her ovaries are regularly producing two eggs rather than one. In Britain, the chance of having twins is one in 80, in Africa it is higher. I'm not sure anyone knows the chances of having a second or third set of twins - there probably isn't that much information out there. But all obstetricians have stories of a woman who has had twins having twins again. I have a patient who had twins followed by triplets. Twinning runs in families too. A woman who is a twin herself has a higher chance of giving birth to twins |
[quote author=tpiah* link=topic=596427.msg7656413#msg7656413 date=1296684334]please dont bring any animal in here. ![]() as for physicqed, he knows better than anyone else what's biting his arse. best ignored so he can go find someone else to dump on. he probably wants to derail the thread because he didnt think of it first. same way he got so agitated over the hausa one and couldnt rest until he shouted it down. envious much.[/quote]Okay. I am not really sure what is going on. But I respect your wishes. ![]() |
tensor777:He knows he can still have kids in his 70s, even 80s and beyond. "Matter fact" there was a NL thread about a 100-yr old new father. buzugee:I better not see you anywhere near Lagos. That town ain't big enough for the 2 of us. Fact! Seriously, I feel you though. I hope I won't have to raise my kids fulltime in America. |
PhysicsMHD:What's going on, my PHDMDDDS [size=4pt]bicurious [/size] friend? So unlike you to be getting into meaningless fights? Are you missing your bosom buddy, Jaygetta? Se fe ka pari ija? Can we settle the quarrel? You too Ileke! |
VeraDove:Lady, How is everything? What happened since? Why did it take your beloved 15 yrs to propose? Were you teenagers when you met? Please come back and tell us if you called off your white wedding and went back with the ex. If your ex is telling you your husband knows you don't love him, he's trying to tell you it is okay to pull out of the wedding and come back to him. Why is that so difficult to understand? ::Have a headache after trying to understand this dilemma:: |
Nigeria Abroad News: Update on Akeem, Nigerian man found in car trunk half-dead. http://gothamist.com/2011/02/01/bmw_victim_breathing_on_his_own_att.php BMW Victim Breathing On His Own, Attacker Still Loose After his story received a massive amount media attention, the family of Akeem Ajimotokan have moved him from Harlem Hospital to another, undisclosed, medical institution. And while Ajimotokan (who was found last week stuffed into the back of his BMW with his ear half-torn off) is still in a coma, he is reportedly now breathing on his own. Meanwhile police are still hunting Barion A. Blake, a crook with a thing for BMWs who is suspected of offering to buy Ajimotokan's car before changing his mind and instead beating him up and stuffing him in the back. Blake, who it turns out is the nephew of NYPD counterterrorism division Deputy Chief Michael Blake, was last seen fleeing the BMW after getting into a fender-bender with a taxi. FStranger, how's your day going? |
[quote author=tpiah* link=topic=590933.msg7655211#msg7655211 date=1296671522]Are you not oyinda? ![]() if you are, that's why debosky is having issues with you, imo.[/quote]Don't know who that is? I think Debosky was just making random comments. I didn't sense anything personal. Dunno. ::Shrug:: dayokanu: I guess I'll have to read some of this member's posts. When I feel like it.[quote author=tpiah* link=topic=590933.msg7655327#msg7655327 date=1296672583]hmm.[/quote]I am not going to entertain any more conspiracy theories or theorists. I will catch you guys when you get back to normal. ![]() |
OAM4J:Well, I don't have a "girlfriend" because hetero girls don't have girlfriends - not the way you mean it anyway. I can prove I am not gay, simply by the fact that I did not post any nonsense about "live and let live" and "gay is good" or any of that homo crap. (pls check out my siggy). hehehe. That's how I compiled the list. Coldn't you tell? I needed no evidence of same-sex desires to put you on the "gay" list. Try and keep up! It was a joke anyway. You liberals and your lack of sense of humour. ![]() You can't have my sister. I'm an only child. (I know what you're thinking - just don't dare say it.) ![]() I can't stick around right now, my pinko commie friend. Laters. (Anyway, I didnt know you are a girl, and I also need a prove that you are)ok. But not gonna prove that either. |
debosky:All rignt. Got it. You'd like me to bring cokes and fantas and some meatpies? What about the scotch eggs, chicken and jolof rice? Okay, I'll just surprise you. Thanks for the lovely invite. Delighted! ![]() |
dayokanu:I am most interested in international competitions and qualifications leading up to the tournaments, mostly the world cup and any that I can get here in the US, Euros, Cup Oro, etc. With streaming online, of course I can watch a lot more like the African tourneys. I support Nigeria or any African country. If no African country, then it's a toss-up depends what takes my fancy.I also will follow a few players. But I really don't support football clubs. And I don't follow USA pro leagues. If it's on tv, sometimes I'll watch. Very infrequent. I know about Gunners and all the EPL teams. P.S. I've been a member on Bigsoccer for about 5 years. Not a member on Redafe. BTW, those boys are really vulgar over there. I never visit Redcafe unless it's my own computer. I mostly read the forums now though, but post more (on Bigsoccer) during matches that interest me. I follow EPL, LA Liga, and I know a tiny little bit about Germany and Portugal teams. |
debosky:Not for you to decide!!! I'm not coming to see you. I'm already fed up of talking to you. BTW, do you get that a lot? You are really annoying (and not in a good way). And I usually don't get mad at people. Ask DK. ![]() I'm coming to offer my excellent analysis of Arsenal's shortcomings. Especially, if Arsene has another meltdown! |
debosky:Debosky, I knew you were a troublemaker the first time I saw you. War has been declared. Expect me in the Sports section this weekend. I am sure Arsenal will fail! dayokanu:DK, I know a little something about this sport called football (not the "rugby with a suit of armour" the Americans play) and the EPL. You and your buddy here will rue the day! I've been following it off and on for some time. Before I started frequenting Nairaland, the only other forums I regularly visited were football ones. If you check my very first posts, you'l see I mention that part of my interest here was the Sports section. Had a few posts during the world cup and a couple re: La Liga. Anyway, I'm cool. No worries. P.S. I know everything about Cristiano Ronaldo's stay at Man U and his subsequent move to La Liga. Anything you wanna know about The Special One, I can fill you in. http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=153 http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?s=954982956f8dba5c52e78ac38ef2545a&f=229 http://www.redcafe.net/f7/ |
dayokanu:What tirade? I've seen the name Debosky before. But clicked on his profile real quick - saw he is a gunner and went for the jugular. ![]() DK, don't be paranoid. I joined a year ago, but didn't really frequent much until like September and didn't start to really participate until a couple months ago. |
manny4life:Am not going to read all that. What happened to you? ![]() OAM4J:Not as defensive as Manny up there. Anyway, why is it that men who profess to be the most liberal about gay rights are usually the ones most strident about proving their heterosexuality? God forbid you suggest (jokingly) that they might be light in the loafers. ![]() You know this was all in jest, right? This 33 pages of stuff is ridiculous!!! Half of it was about school ranking. But most of it was fun nevertheless. The list stays though. Sorry! ![]() BTW, I don't have a girlfriend. I'm not gay, remember? But, keep looking - you'll find the right girl/boy someday. ![]() |
debosky:Eeewww. Typical arsene/arsenal fan. Take that kinda talk to you-know-where. Debosky, you've outstayed your welcome. Bye. ::waves::P.S. You can come back only if you have news/info/story related to living abroad, or if you are addressing or answering any questions/comments posed by me! ![]() |
debosky:What do you want Debosky? Do I know you? Did you follow Dayokanu over here? Go back to Arsenal forum where you belong. Seriously. ![]() Anyway, I think you're just jealous. Gotta go. But if you want a arse-kicking, you can come back later - much later. I'll have more (disappointing) Arsenal news for you then. How's Andre Arse-shaving, by the way? Still there sucking up the oxygen at the Emirates? ![]() |
manny4life:Manny4life, my fruity brother, I waited for you. How pathetic can it be that you cannot find two (2) NLers to bail you out of the you-know list? And 2 you-knows don't count. Has to be 2 red-blooded testament to African masculinity/femininity! Pick from the hetero list. BTW, Bluetooth is worth the sum of 2 all by himself. Note: If you can show me a post in this thread showing the following, I might reconsider: - you asserted your right to chase as many women as you can handle - where you expressed regret that a life was lost, but "you know, he kinda shoulda expected it" - you will defend to your last breath the continent of Africa from legalizing the gays - you expressed the view that the westerners are out to ruin us by promoting this "lifestyle" and corrupting our young 'uns in their country - you stated that the guilty party was probably a friend You may also gain the support of 2 members on the "hetero" list that can vouch that you are not "you-know"? You may not edit your posts. I can tell. - - - - - - - - - - - - - Anyway, I moved around a couple and added a couple more. So, this is final. Fight! THE REALLY UPDATED LIST - Page 3 to now: Gays FSTRANGER Eldee (Would like four husbands just like the polygamists do it) Eku (but of course), Jenifa (not Nigerian, not even African), Udezue (seriously, look at his profile pic) Chrisbenogor (very angry gay) Gar3th (gay guy, gayer name) Babalegba (passionate about man love) 2good (2good for women?) Manny4life (denial is not a river in Eqypt) Drrionelli (thinks you aint gay until the 100th man Plus: Tippy Top; Morpheus24; Redsun; Idehn; Adconline; Olojoro; And: Queensmith; Londoner; Ileke-Idi; Shy-One Bi-curious PhysicsQEDHMDPHDEDD (am shocked) Gbawe (a gay pretending to be a liberal hetero in order to get lipstick lesbians/ hot feminists) Tasma Questionable Buzugee (nothing to see here) Mobinga (Mobingay? ) OA4MJ ( )In a League of His Own 13volts ( "I will kill any Gay if i had a chance" ) Hetero Sagamite Katsumoto Mai Suya; Lastpage; Elrony; Viewlekan; babaowo; Dreamchaser Tensor777 (VERY VERY VERY VERY VE-RY heterosexual! Very!) Obiagu1 (the gays really really hate him!) Righton (thinks everyone except him is "secretly gay" ) Deluxecad (hates homos named david) Philip0906 (textspeak will turn you gay. seriously, stop it!) Isale-Gangan (What? Me worry? ) Dayokanu (thinks he equals the sum of 5 normal heteros!) BLUETOOTH (how could I forget our champion) Disclaimer 1: If you feel you have been misinterpreted, maligned, your reputation sullied in any way, I hereby offer . . . ![]() Disclaimer 2: See my siggy. |
debosky:Wenger sucks! Arsenal will not win another Premiership Cup for the next 25 years! Oh, yeah! RVP is a rapist. ![]() |
:-x |
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; he's just playing
