ok I agree with the fact, but whatever xyz foreign policies a country, Israel or Jordan or whatever may have, they are made clear in the print. The issue here is not debating about whether the foreign policy is wrong, but whether some legal stamps on your passport warrant your laptop to be shot for security.
She had the following on herself -hand drawn map of downtown Jerusalem
Geography students in Israel better start wearing kevlar soon.
-Arabic stickers on laptop -
If you're one of the 530 million people speaking Arabic, here's some news - knowing a language could be a crime.
"Fuck Star of David" pic on phone
I'm not one for nasty language, but I won't go popping bullets in things I don't like, Mr Columbine.
-passport stamps from Arab countries -
What's wrong with visiting an arab country? or do you believe in enclosing a race to their own land and prevent them from outside contact? Similar logic to that of a certain country, I must say.
various Arab publications
That sounds plain xenophobic. Education is not synonymous to English or Hebrew.
-photos condemning Israeli military action in Gaza
You should start getting trigger-happy with the U.N., Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and a dozen other human rights monitoring agenices and governemtns, because they condemned military action in Gaza. I should not have to leave my opinion at the border when entering a country, if my opinion is not causing any harm to anyone.
We have seen it for thousands of generations, the oppressed/rebel kid/cool dude becomes the oppressor. Apple is the new Microsoft. Pretty soon Google will be the new Microsoft, who knows what next.
What I do know is eventually it'll lead to by the law of natural selection the most oppressive organisation in the form of Skynet and mankind's only hope will be an Austrian Terminator (no no Summer Glau of Sarah Connor Chronicles is NOT a fighter type more like a japanese maid robot)
p.s. we do have to melt the terminator in the end just to be on the safe side
Qas uses the alphabet 'seeen' similar to the English alphabet s. Qassab uses the alphabet 'swaad' that is pronounced differently and has no equivalent in English. Non-arabic speakers usually make the mistake of pronouncing both as the alphabet s. Both words use different alphabets and have different roots. Also note Qas is two consonants and thus is not necessarily from any family of 3-consonant roots.
Arabic words are generally based on a root that uses three consonants to define the *underlying meaning of the word*. Various vowels, prefixes and suffixes are used with the root letters to create the desired inflection of meaning.
Each set of root letters can lead to a vast number of words, all predictable in form and all related to the basic meaning of the three root letters.
From http://www.al-bab.com/arab/language/lang.htm:
If you speak a European language, the root system of Arabic is an unfamiliar concept. Arabic words are constructed from three-letter "roots" which convey a basic idea. For example, k-t-b *conveys the idea of* writing. Addition of vowels, and letters before, between and after the root letters produces many words associated to writing.
From the root s-l-m, Islam, salam, (M)uslim. This is not an equivocation. This is the structural organisation of the language. 'root' in Arabic, Aramaic, Hebrew etc is a very different concept from 'root' in European languages. Sharing a root in Arabic means sharing similar meaning, idea and yes, spirit.
Tieing a linguistic root does not mean that two words are in the same spirit.
Then you don't know or understand the Arabic language. Languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, Chinese, Japanese do not necessarily follow the linguistic concepts of only your language. Thas has always been the problem with orientalism - seeing the world with tinted glasses.
what?! Toyota as well? As far as I know, Mclaren was found guilty of stealing ferrari secrets. Of all the places, the mclaren guy went to photocopy the files in a shop whose owner was (groan) a Ferrari fan.
yes, and i did not say otherwise. Like i said, *Salam* the daily greeting used by muslims, is derived from the arabic word Islam, and Salaam means peace. Islam meaning submission to God and salam meaning peace have the same linguistic root due to one meaning the other in Arabic.
lol, you guys make it sound like IT jons are the most intellectual and challenging jobs around unlike the zero skill/craft jobs in electronics engineering, photonics, nuclear physics, medicine, mechanical engineering - the people you usually think of when you hear the word 'innovation'. i'm not dissing IT pros like you flippantly dissed other professions unintentionally due to ignorance, im just saying maintaining servers and creating web apps does not make it more skillful than/most other fields.'
"Muslim is a religion of peace". (Not that the two really go hand in hand,
First, Muslims are followers, the religion is Islam.
Second, Salam, derived from the word Islam, is Arabic for 'Peace.' So, actually Islam and peace are the same hand, sadly twisted by some people for their own idealogies.
Actually, the Bin Laden family did. The bush and bin laden family have history in business dealings and the like. Watch Fahrenheit 911 for the facts, whatever opinion you may have of Michael Moore.
Well, the first 'space-man' was a cosmonaut, so by the 'i-was-there-first' rule all spacemen should now be called Cosmonauts.
As an aside, both names are derived from Greek, somewhat embarassing given they were coined to assume national identities.
On a further note, in all Chinese documentation written in English, 'astronaut' is used, while cosmonaut is used in chinese documentation written in Russian. Taikonaut was invented by the US media to distinguish Chinese astronauts.
And on another topic,
French space-men - Spationaute
and for Indian spacemen, I propose: Apu-naut.
Apu: Tonight Iâ(TM)m going to party like itâ(TM)s on sale for $19.99!
Who are the most likely buyers with huge amounts of money at their disposal?
CIA anyone? white house? anyone interested in trying to build a puppet regime in Venezuela maybe?
Nemo: Dad I wanna go for a ride on the subway current!
Dad: you kiddin petrol prices are up the roof! besides when we were your age we stuck to our schools.
Hmm call me a perv but judging from an activity when people get quite hot and sweaty and release body heat...
Power the Future. From your Bedroom.
Or:
The Future Generation is in Your Hands.
- double pun whammy.
yes yes I know, but...hehe.
ok I agree with the fact, but whatever xyz foreign policies a country, Israel or Jordan or whatever may have, they are made clear in the print. The issue here is not debating about whether the foreign policy is wrong, but whether some legal stamps on your passport warrant your laptop to be shot for security.
She had the following on herself -hand drawn map of downtown Jerusalem
Geography students in Israel better start wearing kevlar soon.
-Arabic stickers on laptop -
If you're one of the 530 million people speaking Arabic, here's some news - knowing a language could be a crime.
"Fuck Star of David" pic on phone
I'm not one for nasty language, but I won't go popping bullets in things I don't like, Mr Columbine.
-passport stamps from Arab countries -
What's wrong with visiting an arab country? or do you believe in enclosing a race to their own land and prevent them from outside contact? Similar logic to that of a certain country, I must say.
various Arab publications
That sounds plain xenophobic. Education is not synonymous to English or Hebrew.
-photos condemning Israeli military action in Gaza
You should start getting trigger-happy with the U.N., Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and a dozen other human rights monitoring agenices and governemtns, because they condemned military action in Gaza. I should not have to leave my opinion at the border when entering a country, if my opinion is not causing any harm to anyone.
There should have been a preliminary Haering as there isnt enough evidence against him.
We have seen it for thousands of generations, the oppressed/rebel kid/cool dude becomes the oppressor. Apple is the new Microsoft. Pretty soon Google will be the new Microsoft, who knows what next.
What I do know is eventually it'll lead to by the law of natural selection the most oppressive organisation in the form of Skynet and mankind's only hope will be an Austrian Terminator (no no Summer Glau of Sarah Connor Chronicles is NOT a fighter type more like a japanese maid robot)
p.s. we do have to melt the terminator in the end just to be on the safe side
I wonder what we'll talk about when he sees me reading this sla...oh shit Ctrl+F4
oh yes, the root word for qassab would be Q - S(swaad) - B ; 3 consonants. B is not a suffix here.
Qas uses the alphabet 'seeen' similar to the English alphabet s. Qassab uses the alphabet 'swaad' that is pronounced differently and has no equivalent in English. Non-arabic speakers usually make the mistake of pronouncing both as the alphabet s. Both words use different alphabets and have different roots. Also note Qas is two consonants and thus is not necessarily from any family of 3-consonant roots.
Arabic words are generally based on a root that uses three consonants to define the *underlying meaning of the word*. Various vowels, prefixes and suffixes are used with the root letters to create the desired inflection of meaning.
Each set of root letters can lead to a vast number of words, all predictable in form and all related to the basic meaning of the three root letters.
From http://www.al-bab.com/arab/language/lang.htm:
If you speak a European language, the root system of Arabic is an unfamiliar concept. Arabic words are constructed from three-letter "roots" which convey a basic idea. For example, k-t-b *conveys the idea of* writing. Addition of vowels, and letters before, between and after the root letters produces many words associated to writing.
From the root s-l-m, Islam, salam, (M)uslim. This is not an equivocation. This is the structural organisation of the language. 'root' in Arabic, Aramaic, Hebrew etc is a very different concept from 'root' in European languages. Sharing a root in Arabic means sharing similar meaning, idea and yes, spirit.
Tieing a linguistic root does not mean that two words are in the same spirit.
Then you don't know or understand the Arabic language. Languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, Chinese, Japanese do not necessarily follow the linguistic concepts of only your language. Thas has always been the problem with orientalism - seeing the world with tinted glasses.
what?! Toyota as well? As far as I know, Mclaren was found guilty of stealing ferrari secrets. Of all the places, the mclaren guy went to photocopy the files in a shop whose owner was (groan) a Ferrari fan.
no, its the Firefly, after the show being cancelled it had nowhere else to go.
yes, and i did not say otherwise. Like i said, *Salam* the daily greeting used by muslims, is derived from the arabic word Islam, and Salaam means peace. Islam meaning submission to God and salam meaning peace have the same linguistic root due to one meaning the other in Arabic.
lol, you guys make it sound like IT jons are the most intellectual and challenging jobs around unlike the zero skill/craft jobs in electronics engineering, photonics, nuclear physics, medicine, mechanical engineering - the people you usually think of when you hear the word 'innovation'. i'm not dissing IT pros like you flippantly dissed other professions unintentionally due to ignorance, im just saying maintaining servers and creating web apps does not make it more skillful than /most other fields.'
"Muslim is a religion of peace". (Not that the two really go hand in hand,
First, Muslims are followers, the religion is Islam. Second, Salam, derived from the word Islam, is Arabic for 'Peace.' So, actually Islam and peace are the same hand, sadly twisted by some people for their own idealogies.
Actually, the Bin Laden family did. The bush and bin laden family have history in business dealings and the like. Watch Fahrenheit 911 for the facts, whatever opinion you may have of Michael Moore.
Well, the first 'space-man' was a cosmonaut, so by the 'i-was-there-first' rule all spacemen should now be called Cosmonauts. As an aside, both names are derived from Greek, somewhat embarassing given they were coined to assume national identities. On a further note, in all Chinese documentation written in English, 'astronaut' is used, while cosmonaut is used in chinese documentation written in Russian. Taikonaut was invented by the US media to distinguish Chinese astronauts. And on another topic, French space-men - Spationaute and for Indian spacemen, I propose: Apu-naut. Apu: Tonight Iâ(TM)m going to party like itâ(TM)s on sale for $19.99!
and surely anyone who can pay for a software online can copy dvds using free software.
Tom Cruise be so happy he thetaned his pants.
Who are the most likely buyers with huge amounts of money at their disposal? CIA anyone? white house? anyone interested in trying to build a puppet regime in Venezuela maybe?
don't, its not good for geeks. if ever in your lifetime a girl likes you, you'll fry her with your intense gaze.
Nemo: Dad I wanna go for a ride on the subway current! Dad: you kiddin petrol prices are up the roof! besides when we were your age we stuck to our schools.