#CornrowKemi

56.7K posts

#CornrowKemi banner
#CornrowKemi

#CornrowKemi

@KemiButane

I just got remixed, chopped n screwed. I went from ashy to nasty to classy, still... #TonyYayoStanAccount

Atlanta, GA Katılım Eylül 2012
1.5K Takip Edilen554 Takipçiler
Blessed to be a blessing
Blessed to be a blessing@SisiofLagos1·
@UcheMaryOkoli I asked a colleague at work who is a muslim why they are killing Christians. Her response was, “those killing Christians are not muslims” I just went quiet and kept to myself. I couldn’t start arguing with her because it’s a corporate environment. Moderate muslims are enablers
English
37
36
931
34K
Uche is a girl
Uche is a girl@UcheMaryOkoli·
Can the "good Muslims" kindly tell the bad Muslims to stop k!lling Christians in Nigeria, please????????????
English
1.2K
5.5K
33.2K
775.8K
Al Kitaab Was Sunnah
Al Kitaab Was Sunnah@kitaabwasunnah_·
1) The Asalatu is bidiah ( Innovation) and is impermissible for the following reasons: [1] Gathering: The fact that the Asalatu is chanted jointly by people has made it impermissible as there is no basis for this gathering from the Quran and Sunnah.
Shogunle Hazeezat Nosadiana@realHazeezat

Asalatu is not part of the Deen, it’s an innovation. Everyone should go to madrasat, Halqah, Ta’alim. More rewarding than Asalatu a total innovation!

English
3
9
14
1.7K
#CornrowKemi retweetledi
Esmaeil Baqaei
Esmaeil Baqaei@IRIMFA_SPOX·
در نشست سخنگویی امروز مطرح شد: ما در این سی و یک روز هیچ مذاکره‌ای با آمریکا نداشته‌ایم. آنچه که بوده، ارائه درخواست مذاکره همراه با مجموعه‌ای از پیشنهادها از طرف #آمریکا بوده که توسط برخی واسطه‌ها از جمله پاکستان به دست ما رسیده است. موضع ما خیلی روشن است. ما الان در شرایطی که تعرض و تجاوز نظامی آمریکا با شدت ادامه دارد، همه تلاش و توانمان مصروف دفاع از کیان ایران است.. ما تجارب قبلی را با گوشت و پوست و استخوان خود لمس کرده‌ایم، و خیانتی که در دو نوبت در عرض کمتر از یک سال به دیپلماسی شد را فراموش نمی‌کنیم.
فارسی
367
573
2.3K
135.1K
Alara
Alara@_alagbada·
@_Abou_bakr Analogy and logic flies above the average wahabi head. The start point of all these is the statement "asalatu is bid'ah" calling halqah bid'ah is just a reverse logic to establish that the two practices are traced to the same principle, and one can't be bid'ah while the other is
English
4
0
3
291
Abu Aa’ish wa Anas
Abu Aa’ish wa Anas@_Abou_bakr·
Quick to label Halqah as bid’ah but hell bent on whitewashing wasifah and kuburah as permissible and not bid’ah. Fantastic.
English
4
17
31
2.1K
#CornrowKemi
#CornrowKemi@KemiButane·
You guys are not approaching this discourse with scholarly reasoning and data, and it's sad to see. You are conflating two separate topics. Is group dhikr prohibited? No. Is Assalatu a group dhikr? Yes. Are most Assalatus being held in the most pristine way? No. Very simple.
AbuMustaeina Oloye@AbuMustaeina

Are these “Asalatus” anyway beneficial? YES…..ABSOLUTELY!!! Asalatu in and itself is an act of worship, there is absolutely nothing wrong in doing it, it can be done anyday, anytime, anywhere. The kind of Asalatu to be read must also follow the laid down path taught by the prophet PBUH himself. Praising RosuluLah (PBUH) in different speech (for example, Arabic) wouldn’t be bad cos it’s just another language, however, the text must be ascertained that it follows the tenets of Islam, it must not place him PBUH in ranks that Allah had not placed him (over-praising), equating him to Allah or in other ways that we know, that’s why the scholars of Sunnah would advise every Muslim to stick to what is known cos many recite what they do not understand (passionately ignorant). Fixing a day to gather and tag it Asalatu like the Sundays Asalatu which started about 3 decades ago has no basis in Islam (I have not seen any), I personally know when the first popular Asalatu started, the founder was frequent in Kumuyi street, Mushin, I know him very well, when there was a break out, I was offered to be a missioner of one of the break out groups (Mushin Branch) by my own dad who was/is an active member, I respectfully declined, I told him this has no basis in the deen. Are these “Asalatus” beneficial?ABSOLUTELY…YES. We have seen people learnt Qur’an from their madaaris etc Does that make gathering every Sunday or any other day in the name of Asalatu right? In my opinion, NO. I have suggested many times in closed doors with our friends who are missioners at these Asalatus, elders, members and key stakeholders holders to STOP CALLING THESE GATHERINGS “ASALATU”, call them something else, Asalatu is an act of Ibadah and should be done rightly and appropriately, doing it wrongly or in your own ways; as you wish; would be considered innovation (Bid’ah) and may attract punishment from Allah as doing it the right way would earn you immense rewards. Another point to note is that these groups turned to hizbiyah, they do things and say “We in this Asalatu, this is how we do our own things” even when these things are not in conformity with Islam” I don’t want to mention names but I will give you an example, when a particular Asalatu group member meet each other, as Muslims, they are to exchange tasleems but this group; a member would say “HASBUNALAH” and the other person would respond with “WA NIMAL WAKEEL”, I asked them one day, why do you greet yourself like this? the responder said “this is how we identify ourselves as members” I can go on and on but this post is getting too long. WaLahu a’lam.

English
0
0
0
21
#CornrowKemi retweetledi
𝕴𝖓𝕯𝖊𝖇𝖙𝖂𝖊𝕿𝖗𝖚𝖘𝖙
Making a pact with the devil always comes with a salty bill.
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

You're looking at the world's busiest international airport at 40% capacity. The fallout from this empty terminal is about to hit your gas price, your grocery bill, and your 401k. Dubai's airport moved 95 million passengers a year. Since Iran started striking Gulf states on February 28, the airport has been hit by drones four times. British Airways canceled all flights to Dubai through the end of May. Lufthansa, Air France, KLM, Cathay Pacific, Singapore Airlines, Virgin Atlantic. All gone. The hub that connected three continents is barely open. But that's the part you can film on your phone. Dubai's main shipping port and the business zone around it make up 36% of the city's economy. A missile set a dock on fire and shut it all down. Property values crashed 35% in two weeks. The two biggest developers lost about 40% of their stock value. Five-star hotels running below 20% occupancy. In one month, $44 billion in stock market value just vanished. Went through the fund data on this. Gulf governments hold about $6 trillion in investment capital (basically giant national piggy banks filled with oil money). That's 40% of all government investment funds on earth, and none of it is sitting in a vault. In 2025, these funds amounted to $132 billion in the US alone. One Abu Dhabi fund sent 57 cents of every dollar it invested to America. Saudi Arabia's fund bought into Heathrow Airport and led a $55 billion deal to buy EA, the company that makes FIFA and Madden. They're co-investors in AI data centers going up outside Paris. This money is already in your economy. Last May, Gulf leaders pledged $2 trillion in US investment during Trump's visit. Fighter jets, Boeing planes, AI chips, and data centers on American soil. Those deals don't close themselves when your country is getting bombed. The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman. One in every five barrels of oil on earth flows through it. Iran shut it down in early March. Oil spiked to $126 a barrel. The International Energy Agency called it the worst energy disruption in history. Countries released 400 million barrels from emergency oil stockpiles. The Dallas Fed estimates it could knock 3 points off global growth this quarter. Goldman Sachs put the odds of a US recession at 1 in 4. Ninety percent of Dubai's residents are foreigners. British teachers, Indian engineers, Filipino nurses, American bankers. A lot of them left. Charter flights out of the city sold out within days of the first strikes. Dubai sold the world a simple pitch for 20 years: move here, pay zero taxes, raise your kids in the safest city in the Middle East. That pitch died on February 28. And $6 trillion in capital that was parked on the back of that promise has to go somewhere else now.

English
0
2
1
119
#CornrowKemi retweetledi
Dr. Kelechi Ugonna (PhD)
Dr. Kelechi Ugonna (PhD)@Ugo_KelechiPhD·
It is UAE’s fault— weak, chicken-livered people. That’s why the Emirati, Saudi, Kuwaiti & Qatari natives virtually do no tasking jobs— they are WEAK. They could have put out a joint testament with their Middle East colleagues & tell the US: “We are not a part of this!”
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

You're looking at the world's busiest international airport at 40% capacity. The fallout from this empty terminal is about to hit your gas price, your grocery bill, and your 401k. Dubai's airport moved 95 million passengers a year. Since Iran started striking Gulf states on February 28, the airport has been hit by drones four times. British Airways canceled all flights to Dubai through the end of May. Lufthansa, Air France, KLM, Cathay Pacific, Singapore Airlines, Virgin Atlantic. All gone. The hub that connected three continents is barely open. But that's the part you can film on your phone. Dubai's main shipping port and the business zone around it make up 36% of the city's economy. A missile set a dock on fire and shut it all down. Property values crashed 35% in two weeks. The two biggest developers lost about 40% of their stock value. Five-star hotels running below 20% occupancy. In one month, $44 billion in stock market value just vanished. Went through the fund data on this. Gulf governments hold about $6 trillion in investment capital (basically giant national piggy banks filled with oil money). That's 40% of all government investment funds on earth, and none of it is sitting in a vault. In 2025, these funds amounted to $132 billion in the US alone. One Abu Dhabi fund sent 57 cents of every dollar it invested to America. Saudi Arabia's fund bought into Heathrow Airport and led a $55 billion deal to buy EA, the company that makes FIFA and Madden. They're co-investors in AI data centers going up outside Paris. This money is already in your economy. Last May, Gulf leaders pledged $2 trillion in US investment during Trump's visit. Fighter jets, Boeing planes, AI chips, and data centers on American soil. Those deals don't close themselves when your country is getting bombed. The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman. One in every five barrels of oil on earth flows through it. Iran shut it down in early March. Oil spiked to $126 a barrel. The International Energy Agency called it the worst energy disruption in history. Countries released 400 million barrels from emergency oil stockpiles. The Dallas Fed estimates it could knock 3 points off global growth this quarter. Goldman Sachs put the odds of a US recession at 1 in 4. Ninety percent of Dubai's residents are foreigners. British teachers, Indian engineers, Filipino nurses, American bankers. A lot of them left. Charter flights out of the city sold out within days of the first strikes. Dubai sold the world a simple pitch for 20 years: move here, pay zero taxes, raise your kids in the safest city in the Middle East. That pitch died on February 28. And $6 trillion in capital that was parked on the back of that promise has to go somewhere else now.

English
1
3
2
322
#CornrowKemi
#CornrowKemi@KemiButane·
@contentmints @JokombaJibreel Not sure why people didn't get what you did 😂 It's a classical way of putting holes in arguments before sharing your counter points.
English
0
0
0
146
Ali Faagba
Ali Faagba@contentmints·
Let me quickly clear this before I delete it: Halqah isn’t Bid’ah. I just wanted to engage the sister in her own manner. But I see this is fast causing Fitnah. Now you can read my response to @JokombaJibreel for indepth explanation.
English
1
3
12
1.6K