Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
you are right, he is a great ambassador of KSA very likable man bless him
An award-winning documentary about Yemen from 2000. Rather good if you ask me.
Im kind of busy these days working on my USMLE. I don't have the time to be onboard these days but sure yeah I will definitely watch those great videos when my time helps.
Thanks for sharing homeboy, Yemen is a great country with a rich history past and present.
Thanx again
Thanks for the video's. I just watched them. Very nice introduction to Yemen, its people and landscape, definitely worth visiting. I liked the ancient sky scrapers, the music and the dances. People seem nice and friendly and food seems delicious. It's kind of a unique place, unlike any other. When the security situation improves, it will get a lot more tourists, because unlike many others, this place is still authentic, like caught in a time capsule from the past. And that is something people like to see and experience.
Yes, he did a good job in that documentary. Came across really well. Apparently he was also a good governor of the Ha'il Province.
Inside the Saudi Kingdom (BBC Documentary) - YouTube
It's amazing how many views that documentary has and how many comments.
Oldie but goldie you could say. Just like the documentary this thread is about.
But I prefer the Saudi princesses.
Human societies or civilizations when they reach a certain size constantly adapt and reinvent themselves, due to internal reorganization and external influence. The longer a society is left intact without too much external interference, the more they can achieve a high degree of internal cohesion and as a result are able to adapt to changing circumstances more quickly and efficiently, as compared to a society that has been the victim of external aggression and forced transformation. In other words, relatively untouched societies retain some competitive edge over societies that were victims of invasion and brutal subjugation. There could be many reasons for this, but one of the most important one seems to be that societies take a certain amount of time to heal themselves of the damages from external forces to come to a steady state where the heirarchical pyramid structure of societies become well defined and whole society starts functioning as a organic whole with all parts playing their respective specialized roles. A good analogy is the body of higher animals whose body has organs for specialized functions. Although all cells start out as stem cells, eventually their functions and forms change to become part of a specialized organ, such as the central nervous system, the pancreas, the liver, the heart etc. Just as it takes time to evolve from single celled blue-green algae to complex reptiles, mammals, plants etc., societies also take time to evolve into a more efficient and complex unit, that has a competitive edge over other societies that did not have time or freedom from external influence to evolve.
@tyrant
How is life? Long time no see. Hope everything is well.
Oct 26th | Saudi women driving campaign
Signed up?
Saudi religious police told not to arrest women drivers | GulfNews.com
Soon that tremendously moronic law (IMO) will be gone. Just a question of time.
Hey bro, good luck with your USMLE exam, Insha-Allah you will pass it. I didn't know you are a doctor. After your exam when you have more time, I got some ideas about alternative treatment that I would like to discuss.
Recently I heard on the radio, FDA and the manufacturer fooled people about Acetaminophen:
Use Only as Directed - ProPublica
150 Americans Die Each Year from Tylenol's Most Active Ingredient - Zach Schonfeld - The Atlantic Wire
I think it is best to avoid this drug, it is too dangerous, only a slight overdose will damage the liver or even kill people. I am sure you have seen this already, but I thought I would mention it as many people are still taking Tylenol and other product where the active ingredient is Acetaminophen, oblivious to the high level of danger and risk associated with it.
The medication Acetaminophen widely known under the name paracetamol is an anti-inflammatory/anti-analgesic used as a pain reliever (headache, teeth pain, arthritis, flu...etc) and fever reducer. This type of medication under any trade/brand names like for example; Tylenol, Panadol, Dexamol has many complications and can lead to death if its used in an overdose or randomly non regularly especially for patients with liver disease such as hepatitis of all kind and patients with chronic alcoholism history. It can also result to gastrointestinal and blood disorder which may result to internal bleeding in the stomach and increases the risk of blood cancer(leukemia), kidney and liver failure.
Thanks for raising such concern as heath education is an essential requirement for people with/out health history to avoid being under risk of using any kind of medications.
All the best of luck once again bro. May every Saudi Arabian abroad succeed in his academical pursuits!
Sean McAllister, The Reluctant Revolutionary (2012)
"McAllister has achieved something incredible here. The Reluctant Revolutionary is a stunningly humane portrait that shows vividly what's at stake before leaving it bloody on the Formica floor of a battered concrete building." [Cole Abaius, Film School Rejects]
An intimate portrait of Yemen as the revolution unfolds, told through the eyes of tour guide leader Kais, an intelligent commentator on the changing times in Yemen, offering poignant moments of reflection, loss, anger and hope on the unknown road to revolution. Filmed over the course of the past year we see Kais's journey from pro-President to reluctant revolutionary, joining angry protesters in the increasingly bloody streets of Sana'a.
Kais is a 35 year-old tour guide from Sana's, the Yemeni capital, struggling to make ends meet and working in his father's travel agency. He is philosophical, articulate and reflective but as the story begins he is cynical about the undercurrents of dissent in his country and supposrtive of the President.
When one of his tours has to be cut short due to the instability and increased danger for tourists, Kais returns to Sana'a to find 2 permanent camps in the city centre: one for the President and one against. Kais is adamant that protests wont solve anything, that the President is doing his best and that violence will never be used to quash the protests. At first, he refuses to enter the anti-president camp, but is convinced by sean to have a look one night. Over a number of visits we see Kais change, "I never imagined seeing rival tribes coming and sitting here in peace, without their Kalashnikovs" he declares.
As the protest camp grows from 'Change Square' to take over the surrounding streets we see that like Kais, many other people are also being converted to the movement. Kais embraces the revolution as each Friday gets bigger, and bloodier. Through his eyes, we see the events unfolding in the peace camps - the reactions to killings, defections, the President's failure to sign a peace deal - and understand what the revolution means to ordinary Yemenis. Sean shows us a revolution in the making through the eyes of ordinary Yemeni citizens, and paints a subtle picture that shows us the very root of people's discontent and their demands from the government.
Meanwhile, foreign journalists are being tracked down and sent out of the country, and soon Sean is the only remaining foreigner in his hotel.