Sunday, February 25, 2007

Abu Gharib: What's in a spelling?

While embeds and their coorporations decided to use "Abu Ghraib" there is evidence that the name of the locale is "Abu Gharib." What's in a name and why would there be a change? First of all, how did I know this? I have friends who see things, and we have seen the highway pass to Abu Gharib that says "Abu Gharib, 5 Miles." You know how the government uses mindcontrol to send messages to psychotics through the news media? Well, that's how we knew. (Always makes me laugh when the psychiatrist says: "Do you sometimes think there are messages for you on TV?" Yes, I'm going to tell you. Yes, I saw a message from Bernard Shaw. He called President Clinton "the Leader" in a way that was unmistakably a message for me. Yes, I'm going to tell you in a white suit. Ode!) Anyway, about Abu Gharib, it just made me wonder why there was a lack of precision. Was this, as well, a slam dunk? Not quite. Not apparently. Gharib or Yarrib in Hausa Lore is the father of the Yoruba. Abu Yarrib, his son or kid brother, was who eventually led the Yoruba from the clutches of a racist Mecca to the sanity of a Delta Paradise in Niger Area.

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