- Omar Abdullah:This insightful piece highlights the growing challenges faced by Arab housewives, particularly in relation to online infidelity. Factors such as lack of time, marital dissatisfaction, and
- اسپری فیکساتور:Hey there, I think your site might be having browser compatibility issues. When I look at your blog site in Firefox, it looks fine but when opening in Internet Explorer, it has
- Fadi:الله يرحمها و يجعل مثواها بعليين و يجمعك معها بالجنة بعد عم%
- بلوجر بالعربي:looks very good
- بلوجر بالعربي:مفيد جداً
- Noura:Different home, but same longing and nostalgia .. it seems we are chasing a mirage , Beirut of my dreams does not exist nor the people i miss .. i don't know if my gains were worth the losses ? I
- price waves repeat:The other day, while I was at work, my sister stole my iphone and tested to see if it can survive a 25 foot drop, just so she can be a youtube sensation. My iPad is now broken
- Sara:You can say that again!God Bless🕊
- ياسمين حميد:كما هي طبيعتنا نحن العرب، عند الانتقال بين منصة وأخرى لا نحت%
- Sara:No, never meaningless.. amen ya Raby🙏God Bless🕊
This webslice will refreshes every10 minutes.
Memories....
Good Luck JB (Jordan Blanet or Blogs) :P
Thank you Qwaider ... we appreciate this :)
Just like users have no rights to impose what content JordanBlogs provide; The administrators of a privately owned service have no right to ask users to "overlook" some of the decisions made by that administration.
Some users might agree to what Khalid is doing. Others DON'T! But users deserve to be notified about those decisions. And (self-respecting?) users need to demand clarity and transparency. This is not the case, and this kind of behavior is breaking the trust between the users and the administration. Trust is not an obligation, but if an administrator chooses to break that trust, they should expect disapproval from the users, and in extreme cases, such broken trust might cause the users to abandon that "free" service.
The funny thing is that many of the advocates of "free speech" routinely remove posts from their blogs they don't approve of. Hard to reconcile that with their newfound love for free speech on someone else's volunteer project like Jordan Blogs.
my 2 cents.
but thanks Khalidah, Red Rose, Amre, Seema, Devils mind, Abd Summer and moey