I DO know what I'm talking about. Her politics have nothing to do with whether she married her brother. Do you agree with me there?
See, in this nation we have a moral standard that us good real Americans expect others to follow....Marring your sibling falls way outside of this moral standard....weird huh?
Look, good, real Americans aren’t quite ready for that anything goes, no boundaries, free for all that you LefTarded folks seek....sorry.
So far, no one has given me a shred of information that would indicate or even hint that Omar married her brother. A few of you have said "It's true."
Wow.
Omar Faces Questions After Report Fails to Disprove She Married Her Brother to Protect His Immigration Status
She didn't have to. He could have come here as her sibling, if he were her sibling, which he wasn't. He was younger than her. According to immigration records, when the family came here they were asked how many kids were in the family and who they were. There was no son younger than Omar. The parents ought to know. Just because the records burned doesn't mean they can't remember how many kids they've got.
This is just ridiculous and I'm not wasting any more time on it. You're a bunch of nasty aholes spreading this garbage.
She was 10 years old when she came to America.
She's the youngest of 7 children.
Ilhan Omar - Wikipedia
Omar was born in
Mogadishu on October 4, 1982,
[5][6] and spent her early years in
Baidoa,
Somalia.
[7][8] She was the youngest of seven siblings, including
Sahra Noor. Her father Nur Omar Mohamed, an ethnic
Somali, worked as a teacher trainer,
[9] and her mother, Fadhuma Abukar Haji Hussein, a
Benadiri (a community of partial
Yemeni descent), died when Ilhan was two.
[10][11][12][13] She was raised by her father and grandfather thereafter.
[14] Her grandfather Abukar was the director of Somalia's National Marine Transport and some of Omar's uncles and aunts also worked as
civil servants and educators.
[9] She and her family fled Somalia to escape the war and spent four years in a
Dadaab refugee camp in Garissa County,
Kenya, near the Somali border.
[15][16][17]
After first arriving in
New York in 1992,
[18] Omar's family finally secured
asylum in the U.S. in 1995 and lived for a time in
Arlington, Virginia,
[12] before moving to and settling in
Minneapolis,
[12] where her father worked first as a taxi driver and later for the post office.
[12] Her father and grandfather emphasized the importance of
democracy during her upbringing, and at age 14 she accompanied her grandfather to
caucus meetings, serving as his
interpreter.
[14][19] Omar became a
U.S. citizen in 2000 when she was 17 years old.
[20][12] She has spoken about being bullied for wearing a
hijab during her time in Virginia, recalling classmates sticking gum on it, pushing her down stairs, and jumping her when changing for gym class.
[12] Omar remembers her father's reaction to these incidents: "They are doing something to you because they feel threatened in some way by your existence."
[12]
Omar attended
Edison High School and volunteered there as a student organizer.
[21] She graduated from
North Dakota State University[19] with
bachelor's degrees in
political science and
international studies in 2011.
[22] Omar was a Policy Fellow at the
University of Minnesota's
Humphrey School of Public Affairs.
[23]