Ok I'm back here, but let's get things straight:
@EviLore is resorting to his dirty tactics and has been harassing me lately and sending his goons like
@Mod of War to push me around and ban me. He's worried that the "new cool kid in the hood" is getting all the attention and love, going the extra mile by deleting and blocking all the love PM's to me from hot chicks in here.
Yes, ladies and gentlemen, he's getting pushed inside his own turf, feeling the heat, but he's only pushing me like an Xbox Series S pushing a PS5. He's afraid that I will rebel and dethrone him and bring back the glory days of SonyGAF.
So now I need to make a historical reminder, as the ambassador of Oman in NeoGAF to the US president in NeoGAF:
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Formalizing Relations
The two countries [Oman and USA] formalized their relationship when they signed the "Treaty of Amity and Commerce" in 1833 — the first bilateral accord between the U.S. and an Arab Gulf state. In 1840, the Sultan's envoy Ahmad bin Na'aman sailed to New York on the
Sultanah, and bin Na'aman became the first Arab diplomat accredited to the U.S. The
Sultanah was also the first Arab ship to sail to the United States. In 1880, the U.S. established its first Consulate in Muscat in order to strengthen political and economic ties with Oman.
The Twentieth Century
Oman and the United States expanded their trade and diplomatic relations in 1958, when they signed the "Treaty of Amity, Economic Relations, and Consular Rights" in
Salalah. In 1972, the United States opened its Embassy in the capital of Muscat and the Sultanate opened its embassy in Washington D.C. the following year. Oman and the United States signed a military cooperation agreement In 1980, which was revised and renewed in 2010, continuing its close military partnership
...Such a voyage finally took place in 1839, in part because of the urgings of a visiting American shipmaster representing the New York firm of Scoville and Britton. Sayyid Sa'id's ship, Sultana, the same vessel that had been sent to the aid of the stricken Peacock, sailed from Muscat on December 23. After touching Zanzibar and St. Helena, she arrived in New York harbor on April 30, 1840. Aboard as supercargo and as Sayyid Sa'id's special emissary was his secretary Ahmad bin Na'aman, charged with delivering letters and gifts for the President of the United States and purveying a cargo of Omani dates, Persian wool carpets, and Mokha coffee loaded at Muscat, as well as various articles from agreed that they might be accepted on behalf of the government of the United States. Some, such as
two Arabian stud horses,
were sold at auctions—one to a member of former President Jackson's Cabinet, General John Eaton of Tennessee. Proceeds were deposited in the United States Treasury. Others, such as a Persian carpet, a gold-mounted sword and minor gifts, were accepted on the condition that they belonged to the United States.
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TL;
DR: WHERE ARE MY FUCKING PONIES!!!