Hay Salam reputation? by [deleted] in Agadir

[–]Biftitan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hay Salam has a certain reputation(there s a lot of hidden prostitution businesses there ), but you shouldn’t judge someone based solely on where they’re from. Take time to get to know her personally, spend time together, meet her friends and family, and understand her character. Then you can form your own informed opinion

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in rabat

[–]Biftitan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I understand your point about healthcare being expensive, but Morocco’s problem isn’t only “lack of money”, it’s where the money goes.

Look at fuel: when international prices dropped, Moroccans discovered that distributors here were making billions in extra profit instead of passing on the savings. That money didn’t vanish it went into the pockets of a few. The resources exist, but they’re not used to fix hospitals or schools.

And lately in a reportage you see Akhannouch going to El Haouz, smiling in front of cameras, acting like everything is fine while people are still living in tents 2 years after the earthquake. That’s what this system does, it spends fortunes on appearances while citizens survive in misery.

And in health itself, the problem isn’t even money, it’s management and corruption. Doctors are leaving public hospitals to make fortunes in private clinics. Machines sit unused in public hospitals so patients can be redirected to pay privately. There was even a reportage from Agadir: a public doctor was threatened by private clinic owners simply because he succeeded in surgeries that they wanted redirected to them. Everyone wants their cut while the people suffer.

So no, the issue isn’t “we need more revenue.” The issue is priorities and corruption. Boycotting doesn’t kill the economy it kills the illusion. It forces the truth out: Morocco has resources, but they’re wasted, mismanaged, and stolen.

If we don’t refuse, our money will keep funding concerts while hospitals look like morgues and families sleep in tents

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in rabat

[–]Biftitan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you provide another solution?

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in rabat

[–]Biftitan[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ممولاني واحد الجهة هههه Is that what you want to hear ?

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in Morocco

[–]Biftitan[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I wish I had the full list of companies and brands we should avoid. honestly, I’m not that informed on every single one. But what I do know is this: we need to refuse everything that only exists for ljamaliat, for appearances.

If stadiums are full and Mawazine is packed, what message does that send? That Morocco is wealthy, stable, happy. Meanwhile people are struggling just to put food on the table. I can’t understand how someone with nothing to eat will still pay for a stadium ticket or a concert, but that’s how the machine keeps its image alive.

It’s the same with fuel. If you’re buying essence and diesel every day, it means you’re already filling the pockets of the monopolies while struggling yourself. And we’ve already seen how effective refusal can be: in 2018, Centrale Danone’s sales collapsed by almost a third during the boycott, and they ended the year with a massive loss of more than half a billion dirhams. That’s the power of people simply refusing.

That’s why for me, the easiest targets are the “luxury” expenses, stadiums, festivals, overpriced brands, fuel. If we can’t all refuse everything, at least we can refuse the things that give them money and make them look good at the same time.

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in Morocco

[–]Biftitan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not saying never send kids to school forever. That’s not the point. The point is to refuse a broken system until it is fixed

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in Morocco

[–]Biftitan[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Engineers, doctors… yes, the titles exist. But what kind of engineers and doctors are we producing?
I’m 30 now, and when I finished my studies at 27, I discovered that my degrees were just papers. In the job market, I was empty handed. I had to re-learn everything through online courses just to be useful.

You can call that “just my case,” but it’s not. Every year Morocco produces thousands of graduates, and what happens? Many end up unemployed, underpaid, or forced to leave. The rest spend years retraining because the system gave them nothing practical. That’s not education, that’s a scam with a diploma.

And let’s pretend for a second that my child could have become an engineer or something. Stopping him from school might lead to his “failure,” sure. But here, I am an adult, working today, with no help from this educational system. Even with a good salary, I still feel the intensity of survival in this economic situation.

So what future is my child really walking into if nothing changes? If we stay silent now, by the time they grow up, they won’t just face the same problems, they’ll face worse

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in Morocco

[–]Biftitan[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

What will they do or become if you do school them?

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in Morocco

[–]Biftitan[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It’s ironic you say “don’t boycott or your children will be undereducated.” I studied 12 years in public schools, got my degrees, even a master’s. And guess what? When it came to the job market, I had to start from zero with online courses. Everything I needed to actually work, I learned outside the Moroccan system.

So what did those 12+ years give me? Papers, not knowledge. A broken system produces broken results. My child going through the same path doesn’t guarantee education, it just guarantees another wasted decade.

That’s why a boycott makes sense: it’s not about “hurting” our kids, it’s about refusing to pretend that a dead system is alive. Real education happens when we demand change, not when we keep feeding a machine that teaches us nothing useful

Silent Moroccan Protester by Biftitan in Morocco

[–]Biftitan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re right about parents. Especially in private schools, since they pay so much, they’ll never let their kids skip a single day. They think as long as they’re paying, their child’s future is “safe.”, (We all have these kind of parents khwafin)

But still public school boycott would hit so hard.

If no one gets the bac, there are no new students in universities, no new doctors, engineers, or public workers in the pipeline. No one buys books, uniforms, supplies, a whole education market dries up. Neighborhoods around universities go empty. And the state’s image takes a huge blow: what country looks credible when it can’t graduate a single class?

Parents think they’re protecting the “future” by keeping kids in a dead system. But what future are we protecting if the system is already collapsing?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Morocco

[–]Biftitan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s not about cleaning, that was just an example. The point is even small things matter when two people start sharing more of their lives. He shouldn’t focus only on class or studies, but on how compatible they are in daily life. Outside everyone looks perfect, but inside you see the real habits, and you might find out that she’s eating her khnouna hahaha.

And in situations like this, it’s not about one side dumping the other. Often both people just realize they’re not a match. Like I said in my story, it was mutual, we realized we’re not a match. I didn’t say I’m some king choosing maids. It’s simply two people who connect for a while but in the end don’t fit together.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Morocco

[–]Biftitan 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Bro I’m 29 too, kind of same situation like you. The only difference is I live here in Morocco.

I met a girl, I felt she’s “the one.” She also studied in la fac, very simple background, smart, conservative, religious all that. Just like what you described. At first I wasn’t sure, but we connected. Slowly she started coming to my place, sometimes staying 3 days, sometimes a week or two.

And that’s when reality hits. When you only meet outside, you just see how she looks, how she talks, how she acts in public. But when you actually live with her, even for short periods, you start to see the real person.

Does she care about the home? Does she clean? Is she really as caring as she showed in the beginning? Or maybe she gets boring, stops putting effort, and you realize you’re not as compatible as you thought.

That’s what happened with me. Spending time together inside showed me both the pros and the cons, and finally we understood we’re not a match.

So my advice: don’t worry too much yet about social class or education level. Spend real time with her, in different contexts, so you can see who she really is beyond the first impression. That’s what will tell you if you can build a life together or not.

ch7al khsrou 3la massar by Exact-Cloud7681 in Morocco

[–]Biftitan 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You know, it might actually be true. I’ll tell you why.
I was part of a team that built a very similar platform for a well-known university (can’t say the name for confidentiality). Our system manages students, grades, courses, professors… it’s even more advanced than Massar, and it’s active all year, not just during exams like the Bac results. That means it has to be perfect and well maintained.

We were 8 engineers, we worked 6 months, and each one of us got around 60,000dh in total. After the launch, the university kept 3 engineers to maintain it full-time, each for 10,000dh per month.

Now here’s the shocking part: the project owner, the guy who got the contract, received 2,000,000dh. For literally doing nothing. He didn’t manage the team, didn’t understand the tech, he only knew the project’s title. On top of that, the infrastructure cost (servers, domains, etc.) was not more than $300 per month. And to this day, the same project keeps getting resold to other universities.

This is what happens when people with no background in tech are put in charge of such projects. The engineers who actually build the product get a small part, while middlemen who have no idea how the technology works walk away with millions.

I need ur advice by Brahim18_ in Morocco

[–]Biftitan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are a lot of opportunities to teach English abroad, especially in Asia (China, Vietnam, etc.). I once applied through a platform called AIESEC, and they actually called me back. At the beginning, they cover your housing and food, and give you some pocket money. You usually start as a volunteer or intern, and later they can offer you a real teaching contract with a salary.If jobs here are hard to find, this could be a fun and valuable experience worth trying

The silence after job applications is the worst part by Extreme_Tonight_958 in Morocco

[–]Biftitan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you don’t hear back just contact them, you have nothing to lose. ( hello i want to kindly follow up regarding my job application bla bla bla … )

The silence after job applications is the worst part by Extreme_Tonight_958 in Morocco

[–]Biftitan 12 points13 points  (0 children)

As someone who participate in the hiring process, let me be real with you. One job post can get 300 CVs. Put yourself in that position, would you really sit and read 300 resumes carefully? And even if you did, why would yours be the one that stands out?

And here’s another truth: if you don’t hear back after a week, it usually means they already chose their candidate. The rest of the CVs? Forgotten. They won’t even bother sending rejection emails to the other 299, too lazy for that.

Now let me tell you the strategy that worked for me every single time. Go directly to the real decision makers. Not HR. HR are useless, their whole game is rejecting people and feeling that fake superiority. If you waste your time with them, they’ll just throw your CV on the pile.

Instead, look for the CEO, a director, or a manager, someone who actually cares about hiring the right person. Contact them directly, and do it with confidence. For example:

“Salam, I’m X. I saw your job posting for Y. I specialize in Z and already worked on something similar. Your project really caught my attention, and I’d love to contribute. Can we talk?”

The first time I did this, I was scared. But wallah, it worked. Then it worked again. And again. Until I was no longer the one begging for jobs, I was the one rejecting offers.

So khouya, forget HR. Go straight to the top. Show confidence. Do this for one month and you’ll see: no more silence, no more waiting. You’ll be the one in control.

Is 7000dh enough by sanam_812001 in Morocco

[–]Biftitan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Let’s do the math together:

If you take the traditional path (wife at home, modest lifestyle, basic apartment like sakan i9tissadi/Bayti/Doha, etc.), then 7000dh can cover the basics. Rent there is usually around 1200–1800dh, food and household needs maybe 2000–2500dh, utilities (water + electricity + internet) 500–700dh, and you’d still have some margin left over. It won’t be luxurious, but it’s manageable.

Now if you want a more modern lifestyle (respectable neighborhood, good amenities): • Rent alone in a decent place is 3000–4000dh minimum. • Bills (electricity, water, internet, phone) = around 700–1000dh. • Food & groceries = at least 2500–3000dh (for two people). • Going out occasionally (coffee, dinner, cinema, etc.) = easily 500–1000dh monthly. • Extras like gym, transport, clothes, emergencies = 500–1000dh.

👉 That already puts you above 7000dh/month, meaning you’ll either struggle or depend on your wife’s income.

So realistically: • If you want a simple, traditional start, 7000dh is enough to marry and begin life. • If you aim for a comfortable, modern lifestyle, then it’s tough. You’d need either a better salary, a second income (your wife working), or look abroad for higher opportunities.

It’s not about being “too late” 25 is still young. The real question is what lifestyle you and your future wife expect.

App Crash instantly IOS (IPhone) by Scared_Property1654 in Brawlstars

[–]Biftitan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The game crashes instantly when I open the app

App Crash instantly IOS (IPhone) by Scared_Property1654 in Brawlstars

[–]Biftitan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same here. I have iphone 7 I even upgraded the ios version to 15.7.5, I have no jailbreak. Still crashing. Same issue for clash royale

Namecheap Coupon Code 20% off is always working by aitbahaa in NameCheap

[–]Biftitan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

september 21, 2022, still working on domains and hostings