Every schoolchild now knows of the gift the Choctaw Nation gave to the Irish during the Famine but it wasn't always so. Losing a language can mean losing folk memory.
https://t.co/CaiQWXXVCL
"Gaza is now forgotten," the Vicar General Patriarchate of Jerusalem has said as he visits Ireland to highlight issues facing Palestinians in the enclave and the West Bank https://t.co/X05lYlHh7b
@BigMattSays@ni_skies@DarranMarshall I get that, but the tweet I was replying to was trying to make out that “baile” isn’t an Irish word at all and that it’s Anglo-Norman. That’s incorrect. Wide spread or not, it’s an Irish word.
Israel doesn't just slaughter kids, doctors, and other human beings.
And they're now doing to Lebanon and the West Bank what they did to Gaza.
They destroy everything.
Everything that supports life.
They must be stopped by all good people.
You need to watch this.
A Jewish terrorist in an IDF uniform shoots an assault rifle for several minutes at a school.
He murders a child and a parent.
This isn't even mentioned on RTÈ.
Why? Because the terrorist is Jewish and the victim is Palestinian
‘My Brother the Minotaur’ is available to stream on Apple TV.
Original Score & Original Songs Co-writer: Christian Henson
"...visually stunning, leaning into the natural splendor of its wild, rustic setting..." The New York Times
We, the Lebanese and Palestinian, are the only people in history watching our genocide live, and we could get arrested or suspended for saying stop kill us, because it might hurt the feelings of the killers.
"The 'documentary' alleged a Muslim was involved in running a trafficking and drug operation in Clonmel. The footage was almost entirely generated by AI."
How Irish 'slopaganda' is making extreme political messaging cheap and viral.
https://t.co/YZAyn1SCTq
Join us for a special screening of the first two episodes of My Brother The Minotaur, presented by Apple TV. Step into a mythic world of adventure, magic and unforgettable creatures. May 9, 1PM. Get tickets. https://t.co/g3GSz7XIHz #MyBrotherTheMinotaur
Old television, known as CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) TVs, were essentially big, vaccum-sealed glass bottles that used a beam of electricity to "paint" pictures on the screen.