🚨🇺🇸 Thomas Massie will honor the USS Liberty Crew in Congress on June 8th.
Israel KILLED 34 Americans while attacking the USS Liberty in 1967, injuring 171 more.
AIPAC says speaking about the event is antisemitic.
@yslcora Like the inside of my cheek. After they really get into it, slightly salty with a very slight slimy consistency.
Far more fun than I expected, I prefer cunnilingus to PIV sex actually.
You know why it's so annoying talking to a Zionist? Because they're not listening. When I'm talking to anyone else, we're having a conversation, back and forth. And trying to keep an open mind. Zionists are going to say their talking points and call you an antisemite. That's it.
If 9 Israelis had been burnt alive yesterday, they’d have called it a barbaric & savage antisemitic massacre.
When Israel burns alive 9 Palestinians to death, they call it a ceasefire.
Israel executed baby Sam today with a bullet to the face in the occupied West Bank.
They killed his mother too.
Sam was only 7 months old.
They murdered a mother. And her infant.
@ajplus Another highly attractive woman ahd her family members murdered by the cultists of Rothschilds Israel...
Its really like they're egging us on to wage war against them.
Blonde-haired, blue-eyed white people from Ukraine were celebrated for making home-made Molotov cocktails to defend their land, but the brown Arab Muslim, the Iranian, the Afghan, is far too “uncivilised” to have the right to resist. Their resistance is “barbaric” because it comes from an inherently “violent” culture.
The selective application of international law and one’s right to defend themselves from illegal occupation and colonial violence has been revealed to be a complete contradiction in the west, and is no doubt infuriating.
But we need to also understand how these “resistance” narratives are processed in communities.
These narratives do not stay on our screens. They shape how entire communities see themselves.
When Indigenous, Black, and other racialised peoples repeatedly see their histories, struggles, cultures, and resistance framed as dangerous, irrational, or inherently violent, many begin to internalise those messages.
Some distance themselves from their own identities in search of safety, acceptance, or legitimacy.
Others carry a deep, unspoken rage born from exclusion, dispossession, and the constant demand to prove their humanity.
When people are disconnected from their roots, denied dignity, and taught to be ashamed of where they come from, they will still search for belonging. It’s a basic human need to feel a sense of community.
The question is whether we create spaces that nurture healing, identity, and justice, or leave them vulnerable to finding belonging in places that exploit their pain.