La BBC ha recopilado pruebas de más de 160 niños palestinos que fueron deliberadamente disparados en la cabeza por francotiradores israelíes en Gaza.
Los informes dicen lo siguiente: "Los judíos israelíes cazan niños por diversión."
Este video se convirtió en meme hace 15 años, cuando alguien lo rescató de un documental de 1997 sobre la escena rave en Ucrania. El chico que aparece bailando era hijo del dueño del club.
We’ve found a “third state” between life and death.
Some cells refuse to accept death when the organism does. Instead, they adapt, reinvent themselves, and sometimes start over.
Researchers have found that certain cells, taken from a recently deceased body and placed in the right conditions, can awaken into a surprising new existence. They self-organize into living, moving entities that behave in ways their original bodies never did. Scientists describe this neither as full life nor true death, but as a third state—something in between.
In a landmark experiment, skin cells from deceased frog embryos were scattered into a dish. Within days, they gathered into multicellular clusters called xenobots. These tiny creations could crawl, self-repair, and—most astonishingly—reproduce by sweeping loose cells into piles that then became new xenobots.
The phenomenon isn’t limited to frogs. Human lung cells, harvested postmortem, recently formed anthrobots—microscopic blobs that propel themselves through liquid and can even encourage healing in damaged neural tissue nearby.
This remarkable plasticity reveals that even after the organism dies, many of its cells retain not only basic function but a kind of creative agency—the ability to change identity and build entirely new structures.
The implications are profound. In the near future, patient-derived biobots could be engineered to deliver drugs directly to tumors, scrape plaque from arteries, or mend injured tissue, then harmlessly dissolve after weeks without triggering immune reactions.
Death, it turns out, is not always final at the cellular level. Some of our cells may still have work left to do long after we’re gone.
["Biobots arise from the cells of dead organisms − pushing the boundaries of life, death and medicine." The Conversation, 2024]
👉Esto debería ser un escándalo enorme pero pasa sin pena ni gloria.
Un juez francés de la Corte Penal Internacional, Nicolas Guillou, está viviendo un auténtico calvario porque
EEUU lo sancionó tras autorizar las órdenes de arresto contra Netanyahu y Yoav Gallant, ex-ministro de Defensa israelí, por los crímenes en Gaza.
❌Desde entonces, no puede usar Google, Apple o Amazon, ni reservar hoteles, ni pagar con tarjetas, ni abrir cuentas bancarias. Europa entera le cierra las puertas por miedo a Washington.
Un juez europeo, en suelo europeo, “económicamente borrado” por hacer su trabajo.
Aquí os dejo el enlace de Le Monde con esta historia https://t.co/0okNyIgEWp