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This video is so so sad to watch.
Yet the criminal crooks behind this madness described in this video are parasitic tyrannical pretenders who have somehow successfully convinced their idiotic sycophants that they are patriots.
What a shame. A whole shame.
May what we have let go of lose its hold on us.
May the things we look forward to anchor us in hope.
May our hearts be at peace with all things.
May our wandering minds wander toward greatness.
May we deal in love in all things.
And in the end, may it all have been worth it.
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A gentle reminder that we are mammals, wired for emotional bonds, physical touch, and every other human feature, especially leading with love.
I hope you never feel shame for being utterly human, for not denying your biology.
“This country is not sane. How can someone have an accident and be left without medical care for two days, and pass away because doctors are on strike?”
This video is so heartbreaking.
But idiots online are busy celebrating City Boys Mad People Movement.
I once tweeted about how people who pray or consider themselves prayerful think they deserve life's good things more than those they believe don't pray, and it stems from the fallacy that they are "special" compared to those who don't pray or don't pray their way.
This is a major reason I don't fancy very religious people: they sincerely wish you fail for not being as religious as them, so they can attribute it to your irreligiousness. When you fail, they say "it's because you don't pray," not because they know you don't pray, but because you don't pray in the way they approve as the gatekeepers of prayer acceptance.
They will claim you failed an exam or didn't get a job because you didn't pray well and/or properly. Ironically, however, more religious people fail than irreligious ones, making the "you didn't pray" line and it's variants baseless.
It is sad that religion does this to people, and even sadder that they cannot see it.
💥 If you read one thing today, make it this story by Italian journalist Lorenzo D’Agostino — captured aboard the Global Sumud Flotilla: beaten, blindfolded, mocked with homophobic slurs, and held half-naked in freezing vans and scorching cells.
According to D’Agostino and multiple accounts, Israeli forces subjected Greta to severe cruelty, forcing her to crawl and kiss the Israeli flag. “They did exactly what the Nazis did,” said Ersin Çelik, a member of the Global Sumud Flotilla. They publicly humiliated her and targeted her specifically because she’s a well-known figure.
It appears that the Italian state, government, and parts of the Church tried to stop the Flotilla not to prevent an armed clash with Netanyahu, but to avoid the media exposure of a country increasingly radicalized and indefensible — except through repressive laws — and to suppress reports of egregious human rights violations.
"We were intercepted at 1:58 a.m. on Thursday. On my boat, the Hio, part of the Global Sumud Flotilla mission, five Israeli soldiers boarded with rifles pointed at us, lasers aimed. Exactly one month after our departure from Barcelona.
On board, the soldiers allowed us to go to the bathroom, eat, drink, and smoke. Then they redirected the boat toward the port of Ashdod. We stayed moored for a couple of hours. Before letting us disembark, one soldier wanted to speak to our captain: “My friend, my friend, listen to me, you’ll like this one: when dwarfs cast long shadows, it means the sun is low.” That was the last thing he said.
As we disembarked, someone from the other boats shouted, “The police will be worse.” As soon as I stepped onto land, an officer grabbed my arm, twisting it behind my back to cause maximum pain. They made us sit on the ground, on a concrete esplanade.
Greta Thunberg was wrapped in the Israeli flag like a war trophy. They sat her in a corner; officers surrounded her, taking selfies.
Then they turned on another girl, Hanan, forcing her to sit in front of the flag so she’d have to look at it. They kicked people, ordered us to lower our heads and look at the ground — anyone who looked up was forced to kneel. An older activist wet himself. Anything associated with Palestine was ripped away, thrown to the ground, and trampled. They tore bracelets off everyone’s wrists; one girl was dragged because hers wouldn’t break. It wasn’t even the Palestinian flag — it was Somali.
We stayed on the concrete for hours. They asked for Italian passports and took us through immigration control. There they opened our bags: anything linked to Palestine was thrown in the trash. When they found a copy of the Quran in my bag, they went berserk — convinced I was Muslim. For two hours, every officer passing by mocked me.
In my toiletry bag they found pink wet wipes and laughed, saying “you’re a woman.” They slapped each other’s backs, amused. After border control, they forced us to strip down to our underwear. We went through two interrogations — only one with a lawyer present. They asked if we wanted to be deported. Then came the announcement: we were going to jail.
That’s when Itamar Ben Gvir, Israel’s Minister of National Security, arrived. He came to Ashdod to make sure we were treated as terrorists. He screamed it at us — that we were terrorists. Right in front of him, the police wanted to show their zeal: they blindfolded us and tightened plastic handcuffs around our wrists until they cut into the skin.
They loaded us into an armored vehicle wearing only light shirts. The air conditioning was blasting; it was freezing. A Scottish boy managed to loosen his cuffs and, with help from an Italian named Marco, released the others. When we saw the others getting off, their hands were purple. Some had been tied since the interception — traveling to prison with their hands bound from 2 a.m. to 4 p.m.
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