@lucatelese Solo uno sprovveduto puรฒ pretendere di fare il conduttore di talk show politici ed essere preso seriamente scrivendo certi tweet.
Che cazzo di equidistanza puรฒ avere uno cosรฌ?
Henry Nowak, inglese, 18 anni, viene accoltellato da Vickrum Singh Digwa, 23enne sikh indiano.
All'arrivo della polizia, l'indiano accusa l'inglese di razzismo, cosรฌ la polizia ammanetta l'inglese mentre giace agonizzante nel suo sangue.
Henry Nowak muore dissanguato poco dopo.
@imballoionico@BoldrinDaniela Ha solo omesso che chi entrava doveva rispettare le regole e non aveva pasti gratis, cure gratis. Cioรจ lui per regole intende quello, ma bisogna spiegarlo oggi agli accoglioni
A very cool moment for Italian motorsport and 100% deserved - no other country has loved motor racing and motorcycle racing for as long as Italy ๐๐ฎ๐น
Tipica spazzatura da La.7 Heil Gruber. A riprova che lโunico ebreo accettabile a questi miserabili รจ quello da compatire. Specie se รจ giร morto ammazzato. Nel 900. Evviva ๐ฎ๐ฑ Israele๐
๐ฎ๐น๐บ๐ฆ He Could Have Stayed Home
He could have lived a peaceful life in Italy.
He could have spent his days training others, writing books, building a career, and planning for the future.
But Alex Pineski made a different choice.
And that choice brought him to Ukraine.
The 42-year-old Italian was killed on May 23 near Lyman in Ukraine's Donetsk region while carrying out a combat mission as part of a drone operations unit.
He was not Ukrainian.
He was not born here. He did not grow up here. He had no family here.
Yet he gave Ukraine the most precious thing a person can give โ his life.
That is why his story deserves to be remembered.
Long before Russia's full-scale invasion, Alex already knew what war looked like.
A former Alpine soldier in the Italian Army, he became one of the first European volunteers to travel to Iraqi Kurdistan to fight against ISIS terrorists.
He took part in the battles for Kirkuk and Mosul.
He witnessed things that most people should never have to see.
After returning home, Alex wrote a book about his experiences and founded a tactical training center.
He taught others how to handle weapons, survive in difficult conditions, and maintain discipline.
Most importantly, he constantly reminded people that war has nothing to do with romance.
For him, war was never an adventure.
It was never a path to fame.
It was never content for social media.
It was a responsibility.
That is why, after February 24, 2022, he refused to stand aside.
He openly stated that the war in Ukraine was not only Ukraine's war.
He believed that the future of all Europe was being decided here.
He believed that freedom cannot be guaranteed if no one is willing to defend it.
And when the time came to choose between words and actions, he chose action.
He came to Ukraine.
Not for awards. Not for glory. Not for citizenship.
But because he believed in justice.
On the front line, he worked with dronesโone of the most demanding and important roles in modern warfare.
And until his final day, he remained alongside the people he considered his brothers-in-arms.
Today, thousands of Ukrainians know his name.
And that matters.
Because this war has revealed something remarkable to the world.
Ukraine has friends far beyond its borders.
People of different languages, cultures, and nationalities.
People who were never obligated to help.
Yet they chose to help anyway.
Alex Pineski was one of them.
He was not born Ukrainian.
But he consciously chose Ukraine's side when doing so carried real danger.
And actions like that say far more about a person than words ever can.
May his memory be eternal.
And may he be remembered with gratitude for his courage, solidarity, and his choice to stand with Ukraine in its darkest hours.
๐ฎ๐น๐ฏ๏ธ๐บ๐ฆ