@InaCigaal You are the one who thinks it's underwear. In Finland and similar countries, people walk around in whatever they want, including bikinis or the like. This kind of social shaming is for retarded people. Don't people have anything else to do but comment on other people?
In other news: Iran opens an exclusive boarding school for Judeo-Christian elites in Geneva after defeating them at war in West Asia in the months prior; Iran says the new educational institution is meant to teach Judeo-Christians to act like normal human beings (Mizrahi Times)
An old clip of Starmer's "replacement" Andy Burnham, promising to head straight to Israel "as his first foreign trip" if elected as leader
Starmer 2.0 confirmed.
Iran single-handedly put an end to the horrors in Lebanon, when the whole world would do nothing. For this alone, Iran deserves all the blessings and good fortunes under the sun. They tower above an entire international landscape of cowardice and complicity
@missjay2 There was no freedom of speech. The military was corrupt. The jobs that academics got were empty seats. There was an extremely high level of cynicism that publicly denied tribalism but was actively implemented in everyday life. 1/2
Breaking News:
After this video in which Coldoon says you cannot silence us and force us to support Zionism, he has been kidnapped.
No one knows his whereabouts.
Many people are imprisoned in Hargeisa. Lots of torture and oppression is going on there
#Somalia
🚨🇱🇧 Israel DEFEATED at Ali Taher Hill for 8th night in a ROW!
The IDF has suffered MULTIPLE deaths, over 100 injuries, and 10+ destroyed tanks attempting to capture Ali Taher.
Israel STILL has not been able to recover the bodies, now ASKING for permission to retrieve them.
In 1879, a simple Egyptian peasant woman named Mubarka Khafaji from a village in Kafr El-Sheikh married a farmer, Ibrahim Atta, who worked for daily wages. Due to financial hardship, he divorced her even though she was in the final months of her pregnancy.
Mubarka moved with her mother and brother to Alexandria, where she gave birth to her son, Ali Ibrahim Atta. She made a firm decision to do everything possible to raise and educate him in the best way.
She had countless reasons to despair and grow bitter toward men, but she did not. She could have forced her son into child labor selling tissues at traffic lights, but instead she worked as a cheese seller in the streets of Alexandria to support him.
She enrolled her son Ali in the Ras El-Tin Primary School. After he completed primary education, his father came to take him away to make him work with only a basic certificate.
But Mubarka’s dreams were much greater. She secretly moved her son from the roof of her house to the neighboring roof and fled with him to Cairo, enrolling him in the Khedivial School in Darb El-Gamamiz. She worked for a family in order to fund his education.
Ali excelled in his studies and was admitted to medical school in 1897, graduating in 1901.
Fifteen years later, Sultan Hussein Kamel fell seriously ill, and doctors were unable to diagnose his condition. Dr. Othman Ghaleb suggested the name of Dr. Ali Ibrahim. He successfully performed a critical surgery, after which he was appointed as the Sultan’s chief surgical consultant and personal physician, receiving the title of "Bey."
In 1922, King Fouad I granted him the title of "Pasha."
In 1929, Dr. Ali Pasha Ibrahim became the first Egyptian dean of the Faculty of Medicine at Fouad I University (Cairo University). He later became the university’s president.
In 1940, he was appointed Minister of Health. In the same year, he founded the Egyptian Medical Syndicate and became its first president. He also served as a member of the Egyptian Parliament.
His mother was: An uneducated, rural, divorced peasant woman.
Yet she raised a son who changed history.
The reform of any society begins with a mother.
Salute to every mother who is a true school of life.
Palestinian lawyer Khaled Mahajneh recounted a brief conversation he had with a Palestinian prisoner during a court hearing, after noticing clear signs of exhaustion and fatigue on him.
In a post on X, he wrote:
“Today, while listening to the testimony of a Palestinian prisoner in court, I asked him whether he had eaten breakfast.
He replied, ‘My last meal was yesterday afternoon.’
I asked him, ‘Are you hungry?’
He looked at me sadly and said, ‘Yes.’
The hearing was halted, and the prison guards were forced to bring him food. That single ‘yes’ summarizes the harsh reality that Palestinian prisoners are enduring inside Israeli prisons.”
@anthonyzenkus@DropSiteNews@corgispants They always take half-measures. This senator is one of the better ones on these issues, he should not go soft on those who contributed to and encouraged the daily live broadcast massacres.