Using phrasing like "Iran-backed Houthi rebels" — but not "US-backed Zionist settlers" when describing Israel is the hallmark of a biased, imperialist rag.
Forget politics — just from a linguistic viewpoint, what a bloody mouthful. Who wants to read that nonsense?
Marjane Satrapi was a genocidal Zionist racist Islamophobe, and no matter how many times you post that interview excerpt from 20 years ago or that one still from that shitty propaganda trash Persepolis, she was an unrepentant imperialist Zionist scumbag. Here she is last year:
Insane to think that all through the 90s we were told we absolutely had to let the Klan march in American cities to protect free speech and now they're withholding diplomas, firing people, imposing travel bans, qmd running weekslong smear campaigns for saying the word genocide.
Joseph Aoun was not directing these words at Israel, which has invaded his country, but at citizens who’ve taken up arms to repel the invasion
He’s called for Hezbollah be disarmed, but issued no demand for immediate Israeli withdrawal
His mandate comes not from Lebanon’s population, which opposes normalization, but from the US and Saudi governments that installed him
ZIOS: it's antisemitic to say Jews control the media
ALSO ZIOS: controlling all the media is a lot of work. "Instead of trying to control the whole world," [yes, that's a direct quote], all we have to do is control AI, because people trust AI and that's where everyone is getting their information.
Do people think Israelis fall out of the sky? They are Americans. They are from Germany, Russia, the UK, France.
It's a Western colony. Founded, armed, and supported by the West, and made up of Westerners.
This statement about Israel’s murder of Lebanese army personnel is outrageous.
They say “movement in the area requires coordination with the IDF.”
Excuse me? Lebanese Army movements INSIDE LEBANESE TERRITORY require “coordination” with Israel? Who gave the Israelis this authority???
Over the past two weeks alone, I personally have been denied housing in three different buildings across two different areas in Lebanon simply because I am a Muslim Shia woman who wears the hijab.
This was not a matter of price. In all the cases, landlords were already demanding four times the normal market rate. Some properties were publicly advertised at standard prices, only for prospective tenants to be told that those prices applied exclusively to Christians. For Muslim Shia applicants, the rent would suddenly triple.
Real estate agents openly questioned me about my sect. Because my name does not immediately reveal my background, I was repeatedly asked whether I was Sunni or Shia. More than once, I was specifically asked whether I was a Shia from South Lebanon, with claims that certain municipalities had circulated directives preventing locals from renting to "people like us".
To those engaging in this discrimination, understand that you are not weakening us. You are merely exposing a prejudice that serves the interests of those who seek to divide Lebanon. Terroist Israel is very proud of you since it undoubtedly benefits from every act of sectarian hatred directed against fellow Lebanese.
But listen well: this war will end. We will return to our homes, our villages, and our land in the South, where we belong. The houses that were temporarily filled will once again stand empty, the markets that briefly prospered will once again fall silent, and the bitterness that fuels such discrimination will consume only those who carry it from the inside out.
As for us, the people of South Lebanon, we will remain proud, dignified, resilient, and full of life. Through our grace under pressure, our generosity in hardship, and our refusal to surrender our humanity, we have demonstrated values far closer to the teachings of Jesus Christ than those who invoke His name while practicing exclusion and discrimination.
We will return home with our heads held high.
This is what they did to my father’s grave and my grandparents and other family.
This is not a war on Hezbollah. This is a war on a people and their memory.
@yrfreakyneighbr I’m super happy for you Neighbour. It’s been a long time coming and thank you for sharing your journey with us! I am stoked to see Trachem’s official serialization! And to see Margaret and Seishin get their stories told!
I’m so happy for you! Seriously!!!
The most important word in imperial media is "allegedly."
Palestinian health officials allege the death toll is 70,000.
Witnesses allege that the strike hit a hospital.
Survivors allege that soldiers committed acts of torture.
Allegedly.
Now watch how "allegedly" disappears when the victims are on the other side.
Hamas attacked. Hamas massacred. Hamas killed.
No "allegedly."
No "according to Israeli sources."
No epistemic caution.
The word "allegedly" is a small word that performs an enormous function.
It quarantines doubt.
It applies uncertainty surgically, to specific claims, made by specific people, specifically the people whose deaths and suffering the powerful would prefer you to hold at arm's length.
It is a one-word editorial policy.
It is a one-word verdict on whose testimony counts.
No community in Lebanon occupies a more paradoxical position than the Shia, who remain the only group forced to justify their belonging despite a thousand years of continuous presence on this land. While the Lebanese resistance currently serves as the sole effective shield against foreign aggression, the state persists in its historical pattern of abandonment. The central government has not only abdicated its sovereign responsibility to defend its people against Israeli crimes, but it has also facilitated the domestic vilification of the Shia. Through media apparatuses and official political discourse, their loyalty is treated as a suspicious anomaly and their cultural identity is systematically defamed.
This contemporary interrogation of Shia belonging is the modern face of a deep-seated history of state-sponsored marginalization. During the Ottoman era, the inhabitants of Jabal Amel (south Lebanon) and the Bekaa were targeted as heterodox outsiders, enduring the brutal military campaigns of figures like Jezzar Pasha who sought to crush their intellectual and social independence. With the formation of Greater Lebanon in 1920 and the subsequent National Pact of 1943, this exclusion was institutionalized. The state was constructed as a kind of merchant republic that enriched the center while relegating the Shia to a neglected periphery, denying them the basic infrastructure of a modern life.
The state has long weaponized the trope of the foreign agent to excuse this structural neglect. When Imam Musa al-Sadr led the movement for civil rights in the mid-20th century (Harakat al-Mahroumin, or the Movement of the Deprived), the ruling class dismissed these indigenous demands for justice as subversive imports. Today, a bitter irony persists where those who have long give their blood for the country's defense are characterized as proxies of external powers. To question the authenticity of the Shia identity is a failed attempt of intellectual erasure of Jabal Amel, which for centuries stood as a premier global sanctuary for Arab jurisprudence and philosophy. By casting our community as intruders, the state and its subordinates seek to divorce the soil from its most ancient cultivators. This is not simply a political disagreement as some here would like to frame it but an ontological assault on our community which is intended to sustain a system where the very people who preserve the nation’s existence are treated as pariahs within its borders.
Israel is planning to steal $40 billion gas field in Lebanese waters. Sorry, I meant self-defense themselves into $40 billion. In order to do that, they’re going to destroy 70 villages, including three Christian ones. No one in our government cares. In fact, we’re funding this.
Syria Israeli invaders demolish farms.
There is no Hezbollah or Hamas in Syria, still Israel spreads like cancer.
This is the result of the “Syrian revolution” which got rid of Syria’s natural allies iran and Hezbollah . Let her be a lesson to all.
The difference between Gaza and Yemen is that when we were subjected to genocide by America, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, the world was unaware of everything happening in Yemen and all the crimes committed by Saudi Arabia in Yemen.
No country has condemned the Saudi-American aggression against Yemen; only Iran has condemned the aggression against Yemen.
On an official level, Iran is the only country that has condemned the aggression against Yemen.
At the party level, the only leader who condemned the aggression against Yemen was the martyred Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, and he was the only one who spoke about us in more than one speech at a time when the whole world and all media outlets were silent.
We were subjected to a suffocating and deadly siege, and thousands of children and women died of starvation, and no one knows anything about us because Saudi money bought the world's conscience.
Because America was also behind all those crimes.