em dias assim eu fico mto orgulhosa da minha mãe ter rezado bastante pra eu ter casado com O Mais Legal & Gentil de todos (quem n rezou mto foi minha sogra)
Eu tinha uma prof q dizia que como químicos & cientistas nosso dever é bater de frente contra as mentiras das propagandas da indústria da beleza mas sinceramente que saia de casa todas as otárias e me dêem teus dinheiros
@paolaqueirozz@justmisspoison mas cabelo não é um tecido sanguíneoarivo para ter potencial regenerativo, é literalmente apenas uma cadeia de queratina e mais nada. Todo & qualquer procuro seja da Kérastase ou Palmolive só depositam ativos externamente 😔
soltando pequenas lágrimas de orgulho pois aluna minha entrevistou nada mais nada menos do que os meninos do ENHYPEN e eles são sim umas gracinhas trataram ela super bem
Her name was Gisèle Halimi. Born in Tunisia in 1927 to a Jewish mother and Muslim father. Refused to eat as a child until her parents treated her the same as her brothers. She became a lawyer.
In 1960 Algeria was fighting for independence from France. The French military was using torture in its colonial prisons. Women were being assaulted, electrocuted and beaten in custody.
Nobody would defend them. Gisèle did. She stood in French courtrooms and forced the military to answer for what they had done. She made France look at itself. She won cases nobody thought were possible. Then she kept going.
She spent the next 40 years dismantling every French law that failed women. She fought for abortion rights when abortion was illegal. She argued that r*pe was not a minor offence when French courts treated it as one. She won both. She changed French law so many times the legal establishment stopped counting. When she died in 2020 France called her the most fearless lawyer in its history.