My daughter had her wisdom teeth removed yesterday. I gave my @openclaw agent the aftercare instructions (just photos and a transcript of the conversation with the doctor when we left). It’s helping me with medication schedule reminders, feedback based on pain, etc. Love it!
Phase 1 organizes by category and applies labels based on people and whether it’s something I need to do, delegate, defer, waiting on or is more of a project initiative. Meeting notes are not saved on the server and everything is tightly locked down.
I just saved my assistant at least five hours a week. Replaced her manual review of my Granola notes with an OpenClaw+Haiku powered solution that extracts, enriches and organizes action items from each note and pushes them into Todoist. So cool!
To all those “I stand with Yemen 🇾🇪” idiots, are you aware that the official internationally recognized government of Yemen is fighting the Houthis?
You don't stand with Yemen. You stand with a terrorist organization that has murdered over a hundred thousand Yemeni civilians.
Hi there @SusanSarandon, this is my mom, my dad and me on the rail trail in Morgantown, West by God Virginia. Let me tell you what it means to be Muslim in America.
First, your backstory: At an anti-Israel protest in NYC, you just said, "There are a lot of people that are afraid, that are afraid of being Jewish at this time, and are getting a taste of what it feels like to be a Muslim in this country.”
Let me give you “a taste” of what it “feels like” to be a Muslim in America:
✅🇺🇸 My dad didn’t have to become a second-class indentured servant to one of the many tyrants of Muslim countries that use immigrants from India, like my family, as essential slaves. In 1975, after getting his PhD at Rutgers, he was about to go to Libya — a Muslim country — led by a Muslim, Moammar Qhadafi, to work like a servant with a PhD for a wealthy dictator…but then the phone rang one day and I picked it up…
✅🇺🇸 It was West Virginia University calling, and my dad got a job as an assistant professor of nutrition. He got rejected first for tenure but being Muslim in America meant he got a right like everybody got — his right to appeal and guess what? He won and he became a full professor. That’s what it means to be Muslim in America. You get your full rights, like @DrZuhdiJasser has wished for his family in the Muslim nation of Syria, where a Muslim dictator destroys the lives of Muslims.
✅🇺🇸 My mom? Being Muslim in America meant she got to live FREE with the wind in her hair, like @AlinejadMasih fights for women in the Muslim nation of Iran to be able to enjoy.
✅🇺🇸 And what did living free mean for my mom as a Muslim in America? It meant in 1981 she got to start a business on High Street in downtown Morgantown, called Ain’s International. That is something that @miss9afi wished women could have had the right to do in the Muslim nation of Saudi Arabia. But guess what? That entrepreneurship and financial independence is denied Muslim women in so many Muslim countries.
✅🇺🇸 That summer my mom started her business, I got on a plane at Pittsburgh airport for Tahlequah, Oklahama, and I went away from home at 16 for a National Science Foundation camp — without a male chaperone, a right denied Muslim women and girls in Saudi for so long.
✅🇺🇸 In another “taste” of being Muslim in America? My family got a pathway to citizenship. You think the Muslim dictatorship of Qatar allows a pathway to citizenship for Muslim slaves, servants or Palestinian Muslims? Hell no. The Muslim Al-Thani family just buys citizenship for Muslim soccer stars from countries in Africa to steal World Cup wins. But otherwise it treats non-Qatari Muslims like slaves. America? My family waited, took the test, studied the constitution and we are citizens — hallelujah!
✅🇺🇸 I’m going to fast forward because this is just a “taste” of what it means to be Muslim in America. In 2002, I fled Pakistan with a souvenir that could have gotten me imprisoned or killed: a baby growing inside of me, a wedding ring not upon my hand. Sharia law makes sex out of marriage a crime in Muslim countries like Pakistan. My body? The mullah’s tyranny. And even dare to be atheist like @YasMohammedxx? It’s also a crime punishable by death — in Muslim countries but not in America!
✅🇺🇸 Where do you think I came to give birth to my baby in safety and security, without shame? West by God Virginia in the United States of America — where we enjoy equal rights as Muslim AmeriCANs, not AmeriCANTs.
This is a “taste” of life for a Muslim family in America. Please don’t minimize the experience of Jewish Americans by sanitizing the hell that it is for Muslims living in Muslim countries and vilifying America for the life — and freedoms — she offers Muslims like my family. Go, live like a Muslim woman in a Muslim country.
You will come back to America and kiss the land beneath your feet. 🇺🇸
For many on the progressive left:
Gays are good unless they are Jewish
Women are good unless they are Jewish
Black people are good unless they are Jewish.
Jews are good unless they are proud.
The betrayal is unforgivable.
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
Believe Israeli women
@UN_Women#NoExcuses
Yoav Atzmoni:
“My intention was to plant the first pride flag in Gaza as a call for peace and as a message of freedom”
“Before entering Gaza, I asked my partner to bring me two pride flags: The first is an Israeli flag in pride colours that I pose with on a tank. It sends two messages:
There is an internal message to Israel: that we carry obligations towards the state and must demand gay rights here - not necessarily to marry and start a family, but something more basic - the right to security as LGBTQ people, the right to respect, the right to be part of the national ethos, the right to be counted and recognized
The external message to the world is that despite the pain of war - the IDF is the ONLY army in the Middle East that defends democratic values. It is the ONLY army that allows gay people the freedom to be who we are. And so I fully believe in the righteousness of our cause.
The second flag is a simple pride flag that represents global solidarity.
When I entered Gaza, I knew I would write a message in three languages, but I hadn't yet decided what to say. (I should mention that I speak both spoken and literary Arabic).
In the early days of the conflict I saw the Arabic inscription 'Bismillah' ('In the Name of God') on many houses
I decided to correspond with this by writing "Bismilahav" - which means "In the Name of Love"
Additionally, 'In the Name of Love' is a song by the band U2 that I really like!”
#LGBT #LGBTQ #LGBTQIA