Report from the yellow line. Americans; how long before drone assassinations by your local police department become the norm? The violence you export will come back to you.
Cameraman: @aliezzedine7
@JPFinlayNBCS Credit where it's due, the spear is less Indigenous-looking than I was bracing for, which is a good thing. Take that with a grain of salt from this non-Indigenous diehard fan who cares about decolonization and not using harmful imagery.
@wayercree123@AdamParkhomenko@RepSwalwell@Ally_Sammarco *rando on the internet to person in the middle of it*: "Lay bare your personal challenges for me upon my random demand, or I, someone you've never met and likely never will, won't believe you and will continue to be a shitty troll to you online." 🙄
I have not seen a single mainstream media outlet give this the attention it deserves.
Israel blew up an entire Lebanese town, an ancient place. It should be headline news. There’s footage of it happening.
Imagine this was your town, and you saw every building blown up by a terrorist army to prevent you from ever returning. You would at the very least expect wall to wall coverage. Instead it passes without a word.
It’s not the only town Israel has blown up. And sadly it probably won’t be the last.
Earth’s greatest enemy strikes again. The air suffocates. The water burns. It rains oil. The U.S. war machine created the greatest ecological crisis, through its pollution, its death toll, and preventing alternatives to emerge. Watch Earth’s Greatest Enemy by @EmpireFiles.
Arrested at least 13 times by the time she was 11, civil rights activist Jo Ann Bland was one of the youngest foot soldiers to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Bloody Sunday, March 7, 1965.
Bland died on February 19 in her hometown of Selma; today, we honor her legacy.
There is no easier or more important political position to take than to do everything possible to stop this. It will change our society forever, and Democrats are going along with it.
At the beginning of the cell phone infrastructure expansion era, these companies didn't want to be held liable for any health impacts, so they got Congress to include these limits in this broad-reaching act. The US has been behind in this field ever since.
.@1067theFan@BMITCHLIVE30@JPFinlayNBCS For the substation issue, it was built into the Telecommunications Act of 1996 to drastically limit how much we can legally study the impacts of electromagnetic radiation in the US. Phone companies didn't want people having those answers.