The great femboy salad

1.5K posts

The great femboy salad banner
The great femboy salad

The great femboy salad

@wintersonetta

20 looking for fwends 🧚 This is troll account

הרוצח של כפיר Joined Eylül 2024
5 Following14 Followers
Begüm
Begüm@bgmturkoglu·
@enbiya_yildirim Bağımsız Cezayir şu an şahlanmış bir ülke. 2023’de Ay’a bile gitmişler.
Türkçe
19
0
7
57.2K
Enbiya Yıldırım
Enbiya Yıldırım@enbiya_yildirim·
MEŞHUR VİDEO (SESLİ SEYREDİN): İşgalci Fransızlar 1929'da Biskra şehrindeki üç Cezayirliyi tehditler altında, kameralar önünde namaz kılmaya zorlar. Amaçları Cezayirlilerin sadakatini kazandıkları ve üzerlerinde tam kontrol sağladıkları mesajını vermek. Ancak bu üç Cezayirli,
Türkçe
7
24
356
368.9K
The great femboy salad retweeted
المسجد الأقصى
غروبٌ مقدسٌ في رحابِ المسجدِ الأقصى المبارك. القدسُ لنا.. والنبضُ فينا .. #المسجد_الأقصى🕌
المسجد الأقصى tweet media
العربية
6
94
419
4.2K
The great femboy salad retweeted
المسجد الأقصى
صوتٌ لا يغيب.. وحقٌّ لا يزول. #المسجد_الأقصى🕌
العربية
3
99
451
4.5K
🇱🇾/J-FGC43122/السلمي
@GabrielSaidR Al-Kamil was in need of Fredrick military help, to the point he handed Al-Quds to him. the rat francis was aware of the situation, and use it to his advantage to preach, and no one gave a sh!t about him or his false faith. At the end the crusaders were smashed as usual.
🇱🇾/J-FGC43122/السلمي tweet media
English
3
1
65
2.8K
GabrielSaidR
GabrielSaidR@GabrielSaidR·
Saint Francis went to Egypt to preach the Gospel & even criticize Islam. He was ready to be killed by Muslim authorities for this & to become a martyr. He didn't go for hugs with al-Malik al-Kamil, as the icon connected with the 2019 document "Human Fraternity" (signed with Ahmed El-Tayeb in Abu Dhabi) suggests. Of course - folks could and should advocate for dialogue today (& not polemics), but let's deal with real history and not fool ourselves.
GabrielSaidR tweet media
GabrielSaidR@GabrielSaidR

I love you Pope Francis, but this is an imagined Saint Francis, not the Saint Francis of history. Not even close, really.

English
8
6
96
55.8K
أبو إسماعيل 🗡️
Oussama Ibn Munqidh (1095-1188), émir syrien, raconte avec stupeur le manque de jalousie des chrétiens d’Europe arrivés au Levant : mixité au bain, femmes seules avec des étrangers, absence de pudeur face à l'adultère...
أبو إسماعيل 🗡️ tweet mediaأبو إسماعيل 🗡️ tweet mediaأبو إسماعيل 🗡️ tweet mediaأبو إسماعيل 🗡️ tweet media
Français
2
8
78
3.6K
The great femboy salad
The great femboy salad@wintersonetta·
@GodPlaysCards “In some regions slaves and concubines were burned alongn their master” it is in slavs region volga river
English
0
0
0
92
Cards of History
Cards of History@GodPlaysCards·
Ibn Battuta left home at 21 to complete a religious pilgrimage that should have taken sixteen months. He came back twenty-nine years later. Just look at the map, he is a man that truly lived an odyssey. I've gathered some highlights from his 117.000 kilometer journey. Here we go: 🔸Born February 24, 1304, in Tangier, Morocco, into a family of Islamic legal scholars and judges. His name, literally, means "son of a duckling." 🔸Trained as a qadi, a Muslim judge with authority over religious and civil matters. That credential would open doors on every continent he visited. He was smart enough to know it. 🔸Left home riding alone on a donkey. On the road to Mecca he developed a fever so severe he had to tie himself to his saddle to avoid collapsing. He kept going. That became the pattern. 🔸In Alexandria, early in the journey, a holy man named Sheikh Burhanuddin told him he would travel to India, Sind, and China, and meet specific scholars there by name. Ibn Battuta did exactly that. He recorded the prophecy without apparent amazement. 🔸Completed the hajj in 1326, then joined a caravan heading into Mesopotamia. He had discovered, somewhere along the North African coast, that he simply loved to travel. 🔸One caravan he joined functioned as a moving city. When it stopped, food was cooked in giant brass cauldrons for the poor. It had its own markets, luxury goods, and fresh fruit. At night they lit torches along the entire length of the column, turning the darkness into what he described as radiant day. 🔸What followed is almost impossible to compress. Persia. Iraq. Azerbaijan. Yemen. The Horn of Africa. Mogadishu. The coast of Kenya and Tanzania. The Crimea. Constantinople. Central Asia. India. The Maldives. Sri Lanka. Sumatra. China. Mali. He crossed the Sahara. He rode the Grand Canal. He visited Beijing, Hangzhou, and Guangzhou, and reportedly saw the Great Wall. 🔸117,000 kilometers in total. That surpassed Zheng He's 50,000 and Marco Polo's 24,000. He did it without a mission, a sponsor, or a navy. 🔸His method was elegant and entirely parasitic on a single fact: the Islamic world in 1325 stretched from Morocco to the Malay peninsula, and everywhere within it, a scholar who could speak Arabic and recite the law was guaranteed hospitality. 🔸Ibn Battuta exploited this with genius. He arrived in courts as a learned man, was appointed qadi, collected gifts, gathered a retinue, married locally, then left. 🔸He documented death rituals everywhere he went with the detachment of an anthropologist. In Turkey, forty days of mourning for a ruler's mother. In Iran, a funeral that resembled a wedding celebration. In some regions, slaves and concubines buried alive with the deceased. He recorded all of it and moved on. 🔸In Delhi, the Sultan appointed him grand qadi of the city. His employer was a ruler described as an extraordinary mixture of generosity and cruelty. Ibn Battuta watched friends executed regularly, feared for his own life daily, and eventually fell into disgrace. He wrote about the sultan with a psychologist's precision, terror and fascination running through every line. 🔸Then came the shipwreck that saved his life. Appointed as the sultan's ambassador to China, he loaded ships with hundreds of gifts including horses, slaves, and gold. He missed the departure to attend Friday prayers. The ships sank in a storm. Everything was gone. He was alive, stranded, and too afraid to return to Delhi to explain what had happened. He sailed to the Maldives instead. 🔸In the Maldives he served as qadi, married into the ruling family, got involved in local politics, and came close to making a play for the sultanate itself. He found the situation too dangerous and moved on. 🔸He survived bandits, shipwrecks, and a sultan's suspicion. On one occasion he was robbed and escaped with nothing but his trousers. He caught up to his caravan on foot and kept going. 🔸By the end, the Rihla records encounters with over 60 sultans and more than 2,000 prominent figures. He made himself welcome, or at least useful, in virtually every court he entered. 🔸He kept no journal. Everything he recorded, he carried in his head for decades. When he finally dictated the whole account, he reconstructed twenty-nine years of travel entirely from memory. 🔸Some scholars believe sections describing China were lifted from earlier authors. His account and Marco Polo's share suspiciously similar passages. He had no notes to prove otherwise. 🔸Near the end of his life, the Sultan of Morocco insisted he dictate the whole account to a scholar. The result was titled A Gift to Those Who Contemplate the Wonders of Cities and the Marvels of Travelling, now known simply as the Rihla. 🔸Then he was appointed a judge in Morocco and vanished from history. He died in 1368 or 1369. His work was unknown outside the Muslim world until the nineteenth century. 🔸His contribution to geography is considered as great as that of any geographer, yet for centuries he appeared in no textbook, Muslim or Western. To conclude: Ibn Battuta did not set out to be an explorer. He set out to fulfill an obligation and found he could not stop. What he produced, one man's firsthand account of the medieval Islamic world from Morocco to China, is a document with no equivalent in any other civilization of its era. Marco Polo had backers, a trade route, and a famous name. Ibn Battuta had a credential, a memory, and an inability to go home. As always, if you have a figure that should be honored and immortalized with a card, I'd love to hear your suggestions.
Cards of History tweet mediaCards of History tweet media
English
26
420
1.7K
181.6K
General Buster Grant
General Buster Grant@GenBSGrant·
@en_jeade @WorldStrategist Unprovoked.... Is Singapore also supporting terrorist groups who are themselves waging armed conflict in at least three different countries? Maybe that's why the haven't been bombed.
English
0
0
6
122
Eric 𝕏
Eric 𝕏@WorldStrategist·
Singapore’s Foreign Minister on why he cannot accept negotiating with Iran for safe passage of ships. Definitely worth listening to:
English
994
5.8K
21.5K
3.2M
The great femboy salad
The great femboy salad@wintersonetta·
@omar_dddg Only netanyahu? Not the whole israel itself? Will the problem solve if we just hang netanyahu?
English
0
0
0
135
Omar
Omar@omar_dddg·
Almost everyone in Syria doesn’t want to go to war with Israel, they want to just build a country where they’re not a nation of refugees. However, Netanayhu seems to have other plans. With Israel, you can pick to mind your own business, but war will pick you, unless you completely kiss Netanayhu’s ass.
Wolverine@Wolveri07681751

سوريا ضمن أهداف نتنياهو

English
29
38
308
34.7K
The great femboy salad retweeted
amel🪽
amel🪽@sleepyamel·
This is attested throughout the Middle Ages. Jewish women in Egypt appealed to Muslim courts for divorces, looking for better outcomes
English
6
271
1.7K
40.9K
Claude
Claude@firus04·
@4zharabdullah So u identified that SAF was modelled after the IDF, whats stopping u from modernizing and building a strong and credible TUDM and TLDM?
English
5
1
29
4.5K
Kagayaku Seijūrō
Kagayaku Seijūrō@4zharabdullah·
2013 SINGAPORE SPYING ON MALAYSIA AND THE ISRAELI-INSPIRED PREEMPTIVE DOCTRINE In 2013, Edward Snowden’s leaked NSA documents revealed that Singapore had partnered with Australia’s Defence Signals Directorate since the 1970s to tap undersea cables like SEA-ME-WE 3, enabling surveillance of Malaysia’s international communications routed through SingTel’s facilities This intelligence-sharing positioned Singapore as a “third party” partner to the Five Eyes alliance, harvesting data from regional traffic flows Malaysia responded on 26 November 2013 by summoning Singapore’s High Commissioner, with Foreign Minister Anifah Aman declaring such spying on a neighbour “unacceptable” and contrary to good relations Singapore declined to confirm or deny the allegations but assured Kuala Lumpur that it had no interest in harming bilateral ties These activities align with and support Singapore’s preemptive strike doctrine, a forward-defense strategy that emphasizes proactive intelligence gathering and rapid offensive action to neutralize threats before they can materialize against the small city-state’s limited territory and manpower The doctrine emerged in the 1980s as Singapore moved beyond its earlier “poisonous shrimp” or “Gibraltar of the East” defensive posture, which relied on making any invasion extremely costly in urban warfare, toward a more assertive “porcupine” strategy focused on deterrence through OFFENSIVE capabilities Singapore directly acquired this preemptive approach from Israel, modeling its Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) after the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) with Israeli military advisers providing doctrine, training, and operational guidance starting from 1965–1966, due to the shared vulnerabilities of two small nations surrounded by larger neighbours This Israeli influence, kept low-profile for regional sensitivities, helped shape Singapore’s emphasis on first-strike options, combined-arms operations, and intelligence-driven preemption to ensure survival in a hostile environment Bilateral relations between Singapore and Malaysia quickly normalized after the 2013 episode, with both sides continuing close cooperation in trade and security while managing underlying strategic sensitivities
English
25
322
633
38.1K
لالہ مصری خان
لالہ مصری خان@Bedil_Khushabi·
Dude just found out about the Sabians (Mandeans). Amazing that after 15 centuries of Muslim rule, all these ancient religions still survived in safety. Compare that to Christianity that wiped out all pre-Christian religions in Europe.
Michael Galant@michael_galant

Just finding out that there’s an extant ancient quasi-Abrahamic religion in which John the Baptist is the most important prophet (Jesus is acknowledged but rejected) that’s based mostly in Iran, Iraq, and Worcester, Massachusetts. Did everyone already know this?

English
27
446
2.8K
81.1K
Dr. Maalouf ‏
Dr. Maalouf ‏@realMaalouf·
Syria (Aleppo) in the 1950s, when 40% of the population was Christian. Today, it’s less than 1%. This is the case for all the Middle East under Islam. Funny how no one cares about this genocide.
English
475
9.2K
31.6K
770.3K
M
M@MMmaah1r·
Yk it’s funny, Christian’s can’t explain / understand the trinity properly but can somehow interpret the Quran and Hadiths for us
English
70
356
4.4K
62.8K
The great femboy salad
The great femboy salad@wintersonetta·
@albertolopes067 @havoc8593 @sylviapuffs Have you lost your mind, christcuck? Calling me f*ggot when jesus is THE BIGGEST fag out there😂 they call him gaysus for a reason! Ever wonder why fagsus have long shiny hair and wear dress? Yeah bcs gaysus is the most famous femboy in roman-judea among roman soldier🤣 jesussy😝
The great femboy salad tweet media
English
1
0
0
64