suzie creamchease

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suzie creamchease

suzie creamchease

@SCreamchease

my name is Suzie Creamchease cos here in virtual reality i wear fake eyelashes, have a pussy and crabs, and am in bed with Frank Zappa, Malcolm X and Ms Greer.

Freakish attitude from 1966.. 参加日 Aralık 2022
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
Invention of Printing Press increasingly facilitated the common man's ability to think for himself, effectively scrutinize and understand the world and express his own opinions, leading to death of Monarchy. we are now back to smoke signals & dog-whistles. bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3c…
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Just some guy
Just some guy@Lunarprime1996·
@SCreamchease @wokal_distance I have already substantiated mine with the resentful post from the feminist to decide that it's a movement based on resentment towards the opposite gender
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Wokal Distance
Wokal Distance@wokal_distance·
One of the more poisonous aspects of feminism is that it interprets relationships through the lens of a Marxist theory of labor which reduces every act of love and care to an economic transaction
Wokal Distance tweet media
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
outrageous and tragic but not fundamentally different to Ireland while under the control of theCatholic Church.. or to the United kingdom under laws put in place by Winston Church - where children raped by adults were locked up and then not allowed out again until the 1980's..
Imtiaz Mahmood@ImtiazMadmood

n 2004, a journalist named Asieh Amini came across a story from a small town in northern Iran. A 16-year-old girl named Atefeh Sahaaleh had been publicly hanged. The official charge: "acts incompatible with chastity." The reality, which Amini uncovered through careful, dangerous investigation: Atefeh had been repeatedly raped by a neighbor and other men beginning when she was nine years old. She had been neglected by her family and paid to keep silent — money she used simply to survive. At 13, Iran's morality police arrested her. A judge sentenced her to one hundred lashes. Under Iranian law, a woman could be sentenced to lashings three times — the fourth offense carried the death penalty. She was 16 when they hanged her. Amini wrote the story. Her newspaper refused to publish it. Another paper refused as well. A women's publication finally agreed to run an edited version. She kept going. Born in 1973 in the Mazandaran province of northern Iran — one of four sisters who spent their childhood painting, reading, and playing outdoors — Amini had built her career as a journalist through the brief flowering of press freedom following President Khatami's election in 1997, editing a women's affairs newspaper called Zan until hardline clerics shut it down in 1999. She had known the Iranian state's capacity for silencing voices. She had not yet known the full depth of what it was capable of doing to girls. After Atefeh, she knew. Case after case began reaching her. Leyla — a 19-year-old with diminished mental capacity, herself a victim of child rape, facing execution. The judge in her case told Amini plainly that Leyla was a threat to family life because of her "sexual availability." Amini enlisted human rights lawyer Shadi Sadr, published Leyla's story, drew international attention, and helped get her out of prison and into the care of a women's organization in Tehran. One life at a time. One story at a time. Against a legal system that had no interest in being exposed. In 2006, Amini discovered that despite a government moratorium on stoning — a directive issued in 2002 that carried no binding legal force — a man and woman had been stoned to death in Mashhad for adultery. The judge claimed he answered only to Sharia law. The Ministry of Justice denied the stoning had happened. State media attacked Amini's credibility. That October, Amini and Sadr co-founded the Stop Stoning Forever (SSF) campaign — systematically documenting stonings occurring across Iran and sharing their findings through colleagues abroad who could publish without fear of arrest. The state took notice. In March 2007, Amini was among 33 women arrested during a silent sit-in at a Tehran courthouse. During interrogation she realized — with the specific clarity of someone who had been investigating surveillance — that the police had been investigating her for some time. She was released after five days. Her phones, she was certain, were tapped. Her movements tracked. She kept reporting. The sustained pressure of the work eventually took its physical toll — stress-induced symptoms that included headaches, vision problems, and muscle paralysis forced her to step back briefly while her partners reorganized the campaign from outside Iran. She recovered. She continued. In 2009, following the disputed reelection of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Amini was among the demonstrators beaten in the protests that swept Iran. She continued reporting — under pseudonyms, in the chaos. Then came the warning: police were questioning prisoners about her. She needed to leave. She had been invited to a poetry festival in Sweden. She took her daughter Ava and she went. They did not come back. Amini settled eventually in Norway, supported by the International Cities of Refuge Network — a program that protects writers facing state persecution. From exile, she continued her advocacy, published two books of Norwegian-language poetry, and kept doing what she had always done: making sure that the stories of girls and women the Iranian state wanted silenced were heard by the world instead. She was awarded the Human Rights Watch Hellmann/Hammett Award in 2009 — the same year she fled. The Oxfam Novib/PEN Award in 2012. The Ord i Grenseland prize in 2014. Asieh Amini picked up a pen in a country that punished women for existing outside the law's narrow definitions — and she used it, at enormous personal cost, to push against every wall that pen could reach. The girl from Mazandaran who dreamed of becoming a painter and writer became something rarer and harder: A witness who refused to look away. And a voice that — no matter how many times the state tried to silence it — kept finding new ways to be heard.

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Liza Rosen
Liza Rosen@LizaRosen0000·
Islam kills the people of Iran! Don’t let anyone pretend otherwise. Please share and follow @d_white_rabbit
Liza Rosen tweet media
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@RonniNicole1 jaw is on the floor that they are going to be so quickly released.. one of those cases where ever letting them out makes little sense..
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Ronni Nicole #KPSS
Ronni Nicole #KPSS@RonniNicole1·
"Two "dangerous" men involved in rape of baby of "extreme" youth jailed for life Ethan Towers raped baby 5 times last summer, while John Watson encouraged him to abuse child Towers jailed for minimum of 12 years 5 months and Watson was given 13 years 4 months after both admitted multiple offences" bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…
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a
a@Nobody72038·
@CRITIKUZ @David_Y3 it was an emotional witch hunt, a bunch of savages abusing women
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David
David@David_Y3·
The Western world lectures us about civilization. Look at 1945, when the hair of twenty thousand women was cut off in this way. Yet you will never see such an incident in the Islamic world. In fact, the West was uncivilized, and even now they are barbaric;
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@CRITIKUZ @David_Y3 they fucked german conscripts - that is all.. unlike French and some British Police Officers who helped out with the Holocaust.. and not only got away with that but also picked up a couple of knighthoods..
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CRITIKUZ
CRITIKUZ@CRITIKUZ·
@David_Y3 These were nazi’s / nazi wifes and traitors, you uneducated fool.
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@David_Y3 you understate your case.. at the same time French Police walked away without any punishment for their role in the Holocaust and senior UK Police Officers picked up knighthoods after handing jews over to german authorities..
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@GriftReport there is an apparent schizophrenia with the police.. they can't cope with brown skinned christians preaching nonsense.. but will always turn a blind eye to the role of white christian bishops in the rape or torture of children..
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G R I F T Y
G R I F T Y@GriftReport·
Christian preacher is told by the police if he carries on preaching with a loud speaker in a Christian country in public he will be arrested. Notice how they NEVER do this to Muslim preachers. EVER.
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Anti Woke Memes
Anti Woke Memes@AntiWokeMemes·
You have to be kidding me 😂
Anti Woke Memes tweet media
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@Jobsworth197 @onemoreday1966 it is a hell of a lot worse now if you are signing on - monitored almost all of the time to check that you are trying hard enough to get a job - and more of a nightmare than having a job.. under Thatcher - i could just stroll into job centre every two weeks at my own convenience.
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Jobsworth
Jobsworth@Jobsworth197·
@onemoreday1966 Brilliant drama. I left school in 1984, and went on the Youth Training Scheme (YTS), training to be a car mechanic. We were paid £26.25 a week. Bleak days, and I hope today's youth will never experience days like this.
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p goddard
p goddard@onemoreday1966·
Just watched this brilliant series from 1982, I remember leaving school, no job, no hope. Thatchers generation, thrown on the scrap heap! Never forget! Reform are just Tories in disguise! #boysfromtheblackstuff #Alanbleasdale
p goddard tweet media
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@onemoreday1966 it was the BBC at their best.. however - i found being unemployed a walk in the park under Thatcher.. it turned into a fecking nightmare under Tony Blair and has only got worse for people now..
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suzie creamchease がリツイート
Israel Exposed
Israel Exposed@xIsraelExposedx·
Avi Shlaim, an Israeli historian, documented how Mossad bombed its own people in Iraq, to create panic and make them flee to Israel. @Byoussef explains.
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@Hypnoteq @RonniNicole1 i did expect to get a negative reaction - but what i find most depressing is those people who are willing to dish it out - but lack the courage to take it - so block me before i can reply to their fallacious and unnecessarily nasty comments..
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@Hypnoteq @RonniNicole1 and i say we all need to grow up and be adult enough not to trouble ourselves with "deviant men’s reprehensible wank opportunities" and instead deal with the actual atrocities in the real world - most of them perpetrated by the governments we vote for, in our name with our taxes.
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Ronni Nicole #KPSS
Ronni Nicole #KPSS@RonniNicole1·
MAN "Stirling University student and political activist is AI sex offender Amelia Connolly pled guilty to having sexualised images depicting a child's face superimposed onto an adult's body" thecourier.co.uk/fp/news/courts…
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@GiveUsAQuid like politicians, he told everyone whatever they wanted to hear. he liked to think of himself as vegetarian but was not. most people who effectively deceive others, also deceive themselves. he would be at home in most political parties, maybe especially those that support Israel
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Sir Lefty Farr-Wright, Far-Right Parody Account
He was also a National 𝐒𝐨𝐜𝐢𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐬𝐭 (he believed in an all-powerful State), but please don't remind Leftists about this as for some reason they find this very upsetting.
Sir Lefty Farr-Wright, Far-Right Parody Account tweet media
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@portraitinflesh i think that you need to ask yourself honestly - if someone makes an outlandish statement - is it actually true.. and then if it is - are they the real problem - or is it actually the thing that they are correctly criticizing ??
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Tomos Doran 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 🇬🇧 🇺🇦 🇮🇱 🇵🇸
A major giveaway that most "anti-Zionism" is really just antisemitism is that it's never enough for Israel to merely be a bad actor; it has to be the worst state to exist in the history of the world. Which is palpably absurd, but that's essential to the very nature of Jew-hatred.
Tomos Doran 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 🇬🇧 🇺🇦 🇮🇱 🇵🇸 tweet media
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suzie creamchease
suzie creamchease@SCreamchease·
@kqlling1 @yvessirae while senior UK Police Officers who voluntarily handed jews over to german authorities during the Holocaust - at the end of the war - were rewarded with knighthoods..
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Yves ౨ৎ
Yves ౨ৎ@yvessirae·
The shaving of women's heads at the Liberation of Europe took place between 1944-1945. In France alone, around 20,000 women were publicly shorn during the "purge," before legal institutions were restored. These acts usually took place in front of crowds and were accompanied by insults, beatings, forced parades.. These women were accused of what was called "horizontal collaboration", a term used to describe intimate relationships with German soldiers. This, however, collapses into very different realities. It included consensual relationships, transactional exchanges for food or protection, relationships formed under severe economic pressure and sexual violence. In many cases, so-called consent was deeply constrained by hunger, fear and power imbalance. The punishment was gendered, women were targeted through their bodies and hair was a central marker of femininity. Shaving it stripped women of gender identity and transformed their bodies into public symbols of disgrace. What was being punished was not political collaboration, but the female body perceived as having betrayed the nation through sexuality. The shaving itself constituted a form of sexual violence. It often included being undressed, touched and exposed to a crowd. Most of these punishments were carried out without trials. Many women were never allowed to defend themselves and were punished on the basis of rumor or vengeance. The targets were often single mothers or working-class women, who lacked protection. Public shaving also served a broader social function. It allowed communities to channel anger after years of occupation, while diverting attention from male collaboration. It helped reassert a patriarchal moral order and symbolically purify the nation by punishing vulnerable bodies. Today, there is scholarly consensus that the shaving of women was a violation of human dignity. It was a punishment that targeted women almost exclusively, ignoring the realities of survival under occupation. As historian Fabrice Virgili has argued, the shaving did not truly punish collaboration; it punished the transgression of female sexual norms in a moment when society sought to restore control.
Yves ౨ৎ tweet mediaYves ౨ৎ tweet media
ً@wynrosei

What’s one of the darkest ways history controlled women’s voices?

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