Michael de Monte

38.5K posts

Michael de Monte

Michael de Monte

@MichaeldeMonte2

Sydney & London 가입일 Mayıs 2018
7.5K 팔로잉1K 팔로워
Baba Banaras™
Baba Banaras™@RealBababanaras·
BREAKING: Devil is dead. Ayatollah Alireza Arafi, second highest leader of Iran, responsible for making anti women law & killing of thousands of Iranian women for not wearing Burqa & Hijab, has been killed in overnight US-Israel strikes on Tehran.
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Michael de Monte
Michael de Monte@MichaeldeMonte2·
@GaardenTrasch @AnnaSobriety Andrew tells me that Keir brings his forensic skills to his interaction with Ukrainian youth, when he is initially gently probing but then deeply penetrative with his insight.
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prof Lord Sir Timothy Jardin Trasch KC #FBPE
If Keir does not eventually get a big job as an EU Commissioner or an ECJ judge as a reward for implementing the EU’s UK reset, there really is no justice in this world.
prof Lord Sir Timothy Jardin Trasch KC #FBPE tweet media
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John Redwood
John Redwood@johnredwood·
Why do people put out lies about loss of GDP and trade from Brexit based on out of date wrong forecasts? The official numbers for trade and GDP over the last ten years show no Brexit losses, with the UK outperforming Germany for GDP.
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Michael de Monte
Michael de Monte@MichaeldeMonte2·
@ZealouslyQuoted That's English for you. Why Arkansas (R Can Saw) & Kansas (Can Zuss)? Why "Giant" with a G not a J?
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North Yorkshire
North Yorkshire@visitnorthyork·
What’s the greatest thing Yorkshire has ever given the world?
North Yorkshire tweet media
Yorkshire and The Humber, England 🇬🇧 English
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Simon Clarke
Simon Clarke@SirSimonClarke·
There is nothing “absurd” about thinking that locking the UK into a continent that is getting almost all its big strategic bets for the future wrong would be a catastrophic mistake. Yes the world is changing. But that means we need more robust borders, more flexible labour markets, more dynamic capital markets, cheaper energy, a positive attitude to AI and tech…ie all the key things the EU isn’t doing well or at all, and that Brexit allows us to pursue.
Gavin Barwell@GavinBarwell

I guess Seb has to pretend he thinks this if he wants to be selected as a Conservative MP, but it's absurd. The world is *much* less conducive to a free trading, go it alone UK than it was in 2016 - which is why public opinion has shifted decisively in the opposite direction

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Zac Goldsmith
Zac Goldsmith@ZacGoldsmith·
This is the debauched Islamofascist monstrosity those idiots march for in the West. How could they be so stupid. The Islamist hostiles among them I understand: this is the world they want. But the westerners among them... they are beneath contempt
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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Narendra Modi
Narendra Modi@narendramodi·
Good Friday reminds us of Jesus Christ’s sacrifice. May this day further deepen the values of harmony, compassion and forgiveness. May brotherhood and hope guide us all.
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Michael de Monte
Michael de Monte@MichaeldeMonte2·
Boycott this racist bike company @littlebigbikes
Myriam Shermer@MyriamShermer

A few years ago, my husband — a cycling enthusiast — invested almost $300 in a “built to last” balance bike from @LittleBigBikes for our kids, specifically because parts could be replaced over time. Today, as our youngest needs new pedals and brakes, the company refuses to ship to Israel. Not to a government — to customers. Companies are, of course, free to take political positions. But refusing to serve individuals based solely on where they live is not a “peace stance.” It’s collective exclusion and discrimination. People who oppose boycotts should know where this company stand.

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Szilas
Szilas@aratogep·
It is important in so far as it reflects American delusions on this topic quite well in spite of the author being neither American nor European. Europe has never freeloaded on American security. America has been running a protection racket on Europe, fattening its own MIC and giving not even nothing in return (which would be preferable) but all kinds of harms such as energy blackmail, sowing chaos and causing massive influx into Europe, injecting insane ideology into Europe, running widespread regime change operations in Europe and constantly shaping the political landscape to install traitors into European leadership positions and recruiting European countries for mad and destabilizing military adventures in the Middle East and Africa. And now the US wanted to recruit Europe for an even more insane and devastating military adventure and it takes offense that even the previously installed traitors of Europe say not to this debacle. This delusion should be dispelled. This is almost like a mental disorder. Benevolent American Supremacy Zealotry Derangement MEGalomania aka BASZD MEG.
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Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman@BillAckman·
An important read on Europe and NATO.
Melissa Chen@MsMelChen

Let’s be real here. Europe has spent decades freeloading on American security. Even now, with every NATO member finally hitting the 2% GDP target in 2025. But beyond the financial contributions, the real rupture is philosophical and the Iran crisis has shown a spotlight on it. Europe worships process. Endless committees, consultations, and “predictability.” Macron actually calls it a virtue. For Trump, this is paralysis as his style is to articulate a threat, fix a target, and act. The Americans are men of conviction and purpose. Europe on the other hand lives by bureaucratic liturgy and in high-minded abstractions. Sure, Americans might make mistakes when acting. But Europe never considers what the costs of not acting actually are. Just look at how their nations are doing on various fronts, especially on the border crisis, and you see the same cancerous rot that undergirds their foreign policy approach play out domestically. It's the same problem on a different scale. Iran is currently holding the Strait of Hormuz hostage, choking 20% of global oil and spiking prices past $100 a barrel. Meanwhile, the regime is bleeding from strikes, its nuclear ambitions are still alive despite degraded capability, and its proxies are firing missiles at allies and oil tankers. If this isn’t a clear and present danger to the global economy - of which Europe is a part - then I don’t know what is. Yet when Washington asked to use European bases to finish the job - bases the US has defended for generations, the response was hesitation and hand-wringing. The US did strike from RAF Fairford, but only after warnings that British soil could become a “legitimate target.” If you cannot agree that a theocratic regime with eschatological ambitions who have shown no restraint in hitting out at Gulf countries and threatening the world’s energy jugular is an enemy worth confronting, then what, exactly, are we allies about? Europe loves to preen about being tough on Russia. They issue condemnations and speeches and slap sanctions that hardly work to cripple the Russian economy. Now here was a chance to do something concrete: let the Americans use the bases they already pay for, help clear the Strait, and actually degrade the Iranian war machine that arms Moscow’s proxies. Turmp didn’t ask for boots on the ground or any kind of more offensive action. All he wanted was permission to operate from the infrastructure America has underwritten for decades. They couldn’t even manage that. So can you blame the Americans for seeing NATO for what it is? A paper-tiger alliance that expects Washington to bleed and pay while Brussels and London convenes and deliberates. If Europe refuses to treat Iran as the threat it is while happily letting American power keep the Strait open and the lights on, then the alliance is already dead. Trump is simply stating the obvious and the Americans are becoming very reluctant to subsidize the European delusion any longer.

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