HABACASA wont DM you👻

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HABACASA wont DM you👻

HABACASA wont DM you👻

@HabaC24901725

Dutch🇳🇱Old Crypto fool #Amsterdam.❌❌❌Gleufglijder🚎@AFCAJAX ⚽️🫶🏼.💼💼 $DUSK $TRAC $TAO $ETH $WOO $NPC $ICP 🌱🌱🌱🪴🪴🪴

Amsterdam, Nederland Katılım Nisan 2021
264 Takip Edilen63 Takipçiler
Sweet Seeds®
Sweet Seeds®@sweetseeds_es·
This is good or bad?
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B1970K
B1970K@knuijver·
Dus @ZiggoWebcare Van €17,95 naar €9,95 per maand voor abbo @ESPNnl Terwijl het voor €2,50 er standaard bij komt. Daarnaast inflatie correctie van €2,67 Welk voordeel haal ik hier uit?
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Sweet Seeds®
Sweet Seeds®@sweetseeds_es·
Alright, just let us know your top 5 favorite genetics of all time.
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Rawan Osman روان عثمان
“Free Palestine.” I grew up on those words. In Lebanon, most people around me wanted a free Palestine for a very practical reason — to send the Palestinian refugees back. The civil war that tore my country apart was ignited in no small part by the Palestinian armed factions who turned Lebanon into their launching pad. “Free Palestine” meant: free us from them. In Damascus, where my father’s family lived, the sentiment was different but equally self-serving. Palestine must be returned to the Arabs, its righteous owners. No one asked follow-up questions. No one was expected to. Palestine was central to Islam, most Arabs are Muslim, therefore supporting the Palestinian cause was reflexive. A non-brainer in the most literal sense — no brain engaged at all. Nobody stopped to point out that Palestine is not an Arabic word. Nobody found it strange that Jerusalem, the supposedly third holiest city in Islam, is not mentioned once in the Quran. Not once. Nor is Palestine. The entire theological and political architecture of this cause rests on a foundation that their own scripture doesn’t bother to acknowledge. What was actually happening was indoctrination. A systematic, generational rejection of Jewish sovereignty — and frankly, of any minority sovereignty. Jews, Christians, Druze, Kurds, Assyrians, Yazidis — the Arab world has been remarkably consistent in how it treats people who are different. We just don’t talk about that. Instead, in the West, we talk about Palestine. In the West, a civilization that has elevated human rights to its highest moral currency, the Palestinian cause has become the one exception to every rule. In the queue of human suffering, Palestinians cut the line every time. Homosexuals executed in Gaza and hanged from cranes in Iran? Palestine first. Women imprisoned in Saudi Arabia for campaigning for the right to drive — a right they were denied until 2018 — girls sold into marriage in Afghanistan, women erased from public life entirely under the Taliban? After Palestine. Political dissidents ground into dust in Syrian and Egyptian prisons, journalists disappeared in Libya, children starving in Yemen while their rulers wage proxy wars, entire populations hollowed out by hunger in Sudan? All of it waits. Christians ethnically cleansed from Iraq and Syria, the Arab world methodically emptied of every Jewish community it once held — a demographic erasure carried out across a century with surgical patience and near-total Western silence? Palestine is still first. So let’s end where we started. Free Palestine. Which Palestine, exactly? The Roman invention? The British administrative line? The British Mandate covered the entire territory of what is today Israel, the West Bank, Gaza and Jordan. In 1921, 78% of that mandate was handed to the Hashemite family — a dynasty imported from Hijaz in present-day Saudi Arabia — and became the Kingdom of Jordan, which it remains to this day. A foreign royal family, on the majority of historic Palestine, ruling it as a monarchy. Nobody protests that. No flags, no chants, no encampments. The remaining 22% was designated for the Jews, became Israel, and is the only part that any pro-Palestinian activist has ever had a problem with. So when you say Free Palestine, you mean that 22%. You mean the Jews. And free it from whom? From a people with a three-thousand-year-old documented presence in that land, to restore the glory of a name coined by Roman colonizers, a name lifted from the Torah, a name that has no roots in Arabic, no mention in the Quran, and no history as a sovereign state? You are not chanting for liberation. You are chanting for colonialism — the Roman kind, repackaged for social media. Free Palestine is not a cause. It is a colonial term, coined by invaders, recycled by the indoctrinated. The least you can do is have the intelligence to understand it and the decency to reflect on your position. 📍#Israel
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Forte😶‍🌫️
the weed today is not the same weed we were smoking in 2016
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Ahmed Al-Khalidi
Ahmed Al-Khalidi@khalidi79397·
What changed in 1948? The Jews stopped being Palestinians. May 14, 1948. Ben-Gurion reads the Declaration of Independence. The next morning, the residents of the Yishuv wake up as Israelis. The label they'd carried for decades was simply vacated. The Palestine Post → Jerusalem Post (1950). Palestine Symphony Orchestra → Israel Philharmonic. Palestine Electric Company → Israel Electric Corporation. Anglo-Palestine Bank → Bank Leumi le-Israel. Palestine pound → Israeli lira. Jewish Agency for Palestine → just the Jewish Agency. "Palestinian" passports → Israeli ones. Within 24 months, "Palestinian" had been stripped off every Jewish institution that had worn it. Now the Arab side. Arabs did not rush to claim the empty label in 1948. They didn't claim it for another generation. In 1948, the Arabs who fled or remained still called themselves Arabs. The Arab League's war wasn't fought in the name of "Palestine" as a nation. It was fought to prevent partition and absorb the territory into existing Arab states. Transjordan took the West Bank and East Jerusalem and in 1950 simply annexed them; the residents became Jordanian citizens with Jordanian passports. Egypt took Gaza and ran it under military administration. No citizenship, no nation, no "Palestine." The one institutional use of "Palestinian" that survived 1948 was a refugee category: UNRWA, created December 1949, defined "Palestine refugees" as a humanitarian classification. Not a nationality. It kept the word alive in international bureaucratic language while the Arab world itself wasn't using it nationally. Then came the long appropriation. 1964. Nasser sponsors the founding of the PLO in Cairo. The original charter (Article 24) explicitly disclaims any sovereignty over the West Bank, Gaza, or the Himmah area. Read that again. The founding document of the Palestine Liberation Organization renounces claims to the West Bank and Gaza. Because in 1964, those were Arab lands belonging to Jordan and Egypt. The PLO's purpose was to liberate the part Israel held, not those parts. 1967. Israel takes the West Bank and Gaza in six days. Suddenly Jordan and Egypt no longer hold the territory, and the Arab residents there are no longer Jordanians or under Egyptian rule. The pan-Arab framework had just been humiliated on the battlefield. A new identity was needed. 1968. The PLO charter is rewritten. Article 24's disclaimer disappears. The West Bank and Gaza are now central to Palestinian national claims. The label has been fully transferred. Sequence: 1917–1948: "Palestinian" = Jewish institutions and self-identification; Arabs reject the term and call themselves Arabs / Southern Syrians. 1948: Jews drop the label and become Israelis. The word goes dormant on the Arab side, surviving mainly as a UN refugee category. 1948–1967: Arabs in the West Bank are Jordanians. Arabs in Gaza are stateless subjects of Egyptian military rule. "Palestinian" is not yet a national identity. 1964–1968: The PLO transitions the label into a national identity but only after 1967 makes pan-Arabism politically untenable. 1948 didn't create a Palestinian Arab nation. It vacated a Jewish label and left a 20-year identity gap that Arab nationalism took until 1968 to fill.
Ahmed Al-Khalidi@khalidi79397

Until 1948, "Palestinian" overwhelmingly meant Jewish. The Palestine Post (1932): Jewish newspaper, renamed the Jerusalem Post after Israel was founded. The Palestine Symphony Orchestra (1936): built by Bronislaw Huberman to rescue Jewish musicians from Europe. The Palestine Electric Company (Pinhas Rutenberg, 1923): Jewish. The Anglo-Palestine Bank: became Bank Leumi. Keren Hayesod was the "Palestine Foundation Fund." The Jewish Agency's official name was the Jewish Agency for Palestine. Jews carried "Palestinian" passports under the Mandate and used the term as a self-identifier. Arab leaders, meanwhile, rejected it. February 1919: the First Palestinian Arab Congress in Jerusalem declared Palestine "part of Arab Syria, as it has never been separated from it at any time." The slogan was Suriyya al-Janubiyya - Southern Syria. 1937: Auni Abd al-Hadi, founder of the Istiqlal Party, told the Peel Commission: "There is no such country as Palestine. 'Palestine' is a term the Zionists invented. Our country was for centuries part of Syria." 1946: Princeton's Philip Hitti, the most prominent Arab-American historian of his generation, told the Anglo-American Committee: "There is no such thing as Palestine in history, absolutely not." The PLO wasn't founded until 1964. And even its founding charter explicitly disclaimed sovereignty over the West Bank (Jordanian) and Gaza (Egyptian). A distinct Palestinian national identity, defined against Israel rather than as part of pan-Arabism or Greater Syria, is largely a post-1967 phenomenon. PLO Executive Committee member Zuheir Mohsen put it bluntly in Trouw, March 1977: "The Palestinian people does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the State of Israel for our Arab unity. Today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese." None of this means the millions who identify as Palestinian today aren't sincere. Identities get constructed, reinforced, become real. That's how nationalism works everywhere. But the sequence matters. A Jewish national identity tied to this land is millennia old. The Arab "Palestinian" identity, as something distinct from Syrian or pan-Arab, is a 20th-century construction. And for its first decades, the people we now call Palestinians actively rejected the label.

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Onair
Onair@Onair58·
Het opwekkingsfestival. Ogenschijnlijk een mooi christelijk feest. Maar ook op dit festival de Joodse vlag. Heel pijnlijk. Israël vermoordt en martelt élke dag vele mensen. Jezus aan het kruis was er een uitje bij Wat moet je nú dan nog zeggen. Ik ben die valse christenen zó beu!
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Onair
Onair@Onair58·
@vliegertouwtje En weet je wat zo schrijnend is? Palestijnen zijn helemaal niet blij met Hamas, want Hamas onderdrukte hun eigen bevolking en gebruikte ze als menselijk schild. En weet je wat het verschil tussen jou en mij is? Ik heb me ingelezen en mijn kennis is wél aanwezig!
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Highly Ganjanous
Highly Ganjanous@HighlyGanjanous·
The other day a dude told me my plants are lacking in organic soil and I need to be using coco and Athena nutrients. Sure, let me trash my award winning mids and get on that 🙄 Gtfoh 😂
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Kristina Bolten
Kristina Bolten@Kristinartz·
DOES ANYONE HERE HAVE SOMETHING IN THEIR HOUSE THAT'S OVER 40 YEARS OLD..
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Maliq
Maliq@MasterMaliq·
@Ander35213Craig That analogy doesn’t work. Muslims aren’t one organised “team” with a shared goal. That’s just a stereotype, not reality. Judge people by actions, not imagined group strategies.
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Maliq
Maliq@MasterMaliq·
Muslims are not dangerous. We are human beings like everyone else, with families, love, care, and ordinary lives. Our faith teaches compassion, not hatred. Our Prophet taught respect and mercy. Yes, there are a few extremists who distort our religion and bring shame to it, but they do not represent the vast majority of Muslims. So why is it that many still get profiled and treated as suspects? Is it fear, or hate?
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CANNA COLLECTORS
CANNA COLLECTORS@CannaCollectz·
Name this strain and get to be our seeds and buds permanents tester Good luck Only 5 winners Best names wins
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Monique X- Fluencer 🇳🇱 ✌️
Tiktok staat vol met filmpjes over Ter Apel. Ik kan het helaas niet verstaan maar de filmpjes wekken de indruk dat ze elkaar oproepen om alsnog naar ons land te komen ondanks de drukte bij het aanmeldcentrum omdat het nu makkelijk is voor Palestijnen en Soedanezen om asiel te krijgen. Wellicht kunnen Arabisch sprekende volgers het vertalen? @MonaKeijzer @geertwilderspvv @henkvermeer @GidiMarkuszower
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Maaike van Charante
Maaike van Charante@Repelsteeltje21·
De Palestijnse mythe over de Nakba is niet bestand tegen de realiteit. Iedereen die de moeite neemt om oude kranten of andere historische documenten te lezen, ziet hoe het Palestijnse vluchtelingenprobleem werkelijk ontstaan is.
flyme2themoon@flyme2themoon8

Deze uit 1948 stammende artikelen uit @vrij_nederland en @DeGroene halen dat hele huidige #nakba verhaal wel hard onderuit zeg. Misschien iets voor #Halsema, #Dijksma en de @NOS?

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Ahmed Khalifa
Ahmed Khalifa@_A_khalifa·
UAE BANS: Hamas, IRGC, Houthis Hezbollah And Muslim Brotherhood AS TERRORIST GROUPS! Europe?“Yeah we’ll take them all in”😂 Welcome to paradise, folks.
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