Miya💕

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Miya💕

Miya💕

@OutlanderBabe

I’m a bonafide fangirl🥰💞

Katılım Ağustos 2014
744 Takip Edilen654 Takipçiler
Miya💕 retweetledi
PinkB
PinkB@Bentpink1·
This little boy grew up to be the man who wrote this article 🥹 So proud of Prince Harry Good King Harry ♥️🤴🏼
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The i Paper
The i Paper@theipaper·
The Duke of Sussex says silence in the face of rising hatred risks allowing extremism to grow Read more: trib.al/ILHbJ85
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Tom McTague
Tom McTague@TomMcTague·
Belter of a magazine this week with the pieces everyone is talking about. Read @AlistairCarns on how Labour can win again. And then read Prince Harry on his fears for our divided country. The @NewStatesman: your essential guide to modern Britain👇💥🔥
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mona_lisa
mona_lisa@mona_lisa513·
Prince Harry’s column for The New Statesman is a powerful reminder to look beyond hate, division, religion and focus on our shared humanity. Innocent lives continue to suffer across the world. No community should carry the blame for the actions of others. Humanity must come first
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D.B.🌸
D.B.🌸@DBrown99944·
It's so heartening to see all this outpouring of support for @misanharriman and the massive public pushback against recent smear campaign attempt by the @Telegraph. For those not aware, the person behind trying to drag Misan's name through the mud to cause personal and reputational harm is none other than zionist @HeidiBachram Heidi Bachram should be held accountable for deliberately clipping/editing 57 seconds of a video to manipulate and misrepresent Misan Harriman's words. She should not only apologize, she should be fired and sued. #IStandWithMisanHarriman
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PinkB
PinkB@Bentpink1·
This cutie 🥰 Madame Duchess 🔥
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Christian Esguerra
Christian Esguerra@IanEsguerra·
Let's be honest. Alan Peter Cayetano should be held accountable for Bato's escape. He should be included in the investigation.
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Tom McTague
Tom McTague@TomMcTague·
World exclusive in the @NewStatesman!
The New Statesman@NewStatesman

MY FEARS FOR OUR DIVIDED KINGDOM BY PRINCE HARRY Over the past several years, I have spoken about the consequences of a world in which outrage outpaces humanity – where fear and division are amplified faster than truth, and where people are too easily reduced to categories, identities or opposing sides. What concerns me now is how dangerously that same moral blurring is taking hold across parts of Britain. Across the country, we are seeing a deeply troubling rise in anti-Semitism. Jewish communities – families, children, ordinary people – are being made to feel unsafe in the very places they call home. That should alarm us, but also unite us. Because hatred directed at people for who they are, or what they believe, is not protest. It is prejudice. Recent incidents, including lethal violence in London and Manchester, have brought this into sharp and deeply troubling focus. Across the globe, there is deep and justified alarm at the scale of loss in the Middle East. Images from Gaza, Lebanon and the wider region – of devastated communities and entire neighbourhoods levelled and reduced to rubble – have shaken people to their core. For many, the instinct to speak out, to march, to demand accountability, to call for an end to suffering, is both human and necessary. But now these two realities are being dangerously conflated. Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

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The New Statesman
The New Statesman@NewStatesman·
MY FEARS FOR OUR DIVIDED KINGDOM BY PRINCE HARRY Over the past several years, I have spoken about the consequences of a world in which outrage outpaces humanity – where fear and division are amplified faster than truth, and where people are too easily reduced to categories, identities or opposing sides. What concerns me now is how dangerously that same moral blurring is taking hold across parts of Britain. Across the country, we are seeing a deeply troubling rise in anti-Semitism. Jewish communities – families, children, ordinary people – are being made to feel unsafe in the very places they call home. That should alarm us, but also unite us. Because hatred directed at people for who they are, or what they believe, is not protest. It is prejudice. Recent incidents, including lethal violence in London and Manchester, have brought this into sharp and deeply troubling focus. Across the globe, there is deep and justified alarm at the scale of loss in the Middle East. Images from Gaza, Lebanon and the wider region – of devastated communities and entire neighbourhoods levelled and reduced to rubble – have shaken people to their core. For many, the instinct to speak out, to march, to demand accountability, to call for an end to suffering, is both human and necessary. But now these two realities are being dangerously conflated. Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
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Miya💕 retweetledi
Miya💕 retweetledi
Tom McTague
Tom McTague@TomMcTague·
Our cover this week - with some interesting guest writers …
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