SoldierBeetle

49.8K posts

SoldierBeetle banner
SoldierBeetle

SoldierBeetle

@SoldierBeetle

Father. Husband. Gamer. Maker. (He/Him) Free Palestine.

Katılım Mayıs 2007
2K Takip Edilen2.1K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
SoldierBeetle
SoldierBeetle@SoldierBeetle·
SoldierBeetle tweet media
ZXX
0
0
0
101
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Philip Proudfoot
Philip Proudfoot@PhilipProudfoot·
I should be a core Labour voter. I care about inequality, public services, workers’ rights, and human rights. Instead, for 3 years, they treated millions disgusted by the slaughter in Gaza as racists and did nothing to address wealth inequality. Tonight: consequences.
English
6
78
448
4.3K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Pedro Sánchez
Pedro Sánchez@sanchezcastejon·
La responsabilidad pública también implica la obligación moral de no mirar hacia otro lado. Es un honor otorgar la Orden del Mérito Civil a una voz que sostiene la conciencia del mundo: @FranceskAlbs, Relatora Especial de la ONU en el territorio palestino ocupado.
Pedro Sánchez tweet media
Español
3.1K
12.6K
40K
927.2K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
mariewalsh18.
mariewalsh18.@mariewalsh18·
mariewalsh18. tweet media
ZXX
65
2.3K
8K
56.1K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Mike Carlton
Mike Carlton@MikeCarlton01·
The panic over the so-called ISIS brides is pathetic, whipped along by the usual suspects in the media and politics. They are Australian citizens. They’re legally entitled to return. If some have committed crimes they can be charged. Their kids, of course, are innocent.
English
436
600
2.7K
43K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
AWPR
AWPR@WarPowersReform·
The horrendous, expensive waste of US wars is something Australia should consider as we pay billions for American weapons that will not ensure we win or even survive a war. #auspol johnmenadue.com/post/2026/05/w…
English
16
113
189
1.4K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
💧Mary Kostakidis
💧Mary Kostakidis@MaryKostakidis·
Brilliant speech by @yanisvaroufakis Every word true. May we never again be the silent bystanders of 1930. @FranceskAlbs will go down in history
Yanis Varoufakis@yanisvaroufakis

IN PRAISE OF FRANCESCA ALBANESE There is a question that visits me in the small hours, when sleep will not come and the mind turns over old stones. The question is this: “What would I have done in the 1930s, on the morning after Kristallnacht?" Not what I say I would have done. Not what I hope I would have done. But what would I actually have done—when the trains began to run, when the neighbours grew quiet, when the cost of decency became the loss of everything? Most of us, I think, would have done little. Not from malice. From fear. From the soft, creeping conviction that someone else will speak, that the situation is complex, that we must be 'reasonable'. Lest we forget, the ordinary is the extraordinary's alibi. And how we have clung to that alibi! How we still cling to it! And then, every once in a terrible while, someone appears who does not cling. Someone who steps forward when others step back. Someone who speaks the name of the thing when everyone else is busy naming something else. Francesca Albanese is that someone. She stands before the world—alone, unarmed, armed only with law and language and a rare courage—and she says what the centrists will not say, what the foreign ministries will not say, what the editorial boards will not say. She says: "This is a genocide. And we are watching it happen." Do not tell me that is hyperbole. Do not tell me the term is contested. She has not used it lightly. She has used it as a physician arrives scientifically at a diagnosis—not to wound, but to warn. Not to inflame, but to name. And for that, they have come for her. Oh, how they have come for her. Smears. Investigations. Vicious editorials. Frozen bank accounts. Dispossession of the only apartment she had ever owned. The machinery of the respectable turned to crush her. Because the respectable cannot abide what she represents: a mirror held up to their complicity. Let us, once again, travel back to the 1930s. Back to the few who stood up when the trains began to run laden with Jewish people. There was Aristides de Sousa Mendes, a Portuguese consul in Bordeaux. He defied his own government. He signed thousands of visas, by hand, for hours, until his fingers bled. He saved more lives than Schindler. And he died penniless, disgraced, erased. There was a German officer in Warsaw named Wilm Hosenfeld. He hid a Jewish pianist in the rubble. He did not save thousands. He saved one. But that one—Władysław Szpilman—carried the memory. And memory is "the only haven from which we cannot be expelled." There was Raoul Wallenberg. There were the villagers of Le Chambon. There were the anonymous, the quiet, the furious few who said: “Not on my watch.” Francesca Albanese is their heir. Not because she carries a gun. Not because she hides refugees in her basement. But because she does something equally dangerous in a world that has perfected the art of not seeing. She sees. And she speaks. She does not speak as a diplomat. Thank Goodness she doesn't! Diplomats have given us the language of "there are arguments on both sides" and "restraint" and "proportionality." Diplomatic language is the perfumed grave of moral clarity. No, she speaks as a jurist. As a human being. As a woman who has looked into the abyss and refused to call it a "complex geopolitical landscape". Edna O'Brien once described a character who "had the recklessness of those who have already lost everything worth losing." Francesca Albanese has not lost everything. She has her dignity, her office, her voice, her family. But she has calculated the cost of speaking truth to power. And she has decided that that cost is infinitely less than the cost of silence. What is that cost? Let us name it. She has been called antisemitic—she, who stands on the ground of international law forged in the ashes of Auschwitz and the fires of Nuremberg. She has been called a conspiracy theorist—she, who cites every source, every footnote, every UN resolution. She has been called naive—she, who understands better than most the machinery of realpolitik. These accusations are not arguments. They are the spittle of the threatened. Because Francesca Albanese threatens something very precious to the powerful: the right to commit atrocity without being named. Friends, the 1930s did not arrive with jackboots and pogroms on day one. They arrived in small increments. With "reasonable" restrictions. With "proportional" measures. With the silence of the respectable. We tell ourselves that we would have been different. That we would have been Sousa Mendes. That we would have been Wallenberg. But most of us, I fear, would have been the neighbours who later said, "I didn't know." Francesca Albanese knows. And she refuses to pretend otherwise. So let us praise her. Not with statues or awards she does not seek. But with something harder: with our own refusal to look away. With our own voices, raised in places that are safe for us but dangerous for her. With our own bodies, if it comes to that. A brave woman, who was injured while demonstrating outside a US nuclear military base in 1982, the infamous Greenham Common, had told me that "the heart is a hunter for what it cannot have." But I say the heart is a hunter for what it will not lose. And what we will not lose is the memory of those who stood up when standing up cost everything. Francesca Albanese is standing up now. In our time. In our name. Under our indifferent sky. Let us stand with her. Not tomorrow. Not when it is safe. Now. [Extract from a speech in Athens on Sunday 3rd May 2026]

English
5
78
166
1.7K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Owen Jones
Owen Jones@owenjonesjourno·
Imagine these were two blindfolded Israeli women. Imagine Hamas militants had taken this picture. Imagine those women had then disappeared. Imagine the deafening outrage and denunciations of Hamas’ evil. So where is the deafening outrage here?
Ben van der Merwe@_BvdM

In May 2024, @IDF Sgt. Dolev Mor Yossef posted this photo on his Instagram - posing with two blindfolded Palestinian women. The two women have not been seen since.

English
580
10.3K
22.9K
365.9K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Nazia Kazi
Nazia Kazi@NaziaKaziTweets·
BBC be like “Israel Nukes Southern Lebanon in Test of Fragile Ceasefire”
English
13
911
8.6K
75.6K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Dr Colin Hughes
Dr Colin Hughes@drcwhos·
@AngusTaylorMP Over 1000 ex IDF soldiers accused of war crimes in Gaza have returned to Australia Are they being screened by @AusFedPolice Why will no journalist ask @Tony_Burke Surely a bigger risk than 4 young women and their Australian kids? @FergusonNews
Perth, Western Australia 🇦🇺 English
37
488
940
9.1K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Dr Sheep Person Podge
Dr Sheep Person Podge@noplaceforsheep·
Why are we listening to the Jews who don’t feel safe in Australia & ignoring the Jews who feel so safe (&brave) that they participate in pro Palestinian rallies? 🧐
English
35
250
1K
5.7K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Caitlin Johnstone
First and foremost the west needs to stop murdering people. Ending western warmongering should take priority over every other societal concern, in the same way your husband being a serial killer would be a more urgent concern than his refusal to wash dishes. It's a sign of a deep sickness how much more political attention is given to domestic policy in our society than the fact that our governments are butchering human beings on other continents. This is not to say that those domestic policy issues are not important; it is only to say that they aren't as horrifyingly urgent as the way imperial core nations are actively participating in actual mass murder. Healthcare? Very important. Immigrants' rights? Very important. Social justice and equality? Very important. But imagine if you lived in a place where western-made bombs were tearing your family and neighbors to shreds and then catching sight of a western social media post about the supreme importance of LGBTQ issues or ending discrimination against neurodivergent people. Just pause and put yourself in those shoes for a minute. Again and again and again thrice over, I am not saying that those issues do not matter. I'm just saying that ending the mass murder should feel like a more urgent concern. I don't think this should be controversial. In no other area of our society do we have trouble making this distinction. If a mass shooting kills twenty people in your country, that's going to receive more attention than all the other injustices and abuses that happened in your nation on that day. The murder of a seventy year-old woman is going to be far more traumatic and significant for her community than if the same seventy year-old woman died of lung cancer. You would not continue your discussion about intersectional feminism at the restaurant if you saw someone being strangled to death at the table across the room. When it happens near us, to people who look like us and live like us and speak the same language as us, we have no problem understanding that murder is an urgent problem and preventing it is a foremost concern for our society. But when our own governments are involved in the murder of people with darker skin, speaking different languages, practicing different religions and living in different cultures, we're able to compartmentalize away from the urgency of the situation. This says terrible things about us as a civilization. We're no different than the wife of a serial killer who ignores the bodies being buried in the backyard because she's more worried about what his online gambling addiction is costing the family. We're disconnecting ourselves from something precious and important within us in order to psychologically dissociate from the crimes of the empire in the way that we do. This hurts our fellow human beings, but it hurts us too. We're doing something ugly to our insides when we twist ourselves into knots to avoid facing the cold hard reality of western military slaughter. It warps us as people. It profoundly impacts the way we experience life. It scratches the lenses of our perceptual filters. How could it not? All these wars and genocidal atrocities are an invitation to reclaim a sacred part of ourselves by treating them with the urgency they deserve. There's no way to live an authentic life and move into a truth-based relationship with reality without doing so.
English
8
81
215
4K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
John Bourscheid 🇺🇸 🚀
Elon’s mom caught posting from the perspective of Elon’s dad. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to assume Elon is posting on Twitter as both his parents & was on the wrong alt. The cringe deepens daily with this one.
John Bourscheid 🇺🇸 🚀 tweet media
English
503
8K
68.9K
1.6M
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Peter Cronau
Peter Cronau@PeterCronau·
This is what we allowing to be done to Australia. Homelessness ought be made illegal with penalties for any local authority not housing its residents. Homelessness is entirely preventable.
Peter Cronau tweet media
English
133
260
771
106K
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Fairy Gothmother, MD
I already thought Elon’s mom constantly defending him on twitter was embarrassing. I didn’t even consider that Elon was the one tweeting as his own mom and defending himself, which is maybe the most embarrassing thing I’ve ever seen
English
468
16.5K
163.5K
1.7M
SoldierBeetle retweetledi
Assal Rad
Assal Rad@AssalRad·
What a weird way to say Israel bombed Beirut violating the “ceasefire.”
Assal Rad tweet media
English
27
1.1K
4.8K
64.9K