Travis Ross

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Travis Ross

Travis Ross

@Travis_M_Ross

Journalist & co-editor of Canada-Haiti Information Project. https://t.co/Lc1fwDRpee Published at @haitiliberte @blkagendareport @TheCanadaFiles

Canada Katılım Ağustos 2022
2.8K Takip Edilen545 Takipçiler
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Mrs.Dezod🇭🇹🌱
I’m part of a project planting 200 trees in Aux-Sources, Haiti 🌿🇭🇹 Real work to bring life back to the land and support the people there. If you can, donate. If not, share it either way, be part of it. gofundme.com/f/58y858-lets-…
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Scott Robertson
Scott Robertson@sarobertsonca·
Avi Lewis: "We have a very clear plan to cut grocery prices by 30-40% for Canadians at a cost to the federal government ... We'd subsidize it. It costs $350m to launch and $300m a year, which is one-half of 1% of the current defence budget."
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Avi Lewis
Avi Lewis@avilewis·
Hours after Iran and the U.S. reached a ceasefire deal, Israel launched one of its most devastating attacks on Lebanon to date. Over a hundred strikes in ten minutes - carnage in Beirut, where hundreds of thousands of displaced people are sheltering. Hundreds dead, entire neighbourhoods reduced to rubble. Reports of ethnic cleansing and open discussion of permanent military occupation. Prime Minister Carney has rightly condemned the invasion as illegal, but words are not enough. Canada must bring sanctions against Israel, cancel the Canada-Israel free trade agreement, implement a real two-way arms embargo, and use every diplomatic and economic tool at our disposal to rein in Israel. US-Israeli impunity has shredded the international order: Canada should lead in rebuilding it. cbc.ca/news/world/isr…
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Dimitri Lascaris
Dimitri Lascaris@dimitrilascaris·
The Trump-Netanyahu war on Iran has turned into an epic debacle. Mark Carney supported it from the outset and he continues to do so. If Canada’s corporate media had real journalists, they would be raking Carney over the coals for this colossal blunder. Instead, they toss a few softballs at Carney and then go back to kissing his ass.
Rachel Gilmore@atRachelGilmore

The reporter follows up by asking Carney: “do you regret your initial support of this war?” The point of this support, Carney replied, was “the ending of both that state sponsored terrorism and the nuclear ambitions of Iran.” “That remains the case.”

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tim anderson
tim anderson@timand2037·
Young Iranian musician is waiting outside. With her country besieged and under attack she has changed her ideas, "just give me a gun".
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Brian Berletic
Brian Berletic@BrianJBerletic·
the multipolar world must (and is) building a material reality within which US aggression can be defended against, contained, and eventually rolled back. It involves building up core nations of multipolarism but also their neighbors, partners, and allies economically, industrially, technologically, and of course militarily. Iran's ability to survive this regime change attempt is owed to this process. More needs to be done and is being done. The US realizes it is in a race between its ability to destroy the world faster than the multipolar world can build it up and fortify it against the US.
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Sameh Ahmed 𓂆 🇵🇸
Six children and their mother… all that remains of them is a small bag weighing no more than 6 kilograms of human remains. This is Abu Ismail Hammad, who pulled his children out from under the rubble with his own hands, after their bodies had decomposed. What words could ever describe such pain? What language is enough for this loss? We try to speak… but the pain is beyond description.
Sameh Ahmed 𓂆 🇵🇸 tweet mediaSameh Ahmed 𓂆 🇵🇸 tweet media
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Quds News Network
Quds News Network@QudsNen·
Lebanese journalist Ghada Dayekh of Sawt Al-Farah radio was killed earlier today in an Israeli airstrike targeting her home in Tyre.
Quds News Network tweet media
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Max Blumenthal
Max Blumenthal@MaxBlumenthal·
Let the record reflect that not one former living president denounced Trump’s genocidal pledge to destroy an entire civilization Like Obama, they’re inconsequential moral cowards who worry in the back of their minds about being held accountable for their own war crimes
Barack Obama@BarackObama

Congratulations to @CoachDustyMay, Elliot Cadeau, and @UMichBBall on winning their first title since 1989! This team dominated the tournament from start to finish. Well deserved. Go Blue!

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Travis Ross@Travis_M_Ross·
@CornelisEscher You rent out your critical thinking skills to Grok. Got it. If you actually visited the NED website you'd see the names of grantee organizations are omitted deliberately. THE NED explains why they do it. You are likely promoting an NED funded NGO.
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Cornelis Escher
Cornelis Escher@CornelisEscher·
Bolivia doesn’t trend often, but the need is real. This campaign gives older Bolivians basic dignity: – Medical care – Nutritious, familiar meals – Real community If you care about “forgotten places,” this is one of them. Donate or repost: voicesforbolivia.com/campaign/
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Travis Ross
Travis Ross@Travis_M_Ross·
@CornelisEscher The NED has gone dark and no longer publishes the names of partner organizations. But tell me more about the legitimacy of a site devoted to Bolivia that is only in English. ned.org/2024-grant-lis…
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Camila
Camila@camilapress·
If only people had the means to properly reflect on what it is to be a proclaimed feminist in an imperialist country and the way in which ‘women’s rights’ are instrumentalized for imperialist objectives. Reprehensible and unforgettable.
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Dimitri Lascaris
Dimitri Lascaris@dimitrilascaris·
A new poll commissioned by @readthemaple finds that: - 55% of Canadians agree it should be illegal for Canadians to serve in the U.S. military; and - 54% agree it should be illegal for Canadians to serve in the Israeli military. readthemaple.com/54-of-canadian…
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phillys black marxist ☭
phillys black marxist ☭@Forever_noir_·
Capitalism creates a culture where private property matters more than any human being and drives us to defend the very existence of things over the existence of people. A machine has more rights than a person, a building more rights than a community.
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Kit Klarenberg
Kit Klarenberg@KitKlarenberg·
Because OF. FUCKING. COURSE Syria becomes a hotbed of human trafficking the second MI6 takes power
Syria Justice Archive@SyJusticeArc

📰 A New York Times investigation found that abductions of women and girls from Syria’s Alawite minority were more common, and more brutal, than the government has acknowledged By @NYTBen A 16-year-old girl left her home in northwest Syria last May to visit a shop and disappeared. Weeks later, an anonymous stranger phoned her distraught family and said that he had the teenager and would let her go if they paid thousands of dollars in ransom, according to four people involved in her case. The family paid the ransom and the girl returned in August, more than 100 days after she had been kidnapped. She told confidants that she had been held in a dank basement and was regularly drugged and raped by strangers, the four people said. A medical exam turned up yet another shock: She came home pregnant. Since rebels ousted the dictator Bashar al-Assad in late 2024, panicked families and activists trying to help have regularly sounded the alarm on social media that women and girls from Syria’s Alawite minority have mysteriously disappeared or been kidnapped. Many fear that their sect is being targeted as retribution for the brutality of Mr. al-Assad, who also belongs to the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite. The government has denied that Alawite women and girls are being targeted by kidnappers, saying that it has confirmed only one such case. But a New York Times investigation based on dozens of interviews with Alawites who say they were kidnapped, their relatives and others involved in their cases found that these abductions have been common and often brutal. The Times verified the kidnappings of 13 Alawite women and girls, in addition to one man and one boy. Five said they had been raped. Two came home pregnant. The family of one woman said it sent $17,000 to kidnappers who never released her, and provided screenshots of ransom demands and the money transfers. A 24-year-old said she had been held for three weeks in a filthy room where men raped her, beat her, shaved her head and eyebrows and cut her with razor blades. Her relatives also paid the kidnappers and in this case secured her release, according to four people involved in her case. Syrian activists say they know of scores of such kidnappings but details are difficult to confirm because victims and their families are too scared to talk. Most people who spoke with the Times did so on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals from the government or the kidnappers. The Times is not identifying most of those who were kidnapped for the same reason. The Times corroborated accounts from people who had been kidnapped and their relatives, as well as through social media posts announcing when they were taken and returned, ransom messages sent by kidnappers and interviews with medical and aid workers who spoke with the abductees after their release. The kidnappings took place against a backdrop of deep distrust between the Alawites, who make up about one-tenth of Syria’s population, and the new government. Mr. al-Assad relied heavily on his sect in his military and security services while in power. That led many of the Sunni Muslim former rebels who now run Syria to associate the Alawites with the ousted regime. Last March, that anger fueled days of sectarian violence in northwestern Syria that left about 1,400 people dead, according to a U.N. investigation. The inquiry found that some government security forces had participated in the killing, leaving many Alawites afraid of them. Many of the kidnapped women and girls, along with their relatives, said the government had failed to take their cases seriously. nytimes.com/2026/04/03/wor…

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