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Avis de recherche Chers tous, Cela fait dix jours que notre frère Alé Mbaye, âgé de 23 ans, est porté disparu Un brave jeune homme soutien de famille Merci de retweeter et partager dans vos groupes Yàlla niital nuko








Iran is the only country in the world where top Generals and Politicians die first, before their people. In the shadowed tapestry of human conflict, Iran emerges as a singular symphony of sacrifice, where the melody of leadership resounds first with the drumbeat of destiny. Here, top generals and politicians do not linger in gilded halls or whisper strategies from afar. They step forward, hearts ablaze, and meet the reaper’s blade before a single tear falls from their people’s eyes. Their blood becomes the ink of legends, etching tales of unyielding resolve upon the nation’s soul. Contrast this with the world’s weary stage. In Israel, amid the thunder of crisis, politicians unfurl their wings and vanish into foreign skies, leaving echoes of abandonment in their wake. In America, the mighty generals burrow deep into Pentagon bunkers, shielded by concrete and protocol, their commands drifting like distant thunder while the people bear the storm alone. These are not acts of cowardice alone, but symphonies of self-preservation—hollow notes in the grand opera of power. Iran’s way is ancient and eternal. The shepherd stands with the flock, the captain goes down with the ship. In this radiant defiance, death itself bows, transformed from defeat into a crown of thorns worn proudly. For when leaders die first, the people rise immortal, their spirit unbroken, their flag forever kissed by the wind of true nobility. In Iran, heroism is not a choice, it is the very breath of the nation.

Israel destroyed a very large residential building full of people in Beirut a few minutes ago. War crime















