Colin Sheridan

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Colin Sheridan

Colin Sheridan

@colinivan

writing

Katılım Kasım 2010
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Colin Sheridan
Colin Sheridan@colinivan·
Barak Obama was the 'Hope' guy. But as the people of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Somalia, Yemen & Palestine have discovered, its the Hope that kills. Literally. When he soon comes to Ireland, he should be reminded of his bloody legacy, not fêted as a beloved son
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COEXIST Inc
COEXIST Inc@coexistinc·
Farewell to Stephen Colbert! I will miss your laundering the reputations of war criminals, like when you danced with Kissinger. It's a shame Trump got you fired because he made you a liberal martyr instead of the parable of the Obama era’s humorless and empty corporate moralism.
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Colin Sheridan
Colin Sheridan@colinivan·
The Israeli state has, for decades, wrapped itself in the historical trauma of the Jewish people in ways that make criticism extraordinarily difficult. It has weaponised anguish, and turned its scopes on anybody who dares question their retribution irishexaminer.com/opinion/column…
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Shrill by Mouth
Shrill by Mouth@Iskesullas·
The way governments respond to protests depends as much or more on who is doing the protesting (people who would usually vote for them or people they consider as political enemies) than the tactics employed by the protesters imo
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Shrill by Mouth
Shrill by Mouth@Iskesullas·
Interesting piece from Colin Sheridan here. A lot more nuanced than some of the 'blockades are not a legitimate form of protest' takes. But I'd question the degree to which the blockades were really leaderless & decentralised rather than having a behind the scenes leadership 1/2
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Colin Sheridan
Colin Sheridan@colinivan·
Beautiful anecdote. Comparing the soul of Beirut and its people to Tel Aviv and its settlers is...absolutely fucking mental
Melissa Chen@MsMelChen

The first time I was flying to Beirut, the desk officer at London Heathrow asked before checking us in, “have you been to Israel?” We had rehearsed the answer to this question before. But Winston can't lie, so he said yes. I gave him the dirty look. There goes our vacation! "Well, you don't have the stamp on your passports so just make sure you tell the officer in Beirut that you haven't," she intoned. I was stressed out for the next 5 hours, and even more so when we had to face the border officer who, by the grace of God, did not ask us THE question (even though he took our passports to a secondary office for extra checks). Spending time in Beirut, you realize that it's the same Mediterranean light that bathes Tel Aviv; the sea is the same shade of shimmering blue because... well, it's the same sea. In both places, young people spill out of clubs at sunrise, the bass still thumping from rooftops that overlook the same ancient coastline. Both cities pulse with the same Levantine hunger for life: the clink of arak glasses, endless plates of hummus swirled with olive oil, the sudden eruption of dabke or house music that pulls strangers into a circle. Parties start on the rooftops of Gemmayze in Beirut and tumble down into Mar Mikhael’s narrow alleys; in Tel Aviv they begin on the sand at Gordon Beach and migrate to the warehouses of the Florentin district. These are both stylish people who love life, and who love to party. The energy is truly infectious. The accents may differ but something about this weird combination along with a deep sense of rootedness in community and the extended family really underscore how similar they were. And yet, there's been a wall between these two peoples. There are no flights stitching the 45 min hop across the water. No commercial trucks rumbling between the ports. Lebanese law forbids its citizens - inside the country or in the diaspora - from so much as speaking to an Israeli, a rule so absolute that some Lebanese friends of mine who live in Europe still glance over their shoulders before typing a reply to any Israeli even outside the country, whether for business or pleasure. I spent evenings in Beirut listening to Lebanese friends speak of Israelis not as the enemy but as people caught in the same endless loop of fear and longing. Decades of Hezbollah’s shadow have hollowed out parts of Lebanon, turning the south into a garrison and the economy into a ruin. Yet in the cafés of Achrafieh and the mountain villages above the city you hear it more and more: a quiet, exhausted recognition that the real hostage-takers are not across the border but inside it. I keep imagining the day the question at Beirut airport changes. I keep picturing the first flight from Rafic Harari to Ben Gurion. One day the music will be louder than the fear. One day the Lebanese and the Israelis will throw the party the rest of the world has been waiting for. I hope this is the first step:

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Sylvain Perdigon
Sylvain Perdigon@sylvain_anthro·
Today I went to see the place that Israel bombed in Ain al Mreisse in Beirut on Wednesday. It's in a street I love and take often. I'm not a spring chicken yet I felt something deep and new looking at the details i.e. that I was in the physical presence of pure evil... 1/n
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Colin Sheridan
Colin Sheridan@colinivan·
Todays editorial in @irishexaminer, "when you invade a sovereign country, when civilian areas are deliberately targeted for removal, when communities are erased to make way for military control, there are words for that. Those words are ethnic cleansing" irishexaminer.com/opinion/ourvie…
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Colin Sheridan
Colin Sheridan@colinivan·
Crazy how drawn we are to bullshit, & resistant we are to clarity. Karim offers plenty of the latter. Watch what the Irish government does. They'll pull our troops out of @UNIFIL_ early, & abandon a people & a legacy. All for thirty pieces of silver & continued trade w Israel
Rania Khalek@RaniaKhalek

We shouldn’t treat Israel stealing South Lebanon as inevitable. They failed before many times and Hezbollah has been preparing to make sure they fail again. Watch @KarimMakdisi explain

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