Ágnes Cserháti

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Ágnes Cserháti

Ágnes Cserháti

@cserhata

not really lost for words type : takes a while to get there though : morning’s latte : owl’s ruffling of feathers : latest PN Review or LRB : rufusing again

Aurora, Ontario Katılım Şubat 2016
198 Takip Edilen88 Takipçiler
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Humza Yousaf
Humza Yousaf@HumzaYousaf·
"Never Again" After the Holocaust we said "never again" Throughout history I'm not sure if we have ever told ourselves a bigger lie. What makes this worse, is not just the silence, but the complicity of so many. Gaza is the cemetery upon which our collective humanity has died
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Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
🚨 BREAKING: The official U.S. government website has quietly removed Sections 9 and 10 of Article I from the Constitution. Let me say that again: They didn’t amend the Constitution. They didn’t debate it in Congress. They just erased two of the most protective sections; the ones that deal with habeas corpus, limits on federal power, and Congress’s sole authority to set tariffs.
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Earth Hippy 🌎🕊️💚
Earth Hippy 🌎🕊️💚@hippyygoat·
If you need to understand the definition of moral clarity… Then you need to listen to this Irish Politician— Richard Barrett🇮🇪❤️‍🔥🇵🇸
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Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt
The Israeli Army is now targeting starving children in the head and testicles in Gaza, while terrorising others, together with violent lunatics, in the West Bank. These past 650 days, Israel has written one of the darkest pages of human history. And it is absolutely sickening that the EU leadership rewarded this country with more economic partnership instead of putting an end to the genocide.
Gaza Notifications@gazanotice

🚨 SHOCKING REPORT: Israeli soldiers in Gaza are reportedly turning the targeting of Palestinian children into a horrifying and systematic “human-hunting game,” according to British surgeon Dr. Nick Maynard. He testified: “These children are being targeted almost as if it’s a game… One day they’re all shot in the head, the next day in the neck, and another day in the testicles… There is a clear and deliberate pattern to the injuries.”

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Not Your Average Liberal
Not Your Average Liberal@NotAvgLiberal·
This man is speaking on behalf of every American with morals and empathy. Just listen, You won’t regret it.
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Louis Allday
Louis Allday@Louis_Allday·
Questions from Gaza's Children as compiled by staff from the Palestine Trauma Centre in Gaza:
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gato fumante
gato fumante@KweenInYellow·
Actor Mandy Patinkin makes an impassioned plea for Jewish people around the world to think about the consequences of what they're doing and allowing to be done in Gaza.
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Caitlin Johnstone
Caitlin Johnstone@caitoz·
The New York Times has just published an op-ed by an Israeli genocide scholar who agrees with all the other genocide scholars and human rights organizations who say Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. The debate is over. The Israel apologists lost.
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Trita Parsi
Trita Parsi@tparsi·
Watch till the end. Listen to the outrage, despair, and yes, fear, in @PatinkinMandy's voice. That is the sound of a person with a conscious. All our voices should sound like this.
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Sony Thăng
Sony Thăng@nxt888·
The Only Man Who Refused the Nobel Peace Prize They like to tell us the Nobel Peace Prize is the highest honor a human being can receive. They hand it to presidents who launch drone wars. They give it to men who build walls, fund apartheid, and sign off on sanctions that starve children. But only one man in history ever looked the committee in the eye and said: No. Not because he didn’t value peace. But because he refused to lie about it. His name was Lê Đức Thọ. A Vietnamese revolutionary. A negotiator. A man who spent his life resisting empire, not with rhetoric, but with results. In 1973, the Nobel Committee awarded the Peace Prize to Henry Kissinger and Lê Đức Thọ for negotiating the Paris Peace Accords, which were supposed to end the war in Vietnam. Kissinger accepted. Lê Đức Thọ did not. Because unlike Kissinger, he understood what peace actually meant. It was not a speech. Not a handshake. Not a paper signed under U.S. bombing raids. It was justice. Sovereignty. No more corpses. No more lies. No more B-52s dropping "freedom" from the sky. "There is no peace in Vietnam," Lê Đức Thọ said, refusing the prize. Because while the ink was still drying, the U.S. continued its bombings. Continued its lies. Continued to violate every promise it made. Just as it always had. He knew the truth: Awards mean nothing if the blood hasn’t stopped. And a peace prize means nothing if it comes from the same hands that dropped napalm. So he stood alone. He walked away from the applause. And in doing so, he did something no other laureate has done before or since. He kept his integrity. They don’t talk about Lê Đức Thọ in Oslo. They don’t quote him in Western textbooks. They don't include his name in glossy montages of "great peacemakers." Because what he did wasn’t just rare. It was unacceptable. He exposed the farce. He reminded the world that peace isn’t awarded. It’s earned. It’s fought for. And sometimes, it’s refused—if accepting it would mean dressing up injustice as resolution. While Kissinger collected his medal and went on to orchestrate more death in Chile, Cambodia, and East Timor, Lê Đức Thọ returned to Hanoi. To the war. To the rubble. To the people who never had the luxury of pretending peace had arrived. He was not a pacifist. Not a saint. He was a Vietnamese revolutionary who understood that real peace cannot be built on lies, and that decorated silence is more dangerous than honest resistance. The only man who ever refused the Nobel Peace Prize was Vietnamese. Let that sink in. Part of the generation that defeated the Japanese, the French, and the Americans. A man who did not need the West to validate his struggle, his dignity, or his history. While others begged for seats at the table of empire, He walked away from it. Because he knew something the world keeps forgetting: There is no peace without justice. No justice without memory. And no honor in accepting awards from the very systems that tried to erase you. Lê Đức Thọ’s refusal was not an insult to peace. It was a reminder of what peace demands. And history will remember him, not as a laureate, but as something far more rare. A revolutionary who told the truth. And meant it.
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Cian McCarthy
Cian McCarthy@arealmofwonder·
"Being by the sea is like a permanent baptism; the light and air hypnotises, and your soul is washed by vastness." ~ Iain Pears Girl in a Silver Sea (1909) 🎨 Joaquín Sorolla
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Humza Yousaf
Humza Yousaf@HumzaYousaf·
A priest, a professor and a nurse walk into a protest and get arrested. This is not a joke. This is Britain. In 2025. Why are the free-speech warriors who decry "cancel culture" now so conspicuously silent? Ah right, because it's okay to cancel those resisting a genocide.
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Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur oPt
"The powerful punishing those who speak for the powerless, it is not a sign of strength, but of guilt". Let's stand tall, together.
Festival Grounded@grounded_si

After a minute of reflection upon hearing the news that the US imposed sanctions against her, the response of @FranceskAlbs needed no translation, reassuring that there is no stepping back in working for justice and freedom for all. ❤️✊

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Ágnes Cserháti
Ágnes Cserháti@cserhata·
@thelonningsguy What a silly notion! Perhaps you should investigate the veracity of recently reported higher ratios of adult-to-child giggling in such serious places. (Pack a recorder, do, and be sure to measure in decibels. I quite enjoy manly giggles. It’s all about Paradox!)
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Alan Cleaver
Alan Cleaver@thelonningsguy·
IMPORTANT: I would like to refute the scurrilous suggestion that I only walk footpaths that have silly names. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
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Ágnes Cserháti
Ágnes Cserháti@cserhata·
@ardija01talk @Sherlock_Pages Love the S&P stamp! Didn’t know there was such a thing; maybe if you buy in person? Lucky you. I’ll be reading my (un-stamped) copy of this book from @Sherlock_Pages this summer, too. From Canada (armchair travel only). 🍁
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Ágnes Cserháti
Ágnes Cserháti@cserhata·
@visitnorthyork Yes, but not in one sitting, I shouldn’t think, and probably happy to skip the next meal or two (or day or two) if I did manage it all somehow. Possibly the prospect of a good hike in drizzling rain would entice me sufficiently to make the attempt. But tea, surely, not a latte?
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North Yorkshire
North Yorkshire@visitnorthyork·
Be honest. Would you eat this for breakfast? Yes or No
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Yorkshire and The Humber, England 🇬🇧 English
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Michael Lee Rattigan
Michael Lee Rattigan@ml_rattigan·
“I tremble at the inchoate infinity of life when I think of that which the poppy has to reveal, and has not yet had time to bring forth.” Study of Thomas Hardy, D.H.Lawrence.
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Ágnes Cserháti
Ágnes Cserháti@cserhata·
@nxt888 Substitute “delusion” for “fantasy” and you’re spot on.
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Sony Thăng
Sony Thăng@nxt888·
Cheryl, you don’t get to monopolize exhaustion. You say no one knows what it feels like to "be in it." As if Palestinians don’t live under siege. As if they don’t dig their children from rubble or bury families in mass graves. As if Gaza doesn’t wake up every day to drones circling above and sniper scopes aimed at schoolyards. You speak of terror as if it moves in only one direction. As if the people you cage, blockade, bomb, displace, and starve aren’t even real enough to feel fear. Let me ask you this. When a child in Rafah loses her leg to an airstrike, does her exhaustion count? When a father digs through the remains of a UN shelter flattened by your F-16s, is he allowed to say he is tired? You say the world tells you what to do. That you are "fighting on seven fronts." But it wasn’t Hamas that sanctioned 80 countries. It wasn’t Hezbollah that vetoed peace plans. It wasn’t Gaza that received billions each year to violate international law with zero consequence. You’re not a lone survivor. You are not David in this story. You’re the most coddled, armed, and diplomatically shielded regime on earth. And still, you play victim. You mock people for sipping lattes while missiles rain down on others. Yet you celebrate airstrikes like they’re sporting victories, tweet about leveling cities, and act shocked when the world finally says: Enough. You want to know why people chant "Free Palestine"? Because they’re tired too. Tired of watching genocide live-streamed, and then gaslit by those committing it. Tired of being told that asking for dignity is "antisemitism." Tired of seeing journalists murdered and labeled human shields. Tired of living in a world where the colonizer cries harder than the colonized. You say you don’t care? We believe you. Because people who drop bombs rarely do. But understand this. The world’s rage isn’t rooted in latte culture. It’s rooted in memory. And memory doesn’t fade just because you refuse to feel it. You’re not running on fumes, Cheryl. You’re running on fantasy. And history is running out of patience.
Mor Edge Insight@MorEdge_Insight

The world is fatigued from all the wars. That’s what I keep hearing and reading. But none of those telling us how tired they are of all of it actually have the slightest clue what it feels like to be in it. It doesn’t matter if it’s a random keyboard warrior living in their mother’s basement, or the president or prime minister of a country… not one person who isn’t living here and lives a day in our shoes has any idea how exhausted we are from it all. So forgive us if we don’t really stop to care how tired you all are. We’re the ones under attack from all directions. Yet we fight, because not fighting only means our destruction. It’s not your destruction. It’s ours. While hundreds of millions if not billions are sitting in the safety of their screen thousands of miles away, we wake up to missile attacks from every direction, to new UN resolutions condemning us for defending ourselves, to terror attacks on our streets, to millions marching for those who raped and slaughtered innocent people and swear to do it again and again and again. Ukraine was attacked and for 3 years the entire planet has told them what they’re allowed to do and not do while Russia - the aggressor - has carte blanche to do as they will. For two years (in reality the last 77 years), we’ve been told what we can and cannot do because of “international laws and humanitarian laws”, yet Islamic terrorists and the entire Arab league have carte blanche to do as they please without restrictions. We’re fighting a war on 7 fronts with one arm and one leg tied behind our backs and somehow we should be eternally grateful that countries give us their approval to save our own lives?🤷🏽‍♀️ Islamic Terrorists run over innocent people in Germany, America, France, Britain, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Austria, Spain and elsewhere, and somehow it’s our fault? Islamic terrorists throw Molotov cocktails at Holocaust survivors in broad daylight and are filmed doing it, or shoot innocent people outside museums, or burning synagogues or stabbing people or rioting and burning entire cities to the ground… and somehow it’s our fault? Not only are we fighting for our survival while we’re attacked by Iran and Hamas and Hezbollah and the Houthis and Iraqi militias and Qatari sponsored terrorists… but somehow we’re also having to defend ourselves from every single thing that goes wrong wherever it is in the world? We calmly stop a boat of imbecilic retards intentionally sailing to stir shit up and cause an international crisis, we feed them and calmly send them back to their own countries at our own expense and risk, and somehow we’re “kidnapping” them? I and my entire country are grateful for the support we’ve had from many. We’re grateful for the weapons sent to help us defend ourselves. But enough with telling us how fatigued YOU are. It surely can’t be that stressful and tiring where the most difficult decision you make in a day is deciding what flavor you want in your latte. It can’t be that exhausting to sit and watch television all day like sick voyeurs who take pleasure watching us fight for our survival. We don’t care how tired you are. We’re fucking running on fumes. Who gives a shit how hurt your feelings are that we don’t take the virtue signaling and stupidity seriously. Who cares what a Pygmy goblin and a fat clickbait pseudo journalist think? We certainly don’t. We don’t have that luxury to care. So with respect, if you’re tired and frustrated, it’s kind of a you problem. Get over yourselves. We’ve got our hands full, and we don’t care. You hate us? Good for you. Take a number and stand at the back of a very long line. We still don’t care. You can always feel free to test your bravery and fake outrage and come to Gaza. But you won’t. Because you’re just there to whine and moan and cry. We don’t care. Never have. Never will. And we won’t apologize for it.

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Ágnes Cserháti
Ágnes Cserháti@cserhata·
Thank you for putting things into perspective. What’s happening in Gaza, Ukraine, and the USA is not “open to interpretation.” Israel, Russia, and TACO embody lawlessness, hypocrisy, and propaganda as though it’s some kind of badge of honour they’ve earned. Hard currency indeed.
Sony Thăng@nxt888

You’re not listing humanitarian efforts. You’re listing a marketing campaign. You flood the world with stories of Israeli aid drops as if they erase the missiles dropped on Gaza. As if patching up earthquake victims in foreign countries cancels out turning hospitals into rubble at home. As if helping flood victims in Texas somehow morally offsets the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in the West Bank. But it doesn’t. You speak of "Israel" like she’s a selfless angel draped in bandages and mercy. The world sees something else. A militarized apartheid regime built on occupation, land theft, and racial hierarchy. You ask, "Do you think they know what they’re calling to destroy?" Yes. They know exactly. They’re calling to end a regime that steals land, demolishes homes, jails children without trial, and massacres entire families under the lie of "self-defense." They’re not calling for genocide. They’re calling for justice. And you know it. You weaponize the phrase "From the River to the Sea" as if it’s a code for mass murder. But you refuse to acknowledge what already exists between that river and that sea. Checkpoints. Snipers. Segregated roads. ID systems. Siege. Airstrikes. A military that shoots medics in the spine and journalists in the head. What you’re defending isn’t a country. It’s an illusion. An illusion where delivering bottled water to one disaster zone absolves you from creating another. Where treating a Syrian child at the border is supposed to make us forget the thousands maimed by Israeli shells. Where good PR is mistaken for good character. This is what empire always does. It drops aid with one hand and bombs with the other. It builds hospitals in foreign lands while erasing villages on stolen land. It teaches the language of compassion but forgets every word at the checkpoint. You ask what kind of countries we want? We want countries that don’t use humanitarianism to launder brutality. We want countries that help without occupying. That heal without branding. That protect without controlling. That show mercy without cameras rolling. So no, Rich, no one is buying the brochure. You don’t get to cover a graveyard with band-aids and call it virtue. And if the world is finally saying "No more," It’s not because they hate who you are. It’s because they’ve seen what you do.

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