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@cybersebb

25 | th/th | writer | abolition | unfinished maoist | tweets are my own & do not represent any org or group

Katılım Şubat 2015
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Black Beth Dutton
Black Beth Dutton@Oh_Katie_Babie·
@druski More context for those who say Druski is out of line
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Thomas van Linge
Thomas van Linge@ThomasVLinge·
The details are horrifying but the facts are clear: this was the single largest mass slaughter of people the world has witnessed since the Rwandan genocide. But more shameful than that, it was probably the most anticipated one in modern history. The signs were there for months.
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ᴅᴏᴏᴍᴇɴɪᴄ
ᴅᴏᴏᴍᴇɴɪᴄ@dinosaur_info·
Girl I’m bored let’s exit a subway station and come to an abrupt stop at the top of the stairs
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Middle East Observer
Middle East Observer@ME_Observer_·
⚡️🚨BREAKING NEWS: A new international group called "Earthquake Faction" burns an Israeli weapons factory in the Czech Republic : The Earthquake Faction is launched. On 20th March 2026, the Earthquake Faction struck the epicenter of the Israeli weapons industry in Europe. In Pardubice, Czech Republic, Elbit Systems' "Centre of Excellence" was newly built in collaboration with LPP, to service the global expansion of Israel's biggest weapons producer. Whilst the development, production and training center was empty, The Earthquake Faction intervened to destroy its equipment and set the factory ablaze. No one was harmed. The site is used to develop weaponry used by the Zionist entity to massacre people daily in Palestine, Lebanon, Iran, and across West Asia. The Earthquake Faction is an internationalist underground network that targets key sites critical to the Zionist entity. We aim to destroy all limbs of empire from within, by any means effective.
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sebas
sebas@cybersebb·
@nickbitt29 @nazzobetweeting @AshleyKSmalls Not constantly capitulate to Zionist demands at the expense of Palestinians Especially allowing land sales & Zionist synagogues to continue facilitating genocide while repressing protesters Mostly he could just shut the fuck up sometimes which isn’t hard to do
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nazzo
nazzo@nazzobetweeting·
no, YOU made palestinian activism a very core part of his campaign. HE made AFFORDABILITY IN NYC THE CORE PART OF HIS CAMPAIGN. HE is not responsible for the things YOU have projected onto him or his campaign
rain 🧚🏻‍♀️@orenjeade

zohran mamdani made the palestinian activism a very core part of his campaign so he's getting rightfully bashed. you can't capitalize on a genocide of a people, get yourself elected mayor of a state and then do a u-turn and say their oppressors have the right to exist.

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Fawnie
Fawnie@Esmeral69052526·
@cybersebb @nazzobetweeting @AshleyKSmalls OK and? He is an ally to the Palestinians. But he’s also the mayor of New York. There’s nothing wrong with an American politician, focusing on American issues and American problems to solve. You guys are delusional.
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Mujamma Haraket
Mujamma Haraket@MujammaHaraket·
I am excited to share my freely available translation of Yahya al-Sinwar's 1991 book, "Ashraf al-Balouji," a literary biography of the titular young resistance fighter, Ashraf Hassan al-Baʿlūjī. This book, one of al-Sinwar's first published writings, has previously neither been translated into English nor publicly circulated. I have appended a short translator's note about the conditions of the book's writing and the author's intentions. The book was authored during al-Sinwar's period of solitary confinement and was the byproduct of myriad interviews and conversations he had with al-Baʿlūjī's comrades. This biographical effort was precipitated by al-Sinwar's belief that literary-historical commemoration is itself an act of resistance that must accompany any struggle. For al-Sinwar maintained that history is rendered actual through its recording. Al-Baʿlūjī was born in the Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City on 17 February 1972. He was part of a small cadre during the First Intifada and carried out one of the early successful resistance operations once the uprising began. He was wounded and pursued for several months until the occupation forces arrested him on 25 February 1991. He was sentenced to three life terms (and seven additional years) in prison, and his home was demolished. Al-Baʿlūjī became a leader within the prison bloc while in the occupation’s carceral system. He was released in the “Wafa al-Ahrar” prisoner exchange in 2011, alongside al-Sinwar and other charismatic and prominent leaders, such as Rawhi Mushtaha, Tawfiq Abu Naim, Husam Badran, Jihad Yaghmur, and Zi’ad ‘Awad. As I note in my translator's introduction, this text is exemplary of al-Sinwar’s literary prowess. This book dovetails elements of poetry and prose, fitting given al-Sinwar’s training in Arabic studies and literature at the Islamic University of Gaza. I have, unfortunately, not been able to retain all of the polysemous metaphors and myriad literary devices that permeate the pages of this short book. This translation effort, inevitably, required making exegetical choices; where confronted with idioms that do not have cognates, I have opted to retain the Arabic. Any shortcomings in this translation are wholly my own. EXCERPT: "Have you ever visited Gaza as a guest and walked through one of its nights? Have you breathed in the redolent lemon fragrance carried in its air, or felt the sudden rush of jasmine flitting on its winds? Have the night breezes of the Mediterranean touched your face—breezes heavy with the salt of the sea and filled with the memories of our ancestors? For Gaza is unique in its history. Its lineage is linked to Hāshim ibn ʿAbd Manāf, from the line of the father of the Arabs, Ismāʿīl, peace be upon him, and to the prophet Ibrāhīm, upon whom be God’s prayers and peace. Our noble Messenger himself—of Hāshimite lineage—traces his ancestry to Hāshim ibn ʿAbd Manāf, the pride of Arab lineage. Before that, its name was already Gaza, a name meaning strength and fortification. The name 'Gaza' passed easily from one tongue to another, its appellation shaped by the simplicity with which people pronounce the letter ʿayn. It is said that as early as 3,500 years before the birth of al-Masīḥ, peace be upon him, the city was surrounded by a wall that protected it, stretching from Dayr Saʿīd and enclosing every inch of its ground. Every pool of water springs forth from the blood of the martyrs. On every wall are pieces of flesh, thatched into its very being—whether from the martyrs themselves or from the corpses of their enemies. [...] And here on Salah al-Din Street, only a few meters from where you stand, the spark of the 'War of Knives' burst forth, opening a new chapter in the history [...]" Below is the first part (i.e., the Introduction) of what will hopefully be a six-part translation, with each section corresponding to a chapter.
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Paul miller
Paul miller@jokerwaffenfren·
Adin the Jew tried to set up White to lose to a black. Publicly. But you guys know I would NEVER let that happen. Thank god for Duel for always believing in me. Monarch stood by me and I couldn't be more grateful. I did this for my people. ✝️ o/
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sebas
sebas@cybersebb·
Anti imperialists vs stop being fucking homophobic challenge impossible
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