Shippo

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Shippo

Shippo

@entoliberal

Under a gharqad tree Katılım Ekim 2020
98 Takip Edilen211 Takipçiler
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Shippo
Shippo@entoliberal·
Surprisingly, I’m finally out of Xitter jail
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Shippo
Shippo@entoliberal·
@IsraeliLibPriv Could be a political problem for him. It's an obvious tell that he doesn't believe the garbage he spews about Israel.
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Evan
Evan@MyOwnMartyr·
@GraduatedBen “Don’t state at me with a blank stare” The Hindu Stare is undefeated.
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Dr. Ben Braddock
Dr. Ben Braddock@GraduatedBen·
People are finally paying attention to the light question
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Jimbob001
Jimbob001@Jimbob00172·
This is the average background of a Palestinian resistance fighter btw. Anyone who claims Israel would be good if it “just killed militants” is a genocidal and evil person;they’re all victims of genocide and oppression,the genocide victims don’t stop being such when they resist.
Iman@Iman4ii

A Palestinian child's message to Israel back in 2010

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Shippo
Shippo@entoliberal·
@AgiBnuuy Arabs calling Jews retarded and inbred is too funny. Now kindly answer the question about your father.
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Shippo
Shippo@entoliberal·
@CDT754 That also makes it older than every Arab country other than Saudi Arabia and Oman
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samldn
samldn@ms_samldn·
@lucymarionbrown Mine tells me Nigel's dodgy backers did it to take the heat off him.
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Lucy Brown
Lucy Brown@lucymarionbrown·
My gut tells me this Ann Widdecombe thing is really, really bad
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Apex Imperialist
Apex Imperialist@ApexImperialist·
I've always wondered what the Palestinian POV on Israel is? Obviously I'm well aware of what the Israeli side thinks, but I've never had a conversation with a Palestinian with that topic in mind. I'd like to have that debate, whether publicly or privately.
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Shippo
Shippo@entoliberal·
@AgiBnuuy Does you dad know what you do on here, sharmouta?
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Zack Snyder's Xenogears
Zack Snyder's Xenogears@SoftMachineMan·
@entoliberal @Jimbob00172 How many fighters have had their homes bulldozed? Their parents legs shot off by IDF snipers? Settlers beating their siblings half to death and laughing about it, their businesses vandalized and looted? You can't treat people like animals and not expect them to resist
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Tropez
Tropez@_Eur0pa_·
Why would you wear a deep v swimsuit when you have tits that go down to your stomach??? #fatspo #edrtwt #edtwt
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Shippo
Shippo@entoliberal·
@sporks42 The dictionary definition of "Third World biomass" is just a picture of Sneako
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1tachi🇵🇸
1tachi🇵🇸@OnDeenGaara·
@sirtagoy @SneakoUpdat3s If Christians can post about their religion, why can’t anyone else? You fkin re✝️ard. Brown clown religion? You literally worship a brown jew as god who was from Palestine Lol
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SNEAKO DAILY UPDATES
SNEAKO DAILY UPDATES@SneakoUpdat3s·
SNEAKO reaches the top of a mountain near the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina and shouts “Allahu Akbar!” giving thanks to Allah! ☪️ ⛰️
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Mr PitBull Stories
Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07·
In 1872, an eighteen-year-old girl arrived in a remote gold mining camp in Idaho. Legally, she was not even considered a human being. She did not have money, she did not speak a word of English. She had been sold by her starving family in China during a famine, smuggled across the ocean, and bought by a wealthy Chinese saloon owner to work as a slave. Her birth name was Lalu Nathoy, but the miners quickly gave her a simpler name: Polly. The odds against Polly were overwhelming. Under American law at the time, she was invisible. The local government considered her presence illegal, and the men in the camp viewed her as property. But Polly possessed a quiet determination that no one saw coming. While she spent long, exhausting hours scrubbing heavy canvas pants on a washboard, she listened. She memorized every word spoken around her. She learned English in complete silence, without anyone realizing it until it was too late to stop her. Polly looked at the rugged miners around her and noticed something crucial. They had gold in their pockets, but absolutely nothing else. They had no one to feed them properly, no one to nurse them when they fell ill, and no one to make the brutal survival in the canyon bearable. She saw a massive void in the market and decided to fill it. She started cooking, sewing, and providing basic medical care. Every single coin she earned from these side jobs went straight into the dirt floor underneath her bed. While the men squandered their fortunes on gambling and alcohol, Polly was buying something much more permanent: her independence. Her life took a dramatic turn when a local saloon keeper named Charlie Bemis was shot in the face during a gambling dispute. The camp doctor took one look at the horrific wound and declared him a dead man. Polly refused to accept that. She boiled water, sterilized a common crochet hook, and spent hours carefully extracting the bullet from Charlie’s skull. Against all medical logic, Charlie lived. Eventually, Polly and Charlie left the mining camp together and moved to Hells Canyon, the deepest river gorge in North America. The Snake River cut through granite walls so steep that sunlight only hit the valley floor for a few hours a day. On a piece of land that seemed impossible to cultivate, Polly planted a fruit orchard. She grew cherry and apple trees against the harsh rock cliffs. When miners down the river got sick with fever or suffered terrible injuries, Polly took them in, becoming the ultimate healer of the canyon. But her greatest battle was yet to come. In 1892, the U.S. government passed the Geary Act, a harsh law requiring all Chinese residents to carry certificates of residence or face immediate deportation. Polly had no papers. A federal official traveled down into the canyon specifically to deport her. But when he arrived, he saw the thriving orchard, the vegetable gardens, and the sick men Polly was actively nursing back to health. Realizing she was the backbone of the entire canyon community, the officer sat at her table, filled out the residence paperwork, and signed it as her witness instead of arresting her. Polly Bemis lived in her canyon until her death in 1933 at the age of eighty. Today, her cabin is protected as a National Historic Site, and the cherry trees she planted still bear fruit. Polly Bemis proved that when your spirit is strong enough, human law becomes nothing more than a suggestion. She began her life in America with absolutely nothing, yet she chose to fill the harsh canyon with sweet fruit, warm meals, and a safe place for people who had no one else to care for them. Enslaved, isolated, and stripped of every legal right, Polly faced a harsh wilderness and an even harsher society with absolutely no fear. She chose to fight back not with malice, but by building a life of profound purpose and protecting those around her.
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M
M@Monophilia1·
@thePalenimbus @mattyglesias Raz Segal & Omer Bartov application of 1948 Genocide Convention: -Extent & nature of destruction -Statements by Israeli officials indicating intent -Destruction of conditions necessary for group survival -Pattern and context P.S. As an IDF Corporal I’m sure you already knew this
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Matthew Yglesias
Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesias·
One clash of perspectives prevalent on the internet is that I think there's a widespread view that strident anti-Israel stances are a solid comprehensive proxy for sound values, whereas from my particular corner it is often (not always!) a proxy for hating Jews.
Matthew Yglesias tweet mediaMatthew Yglesias tweet mediaMatthew Yglesias tweet media
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