Kingso

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Kingso

Kingso

@iwukings

Chemist/Material scientist I Fan of history (megalith especially) and literature I Grandma's boy

Close to polar bears Katılım Şubat 2022
168 Takip Edilen16 Takipçiler
Everardo Padilla
Everardo Padilla@EverardoP_M_·
@isaacrrr7 Sabemos la codicia sionista por los recursos de África. También su presencia como en tantos países para conspirar crisis, división, caos y muerte. La manipulación de criminales que etiquetan como islamistas para demonizar a los musulmanes. Cada vez engañan menos, farsantes.
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Isaac
Isaac@isaacrrr7·
🚨 Cientos de niños están quedando huérfanos después de que islamistas masacraran a sus padres en Sudán. Esto está ocurriendo en estos tiempos. En estos meses. No hace 10 años. ¿Dónde está la ONU? ¿Dónde está la CIJ? ¿Dónde está Greta? ¿Dónde está UNICEF? ¿Dónde está Amnistía Internacional? ¿Dónde está Gutteres? ¿Dónde está Karim Khan? ¿Dónde está Francesca Albanese? ¿Dónde está MSF? ¿Dónde están los medios de comunicación? ¿Dónde está la UE? ¿Dónde está Starmer? ¿Dónde está Macron? ¿Dónde está Sánchez? ¿Dónde está Bernie Sanders? ¿Dónde está AOC? Dónde es...
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Arewa Source
Arewa Source@Arewa_Source·
"For those spreading misinformation that I have been arrested because I said, I have 1 million Naira for anybody who will cut off the head of that Pastor for Insulting the prophet, I'm still here" I'm here to tell you that I've increased the money from 1 million to 2 Million"
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Kingso@iwukings·
@kwasi_attah_ Most of them don't even know or care that the war has been going on for more than fifty years (old Sudan) and that it's been largely fuelled by Arabism and politcal Islam.
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Addo Showboy 😎 🇬🇭
Addo Showboy 😎 🇬🇭@kwasi_attah_·
Pan Africanist but you hardly mention Sudan's war like the Iran war. Islamist jihadists terrorize innocent Africans but your concern is justifying Russia's war on Ukraine. Most Africans have very poor living standards but you rather romanticize China invading Taiwan. Clowns 😂
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IGBO History & Facts
IGBO History & Facts@IgboHistoFacts·
This ‘charm and rope’ were dug out from the ground in Ezeagu Forest during Operation Udoka by the Nigerian Army… but why are they still this clean?
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Zariyi Yusuf Madaki
Zariyi Yusuf Madaki@ZariyiYusufu·
The Islamic cleric who placed a million naira bounty on the head of the pastor accused of blasphemy has restated his resolve: “…whoever fulfills that requirement (beh3ading the pastor), I swear to Allah I’ll give him that money (one million naira), no retreat… we have nothing to lose if after beh3ading this pastor Arewa plunges into chaos…” Is it not amazing how sheer hate and incitement to violence is spewed with so much zeal and utmost disregard to constituted authority! Well, let’s pretend the government/security agencies of this “secular state” don’t know about this.
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Anambra 1st son
Anambra 1st son@UchePOkoye·
If it was before now, I would be boiling in anger.. But the more I study our people and our thought process the more calmer i am becoming. I have come to the conclusion that onye na alo onye kalili ya anya na eme ya nkili. Mmadu anaghi ayo chi ya ka onyere ya aka na onye oga egbuli! This post wouldn’t get attention, not because they are not seeing it. But if an Igbo man makes such post, it would be taken more seriously. I am not begging anyone to stop, I’m just putting this out there. Maka magbe Oge esu. We learn everyday, and when we learn We dey over do!
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Kingso
Kingso@iwukings·
@slimvnsn Quite a moving story, straight from the heart. Love can be deeper than what we think it is.
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smv
smv@slimvnsn·
My father never came to a single thing I invited him to. Not my primary school graduation. Not my secondary school prize giving where I collected 3 awards and kept looking at the gate. Not my university matriculation. Not the ceremony when I got called to bar in 2012. I'd send him the date weeks in advance and he'd say I'll try and that was always the full sentence. I'll try. No follow up. No explanation after. My mother would sit in his place and clap loud enough for 2 people. I stopped inviting him after the bar call. Not from anger. Some people love you completely and still cannot show up and after a while you stop making them feel guilty about it. He was not a bad man. I want to be clear about that. He was a mechanic in Mushin for 35 years. Worked 6 days a week. Sent every one of us to school. Never raised his hand. Never left. The lights stayed on and the rent was paid and there was always food and he did all of it quietly without asking to be celebrated. He just could not sit in a plastic chair and watch something. I accepted that and moved on. Last year I bought my first property. A flat in Ojodu. Took 9 years of saving and 2 years of paperwork and a lawyer who nearly finished me. When the keys finally came I sat in the empty flat on the floor for an hour just breathing. I called my mother first. She screamed. My sister cried. I didn't call my father. 3 days later he called me. Said he heard about the flat from my mother. Said he wanted to come and see it. I didn't know what to do with that so I just said okay. Gave him the address. Figured he'd say I'll try and we'd never speak of it again. He showed up on Saturday at 9am. Stood at the door in his good agbada. The one he only wears for serious things. Holding a small nylon bag. I let him in and he walked through every room without speaking. Not quickly. Slowly. Like he was counting something. He checked the pipes under the kitchen sink. Knocked on the walls. Opened and closed the windows twice each. Looked at the ceiling in every room the way only a man who has fixed things his whole life looks at ceilings. Then he came and stood in the sitting room and looked at me. Said the pipework is good. Said the windows seal properly. Said whoever built this knew what they were doing. I nodded. Long silence. Then he opened the nylon bag. Inside was a small framed photo. Me at maybe 7 years old sitting on the bonnet of an old car in his workshop. Grinning. Both legs swinging. He's standing beside me with his hand on my shoulder looking at something outside the frame. I remember that day. I had gone to the workshop after school and he let me sit there while he worked and gave me a Fanta and put a Michael Jackson cassette on the small radio. I didn't know anyone had taken a photo. He said he kept it on his workshop table for 22 years. Said he wanted me to have something for the new place. I held that frame and stood very still. He said he knew he missed things. Said he was not good at the sitting and watching. That crowds made something in him go wrong in a way he never knew how to explain. Then he said the flat was good and he was proud and he asked if there was anything in the kitchen because he hadn't eaten. I laughed. Made him eggs and bread while he sat at my kitchen table in his good agbada like he owned the place. We ate and he told me about a car he was working on. I told him about a case that was giving me trouble. Normal conversation. The kind we should have been having for years. He left at 1pm. At the door he gripped my shoulder the same way he did in that photo. Didn't say anything. Didn't need to. The photo is on my sitting room wall now. First thing I hung in the whole flat. Some fathers cannot sit in the plastic chair. But mine drove to Ojodu in his good agbada on a Saturday morning with a 22 year old photograph in a nylon bag. That was his standing ovation. I just didn't know to look for it in that shape.
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Kingso@iwukings·
@UnkleAyo Strange you didn`t know until now that horse meat is common in Sicily. You probably bought, cooked and ate it already. Thinking it was cow meat :)
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👑S.A.L.A.K.O🕊
👑S.A.L.A.K.O🕊@UnkleAyo·
I was supposed to have a slow day & one of my guys hit me up: "We're having a barbecue on one of the farms. How would you like to be introduced to horsemeat?" Me: send me the location. Not in my wildest dreams would i think people eat horse. I guess we find out today. 😅
👑S.A.L.A.K.O🕊@UnkleAyo

Everyone has that one city where they can never be stranded. Sicily is that Island for me. Families to share festivities with, urgent airport pickups, a place to lay for weeks, free food wine and tortas - more than 7 families. My second home fr. Amo la Sicilia. 🏝

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Homer Pavlos
Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos·
On March 30, 1822, when the massacre in Chios began, the Muslim Turks had clear orders. The Sultan had commanded that all Greek Christians be slaughtered, except for boys aged 3-12 and women from 12 to 40. These would be captured and destined for the slave markets. Young girls were raped publicly in the streets, and newlyweds in front of their husbands, who were then slaughtered. Others were raped in front of their parents, after which the men's genitals were cut off. Women over 40 were set on fire and left to burn alive. Pregnant women had their bellies ripped open and their fetuses pulled out, while small children were thrown forcefully against rocks. The frenzy of the Muslims was unprecedented. Many Turkish soldiers cut off the heads of Greek Christians and then licked their swords. With this act, they believed they would earn a place in paradise. Others were hanged from the island's trees for deterrence. Severed human limbs and corpses were scattered on the streets, while the sea had turned red from the blood. The smoke from the burning houses had covered all of Chios, while the flames made the night look like day.Several women from Chios preferred death over dishonor and slavery. They committed suicide by jumping off cliffs. Some were killed while defending their children, siblings, and husbands. Even among those who were captured, some died on hunger strike.Destitute women and children from the island were crammed into ships and transported to the markets of Smyrna and Constantinople, where they were sold as slaves at humiliating prices. By May 1, 1822, over 41.000 slave ownership documents, known as "teskerés", had been issued in Chios. According to the French-language newspaper of Smyrna, Spectateur Oriental, by May 10, duties had been paid at the Smyrna customs for 40,000 slaves. The priest Welsh from the English embassy in Constantinople recorded what he saw in those days at the city's slave market: "The Turks treated the women from Chios with utmost contempt. They examined them, groped them like butchers do lambs, and bought them for 100 grosia to 3 pounds per head. About 500 women from Chios were sold in the fish market." The tragic events of Chios shocked Europe and America. For many weeks, the European press reported daily information and descriptions about the fate of the inhabitants, the massacres, the plunder, and the sale of women and children in the slave markets. Korais writes in a letter to Varvakis: "Imagine that you see Christ on the Cross, drenched in His blood, and calling out to you these paternal words: My son Varvakis, many thousands of captives baptized in my name are in danger at this hour of renouncing me and embracing the abominable religion of Mohammed. Behold the time, baptized in my name, beloved son, to save your baptized brothers from the Turkish defilement." The horrific images of the crimes of the Muslims against the Greek Christians were never erased from the collective memory of Europeans. Great European artists were so shocked by the descriptions that they created important works inspired by Chios. The famous painting by Delacroix is exhibited to this day in a prominent position at the Louvre. Victor Hugo's poem titled "The Greek Child" is a moving record. But the most famous sculpture of 19th-century America also stands out, named: the "Greek Slave." The sculptor Hiram Powers began carving it about twenty years after the tragic events. The statue depicts a young woman, nude, bound with chains. In one hand, she holds a small cross on a chain. Powers himself describes the subject of his work as follows: "The Slave has been abducted by the Turks from one of the Greek Islands during the Greek Revolution, the history of which is known to all. Her father and mother, and perhaps all her relatives, have been exterminated by her enemies, and she alone was kept alive, as a treasure that could not be thrown away. Now she is among barbarian strangers, under the pressure of the full recollection of the catastrophic events that led her to this state. She stands exposed to the gaze of people she abhors, and awaits her fate with intense anxiety, which is mitigated by her trust in the goodness of God. Gather all these sufferings together, and add to them the strength and resignation of a Christian, and there is no room left for shame." (You can search for the sculpture to see it; I'm not uploading it because X might take down the post for sensitive content.) As a Greek, I will use my weapon, the knowledge of my history, to warn as many as I can about the violent and barbaric invasion of Islam and the war we are experiencing today. I will do whatever I can to warn you. - Homer Pavlos
Homer Pavlos tweet media
Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos

When Muslims killed Greek Bishop Gerasimos of Rethymno in 1821, they opened his chest, removed his heart, and sprinkled their banners with its blood in order to achieve victories against the infidels. The entire description of the incident directly evokes cannibalism from a primitive era. (Theochares Detorakis, "History of Crete") Apart from the official executions, there were also the mass slaughters of Christian populations in cases where the Islamic-Ottoman state wanted to demonstrate its power. The main pretext for the massacres was reprisals against revolutionary movements. Alongside the official figures who were publicly executed (bishops, notables, etc.), unruly hordes of Janissaries would rush into Christian homes, break down doors, kill anyone they found in front of them, and then plunder the house, seizing whatever they liked. When leaving, in many cases they also set the house on fire. Now, the hooks or "tsigkelia", as the Muslim Turks called them. On the walls of cities or on specially erected scaffolds, large hooks with sharp, sharpened points were fixed. The naked victim was thrown onto the hooks from high up on the walls or was hoisted up with special pulleys and dropped onto the hooks of the scaffolds. There he remained impaled for days, tormented by terrible pains until he finally expired. If, moreover, the hooks had not pierced a vital organ, the torture could last several days. Historical accounts mention the presence of such a scaffold with hooks in the central square of Heraklion (Candia), where many Cretans, mainly rebels, met their tragic end. One torture that the Muslim Turks carried out when they had no time for anything else was the breaking of limbs. They usually did this to prisoners they had captured in the countryside and did not want to transport to the city for something "more entertaining," either because they were in a hurry or because they did not want to take on the risks of a possible transfer. With an axe they smashed the main joints of the victim's limbs (shoulder, elbow, hip, knee) and several bones (humerus, femur, tibia). The victim was then unable to move at all, while terrible pains shook his body from the shattered joints. The executioners left him helpless and departed, so that he would die a few hours or at most two days later, or become prey to wild animals in the wilderness. An equally torture is that of beheading. The Ottoman lords even had a well-known proverb on their lips: "A head that does not bow falls." The execution of the sentence was carried out in public view by a specialized executioner called "makelaris" (a Greek-Byzantine word meaning "butcher" that derives from ancient Greek), with the well-known curved Ottoman sword, the "yataghan". The victim arrived at the place of slaughter ridiculed and publicly shamed. Before the execution he had, as a rule, been beaten and often mutilated. The punishment itself was painless and instantaneous, but the entire preceding process made it agonizing. The body and head remained exposed for days, just as in the other tortures we mentioned earlier. Often the victim's head was impaled on a pole and paraded through the city, especially if the victim happened to be an officially wanted person (e.g., Ali Pasha). Other times it was preserved and sent to the Sultan himself, as happened with the head of Ali Pasha. Still other times the head remained hung or impaled in a prominent position for days, until the natural decomposition of its features began. The torture of beheading is naturally connected with the fate of the Four Martyrs. The Synaxarion of the Saints confirms everything I have said so far. After harsh tortures and public humiliation through the streets of Rethymno, the Saints (Manuel, Angelos, George and Nicholas) ended up in the square of the Great Gate, which today bears their name in their honor, to be beheaded. This is recent history. Tortures ended almost 200 years before when we destroyed the Ottoman Empire. And if you think they changed, you should start reading their comments on my posts or the reposts. This is who they are. This is Islam - Homer Pavlos

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Kingso@iwukings·
@islemonjuice @echoofme_p It should be clear to you that you are dealing with people who are almost beyond redemption. I am against war, except as a last option. However I believe that any sane person should quickly fight to stop these pseudo-intellectuals from getting to power. To avoid a bleak future
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Oloma Juice 🍋
Oloma Juice 🍋@islemonjuice·
@echoofme_p So Nigerian leaders can't read 📝 But Kagame read the terms and conditions.
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Oloma Juice 🍋
Oloma Juice 🍋@islemonjuice·
CIA and Western world watched Nayib rebuild his country. Turned one of the most dangerous place on earth to a safest place in the world. Africans we need to tell ourselves the truth.
Nayib Bukele@nayibbukele

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Winston Marshall
Winston Marshall@MrWinMarshall·
Here in Hagia Sophia, on May 29th 1453, after 900 years of being a Christian cathedral, in the final hours of the Fall of Constantinople, a large number of Christian men, women, children, nuns, monks, priests, and others sought refuge from the Muslim invaders. The Ottomans surged inside and massacred them. On its holy altars they enacted “perversions with our women, virgins and children” including “the Grand Duke’s daughter who was quite beautiful” and forced to “lie on the great altar of Hagia Sophia with a crucifix under her head and then raped” Those who were not murdered were enslaved. Hagia Sophia resembled a “public brothel” before it was turned into a “stable for their horses”, with toppled altars used as troughs. The Hagia Sophia’s main Crucifix was then paraded “in mocking procession” with “spitting and blasphemies and curses”. “Behold the god of the Christians!” They jeered
Universal News@universalnewsx

🔴 Eid Takbir being recited in the AyaSofya Mosque in Istanbul

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Amit Schandillia
Amit Schandillia@Schandillia·
“The judge has gone over the board just because the lads were Asian.” A Pakistani man on his son’s conviction for grooming and raping a 13-year-old. His argument? “She wasn’t a virgin or new to sex.”
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Kingso@iwukings·
@69BigKanga @Chimeziiee @Dexy300 The crusades were primarily aimed at muslims, promoted by the Pope to recover and keep lands which were lost to Jihadists previously. One could argue there were other 'crusades' even if they had different names or motivations. Those were still aimed at Muslim conquerors.
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Chimezie
Chimezie@Chimeziiee·
Yes, both Christianity and Islam have their radicals. But a radical Christian is not going to slit my throat for refusing to convert. At worst, they display extreme ignorance and become a nuisance. A radical Islamist, on the other hand, will wipe out my household and burn down communities simply cos I do not believe in his god. So when push comes to shove, I already know which side I stand with.
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Kingso@iwukings·
@Chimeziiee @Dexy300 @69BigKanga Even if he referred to Christians in the UK or any other crusading nation, it would still be hypocritical and nonsense. The Crusaders responded to Jihadists who first attacked and occupied Christian lands. Wars are not good but no party should have a monopoly on violence.
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Chimezie
Chimezie@Chimeziiee·
@Dexy300 @69BigKanga How do you even draw such a comparison with a straight face? If he was talking about Christians in the UK, that'd be understandable. But Nigeria????? Nigeria??
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Kingso@iwukings·
@ruffydfire Mehdi is Asian, you dimwit. He is one of the majority of big media journalist I don't rate or care about, but that's by the way. You are just a pseudo-intellectual who thinks that adult gibberish should be considered wisdom.
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oseni rufai
oseni rufai@ruffydfire·
To a lot of people, Medhi can hold politicians accountable because he’s a white man, but a lot of Nigerians are not wired to see a black man like Rufai holding politicians accountable. Today, when Rufai said, “Don’t interrupt me” to a white man, they lost their minds because of colonialism. How dare Rufai say to a white man, “Don’t interrupt me”? So to them, he must be rude, especially when the white man is from a nation that Christianity has taught them to worship! The problem with Nigerians is in their heads. It will take years to change!
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Kingso@iwukings·
@Emperor_jago @just_lawson__ Please also tell your children and grand children that Indians, Chinese, and others need to be chased out. Your argument is music to the ear of useless leaders in Africa.
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𝐄𝐦𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐨𝐫 💎
@just_lawson__ EXACTLY!!!!!!!! I WILL KEEP SAYING THIS TILL I DIE, MY CHILDREN WILL KNOW, GRAND CHILDREN WILL KNOW Africa is not free, we need them out of our country so they can stop installing puppet who privatize our resources instead of using it to benefit our people
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Enogie ||
Enogie ||@just_lawson__·
Yes .. there are moderate Muslims in northern Nigeria.. that’s why majority of them went silent when Deborah was burnt because of blasphemy It’s all Cia invention
Enogie || tweet media
𝐄𝐦𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐨𝐫 💎@Emperor_jago

@just_lawson__ No it's not different They are good people in northern Nigeria They just want you to think all they do is kill The moderate Muslims are not our enemy Just because a small group of people who aren't even Normal Nigerians are terrorist doesn't mean all Muslims are

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Kingso@iwukings·
@Emperor_jago @just_lawson__ Only if you can reach the realisation that Nkrumah, just like Nyerere and Kaunda, are not gods whose words are cast in stone. That even though they were good, they still made mistakes. The Koreans, Japanese, and other Asians also were also influenced by the 'evil' white man.
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𝐄𝐦𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐨𝐫 💎
@just_lawson__ Only if the guy read kwame Nkrumah books on "NEOCOLONIALISM, THE FINAL STAGE OF IMPERIALISM" Will he know who is actually behind the reason Africa can't grow and why Jonathan was removed because he wasn't serving the interest of the west
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Kingso@iwukings·
@olajt @SamAmadi Islamophobia, racism, transphobia, some other phobias, cisms or whatever crap liberal lunatics come up with are words dishonest people use to evade responsibility and logic. To a lesser extent, this also applies to anti-semitism - though not much of it in the past 2- 3 years.
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Sam Amadi
Sam Amadi@SamAmadi·
There is no blasphemy under Nigerian constitution and there can be none in a democracy with a guaranteed right of free speech. That is why the Sharia criminal law is unconstitutional
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Kingso@iwukings·
@aselim71 @DeborahMeaden Why don't you tell the full story, instead of a small and secondary part of it? The war in the Sudans have been on for decades, primarily driven by fanatical Arabs and the Muslim brotherhood, a movement which includes Hamas and other Middle East actors.
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Ahmed Selim
Ahmed Selim@aselim71·
@DeborahMeaden And why is that?, US led war in the ME starting from Iraq war through instigated wars in Sudan by US proxy called the UAE...
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Deborah Meaden 🇺🇦
Deborah Meaden 🇺🇦@DeborahMeaden·
I prefer facts … from the Pew research centre… Muslim migrants most commonly live in the Middle East-North Africa region, which hosts 40% of them, and in the Asia-Pacific region (24%). Two-in-ten Muslim migrants live in Europe, and one-in-ten are in sub-Saharan Africa. Only 6% of all Muslim migrants now reside in North America, and even fewer live in Latin America and the Caribbea
Rajveer Shahi🇮🇳@RajveerShahi70

85% of the worlds refugees are Muslim. Not one of the 56 Muslim countries are taking in refugees. 11 of these countries are the richest in the world. If Islam is so great; why are Muslims countries not taking care of their own?

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🇨🇭🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿InLucysHead🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇨🇭©
This was actually said in court and taken from a transcript: Lawyer: "Doctor, before you performed the autopsy, did you check for a pulse?" Witness: "No." Lawyer: "Did you check for blood pressure?" Witness: "No." Lawyer: "Did you check for breathing?" Witness: "No." Lawyer: "So, then it is possible that the patient was alive when you began the autopsy?" Witness: "No." Lawyer: "How can you be so sure, Doctor?" Witness: "Because his brain was sitting on my desk in a jar." Lawyer: "But could the patient have still been alive nevertheless?" Witness: "Yes, it is possible that he could have been alive and practising law somewhere."
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