john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs
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john hendrichs
@john_hendrichs
fabian.humanitarian.back to https://t.co/NcWUEAz9nv a laugh. Don't take it personal
City of London, London Katılım Ocak 2015
1.2K Takip Edilen507 Takipçiler
john hendrichs retweetledi

Klaus Schwab’s chief WEF advisor, Dr. Yuval Noah Harari: "To DOMINATE humanity on a massive scale, all you need is a coordinated cabal of elites feeding the world the SAME made-up stories — total fictions designed for CONTROL!"
These godless technocrats are rubbing our noses in their evil plan with zero shame, openly boasting they can hack millions of minds with data.
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john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi

In 1987, Costa Rica was 21% forest. Today it's 57%.
In the 1990s, Costa Rica passed a law that pays landowners directly for the ecosystem services their forest provides: carbon storage, watershed protection, biodiversity, soil stability. The payments are funded by a tax on fossil fuels.
Keep your trees standing and the government cuts you a check. Clear them and you lose the income.
Nearly a million hectares have been protected or restored under the program. Species that had retreated or disappeared from large parts of the country are recovering. The forest came back because the incentive structure changed, not because people were told to care more.
But it crashed the economy, right? Not at all.
Costa Rica became the top per capita agricultural exporter in Latin America. Tourism built around its forests and biodiversity became one of its largest industries. The economy didn't absorb the cost of keeping the forest. The forest became part of what grows their economy.
This is the version of the story most people never hear, the one where protecting nature and economic growth pointed in the same direction because we humans designed it that way.
It's not forests or the economy and it never had to be.


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john hendrichs retweetledi

True story did you know that FBI declared feeding children breakfast by the Black Panther party are danger to the country. And they did everything to stop it.. today breakfast is being share across schools in America. Thanks for the Black Panther party in the late 1960s.. they feed over 20,000 children every day for free and the FBI find out as a problem. Just like they provide provided free medical health care for thousands of Black people and other others..
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john hendrichs retweetledi

@ChrisMurphyCT No one elected these people.Yet they feel entitled to set policy for us minions.Time for people to understand that we hold the power. We have become so complacent to accept their BS.They depend on us buying and using their products they sell. It's "We the people". Act like it.

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john hendrichs retweetledi

At the G7, the CEOs of the big AI companies sat at the table like heads of state, alongside presidents and prime ministers.
This is the nightmare scene.
Governments need to have a response to the state-like power of these companies, whether it’s by taking ownership shares, breaking them up into smaller entities, or imposing a regulatory structure that controls their power over citizens.

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john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi

Rosa Ingram and her teen sons were sentenced to death in 1948 after they murdered a white neighbor who attempted to sexually assault their mother.
Thanks to civil rights activists the story gained national press. They were later released on parole for being "model prisoners."
—In 1948 Rosa Lee Ingram, a sharecropper and widowed Mother of four boys, was the center of one of the most-explosive capital punishment cases in history. In 1948 in a one-day trial, Ingram and two of her teenage boys were sentenced to die by electric chair, after an altercation with a White landowner in the state of Georgia.
On November 4, 1947, the landowner reportedly confronted Ingram and three of her sons over livestock entering his land near the small town of Ellaville. John Stratford was armed with a shotgun and pocket knife when he went to have his word with Ingram. Three of Ingram’s boys overheard their mother yelling then rushed over to her armed with farm instruments. Later, the 64-year-old man was found dead by way of blows to the head according to the investigation.
In several accounts and most notably in author Janus Adams‘ “Sister Days: 365 Inspired Moments in African-American Women’s History,” it was said that Stratford struck Ingram in the head with the butt of his rifle after threatening to shoot her mules that allegedly invaded his cornfield. Other historical accounts state that according to later testimony, though, Stratford threatened Ingram with sexual assault before striking her.
Either way, Ingram and her sons, Wallace, 16, and Sammy, 14, were all convicted by an all-White jury to death; Charles, 17, was at the scene but not charged due to lack of evidence.
Although there was an investigation at the scene of the murder, it has been suggested that many who responded to the incident were not officially mandated to do so. As a result, civil rights activists from NAACP branches around the nation leaped in to action to assist Ingram and her boys.
Court-appointed White lawyer S. Hawkins Dykes was aided by the the Civil Rights Congress (CRC) and their fund-raising efforts. Although this move caused some tension with the NAACP, Ingram and her sons were able to get an appeal and their sentences were reduced to life in prison.
National Committee to Free the Ingram Family, led by Mary Church Terrell, was instrumental in continuing to fight on behalf of the Ingram family and worked alongside the CRC and NAACP to ensure their freedom. Working across class and color lines, the case was a rallying cry for women activists and attracted the attention of the media in the North.
These organizations worked tirelessly to keep Ingram’s case alive in the minds of the public, even appealing to President Harry Truman to intervene at one point.
Finally in 1959, the Ingrams were granted parole and released.
The case placed a highlight on the racist and divisive Jim Crow laws of the South and also galvanized African-American women to participate in civil rights activism.
Ms. Ingram lived in Atlanta from the time of her release in prison until her passing in 1980.

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john hendrichs retweetledi

Wtf is wrong with Israel? Can they not stop blowing up kids for even one single day?
sarah@sahouraxo
Israel has dropped over 200 bombs on Lebanon in less than 24 hours — murdering more than 83 civilians. This is an American-backed, American-funded genocide.
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john hendrichs retweetledi

South East Water losing 100m litres of water a day to leaks.
There are no pristine water companies in England.
All dump sewage in rivers, neglect investment, prioritised dividends, fleece customers, fines announced, not collected.
Must nationalise all.
bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…
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john hendrichs retweetledi
john hendrichs retweetledi

"Andy Burnham says he wants a change in direction from this Labour government.
He can prove it: by backing a public inquiry into the British government's complicity in genocide."
Jeremy Corbyn.
Sign our petition: in.yourparty.uk/en/petitions/1…

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