
melt
6.2K posts



وصول شهيدين وإصابات إلى مستشفى الشفاء جراء استهداف طيران الاحتلال مركبة مدنية غربي مدينة غزة.

#Birds What do you think about this? British-owned beef giant CPC has been granted a permit to poison and kill 20,000 native galahs and little corellas at one of their vast cattle stations in the NT, Australia. In its permit application, CPC admits its practices created the problem: “grain production, on-site storage, and cattle feeding have provided an artificial food source.” Ornithologist Dr Lilleyman was "shocked" to learn of the NT government's decision to grant the permit. She said that Birdlife Australia is concerned about the potential for secondary poisoning of non-target species occurring close to "an internationally significant wetland". CPC has ten cattle stations on about 9 million acres. They supply cattle and beef to Asian markets, domestic feedlots and processors, and export live cattle. The company is owned by Guy and Julia Hands through the Hands Family Office. They live in Guernsey after leaving England to avoid UK tax. CPC has also applied for massive water licenses for irrigation projects to grow grain sorghum and other crops which will inevitably attract even more birds. So what happens then? Even wider-scale poisoning of native wildlife?



Israeli girls when they saw Bella and Gigi Hadid father in LA they started bothering him by singing songs calling for the killing of the Palestinian people

@JonesHowDareYou There are only 110,000 Jews in Australia. $600 million is extraordinary

هكذا غادر المستوطنون بالمواشي المسروقة وخلفهم جيب إسرائيلي يحميهم. قالت مجندة إسرائيلية لفلسطيني يطالب بحقه باستهزاء: اتصل بالسلطة تحميك وترجع لك الأغنام. أصيب خمسة فلسطينيين، من بينهم طفل يبلغ من العمر 16 سنة، خلال سرقة المواشي من الأهالي .

A budget detail many missed last night was how the Albanese Labor government is addressing what it calls social cohesion. It is cutting $9 million from the Australian Human Rights Commission, the independent body that protects and serves every community equally.















