Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧

170 posts

Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧

Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧

@nadimdelb

Katılım Mart 2026
23 Takip Edilen6 Takipçiler
Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧 retweetledi
Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
Israel and Lebanon are nearing a deal in Washington. Phased IDF withdrawal from southern Lebanon in exchange for Hezbollah disarmament or significant moves toward it. A CIA-prepared plan for dismantling the group is also on the table. -KAN News.
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Max 📟
Max 📟@MaxNordau·
Lebanese people get mistaken for Israeli Jews because they’re both from the Levant.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
How is it that in 2026, a Lebanese citizen can be charged with treason for sending a WhatsApp message to an Israeli! Just talking to a human being from a neighboring country, and the Lebanese state treats that as a crime. And you expect peace between the two countries without having them even talk? Whoever supports this dumb law either prefers advancing Iranian interests over those of Lebanon, or is just an idiot
Fouad Makhzoumi@fmakhzoumi

I would first like to reaffirm my full support for President General Joseph Aoun in the path he is leading to protect Lebanon, restore the full role of the state, and guide the country toward a just and lasting peace that preserves its sovereignty and serves the interests of its people. Any serious approach to saving Lebanon requires courage in decision-making and wisdom in managing sensitive national issues, foremost among them stability, security, and sovereignty. From this perspective, we support the option of direct negotiations with Israel in a manner that safeguards Lebanon’s supreme national interest, ensures stability in the South, and reaffirms the rights and full sovereignty of the Lebanese state and opens the way toward a real and lasting peace. We also reaffirm our full support for the government and its decisions in every sovereign step that restores the confidence of the Lebanese people and the international community in the Lebanese state and its institutions. In this context, we call on the government to move forward in dismantling the parallel and illegal economy, shutting down institutions such as “Al-Qard Al-Hassan,” preventing smuggling and illegal trade through all border crossings, ports, and the airport, and restructuring the banking sector and financial system to prevent the future financing and arming of militias by drying up their illicit financial resources. We also believe it is necessary to suspend the implementation of the 1955 boycott law, as its continued use as a tool of intimidation and fear obstructs the confidence-building measures required to achieve a genuine and lasting peace and prevents Lebanon from advancing toward realistic solutions that serve its highest national interests. I also stress the urgent need to accelerate the implementation of the decision to make Beirut a safe and weapons-free city under the sole authority of the state. The delay in beginning implementation is no longer justified and is draining the Lebanese people’s confidence in the state’s ability to enforce its decisions. Making Beirut free of weapons must be a sovereign Lebanese decision fully implemented by the Lebanese state, because the capital cannot recover its natural role and its political, economic, and cultural symbolism except under the sole authority of the state. The success of this step in Beirut would gradually pave the way for extending this process to the South, then to the North and the Bekaa, thereby consolidating the authority of the Lebanese state over all its territory and strengthening comprehensive national stability. At the same time, we call on Israel to fully abide by any understandings or arrangements reached, and to carry out a gradual withdrawal from Lebanese territory in a manner that guarantees stability and respects Lebanon’s sovereignty and territorial unity, leading to a fully sovereign Lebanese state free from any illegal or foreign military presence. In parallel, we believe that the issue of general amnesty can no longer tolerate delay or political exploitation. The adoption of a fair and comprehensive general amnesty law has become a national and humanitarian necessity, Away from political point-scoring and political disputes. What is required today is a balanced approach that preserves the rights of the wronged, takes into account the humanitarian conditions of prisoners, and at the same time safeguards the dignity of the military institution while preserving security and stability. True justice cannot be selective; it must be comprehensive and balanced—protecting the nation, preserving human dignity, and safeguarding state institutions. Lebanon today needs a strong state, genuine transparency, and responsible decisions that lead to peace and restore hope to the Lebanese people. This is what we are working for.

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H꩜pe †or Afric꩜
H꩜pe †or Afric꩜@Alkebu_lan_·
@alexeixbt Genesis | 6:6-7 Nope, the LORD regretted that he had made man on earth, and He was grieved in His heart. Sorry for disappointing you my brother. 🤭 Yup! Humans are worse actually.
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Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧
Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧@nadimdelb·
@alexeixbt Genesis 1:27 "So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them."
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Mario Dayba
Mario Dayba@mariodayba·
There is a story being told about us. A story designed to poison us. It goes like this: those who left abandoned the homeland, while those who stayed are the real patriots. It is a cruel story, and it is entirely false. Yes, those who stayed are saints. Real heroes. But leaving Lebanon was never a dream. It was, for most, a last act of survival. The decision made when the state and all its governments, actively persecuted us. Uprooting yourself from Lebanon, from its sacred soil, its church bells, its glorious mountain, is not liberation. It is a wound. Many carry it for a lifetime. Being uprooted kills you slowly. It takes pieces of you, year by year, until you vanish in a country that is not yours. And yet here we are: 16 million Lebanese Christians scattered across five continents, carrying Lebanon in our names, our kitchens, our prayers and our pens. Here we are with a stubborn refusal to stop loving a country that broke our hearts. Yes, the diaspora is blamed for not being organized. Forgive us… the diaspora cannot be organized all by itself. Every serious attempt to build a unifying structure, a platform, a movement, has been met with disruption and with threats. Our enemies are many, and they are strategic… they are patient. They know that a united Lebanese Christian people, inside and outside the homeland, represents something they cannot beat: a real political force, a real memory, a real future. So they whisper in our ears: the diaspora forgot you. The ones who stayed are naive. The ones who left were selfish. They plant these seeds carefully, and if we let them grow, we're finished. Let’s not accept this divide. We are the same people, we share the same pains and the same dreams. The work begins today. It begins with discipline and faith. It begins with hope.
Mario Dayba tweet media
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henri
henri@realhzakaria·
The way they raise their kids vs. the way we raise our kids. Maronitism vs. Shiism.
henri tweet media
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Benjamin
Benjamin@TheBelieverJC·
Jesus walked on water here.🌊 Sea of Galilee.🇮🇱 Israel.
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JESUSisComingSoon🕚
JESUSisComingSoon🕚@GoodShepherd316·
JESUS CHRIST said : “Before Abraham was; I AM.” John 8:58 “I AM the First and the Last” Rev. 1:17-18 JESUS is the Messiah; “I AM he” John 4:25-26 “I AM with you always” Matt. 28:20 “I AM the Bread of Life” John 6:35 “I AM the Light of the world” John 8:12 I AM the Son of Man; “I AM he” John 8:28 “I AM the Gate/Door” John 10:9 “I AM the Good Shepherd” John 10:11 “I AM the Resurrection and the Life” John 11:25 “I AM the Way” John 14:6 I AM the Truth” John 14:6 “I AM the Vine” John 15:5 I AM the same yesterday, today and forever Hebrews 13:8
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henri
henri@realhzakaria·
If you don’t start a family, you don’t have a cause worth fighting for.
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henri
henri@realhzakaria·
Remember this word. ܡܰܥܰܠܬܐ Ma’alto. The best way to explain it is similar to the Jewish Aliyah, but Ma’lto is Maronite. Through Ma’lto, we will bring millions of Maronites back to the homeland. It is being formed and organized. I will share more information soon. Stay tuned.
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 𝓂𝒶𝓇𝒾𝑜🇱🇧🇬🇧🇦🇪
U.S. Ambassador from Bkerki: "I came here because I didnt like what happened over the weekend… The people who did this maybe Lebanon isnt suitable for them, and they should find another country to live in!"
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Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧
Dim ☦️ 🇱🇧@nadimdelb·
@eagleseyeinc 1 Corinthians 13:4–7 “Love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude… Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.”
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𝕾𝖎𝖗 𝕮𝖍𝖗𝖎𝖘
dark sides of marriage you need to know before you commit 1. intimacy fades, you’ll get tired of sex 2. you’ll become just mere roommates who pay bills together and discuss responsibilities 3. resentment can build quietly and before you notice, it becomes normal or hatred 4. financial stress destroys romance faster than infidelity ever could 5. you can lose yourself or your identity so much that you forget who you were before the commitment 6. you can be feeling lonelier sleeping with him/her next to you than you felt sleeping alone 7. routine makes everything feel repetitive, boring and emotionally draining 8. many people stay cos of the kids while dying silently inside they won’t teach you this in school, only experience will and i learnt them the hard way over the years so bookmark and share with others buena suerte 👍
Yves ౨ৎ@yvessirae

Unpopular opinion about marriage that would get you in this position???

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Political Pen
Political Pen@politicalpen_·
Do the Lebanese Want Peace With israel?
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Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
Lebanese activist Majd Harb on normalizing with Israel: Normalization should have happened decades ago. It would fulfill his religious wish to visit Jerusalem and open Lebanon to a $500 billion market. "Why not have a beer in Tel Aviv one day?"
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