Tomás Usón

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Tomás Usón

Tomás Usón

@tomasuson

Geography and Anthropology at @HumboldtUni || STS, climate justice, disasters, temporalities || @tomasuson.bsky.social @[email protected]

Katılım Mayıs 2011
919 Takip Edilen353 Takipçiler
Tomás Usón
Tomás Usón@tomasuson·
@sotojuanjo Porque efectivamente no suena natural. Así imitan los argentinos a los chilenos.
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Juan Soto
Juan Soto@sotojuanjo·
Le pido a "LATAM GPT" que me de ejemplos de lo que sabe, y me pasa una frase de ejemplo: "Vamos a la fiesta, cachai, po." Le pido a Chat GPT que me diga si esa frase está bien dicha y me responde "no suena muy natural en chileno tal como está" 🫠🫠
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Matias Mizrahi
Matias Mizrahi@mizrahi_matias·
@_PabloFdez_ Andate a vivir al lugar de donde vienen esas personas entonces y deja de tratar de cambiarle la vida a los españoles por tus intereses personales, pelotudo.
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Pablo Fernández
Pablo Fernández@_PabloFdez_·
Prefiero mil veces a una persona migrante que a una persona fascista.
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Dr. Ezzideen
Dr. Ezzideen@ezzingaza·
They came at dusk: a woman and two children. Not walking, exactly. Drifting, as if carried not by their own will but by a force more ancient and merciless than gravity. The kind of force that drives insects toward flame or the lost toward confession. One of the children pulled a basket behind, its wheels scraping over the stones like bones. Neither spoke. Their silence was not shy, but inherited. The kind passed from womb to womb in times of war. The woman looked at me, not as one human to another, but as someone standing trial on Judgment Day, stripped of all defense. “Is this a clinic?” “Yes.” “Do you have medicine?” “Yes.” “Is it free?” “Yes.” She entered, as if even the floor needed permission to bear her weight. She sat before me. Her presence was not loud, but unbearable. She did not look tired, but ancient, like someone who had traveled not just for days but through time itself, through the centuries of betrayal that humanity has inflicted upon itself. I said nothing. She said nothing. The silence held. Then she whispered, “My feet and back hurt.” What a simple phrase. And yet it carried the weight of exile. My feet and back hurt. Of course they did. She had been carrying two children, a basket, and the unspoken grief of the earth. “Is this new?” I asked. “No, habibi. It’s from walking. We’ve been walking a long time.” Walking. Such a gentle word for such a violent act. She had walked over corpses and rubble, over forgotten treaties and abandoned neighborhoods. She had walked across the graves of promises. And I, me, a doctor. What could I do? Open a drawer? Offer a pill? I could not suture history. I could not anesthetize the world’s cruelty. So I gave her painkillers. Like a priest sprinkling water on a burning house. And vitamins, why not? A placebo for the soul, perhaps more for mine than hers. She stood, nodded, and left. I should have returned to my notes, to the work. But I sat there, staring at my hands. Those impotent, trembling hands. I wondered if I had just witnessed something sacred or something obscene. Then she returned. In her hands was a bundle of arugula. Earth still clung to the roots. “This is for you,” she said. I refused. My pride would not allow it. But pride dies in the presence of grace. She insisted. “It’s from my heart,” she said. “We’re farmers. From Beit Lahia. We picked it before we left. I still have some.” And in that moment, I saw her. Not the woman, but the truth. So I took it. Not for the leaves, but to protect what little dignity remained in the world. She left again. But she had left something behind. A scream without sound. A sermon without words. And in that clinic, surrounded by antiseptics and broken instruments, I, the doctor, broke. Not from pity. But from the unbearable truth that someone who had nothing still found a way to give everything. #GazaGenocide
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The Costs of War Project
The Costs of War Project@CostsOfWar·
At least 38 million people have been displaced by the U.S. post-9/11 wars. That is more than those displaced by any war or disaster since the start of the 20th century, except for World War II. [1/3]
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Tomás Usón
Tomás Usón@tomasuson·
@mizrahi_matias Faltaron - al menos- 5 años de historia. Arafat rechazó el plan de paz porque Israel no respetó las bases iniciales del proceso de Oslo, el cual no se concretó porque la ultra derecha israelí, liderada por Netanyahu, asesinó al primer ministro Isaac Rabin. bbc.com/mundo/articles…
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Matias Mizrahi
Matias Mizrahi@mizrahi_matias·
El momento que cambio todo. Una oportunidad histórica para lograr la paz. Pero Arafat, sin consultarle a su pueblo, sin promover NUNCA la paz ni la solución de 2 Estados, decidió rechazar y lanzar la segunda intifada, iniciando el ciclo de violencia y guerra que estamos viviendo hasta el día de hoy. Después de esto rechazo los nuevos parámetros de Clinton que aumentaban soberanía Palestina y freno las negociaciones en Taba sabiendo que Barak y Clinton habían quemado sus cartuchos y perderían las elecciones. 3 grandes oportunidades en un plazo de 18 meses. Todas rechazadas sin argumentos.
Eretz Israel@EretzIsrael

Exactly 24 years ago at Camp David, PLO rejected peace plan with 92% West bank, 100% Gaza, land swap and capital in East Jerusalem. Bill Clinton banged on the table and told Arafat, "You are leading your people and region to a catastrophe" #losers #arabs

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Titus Blome
Titus Blome@derLampenputzer·
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Lee Douglas
Lee Douglas@thenandthere_·
Join us! The Centre for Visual Anthropology welcomes urbanist Francisco Mondaca Molina, a Visiting Research Fellow and member of @TRACTS_Network Art Practice/Research "Sand & Water. Traces of Collective Memory for Reparatory Action" Friday, October 13th from 12:00-14:00h
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Vicente Sandoval
Vicente Sandoval@vicentesandoval·
Two months after massive floods in Central Chile (June), another one. Don't get tricked by the apparently low casualties, the level of devastation and costs will be huge. The declared state of catastrophe is a bit larger than the size of #Austria reuters.com/world/americas…
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Tomás Usón
Tomás Usón@tomasuson·
Place, territory, network, route – how does the Anthropocene require us to rethink the figures that have shaped our spatial understanding of the world? Very honored to be presenting at this event alongside such amazing scholars!
Ignacio Farías (@[email protected])@IgnFarias

Looking forward to the Symposium "Spatial Figures in the Anthropocene" organized with my colleague Silke Steets and the Collaborative Research Center "Refiguration of Spaces" @SFB1265 - register to attend in person at ICI Berlin - Oct. 5-6, 2023 #1559655155442-ff9bb510-ecca2ccc-fc44" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">ici-berlin.org/events/spatial…

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