Brendan Duffy

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Brendan Duffy

Brendan Duffy

@Ordinaryman13

Proud Ardoyne Belfast man arts capital of Ireland Political anorak Supporter of downtrodden citizens Tweets represent my personal views.

Mayo, Ireland เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2010
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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
@News_Letter The Marching Dole Queue celebrating Unionists Kulture Marching to Nowhere then standing at Bonfires breathing the Fumes of Tyres and Chemical Laden Pallets while drinking Mundies Wine and snorting Coke.
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Belfast News Letter
Belfast News Letter@News_Letter·
Ballymoney to be turned crimson with 'biggest ever Easter Monday' Apprentice Boys parade, commemorating Siege of Derry anniversary trib.al/fzFrxwK
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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
@Alan__Shatter Retro Provo Republican What to fuck are you smoking That rant is akin to something the Nazis would spew out,but then again Israel is now the Mirror image of the Murderous Nazi regime.
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Alan Shatter
Alan Shatter@Alan__Shatter·
Depicted below is the Iran embraced by some Israel hating Irish Islamo/Smoke Salmon Socialist, Communist, Fascist, Retro Provo Republican & Bohemian political activists that the government, dedicated to criticising every Israeli defensive action against repetitive missile attack as “disproportionate”, is consistently trying but totally failing to appease.
Imtiaz Mahmood@ImtiazMadmood

n 2004, a journalist named Asieh Amini came across a story from a small town in northern Iran. A 16-year-old girl named Atefeh Sahaaleh had been publicly hanged. The official charge: "acts incompatible with chastity." The reality, which Amini uncovered through careful, dangerous investigation: Atefeh had been repeatedly raped by a neighbor and other men beginning when she was nine years old. She had been neglected by her family and paid to keep silent — money she used simply to survive. At 13, Iran's morality police arrested her. A judge sentenced her to one hundred lashes. Under Iranian law, a woman could be sentenced to lashings three times — the fourth offense carried the death penalty. She was 16 when they hanged her. Amini wrote the story. Her newspaper refused to publish it. Another paper refused as well. A women's publication finally agreed to run an edited version. She kept going. Born in 1973 in the Mazandaran province of northern Iran — one of four sisters who spent their childhood painting, reading, and playing outdoors — Amini had built her career as a journalist through the brief flowering of press freedom following President Khatami's election in 1997, editing a women's affairs newspaper called Zan until hardline clerics shut it down in 1999. She had known the Iranian state's capacity for silencing voices. She had not yet known the full depth of what it was capable of doing to girls. After Atefeh, she knew. Case after case began reaching her. Leyla — a 19-year-old with diminished mental capacity, herself a victim of child rape, facing execution. The judge in her case told Amini plainly that Leyla was a threat to family life because of her "sexual availability." Amini enlisted human rights lawyer Shadi Sadr, published Leyla's story, drew international attention, and helped get her out of prison and into the care of a women's organization in Tehran. One life at a time. One story at a time. Against a legal system that had no interest in being exposed. In 2006, Amini discovered that despite a government moratorium on stoning — a directive issued in 2002 that carried no binding legal force — a man and woman had been stoned to death in Mashhad for adultery. The judge claimed he answered only to Sharia law. The Ministry of Justice denied the stoning had happened. State media attacked Amini's credibility. That October, Amini and Sadr co-founded the Stop Stoning Forever (SSF) campaign — systematically documenting stonings occurring across Iran and sharing their findings through colleagues abroad who could publish without fear of arrest. The state took notice. In March 2007, Amini was among 33 women arrested during a silent sit-in at a Tehran courthouse. During interrogation she realized — with the specific clarity of someone who had been investigating surveillance — that the police had been investigating her for some time. She was released after five days. Her phones, she was certain, were tapped. Her movements tracked. She kept reporting. The sustained pressure of the work eventually took its physical toll — stress-induced symptoms that included headaches, vision problems, and muscle paralysis forced her to step back briefly while her partners reorganized the campaign from outside Iran. She recovered. She continued. In 2009, following the disputed reelection of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Amini was among the demonstrators beaten in the protests that swept Iran. She continued reporting — under pseudonyms, in the chaos. Then came the warning: police were questioning prisoners about her. She needed to leave. She had been invited to a poetry festival in Sweden. She took her daughter Ava and she went. They did not come back. Amini settled eventually in Norway, supported by the International Cities of Refuge Network — a program that protects writers facing state persecution. From exile, she continued her advocacy, published two books of Norwegian-language poetry, and kept doing what she had always done: making sure that the stories of girls and women the Iranian state wanted silenced were heard by the world instead. She was awarded the Human Rights Watch Hellmann/Hammett Award in 2009 — the same year she fled. The Oxfam Novib/PEN Award in 2012. The Ord i Grenseland prize in 2014. Asieh Amini picked up a pen in a country that punished women for existing outside the law's narrow definitions — and she used it, at enormous personal cost, to push against every wall that pen could reach. The girl from Mazandaran who dreamed of becoming a painter and writer became something rarer and harder: A witness who refused to look away. And a voice that — no matter how many times the state tried to silence it — kept finding new ways to be heard.

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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
@JamieBrysonLLB They made Dads Army look like the Marines,wee stumps with hands covered in Pig Shit who were the laughing stock of the British Army 🤣 .
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Jamie Bryson
Jamie Bryson@JamieBrysonLLB·
On this day in 1970, the Ulster Defence Regiment was formed. The UDR was a proud and courageous Regiment who defended our country in the face of the IRA terrorist campaign. Remembering always the brave men and women who served.
Jamie Bryson tweet media
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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
@McConnellDaniel Government spokesman says Government doesn't have to help everyone let Business get on with it Then why are Oil companies not taking a cut to profit they make per Litre their forecast profits will be achieved while we subsidise them with our Taxes #TonightVMTV
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Paul Treyvaud
Paul Treyvaud@PaulTreyvaud·
Some personal news Not so long ago, I was approached by one of Irelands prominent far left political parties and asked if I’d join them. Needless to say I was surprised that they came to me in the first place and turned down their advances but they convinced me to hear them out. There have been ongoing discussions over the last few months but the dealbreaker was them inviting me to sit on many of the boards of their NGO friends and thus making this deal very lucrative for me. They told me all I have to do is speak out against everything that most people find fun to do and apart from that, that would be the only Irish concerns I’d need to have. Otherwise I’d just have to find other country’s problems and shout and scream all day about that in The Dail. From time to time I’d have to wear a scarf into work and they also told me I’d have to transition one of my sons. I thought there’s no way that would happen but one of them reversed to park his car, took up two spaces and thought that was ok, so I don’t think it’s going to be as difficult as I thought I am now that proud owner of ELEVEN country’s flags and will be contesting the by-election taking on The Hutch and will be announcing which party I’ll be running for straight after my dress fitting this afternoon Life is funny. I never thought I’d see the day but never being held accountable, making a lot of money and never once being in a position of power or decision making has shown me the light I’ve so desperately searched for all my life I’m sorry to all my common sense friends out there, but this is something I need to do Paul He/she/they/us
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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
Has nobody told this lad that @fiannafailparty Are responsible for the issues he says he's going to work on @CillianKeane1 Housing Infrastructure Health Care All in turmoil because of FF This is Jim Gavin Mark 2 So we'll get a laugh out of his FF coached Antics.
Fianna Fáil@fiannafailparty

"I will be contesting this election on a number of key issues, particularly housing, infrastructure and healthcare." Councillor Cillian Keane. Selected to contest the upcoming Bye-election for Fianna Fáil.

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Vincent McKenna
Vincent McKenna@IrishObserver7·
@BelTel Stop putting those who murdered women into govt...
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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
@fiannafailparty This lad is going to represent @fiannafailparty the party responsible for crashing our Country & Bailing out Europe's Banks FF who are responsible for 18k Homeless including 5.5k homeless Children The dearest Energy & Petrol in EU most expensive Children's Hospital in the World.
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Fianna Fáil
Fianna Fáil@fiannafailparty·
"I will be contesting this election on a number of key issues, particularly housing, infrastructure and healthcare." Councillor Cillian Keane. Selected to contest the upcoming Bye-election for Fianna Fáil.
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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
@JamieBrysonLLB Well you've nailed it there Seamus Unionists Culture Flags and Standing at Bonfires breathing the Fumes of Tyres and Chemical Laden Pallets celebrating a Gay King Billy who married a Catholic. Why aren't you Tweeting in your native tongue Scots Irish isn't that your Culture
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Ciaran Mullooly MEP
Ciaran Mullooly MEP@ciaranmullooly·
The farming and rural community of Offaly, Laois, Meath, westmeath, Kildare and hauliers from as far away as Cork and County Donegal turned out in force at the Midlands hotel in Portlaoise this evening for a major protest meeting to show their concern and downright disgust with the failure of the Irish government to provide meaningful support in terms of the escalation of energy costs and running costs such as green diesel and white diesel. People are hurting badly and after a meeting that went on for over three hours The people present nominated a working committee of over 30 people representing all sectors of society to now proceed with what was described as “armed negotiations” with the government over the course of the short term future. Here is a summary of the meeting
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Ian O'Doherty
Ian O'Doherty@OdohertyI64991·
@BigG1538881 That's shocking. Unless they live in Northern Ireland, then it makes perfect sense.
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Brendan Duffy
Brendan Duffy@Ordinaryman13·
@mooreholmes24 Or as most Citizens of Ireland believe its the same as singing The Sash As you celebrate your Culture of standing at Bonfires breathing the Fumes of Tyres and Chemical Laden Pallets while burning Posters of Nationalists Politicians Keep her lit there @mooreholmes24
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Moore Holmes
Moore Holmes@mooreholmes24·
This is the equivalent to singing: Up the terrorists Up the sectarian murderers Up the punishment beatings Up the human bomb makers Up the family wreckers Up the torturers Up the child killers Up the sexual abusers Up the homophobic assaults Up the backward bigotry All of which happened in the “Ra.”
Moore Holmes tweet media
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Eli Afriat 🇮🇱
Eli Afriat 🇮🇱@EliAfriatISR·
Sad day in Israel. 💔 Pray for us.🙏
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