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How the Watermelon Became a Symbol of Palestinian Solidarity
The use of the watermelon as a Palestinian symbol is not new. It first emerged after the Six-day War in 1967, when Israel seized control of the West Bank and Gaza, and annexed East Jerusalem. At the time, the Israeli government made public displays of the Palestinian flag a criminal offense in Gaza and the West Bank.
To circumvent the ban, Palestinians began using the watermelon because, when cut open, the fruit bears the national colors of the Palestinian flag—red, black, white, and green.
The Israeli government didn't just crack down on the flag. Artist Sliman Mansour told The National in 2021 that Israeli officials in 1980 shut down an exhibition at 79 Gallery in Ramallah featuring his work and others, including Nabil Anani and Issam Badrl. “They told us that painting the Palestinian flag was forbidden, but also the colors were forbidden. So Issam said, ‘What if I were to make a flower of red, green, black and white?’, to which the officer replied angrily, ‘It will be confiscated. Even if you paint a watermelon, it will be confiscated,’” Mansour told the outlet.
Israel lifted the ban on the Palestinian flag in 1993, as part of the Oslo Accords, which entailed mutual recognition by Israel and the Palestinian Liberation Organization and were the first formal agreements to try to resolve the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The flag was accepted as representing the Palestinian Authority, which would administer Gaza and the West Bank.
In the wake of the accords, the New York Times nodded to the role of watermelon as a stand-in symbol during the flag ban. “In the Gaza Strip, where young men were once arrested for carrying sliced watermelons—thus displaying the red, black and green Palestinian colors—soldiers stand by, blasé, as processions march by waving the once-banned flag,” wrote Times journalist John Kifner.
In 2007, just after the Second Intifada, artist Khaled Hourani created The Story of the Watermelon for a book entitled Subjective Atlas of Palestine. In 2013, he isolated one print and named it The Colours of the Palestinian Flag, which has since been seen by people across the globe.
The use of the watermelon as a symbol resurged in 2021, following an Israeli court ruling that Palestinian families based in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in East Jerusalem would be evicted from their homes to make way for settlers.
The watermelon symbol today:
In January, Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir gave police the power to confiscate Palestinian flags. This was later followed by a June vote on a bill to ban people from displaying the flag at state-funded institutions, including universities. (The bill passed preliminary approval but the government later collapsed.)
In June, Zazim, an Arab-Israeli community organization, launched a campaign to protest against the ensuing arrests and confiscation of flags. Images of watermelons were plastered on to 16 taxis operating in Tel Aviv, with the accompanying text reading, “This is not a Palestinian flag.”
“Our message to the government is clear: we will always find a way to circumvent any absurd ban and we will not stop fighting for freedom of expression and democracy,” said Zazim director Raluca Ganea.
Amal Saad, a Palestinian from Haifa who worked on the Zazim campaign, told Al-Jazeera they had a clear message: “If you want to stop us, we’ll find another way to express ourselves.”
Words courtesy of BY ARMANI SYED / TIME
#human rights#equal rights#freedom#peace#free palestine#palestine#free gaza#save gaza#gaza strip#gazaunderattack#hamas#watermelon#flag#time magazine#armani syed#amal saad#haifa#zazim campaign#palestinian flag#khaled hourani#nabil anani#genocide#apartheid
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The 100 Best Books of the 21st Century.
As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers — with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.
NYT Article.
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Q: How many of the 100 have you read? Q: Which ones did you love/hate? Q: What's missing?
Here's the full list.
100. Tree of Smoke, Denis Johnson 99. How to Be Both, Ali Smith 98. Bel Canto, Ann Patchett 97. Men We Reaped, Jesmyn Ward 96. Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments, Saidiya Hartman 95. Bring Up the Bodies, Hilary Mantel 94. On Beauty, Zadie Smith 93. Station Eleven, Emily St. John Mandel 92. The Days of Abandonment, Elena Ferrante 91. The Human Stain, Philip Roth 90. The Sympathizer, Viet Thanh Nguyen 89. The Return, Hisham Matar 88. The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis 87. Detransition, Baby, Torrey Peters 86. Frederick Douglass, David W. Blight 85. Pastoralia, George Saunders 84. The Emperor of All Maladies, Siddhartha Mukherjee 83. When We Cease to Understand the World, Benjamin Labutat 82. Hurricane Season, Fernanda Melchor 81. Pulphead, John Jeremiah Sullivan 80. The Story of the Lost Child, Elena Ferrante 79. A Manual for Cleaning Women, Lucia Berlin 78. Septology, Jon Fosse 77. An American Marriage, Tayari Jones 76. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, Gabrielle Zevin 75. Exit West, Mohsin Hamid 74. Olive Kitteridge, Elizabeth Strout 73. The Passage of Power, Robert Caro 72. Secondhand Time, Svetlana Alexievich 71. The Copenhagen Trilogy, Tove Ditlevsen 70. All Aunt Hagar's Children, Edward P. Jones 69. The New Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander 68. The Friend, Sigrid Nunez 67. Far From the Tree, Andrew Solomon 66. We the Animals, Justin Torres 65. The Plot Against America, Philip Roth 64. The Great Believers, Rebecca Makkai 63. Veronica, Mary Gaitskill 62. 10:04, Ben Lerner 61. Demon Copperhead, Barbara Kingsolver 60. Heavy, Kiese Laymon 59. Middlesex, Jeffrey Eugenides 58. Stay True, Hua Hsu 57. Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich 56. The Flamethrowers, Rachel Kushner 55. The Looming Tower, Lawrence Wright 54. Tenth of December, George Saunders 53. Runaway, Alice Munro 52. Train Dreams, Denis Johnson 51. Life After Life, Kate Atkinson 50. Trust, Hernan Diaz 49. The Vegetarian, Han Kang 48. Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi 47. A Mercy, Toni Morrison 46. The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt 45. The Argonauts, Maggie Nelson 44. The Fifth Season, N.K. Jemisin 43. Postwar, Tony Judt 42. A Brief History of Seven Killings, Marlon James 41. Small Things Like These, Claire Keegan 40. H Is for Hawk, Helen Macdonald 39. A Visit from the Goon Squad, Jennifer Egan 38. The Savage Detectives, Roberto Balano 37. The Years, Annie Ernaux 36. Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates 35. Fun Home, Alison Bechdel 34. Citizen, Claudia Rankine 33. Salvage the Bones, Jesmyn Ward 32. The Lines of Beauty, Alan Hollinghurst 31. White Teeth, Zadie Smith 30. Sing, Unburied, Sing, Jesmyn Ward 29. The Last Samurai, Helen DeWitt 28. Cloud Atlas, David Mitchell 27. Americanah, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie 26. Atonement, Ian McEwan 25. Random Family, Adrian Nicole LeBlanc 24. The Overstory, Richard Powers 23. Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage, Alice Munro 22. Behind the Beautiful Forevers, Katherine Boo 21. Evicted, Matthew Desmond 20. Erasure, Percival Everett 19. Say Nothing, Patrick Radden Keefe 18. Lincoln in the Bardo, George Saunders 17. The Sellout, Paul Beatty 16. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, Michael Chabon 15. Pachinko, Min Jin Lee 14. Outline, Rachel Cusk 13. The Road, Cormac McCarthy 12. The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didion 11. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, Junot Diaz 10. Gilead, Marilynne Robinson 9. Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro 8. Austerlitz, W.G. Sebald 7. The Underground Railroad, Colson Whitehead 6. 2666, Roberto Bolano 5. The Corrections, Jonathan Franzen 4. The Known World, Edward P. Jones 3. Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel 2. The Warmth of Other Suns, Isabel Wilkerson 1. My Brilliant Friend, Elena Ferrante
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Who are the hostages still held by Hamas?
On October 7, 2023, 253 Israelis and foreign nationals were kidnapped to Gaza by Hamas and gazan civilians. Since then, 105 were released in a prisioner exchange deal, 4 were released by Hamas and 3 were rescued.
However, 60 remain in captivity [as of 02/09/24] (4 of those were kidnapped prior to 2023). A recent investigation has concluded that more than a fifth of the hostages are dead and the fate of some other hostages remains unknown. This video explains how doctors determine which hostages are dead, based on the nature of their injury and by analyising footage and the victims' last phone calls. Additionally, during the operation in Gaza, the IDF has recovered the bodies of a few victims and returned to their families for burial.
Since I couldn't find this all in one place, I've compiled a list of: 1) hostages who are presumed alive; 2) hostaged whose death has been reported/confirmed; 3) hostages who were released or rescued. In the group of hostages presumed to be alive who haven't been released, the youngest is 1-year-old Kfir Bibas and the oldest hostage is Iraqi-born 85-year old Shlomo Mansour.
As we learn more information, I'll continue to update this post.
They need to come back home. I'm hoping for more successful rescue operations soon. Keep them in your thoughts.
Hostages still held by Hamas (presumed alive or fate unknown):
(1) (2) (3)
Abraham Eitan Mor (23)
Agam Berger (19)
Alexander (Sasha) Trupanob (28)
Alon Ohel (22)
Arbel Yehoud (28)
Ariel Bibas (4)
Ariel Cunio (26)
Avera Mengistu (37) – Has been held hostage since 2014
Avinathan Or (30)
Bar Kupershtein (22)
Bipin Joshi (23)
Daniel Gilboa (19)
David Cunio (33)
Doron Steinbrecher (30)
Edan Alexander (20)
Eitan Horn (37)
Eli Sharabi (51)
Eliya Cohen (26)
Elkana Bohbot (34)
Evytar David (23)
Gadi Moses (79)
Gali Berman (26)
Guy Gilboa-Dalal (22)
Hamzah Al-Zayadni (22)
Hisham al-Sayed (35) - Has been held hostage since 2015
Yair Horn (45)
Idan Shivi (28)
Itzhk Elgarat (68)
Karina Ariev (19)
Kfir Bibas (1)
Liri Albag (18)
Matan Angrest (21)
Matan Zangauker (24)
Maxim Herkin (35)
Naama Levy (19)
Nimrod Cohen (19)
Oded Lifshitz (83)
Ofer Kalderon (53)
Ohad Ben Ami (55)
Ohad Yahalomi (49)
Omer Neutra (22)
Omer Shem Tov (21)
Omer Wenkert (22)
Omri Miran (46)
Or Levy (33)
Rom Braslavski (19)
Romi Gonen (23)
Sagui Dekel-Chen (35)
Samuel Keith Siegel (64)
Segev Kalfon (25)
Shiri Bibas (32)
Shlomo Mansour (85)
Tal Shoham (38)
Tamir Nimrod (19)
Tsachi Idan (51)
Yagev Kirsht (34)
Yarden Bibas (34)
Yosef Al-Zayadni (53)
Yosef Ohana (23)
Ziv Berman (26)
Hostages confirmed/reported dead:
(Note: I couldn't find a report with the full list, but if you google each individual name you can find sources.)
Abraham Munder (79) - Body recovered on 20/08/24.
Alex Danzig (75) - Body recovered on 20/08/24.
Alexander Lobanov (32)
Almog Sarusi (26)
Alon Shamriz (26) – Mistakenly killed by the IDF
Amit Buskila (28) - Likely killed on Oct. 7. Body recovered on 17/05/24.
Amiram Cooper (84) - Status updated on 03/06/24.
Arye Zalmanovich (85) - Death reported by Hamas. He was forced to appear in a propaganda video.
Asaf Hamami (41)
Aviv Atzili (49)
Carmel Gat (39) - Body recovered on 31/08/24.
Chaim Peri (79) - Status updated on 03/06/24.
Daniel Oz (19) - Killed on Oct. 7. Status updated on 25/02/24
Daniel Perez (22) - Killed on Oct. 7. Status updated on 17/03/24
Dolev Yehoud (35) - Killed on Oct. 7. He was presumed to be a hostage, but his remains were found in Israel after months. Status updated on 03/06/24.
Dror Kaplun (68)
Dror Or (48) - Killed on Oct. 7. Status updated on 02/05/24.
Eden Yerushalmi (24) - Body recovered on 31/08/24.
Eden Zecharya (28)
Eitan Levy (53)
Elad Katzir (47) - Murdered by the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. His body was recovered in Khan Yunis. Status updated on 06/04/24.
Eliyahu Margalit (75)
Elyakim Libman (23) - Killed on Oct. 7. It was presumed he was a hostage because his body wasn't found, but it was later discovered his remains were accidentally buried with another victim. Status updated on 03/05/24.
Gad Haggai (73)
Guy Iluz (26)
Hadar Goldin (32) - Body held hostage since 2014
Hanan Yablonka (42) - Killed on Oct. 7. Body recovered on 24/05/24.
Hersh Goldberg-Polin (23) - Body recovered on 31/08/24.
Ilan Weiss (56)
Inbar Haiman (27)
Itay Chen (19) - Killed on Oct. 7. Status updated on 12/03/24.
Itay Svirsky (35) – Killed by Hamas in captivity. His body was shown in a propaganda video
Itzik Gelenter (58) - Likely killed on Oct. 7. Body recovered on 17/05/24.
Joshua Loitu Mollel (21) – A released video shows how he was brutally murdered by a group of men on October 7
Judy Weinstein (70)
Kiril Brodski (19)
Lior Rudaeff (61) - Killed on Oct. 7. His body was taken to Gaza. Status updated on 07/05/24.
Maya Goren (56)
Mordechai Yonathan Samerano (21) - Killed on Oct. 7. His body was taken to Gaza.
Nadav Popplewell (51) - Status updated on 03/06/24.
Nik Beizer (19)
Noa Marciano (19) – Her body was found near the Al-Shifa hospital
Michel Nisenbaum (59) - Killed on Oct. 7. Body recovered on 24/05/24.
Muhammed Alatrash (40) - Killed on Oct. 7. Status updated on 24/06/24.
Ofir Tzarfati (27)
Ofra Keider (70)
Oren Goldin (34)
Ori Danino (24) - Body recovered on 31/08/24.
Orión Hernandez (30) - Killed on Oct. 7. Body recovered on 24/05/24.
Oron Shaul (30) – Body held hostage since 2014
Ran Gvlli (24)
Ravid Katz (41)
Ron Benjamin (53) - Killed on Oct. 7 and his body was taken to Gaza. Body recovered on 18/05/24.
Ron Scherman (19)
Ronen Engel (54)
Sahar Baruch (24) – Killed by Hamas during a failed hostage rescue operation
Samer Talalka (22) – Mistakenly killed by the IDF
Shay Levinson (19)
Shani Louk (22) - Body taken to Gaza. Her body was recovered on 17/05/24.
Sonthaya Oakkharasr - Killed on Oct. 7. Body taken to Gaza. Status updated on 16/05/24.
Sudthisak Rinthalak - Killed on Oct. 7. Body taken to Gaza. Status updated on 16/05/24.
Tal Chaim (42)
Tamir Adar (38)
Tomer Ahimas (20)
Uriel Baruch (35) - Status updated on 26/03/24
Yagev Buchshtab (34)
Yair Yaakov (59) – Killed on Oct. 7. Sons and girlfriend were released. Status updated on 15/02/24.
Yehudit Weiss (65) – Her body was found near the Al-Shifa hospital
Yossi Sharabi (53) – His dead body was shown in a propaganda video
Yoram Metzer (80) - Status updated on 03/06/24.
Yotam Haim – Mistakenly killed by the IDF
Ziv Dado (36)
Released/rescued hostages:
(1) (2)
Abigail Edan, 4, American citizen
Ada Sagi, 75
Adi Shoham, 38
Adina Moshe, 72
Agam Goldstein-Almog, 17
Aisha Ziyadne, 17
Alma Avraham, 84
Alma Or, 13
Almog Meir Jan (21) - Rescued by the IDF on 08/06/24.
Amit Shani, 15
Amit Soussana, 40
Andrey Zozlov (27) - Rescued by The IDF on 08/06/24.
Anucha Angkaew
Aviv Asher, 2, German citizen
Aviva Adrienne Siegel, 62
Bancha Kongmanee, Thai national
Bilal Ziyadne, 18
Boonthom Phankhong, Thai national
Buddee Saengboon, Thai national
Chalermchai Sangkaew
Channa Peri, 79
Chen Goldstein-Almog, 48
Clara Marman, 63, Argentine citizen
Daniel Aloni, 44
Dafna Elyakim, 15
Doron Katz Asher, 34, German citizen
Ditza Heiman, 84
Emilia Aloni, 5
Emily Toni Kornberg Hand, 8
Emma Cunio, 3, Argentine citizen
Erez Calderon, 12, French citizen
Eitan Yahalomi, 12, French citizen
Ela Elyakim, 8
Fernando Marman – Rescued by the IDF
Gabriela Leimberg, 59, Argentine citizen
Gal Goldstein-Almog, 11
Gal Tarshansky, 13
Gelienor (Jimmy) Pacheco, 37, Filipino national
Hagar Brodetz, 40
Hanna Katzir, 77
Hila Rotem Shoshani, 12
Ilana Gritzewsky Kimchi, 30
Irena Tati, 73, a Russian citizen, was included on the list but released separately from the exchange deal.
Itay Regev Jerbi, 18
Juckapan Sikena
Judith Raanan, 59 [Released 22/10/23]
Kaid Farhan Alkadi (52) - Rescued by the IDF on 27/08/24.
Karina Engel-Bart, 51, Argentine citizen
Keren Munder, 54
Komkrit Chombua
Kong Saelao
Liam Or, 18
Liat Beinin Atzili, 49, American citizen
Luis Har – Rescued by the IDF
Manee Jirachart
Margalit Mozes, 78, German citizen
Maya Regev Jirbi, 21
Meirav Tal, 53
Mia Leimberg, 17, Argentine citizen
Mia Shem, 21, French citizen
Mika Engel, 18, Argentine citizen
Mongkhol Phajuabboon, Thai national
Moran Stela Yanai, 40
Natalie Raanan, 17 [Released 22/10/23]
Nattaporn Onkaew
Natthawaree Moonkan, Thai national
Naveh Shoham, 8
Nili Margalit, 41
Noa Argamani (26) - Rescued by the IDF on 08/06/24.
Noam Avigdori, 12
Noga Weiss, 18
Noam Or, 17
Noralin Babadilla, 60, born in the Philippines
Nurit Cooper [Released 24/10/23]
Ofri Brodetz, 10
Ohad Munder, 9
Or Yaakov, 16, German citizen
Ori Megidish – Rescued by the IDF
Oriya Brodetz, 4
Owat Suriyasri, 40, father of two
Ofelia Adit Roitman, 77, born in Argentina
Ofir Engel, 17, Dutch citizen
Paiboon Rattanin
Pattanayut Tonsakree
Phonsawan Pinakalo
Ra’aya Rotem, 54
Raz Ben-Ami, 56, German citizen
Rimon Kirsht Buchshtav, 36
Raz Asher, 4, German citizen
Ron Krivoi, 25, an Israeli-Russian citizen, was included on the list, although he was released separately from the exchange deal.
Ruth Munder, 78
Sahar Calderon, 16, French citizen
Santi Boonphrom, Thai national
Sapir Cohen, 29
Shani Goren, 29
Sharon Aloni-Cunio, 34, Argentine citizen
Sharon Hertzman Avigdori, 52
Shlomi Ziv (40) - Rescued by the IDF on 08/06/24.
Shiri Weiss, 53
Shoshan Haran, 67
Surin Kesungnoen
Tal Goldstein-Almog, 8
Tamar Metzger, 78
Uthai Sangnuan, Thai national
Uthai Thunsri, Thai national
Wichai Kalapat, 28, Thai national
Wichian Temthon
Withoon Phumee, 33, Thai national
Yaffa Adar, 85
Yagil Yaakov, 12, German citizen
Yahel Shoham, 3
Yarden Roman-Gat, 35, German citizen
Yelena Trupanov, 50, a Russian citizen, was included on the list but released separately from the exchange deal.
Yocheved Lifshitz [Released 24/10/23]
Yuli Cunio, 3, Argentine citizen
Yuval Brodetz, 8
Yuval Engel, 12, Argentine citizen
#israel#october 7#hamas hostages#hostages#bring them home now#jumblr#compiling all their names was a really emotional process. i did this the day before it was announced yair yaakov was murdered#and had trouble opening the file again#praying and hoping for the rest of the hostages' safe return#please let me know if i made any mistakes and/or forgot any names#as i've said in the post - a lot of info was scattered and i'm afraid i might have missed something#note: 253 was the total number i found in most reports. i don't know if it'll change at the end of the war - since some people were#considered to be held hostage and sadly later it was found they had been killed on oct 7 inside israel#like clemence felix mtenga
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Ben-Hur Baz - "Last Rose" - October 1947 Esquire Gallery # 79 Illustration - American Pin-up Calendar Collection
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0532 221 72 79
Slm Birsu ben
Herseyin en iyisini hak ediyorsun kendini benimle ödüllendir
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Il 6 Agosto di 79 anni fa il lancio della prima bomba atomica sul Giappone.
Polverizzarono all'istante più di 70000 persone ed altrettanto morirono per cro negli anni successivi.
Lo ricordiamo oggi come il primo lancio di bombe chirurgiche e democratiche di chi da li a breve penso' che in fondo, lanciarne un'altra, non era poi così disumano perché la pace prima di tutto.
I criminali di guerra USA non dovranno comparire davanti ad un tribunale militare stile Norimberga, non verranno mai giudicati.
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Il Giappone voleva arrendersi. Lo aveva detto chiaramente a più riprese e loro, gli Usa, lo sapevano. Lo sapevano perfettamente!
Ma non gli bastava una resa, a loro non è mai bastato raggiungere l'obiettivo della pace, non gli è mai importato nulla di tutto ciò. Hanno sempre mirato a mostrare al mondo intero uno strapotere militare criminale per i propri vantaggi economici e per riscrivere la storia a proprio piacimento. L'obiettivo è stravincere e umiliare gli avversari spargendo sangue e macerie, soprattutto per dare benzina al motore della propaganda Hollywoodiana, per fare in modo che tutti pensino di essere di fronte al paese perfetto che salva sempre il mondo dai cattivi e che persegue la democrazia per sé e per conto terzi.
Nessuno ancora oggi, almeno nella parte occidentale, chiama le bombe atomiche sganciate a Hiroshima il 6 agosto e a Nagasaki il 9 agosto del 1945 "crimini di guerra". Nessuno in quel pezzo di mondo occidentale ha il coraggio di pronunciare questa frase nonostante siano stati inceneriti in mezzo secondo centinaia di migliaia di civili bambini, donne e anziani Giapponesi che non c'entravano nulla. Il crimine di guerra più atroce della storia pari solo ai crimini di guerra israeliani ai danni dei Palestinesi.
In quel lontano 1945, come dicevamo, il ministro degli esteri Giapponese aveva inviato un messaggio al suo ambasciatore a Mosca. Quel messaggio diceva che volevano far finire la guerra perché ormai si erano resi conto di essere stati sconfitti. In sostanza avevano offerto la resa a patto che l'imperatore non subisse ritorsioni. Cosa peraltro successa anche dopo le bombe atomiche perché gli Usa imposero che l'imperatore diventasse un loro fantoccio. Oltre a questo c'è un'altra cosa altrettanto importante, c'è il Memorandum MacArthur: questo documento riporta ben cinque richieste di resa arrivate agli Usa da alte personalità Giapponesi che agivano per conto dell'imperatore.
Ma agli USA non interessava nulla. Loro dovevano sganciare quelle bombe, bruciare vivi civili e contaminare per le successive generazioni un intero territorio per far vedere al mondo intero, soprattutto alla Russia che era stata già designata come prossimo avversario strategico di avere a disposizione queste armi nucleari. Qualcuno nei ranghi dell'esercito statunitense propose di sganciare le bombe in un'isola remota per evitare una strage. Ipotesi scartata perché quando sei un criminale naturale nato da un genocidio, la cosa più importante è continuare a delinquere. Allora come oggi.
Questa è storia che viene scientemente tenuta nascosta subdolamente. Infatti in nessun libro di storia dei cicli di istruzione nel mondo occidentale la si trova. Intere paginate sullo sbarco in Normandia mentre le bombe atomiche relegate come nota a margine. Esattamente come la battaglia di Stalingrado dove venne sconfitto Hitler per mano del sangue Russo. Ma non può essere cancellata. Bisogna fare in modo che non venga cancellata, costi quel che costi! È necessario coltivare la memoria per non essere fuorviati dalla propaganda che continua a trattarci come degli imbecilli.
Si continua a far credere, con ogni metodo possibile e immaginabile, che ci sia un paese detentore di verità e giustizia. Un paese che si erge e viene eretto a più grande e perfetta democrazia del mondo. Credo che queste siano le bugie più grandi della storia dell'umanità. Ma non perché lo dica io, semplicemente perché i fatti smentiscono categoricamente questa narrazione. Parliamo dello stesso paese che, ed è bene rammentarlo continuamente, a oggi è stato l'unico a sganciare l'atomica. Senza alcuna motivazione. Solo perché avevano deciso così...
GiuseppeSalamone
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Curious — how many are you familiar with? 🔥
Defined however you want, but ideally more than “have heard the name before”:
Harry Truman
Doris Day
Red China
Johnnie Ray
South Pacific
Walter Winchell
Joe DiMaggio
Joe McCarthy
Richard Nixon
Studebaker
Television
North Korea
South Korea
Marilyn Monroe
Rosenbergs
H-bomb
Sugar Ray
Panmunjom
Brando
"The King and I"
and "The Catcher in the Rye"
Eisenhower
Vaccine
England's got a new queen
Marciano
Liberace
Santayana (goodbye)
Joseph Stalin
Malenkov
Nasser
Prokofiev
Rockefeller
Campanella
Communist Bloc
Roy Cohn
Juan Peron
Toscanini
Dacron
Dien Bien Phu falls
"Rock Around the Clock"
Einstein
James Dean
Brooklyn's got a winning team
Davy Crockett
Peter Pan
Elvis Presley
Disneyland
Bardot
Budapest
Alabama
Krushchev
Princess Grace
Peyton Place
Trouble in the Suez
Little Rock
Pasternak
Mickey Mantle
Kerouac
Sputnik
Chou En-Lai
"Bridge on the River Kwai"
Lebanon
Charles de Gaulle
California baseball
Starkweather homicide
Children of Thalidomide
Buddy Holly
Ben Hur
Space monkey
Mafia
Hula hoops
Castro
Edsel is a no-go
U2
Syngman Rhee
Payola
Kennedy
Chubby Checker
Psycho
Belgians in the Congo
Hemingway
Eichmann
"Stranger in a Strange Land"
Dylan
Berlin
Bay of Pigs invasion
"Lawrence of Arabia"
British Beatlemania
Ole Miss
John Glenn
Liston beats Patterson
Pope Paul
Malcolm X
British politician sex
JFK (blown away, what else do I have to say?)
Birth control
Ho Chi Minh
Richard Nixon (back again)
Moonshot
Woodstock
Watergate
Punk rock
Begin
Reagan
Palestine
Terror on the airline
Ayatollah’s in Iran
Russians in Afghanistan
"Wheel of Fortune"
Sally Ride
heavy metal suicide
Foreign debts
Homeless vets
AIDS
Crack
Bernie Goetz
Hypodermics on the shore
China's under martial law
Rock and roller cola wars
I can’t take it anymore (free space)
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Daily update post:
This morning started with the horrible news about an independent Palestinian terrorist attack on the main road to Jerusalem. As workers come into the city in the morning, there's a junction where at this morning time, there's usually a traffic jam. Three Palestinians (from the Beit Lechem area, two of them brothers) started shooting from assault rifles at people sitting in their cars, as if they were fish in a barrel (hand grenades were found as well, but thankfully they didn't get to use them). Currently, the reports are of 1 person murdered (26 years old Matan Elmaliach), and 11 wounded (on TV, they're saying 13 more were wounded, including a young pregnant woman in very serious condition). A spokesman for Magen David Adom (Red Star of David) said that the terrorist attack scene was 500 meters long (about 1640 feet). Two of the terrorists were neutralized immediately, and the third was after a chase. The father of one of the wounded said his son just finished his army reserves service, noticed the terrorist attack, tried to stop one of the terrorists, and in the process was shot himself.
On a personal note, my mom's cousin sometimes works in Jerusalem, coming in through that junction, and his wife sometimes comes with him, so after I woke up from a nightmare about a baby crying because its limbs were amputated by Hamas terrorists, I had to contact my family to check that they're alive, and figure out when it's okay to wake my mom up, so she doesn't get scared for her cousin when she hears the news.
A terrorist attack that was carried out about a month ago, has now been revealed as originally targeting the IDF spokesman in Arabic, Avichay Adraee. Turns out one of the terrorists, who was working in Ra'anana, walked into a restaurant and saw Adraee. The terrorist couldn't kill him on the spot, but returned with a weapon the next day and staked the area (assuming Adraee lived somewhere nearby) for a while, before he decided if he couldn't carry out a "quality" terrorist attack, he still wanted to carry out one. He got his cousin employeed, and together, the two murdered a 79 years old woman, Edna Bluestein, and wounded 18 others. I just think it says something, that an army officer, and an elderly civilian woman, are equally legit targets in these terrorists' mind, because they're both citizens of the Jewish state. Both terrorists were indicted today.
Survivors of the Nova music festival carnage on Oct 7 are suing AP for hiring 4 photojournalists that were embedded with Hamas, and should have been identified as such by the news agency. The lawsuit names the men who were there in the middle of Hamas' war crimes, and documented, among other crimes, the kidnapping of Shani Lock's raped body, and of Yaffa Adar, a Holocaust survivor.
In London, the anti-Israel crowd projected onto Big Ben messages that UK Jews have repeatedly said endanger them, including calls for the Jewish state to surrender to an antisemitic, genocidal terrorist organization, and the slogan that calls for, at the very least, an ethnic cleansing of Israeli Jews, but one which most Jews understand as genocidal, because if it were to be implemented, it would necessarily include the slaughter of the world's biggest Jewish community. According to one witness, he asked the police if projecting these slogans on Big Ben's tower is legal, was told it wasn't, but the police personnel present still wasn't moved to stop this. At what point is the UK going to wake up, and act as if its Jewish citizens, and their well being, counts?
And since I mentioned that demanding a ceasefire before Hamas has surrendered, is to ask the attacked (the Jewish state) to surrender to the attacker (an antisemitic, genocidal terrorist organization), I also want to remind everyone that allowing Hamas to continue existing, and ruling Gaza, is also BAD FOR PALESTINIANS. As the war goes on, more and more Gazan protests are being held against Hamas. I haven't mentioned them in a while, but this is a good moment to remind everyone that people who REALLY care about Gazans want Hamas destroyed for them, too. Here's newly released footage from a Gaza anti-Hamas demonstration, we're now getting more documentation like this practically daily.
This is 19 years old Nimrod Cohen.
On Oct 7, he was kidnapped to Gaza. His twin sister Romi and his parents have been fighting to have him released. The family says he's so sensitive, they can't imagine how he'd be able to survive captivity, and the kind of constant abuse they'd heard the hostages are undergoing from those already released.
(for all of my updates and ask replies regarding Israel, click here)
#israel#antisemitism#israeli#israel news#israel under attack#israel under fire#terrorism#anti terrorism#hamas#antisemitic#antisemites#jews#jew#judaism#jumblr#frumblr#jewish#israelunderattack
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Bugün beni üzen bi şey oldu. Daha doğrusu canım memleketim yine içime dert oldu.
Yeni bi iş verdi manager'ım. Kısaca yeni bir ülkeye açılırken orada bir entity kurmalı mıyız? Bunu yaparken hukuki olarak nelere dikkat etmemiz gerekiyor, sigorta hukukundan patente, iş hukukuna vs nelere bakılmalı? Buna dair bi çalışma yapıp elimizde bu bilgileri outsource ettiğimiz belgelerden 4 ülkenin hukuklarını karşılaştırma gibi bir şey.
Bana yolladığı belgelerden biri de şirketin buna dair Policy belgesi. Şu ülkelerle kesinlikle iş yapmıyoruz, şu ülkelerde devam eden armed conflict var gibi bilgiler var.
İş yaparken bakılan yolsuzlukla ilgili bi index var, corruption perception index diye geçiyor.
Orada puanı 50'den aşağı olan ülkelerle iş yapmayı pek istemiyoruz ama yaparsak da şunları şunları yapılacak diye listelemişler, anti corruption due diligence gibi şeyler, şirket içi ekstra onaylar vs.
Linki burada:
Ve bakın hangi ülkenin puanı 50'nin altında..
Raporu incelerken çok üzüldüm işte bugün. 50'nin altında olmayı bırakın, 2014- 2023 arasında tüm ülkeler arasında en büyük gerileme 11 puan aşağı giderek Türkiye yaşamış, 34 puanda şu an. Bahreyn, Tanzanya, Gana falan hep bizim üstümüzde. Bahreyn arkadaşlar ya Bahreyn...
Hollandanın puanı ise 79. Buralarda da her şey güllük gülistanlık değil. Hatta bi Tweet çok hoşuma gitmişti geçenlerde. Aslında 3. Dünya ülkeleri daha demokratik, batıda sadece zenginler yolsuzluk yapıyor, bizim ülkelerde neredeyse herkes gibi bi tweetajsdjdkdk. İnsanın olduğu her yerde böyle şeyler olur biliyorum ama yine de üzülüyor insan.
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Neyse gece gece analize doyamadım. ortamlarda memleket derdi gece uyutmuyor derim artıkasjdjdjffkfl. Uyutmuyor da işte. Ooo hemen bi memleket, sevdana yürek gerek gelsin o zaman. Pekiii orada 27. saniyede Atamın arkasındaki beyefendi de kimmiş? Aramızda bunca yıl olmasaydı bu gecelerde memleketi birlikte düşüneceğimiz biri. 💘 Sen balkanlarda at sırtında neler yaptın Kazım paşam, ben de yarın Hollanda trenlerinde seni düşüneyim, ne yapayım.
youtube
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FASTPASS EPISODE 79 + 82 SPOILERS
ok so i don't trust logan's grandparents like at all
"James and I tried to help, but we were definitely outnumbered." I DON'T BELIEVE YOU!!! I don't. I'm sorry
"Our current predicament does bring back a bit of nostalgia." WHAT DO YOU MEAN.
And then in episode 82 you know who suggests they go along with maverick? fucking grandpa. we need ben the observer to observe this RIGHT now because they are Up To Something i promise. ive had a bad feeling about them since the sedatives thing. like sure poppies or whatever haha we're gardeners. no. you're lying.
is something bad going to happen to logan. i'm going to lose my mind. next tuesday when???
#school bus graveyard#sbg spoilers#fast pass#logan fields#if my theories are right i'm going to lose my marbles btw. ill scream
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Madagascar in Nickelodeon Magazine (part 2 of 4)
The second time Madagascar was featured in Nick Mag was in their November 2008 issue, highlighting the film's release that month.
The cover features a conga line of several characters through the reserve, led of course by King Julien.
Madagascar got quite a good treatment in this issue; the rest is under the read more!
Included were nine punch-out trading cards. The pictures on the backs, when put together properly, form the film's poster. The Internet Archive does have a version of the website noted, but nothing loads on it, so we will never know what you call four penguins in the desert.
Next we have a small ad for the film's website, featuring King Julien. This site can be accessed on the Internet Archive here (the games are still playable!).
Next we have an ad for the film's tie-in video game. It has a board game path you could play on with a coin and any small objects as tokens.
These next three are the main articles for the film. To prep viewers for the sequel, we have a quiz about the first film. Full transcript below.
The Beasts Are Back! in Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa
In Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, the animals get stuck in Africa when their plan to return to New York City falls apart, and they discover an even wilder world than the one they left behind in Madagascar. Paw through the following pages to get ready for the new movie.
Ready for Part 2?
Prepare for Madagascar 2 by taking this quiz to see how much you remember about the first movie. Answers on page 79.
The animals leave New York City because: a. they want to join the circus. b. they escape from their zoo and get shipped off to a wildlife park. c. they can't afford the rent in New York City anymore.
Where is the crew headed? a. Mount Everest b. Kenya c. A zoo in Washington, D.C.
Their ship goes off course when: a. the penguins take it over and head to Antarctica. b. they hit an iceberg. c. a tidal wave pushes them towards Madagascar.
When crates containing Melman, Alex, Gloria, and Marty wash up on Madagascar, the animals find: a. a kingdom of small, furry creatures. b. that the penguins are running the country. c. an animal-friendly spa.
What do the lemurs call Marty, Alex, Gloria, and Melman? a. The wrecking crew b. The Tennessee Titans c. The New York Giants
Julien is so annoyed by Mort the lemur that he suggests: a. sending him to Chicago. b. feeding him to Alex. c. selling him to a tourist as a hamster.
Alex is banished by his friends because: a. he can't help but see them as juicy steaks. b. they got tired of his constant practical jokes. c. he farts way too much.
At the end of the movie, Alex: a. eats every last animal. b. scares away the Foosa, the lemurs' natural enemy. c. swims back to New York City.
Next we have an interview with the main cast. Full transcript below.
Talking Animals
We chatted with the actors who voice the four main characters.
What is your character like? Ben Stiller (Alex): Alex is a performer. He's used to being the center of attention. He's a good friend, and the camaraderie with the other animals is really important to him. Chris Rock (Marty): He gets bored easily, and he pushes the whole crew. Everybody else wants to stay in the zoo and he's like, "Hey, there's a whole world out there." Jada Pinkett Smith (Gloria): Gloria is very loyal. She's pretty strong-willed, but most of all, she's really fun. She's kind of the mama of the group. David Schwimmer (Melman): Nervous, a hypochondriac, loyal, intelligent, and generous.
How are you like your character? Ben: Alex is comfortable in the city. When he gets into the countryside, he's not used to the quiet. I was like that growing up. Chris: It doesn't take much for me to be bored. Jada: I'm a lot of fun, but I definitely tend to take on the mother role in a lot of the circles that I'm in. David: I'm fairly tall with long eyelashes.
What is your least favorite thing about your character? Ben: The amount of hair that he has. It's a lot of hair care. It's like an hour every morning with a blow-dryer. Chris: Uh, just that's he a zebra. Jada: She could probably exercise a little bit. Not too much—just a little bit. David: His fear of heights.
What advice would you give your character? Ben: Even though we get set in our ways, change is important. Let life happen because then great new things can happen that you would never expect. Chris: I'd tell him to try to appreciate the things he has. Don't go too fast because you can miss some great things while trying to get to the next thing. Jada: I know Gloria likes to eat, which is fine. I would just tell her to make sure she's eating all the right things. David: Have a massage once a week to help you relax.
What would you want to have if you were stuck in the wilderness? Ben: Hopefully, food. And probably a couple of good books—big, thick ones. Chris: A BlackBerry, a Kindle e-book reader, an iPod, and a generator. Jada: A good book and some matches. David: The complete works of Shakespeare, food, fresh water, my girlfriends, and a limitless supply of paper.
What was your favorite line or scene from the movie? Ben: When the lead penguin says, "It's gonna take six to nine months [to fix the plane]," and Alex goes, "Sixty-nine months?" That always makes me laugh. Chris: All the [scenes] with Marty and the other zebras are rally good. Jada: My favorite scene is when Gloria falls in love with this other hippo, named Moto Moto. He asks her out and it's a really cute, flirtatious scene. David: My favorite line is "Aaaaaargh!!!!" My favorite scene is when Gloria saves Melman from falling into the volcano.
Which do you like better, the chimps or the penguins? Ben: The chimps. I've always liked monkeys a lot better. Chris: The penguins are funny. Jada: I like both. [Zelda the roving reporter: I like whoever has the best snacks.] David: Penguins!
ZooTube
Next year, Madagascar's penguins will star in their own TV show on Nickelodeon. We asked Jada, Ben, David, and Chris what kind of TV show their characters should have.
GLORIA "Her show would be called How to Be Fabulous, and she would show viewers how she does it," says Jada. ALEX "Alex would have a variety show," says Ben. "He'd do some singing and dancing, and then have a guest on along with one of his friends." MELMAN "In Melman's show, called What Was That?, he would play a superhero who has the power to fly and become invisible," says David. MARTY Chris says, "Marty would host his own talk show and do a monologue every night about what's going on in the world."
Finally, we have a tutorial on how to draw a penguin. The instructions say that this penguin is supposed to be Skipper, but clearly no one told this to the artist.
#madagascar#dreamworks madagascar#madagascar escape 2 africa#madagascar 2#dreamworks#nickelodeon#nickelodeon magazine#ben stiller#chris rock#jada pinkett smith#david schwimmer#promo material#mada cast and crew#grvyd8.pics
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Josephus on Christianity
Titus Flavius Josephus (36-100 CE), the Jewish historian, is the main source for understanding Second Temple Judaism in the 1st century CE. In the last decades of the 1st century CE, he wrote The Jewish War, the Antiquities of the Jews, Against Apion, and The Life of Flavius Josephus. His histories and eyewitness testimonies remain essential to the study of the historical context that gave rise to the origins of Christianity.
Josephus
Flavius Josephus was born Yosef ben Matityahu, a member of a priestly household in Jerusalem through his father’s side (the house and order of Jehoiarib), and his mother was of royal descent (Hasmonean). He was educated in Jerusalem and most likely shared ideology and sympathy with the party of the Pharisees.
During the Great Jewish Revolt of 66 CE, Josephus was appointed the commander of Galilee. He became famous (and infamous) for changing sides during the siege at Jotapata. He successfully predicted that the Roman commander, Vespasian (r. 69-79 CE), would become the next Roman emperor. Vespasian spared his life, and Josephus spent the rest of the war as a consultant to Vespasian’s son Titus (r. 79-81 CE), who ultimately destroyed Jerusalem and the Temple complex in the year 70 CE. After the war, Josephus moved to Rome where he had access to archives and wrote his histories.
The writings of Josephus are crucially important for several disciplines: Second Temple Judaism in the 1st century CE, background sources for early Christianity, historical details of the client kings of the Roman Empire in the East, and the line of the Julio-Claudian emperors in Rome. Considered one of the greatest traitors by Jews, Christians were the ones who preserved his writings for posterity. This is because he wrote about John the Baptist, reported the death of Jesus’ brother, James, and provided a passage on Jesus himself.
Continue reading...
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Marriage - Pregnancy Announcement Ranking
@fundiepredictions said about a recent post 'Impressed by Jackson&Emerson for making it (almost) to their weddinganniversary without announcing a pregnancy' and you know what, so am I.
That got me thinking, how quickly do couples announce their first pregnancy? How many made it to their first anniversary without announcing? So, from quickest to slowest, here are the Duggar and Bates first pregnancy announcement rates.
Jill & Derick Dillard - 60 days Zach & Whitney Bates - 79 days Joy & Austin Forsyth - 96 days Joe & Kendra Duggar - 101 days Carlin & Evan Stewart - 102 days Josie & Kelton Balka - 131 days Tori & Bobby Smith - 145 days Trace & Lydia Bates - 155 days Jed & Kate Duggar - 155 days Jer & Hannah Duggar - 157 days Jessa & Ben Seewald - 171 days Alyssa & John Webster - 178 days Nathan & Esther Bates - 198 days J*** & Anna Duggar - 199 days Katie & Travis Clark - 247 days John & Abbie Duggar - 271 days Josiah & Lauren Duggar - 324 days (after miscarriage) Jinger & Jeremy Vuolo - 424 days Erin & Chad Paine - 447 days (after fertility struggles) Lawson & Tiffany Bates - 663 days (after miscarriage)
Jackson and Emerson are currently on Day 358 of marriage. Justin and Claire are on Day 1318 of marriage.
This means we are now on five Duggar/Bates couples who have made it to their first anniversary without a pregnancy announcement - and seventeen who have not.
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“Ceasefire!”
Ok. Bring back the hostages.
Abraham Munder, 78.
Samer Fuad El-Talalka, 22.
Bilal Alziadna, 21.
Hamza Alziadna, 22.
Yosef Hamid Alziadna, 53.
Joshua Loitu Mollel, 21.
Sujith Nissanka, 48.
Chaim Peri, 79.
Yarden Roman Gat, 36.
Elad Katzir, 47.
Hannah Katzir, 77.
Oded Lifshitz, 83.
Amiram Cooper, 84.
Ronen Engle, 54.
Yuval Engle, 11.
Mika Engle, 18.
Carina Engle-Bert, 51.
Abigail Idan, 3.
Tamar Gutman, 27.
Channa Peri, 79.
Nadav Popplewell, 51.
Emilia Aloni, 5.
Daniel Aloni, 44.
Yuly Konio, 3.
Ema Konio, 3.
Sharon Aloni Konio, 34.
David Konio, 33.
Shlomi Ziv, 40.
Yahel Gani Shoham, 3.
Nave Shoham, 8.
Tal Shoham, 38.
Adi Shoham, 38.
Noam Avigdori, 12.
Sharon Avigdori, 52.
Shoshan Haran, 67.
Itzhk Elgarat, 68.
Alexander Dancyg, 75.
Inbar Haiman, 27.
Omer Shem Tov, 21.
Raz Ben Ami, 57.
Ilana Gritzewsky, 30.
Tsachi Idan, 51.
Elma Avraham, 84.
Or Levy, 33.
Guy Gilboa-Dalal, 22.
Gadi Moshe Mosez, 79.
Adina Moshe, 72.
Tamar Metzger, 78.
Yoram Metzger, 80.
Noa Marciano, 19.
Roni Krivoi, 25.
Tal Goldstein, 9.
Gal Goldstein, 11.
Agam Goldstein, 17.
Chen Almog-Goldstein, 48.
Daniel Gilboa, 19.
Eitan Yahalomi, 12.
Ovad Yahalomi, 49.
Ella Elyakim, 8.
Dafna Elyakim, 14.
Evyatar David, 26.
Raz Katz Asher, 4.
Avis Katz Asher, 2.
Doron Katz Asher, 34.
Efrat Katz, 68.
Alon Lulu Shamirz, 26.
Maya Regev, 21.
Itay Regev, 18.
Shani Louk, 22.
Omri Miran, 46.
Alon Ohel, 22.
Hersh Golden-Polin, 23.
Maya Leimberg, 17.
Gabriella Leimberg, 59.
Fernando Marman, 60.
Clara Marman, 63.
Bar Kuperstein, 21.
Noa Sharabi, 16.
Eli Sharabi, 55.
Four Angel, 18.
Yossi Sharabi, 53.
Moran Yanai, 40.
Adrienne ‘Aviva’ Siegel, 62.
Ron Sherman, 19.
Ditza Haiman, 84.
Elia Cohen, 26.
Elkana Bohbot, 24.
Agam Berger, 19.
Ohad Ben-Ami, 55.
Nick Beiser, 19.
Yuval Brodetz, 8.
Oriya Brodetz, 4.
Ofri Brodetz, 10.
Hagar Brodetz, 40.
Naama Levy, 19.
Almog Meir Jan, 21.
Liraz Assulin, 38.
Karina Ariev, 19.
Noa Argamani, 19.
Or Avinathan, 30.
Liri Elbag, 18.
Mia Schem, 21.
Yaffa Adar, 85.
Omer Wenkert, 22.
Carmel Gat, 39.
Kfir Bibas, 9 Months.
Ariel Bibas, 4.
Shiri Bibas, 32.
Sahar Kalderon, 16.
Ofer Kalderon, 53.
Louis Har, 70.
Want peace? Want us to ceasefire?
Bring them back!
#israel#palestine#gaza#gaza strip#free gaza from hamas#stand with israel#stand with us#antisemitism#judaism#zionisim#hamas is isis#israeli palestinian conflict#justice for israel#free israel#peace#israel hamas war#terrorism#hamas attack#hamas
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Bu ay iki kere banka şubesine gitmem gerekti, ikisinde de yaşımın 18'den büyük olup olmadığı soruldu işlem sırası alırken. Özellikle suratımda makyaj yokken minyonlugun avantajını kullanabiliyorum ama ben 18'imi geçeli nerdeyse 11 yıl oluyor ndkdjdj küçük sanılmak bazen güzel.
Covid zamanı kimliksiz markete bile gidemiyordum.(Bir kere küçük olduğum gerekçesiyle geri yollandigim için dkdkkd) Yalnızca vücudum küçük amcaaaa, biyolojik yaşımı da boşver ruhum 19 yaşımdan beri 79 buçuk yaşında.
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Four Queens Hotel & Casino 1966-
June 2, 1966 Grand Opening announced on the marquee.
'64: Ben Goffstein, Four Queens Corp, announces the hotel plans in June. 201-217 Fremont cleared. Groundbreaking ceremony in Nov, with construction beginning Jan. '65. (RJ 11/19/64).
'65: Goffstein and 30 other stockholders approved by Gaming Commission.
'66: Grand opening 6/2/66 with one tower. Julius Gabriele, architect and 1% owner. City of Las Vegas builds 222 Carson parking garage, later leased by Four Queens.
'69: Tower raised from 8 to 18 floors. Work begun 12/28/68 (RJ 3/23/69) and finished Fall '69.
'73: Bought by Elsinore Corp, subsidiary of Hyatt. David Hood, president.
'76: Expansion to 3rd St; new gaming floor and opening of Hugo's Rotisserie restaurant, renamed Hugo's Cellar in '81. (“4 Queens expansion completed.” Review-Journal, 6/13/76.)
'77: Jeanne Hood appointed president of Four Queens in Jul., following the death of husband David.
'79: Hyatt Hotels Corp splits off Elsinore into a publicly traded company, J. Hood as VP of Elsinore.
'81: Expansion on South 3rd, Tower II (18 fl., RJ 6/21/81).
'03: Sold to TLC Casino Enterprises.
1966 photos by Hank deLespinasse, Remember When Las Vegas, and three postcards.
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