Texas DPS Arrest Human Smugglers During Traffic Stop, Driver Denying Search, Find Two Illegals in Trunk with Help from Border Patrol K9 Search (VIDEO)

thegatewaypundit.com/2025/06/t…

Quite a luxury that… being able to flee the bombs. A luxury the people being slaughtered by israel in the genocide it is commiting in Gaza don’t have.

So please excuse my very fucking small violin.

#israel #genocide #ethnicCleansing #apartheid #settlerColonialism #Palestine #Gaza #WestBank todon.eu/@dbattistella/1147228…

reshared this

in reply to Aral Balkan

not just gaza, palestinian/arab Israelis apparently don't get shelters either. At least according to CNN, Guardian, Haarez. ...
don't need to go to Al Jazeera for these news, but they say it too of course.

But of course Israel isn't an apartheid state, perish the thought ...

edition.cnn.com/2025/06/16/mid…

theguardian.com/world/2025/jun…

haaretz.com/israel-news/2025-0…

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Sozan reshared this.

ULKOPUOLISET – yhteinen blokki tasa-arvon politiikalle Helsinki Pridessa!
Kulkueesta suljettiin pois eduskunnan ulkopuoliset puolueet. Emme hyväksy tätä. Se rajaa queer-ihmisten ja muiden poliittista itseilmaisua.
Siksi marssimme Ulkopuolisina. Kutsumme mukaan kaikki, joille ei pelkkä karnevaali riitä. Teidät, joille Pride on protesti, tilaa olla näkyvästi queer, köyhä, vammainen, paperiton, työtön, radikaali.
#Ulkopuoliset #Pride2025 #HelsinkiPride2025 TYKKÄÄ JA JAA!
facebook.com/events/s/ulkopuol…

Faille Linux critique - Vérifiez et patchez d'urgence!


Selon les chercheurs de Qualys, l’exploitation fonctionne sur toutes les versions non patchées, donc si vous n’avez pas fait de mise à jour de sécurité depuis le 17 juin 2025, vous êtes vulnérables.

Le plus chiant dans cette affaire, c’est pas tant la faille en elle-même (on en découvre tous les jours), mais c’est surtout sa simplicité de mise en exploitation. Linux est quand même un système ultra-sécurisé où chaque privilège est accordé au compte-gouttes, et là, pouf, 2 services par défaut suffisent pour transformer n’importe qui en administrateur système.

pascal macaigne reshared this.

Who started the sexual blackmail ?
Who owns the central banks ?
Who owns the media?
Who controls Congress ?
Who controlled the office of the US president?
Who controls the oil companies?
Who controls Hollywood ?
Who controls the music industry?
Who controls the TV industry ?
Who funded the slave trade and slave ships?
Who funded and created all terrorist orgs?
Who controls 3 letter agencies?
Who started the feminism movement ?
Who started gangster rap industry ?
Who started Planned Parenthood?
Who started the LGBTQ movement ?
Who funded and created the color revolutions?
Who funded all sides of every war since at least 1500’s?
Who owns the educational institutions?
Who owns the textbook industry?

And on and on and on and on.

E. S. T.

Nuclear power depends on abundant cold water to function. It cannot function properly in a world with rising sea temperatures.

"Nuclear power plant warning as heatwave hits France”

#nuclear #NuclearPower #climate #France

independent.co.uk/news/world/e…

PopOS COSMIC progress, Linux Mint theme changes, System76 in house design: Linux & Open Source News


Check out KernelCare Enterprise, and get your free extended support for CentOS 7: bit.ly/40PC7Ox

Grab a brand new laptop or desktop running Linux: tuxedocomputers.com/en#

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Get access to a weekly podcast, vote on the next topics I cover, and get your name in the credits:

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Support the channel AND get cool new gear: the-linux-experiment.creator-s…

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This video is distributed under the Creative Commons Share Alike license.

#Linux #opensource #technews

00:00 Intro
00:30 Sponsor: Get more time to prepare your transition from CentOS 7
01:17 System76 makes good progress on their COSMIC desktop
03:23 Linux Mint 21.2 brings easier theming
05:22 System76 is working on an internally designed laptop
07:08 Linux kernel 6.4 will add Apple M2 support
08:24 elementary OS 7 progress report
09:44 GTK implements Wayland fractional scaling in the next version
11:36 Gaming News: Wine, game compatibility, 3M Steam Decks sold
13:22 Sponsor: Get a PC made to run Linux from Tuxedo
14:22 Support the channel

System76 makes good progress on their COSMIC desktop

blog.system76.com/post/cosmic-…

Linux Mint 21.2 brings easier theming

linuxiac.com/linux-mint-21-2-w…

System76 is working on an internally designed laptop

fosstodon.org/@carlrichell

Linux kernel 6.4 will add Apple M2 support

phoronix.com/news/Apple-M2-Dev…

elementary OS 7 progress report

blog.elementary.io/updates-for…

GTK implements Wayland fractional scaling in the next version

blog.gtk.org/2023/04/05/gtk-4-…

blogs.igalia.com/carlosgc/2023…

Gaming News: Wine, game compatibility, 3M Steam Decks sold

support.halowaypoint.com/hc/en…

gamingonlinux.com/2023/04/the-…

omdia.tech.informa.com/pr/2023…

This entry was edited (9 months ago)

Human-like object concept representations emerge naturally in multimodal large language models. Embeddings showed human-like semantic clustering and interpretable dimensions.

Strong alignment with neural patterns (e.g., fusiform face area, parahippocampal cortex) reveals that models share fundamental similarities that reflect key aspects of human conceptual knowledge.

nature.com/articles/s42256-025…

#MachineLearning #llm

I have a zero turn radius lawnmower. So today I cut the grass in spirals. Started in a section spun in place and worked my way out. It was fun but not very efficient. I had to go back and mow all the triangles between the spirals. My BIL came by to check on his garden. "You cut your lawn in circles?, he asked. I made my best bewildered look and asked "doesn't everybody?" He just shook his head and looked disgusted, like I had committed some terrible immorality. It amused me.

Arab League Denounces Israeli Aggression on Iran tn.ai/3339439

My son (22) has just completed BSc "Cybercrime and IT Security" at SETU (Carlow). He doesn't have his final results yet but should get a decent honours grade.

Edit: He got a 2.1

He also has a bit of relevant work experience from a couple of placements.

He's in Ireland and would ideally like a post that's mainly WFH and full-time.

If anyone knows of any suitable vacancies or can suggest places he can punt his CV to, please let me know. Obviously he'll be exploring LinkedIn and the usual recruitment sites.

Boosts appreciated.

#GetFediHired #MastoDaoine

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Le saviez-vous ?

45,5% des recettes de la Sécurité sociale provenaient des employeurs en 1973.

En 2019, c'est seulement 29,6 % !

Inutile de chercher plus loin où trouver l'argent pour financer les retraites ou les allocations chômage !

mediapart.fr/journal/economie-…

🚨URGENT - Guerre à la guerre : La police encercle le bâtiment et la brav est a l'entrée principale

C'est inédit. A deux heures du début de la manifestation guerre a la guerre, la police menace d'entrer dans la bourse du travail de Bobigny ou une centaine de personnes assistent a des débats.

Aucune décision de juge n'a été communiquée en appui de cette opération de police manifestement hors de tout cadre légal.

Plusieurs personnes ont dores et déjà été interpellées.

Nous ne nous laisserons pas intimider, le meeting et la manifestation auront bien lieu. Rendez-vous place de la libération a Bobigny des maintenant.

Guerre à la guerre !

“Iranian Drones and Missiles Hit Israel: Fires, Collapsed Buildings Reported”

by Palestine Chronicle Staff

@palestine
@israel
@UKLabour

“Sirens continued to blare across Greater Tel Aviv as interception efforts were underway. Explosions were reportedly heard over #TelAviv, #Jerusalem, #Haifa, and parts of the coastal plain, according to multiple Israeli outlets”

palestinechronicle.com/iranian…

#Press #Israel #US #Iran #War #Missile #Drone #Attack #Gaza #Palestine #Genocide #Terrorism #MassMurder

Iran not negotiate with no side until Israel stop attacks en.mehrnews.com/news/233391/Ir…

🔴 Plus de 50 activistes, à l'appel de la Confédération paysanne 63, d'Attac, de XR Clermont, BNM et aussi beaucoup de citoyen·nes ont convergé vers le péage de Gerzat ce samedi 21 juin pour dire Non à la loi Duplomb.

Cette loi que la FNSEA veut nous imposer, va réintroduire des pesticides tueur d'abeilles, qui nuisent gravement à la santé des paysan·nes et de toute la population.

La commission paritaire va se réunir le 30 juin pour décider en petit comité de notre santé et de la destruction de la biodiversité, au passage en nous privant d'un débat démocratique.

✊ Dimanche 29 juin venez toutes et tous à une grande manifestation qui aura lieu à 11h au Puy.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

The Endless Trial Georges Abdallah


“Gentlemen, I stand before you simply to ask that you wash your hands, stained with our blood and the blood of our children, before claiming the right to judge us. Whoever tramples on the blood of 25,000 martyrs, killed during the imperialist-Zionist invasion of Lebanon in 1982, is nothing less than a direct accomplice of Reagan and Begin in their war to annihilate our people. Twenty-five thousand martyrs in three months, all for your so-called peace. Forty-five thousand wounded, all for your idea of justice. For ninety days, Beirut became a testing ground for U.S.-Israeli weapons. And yet, in your eyes, Reagan’s administration is the victim and the plaintiff. None of this is surprising, except, perhaps, to those still deluded enough to believe there’s a difference between imperial France and its notion of justice.”

— Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, Paris, February 23, 1987

In Discipline and Punish, Michel Foucault begins with the 1757 execution of Robert-François Damiens as a starting point for tracing the transformation of punishment from public physical torture to disciplinary surveillance. Damiens’ body was torn apart with red-hot pincers, his wounds filled with molten lead and sulfur before he was dismembered and burned. This was not merely a criminal punishment; it was a political ritual meant to reaffirm the king’s authority by instilling terror in the collective body.

Yet Foucault overlooks the colonial dimension of these disciplinary systems. While France transitioned to “reforming” modern prisons at home, it deployed the same techniques with even greater brutality in its colonies. In the detention centers of Algeria and Guiana, and the prisons of Vietnam, Syria, and Lebanon. The case of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah most starkly reveals this continuity, where the colonized body becomes a site of disciplinary and racial experimentation.

On June 19, 2025, the French Court of Appeals is scheduled to review the release request of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, who has been held hostage in French prisons for 41 years without a fair trial or legal justification. Abdallah has been imprisoned since October 1984, despite a court ruling granting his release. His struggle has now stretched across four decades. From a public school teacher in the northern Lebanese village of Akroum, he became a global symbol of struggle. His journey began during the 1978 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, where he was wounded in battle. He soon after joined the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Lebanese Communist Party. Driven by PFLP’s slogan “Behind the enemy everywhere,” he chose to take the struggle into the heart of the empire backing the Zionist entity.

To fully understand Georges Abdallah’s case as the longest-held political prisoner in Europe, one must go beyond his 1984 arrest. Defined by his legendary resilience in the face of imperialist violence in its most brutal forms inside prisons, Abdallah’s defiance also manifests through his unwavering solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners’ movement. Over the years, he has launched several hunger strikes in support of their collective actions: in February 2012, August 2016, April 2017, and most recently, October 2022. He has also sent numerous solidarity letters, most notably to Ahmad Saadat, Secretary-General of the PFLP, and to the martyred commander Walid Daqqa, whose death struck Abdallah deeply, despite the geographic distance and the absence of any organized prisoner movement inside Lannemezan Prison in southwest France.

In his letters, Georges Abdallah addresses a wide range of grassroots and protest movements, feeding them with intellectual and moral support. During the Arab uprisings, he voiced solidarity with protesters across the region, most notably in a message to the Lebanese people during the October 2019 revolution. To him, the uprising was a revolt against impoverishment and corruption, a rejection of the banking system’s dictates and the IMF’s prescriptions, and a stand against the violence of imperialist economic policies. During the ongoing al-Aqsa Flood battle, Abdallah issued multiple messages to the people of Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon. To follow his case as a symbol of political steadfastness now requires a timeline, not for simplification, but to begin to grasp the depth and continuity of his journey.

Following in the footsteps of Wadie Haddad


Wadie Haddad, the historical leader of external operations in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), can be seen as the foundational figure behind the theoretical and practical framework that Georges Abdallah would later adopt. In 1968, Haddad established the External Operations branch, known for its high-profile international operations; the creation of the Revolution Airport in Jordan; drawing in revolutionaries from global movements, among them, the Japanese Red Army, Nicaraguan fighter Patrick Arguello, and Venezuelan militant Carlos.

At the core of Haddad’s doctrine was a rejection of transforming the Palestinian armed revolution into conventional urban warfare, as happened in Amman. Instead, he favored the establishment of training centers in Yemen and Iraq and emphasized the importance of international operations. The defeat of this doctrine was not solely due to Zionist attacks and assassinations, but also due to internal Palestinian rifts and the failure to further develop the model. It was instead replaced with an exclusive focus on guerrilla warfare tactics and the formation of urban militias.

This article cannot fully explore the complexities of revolutionary combat theory, but the brutal assaults on guerrilla bases in Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank, and the geopolitical constraints during al-Aqsa Flood, highlight the cost of abandoning transnational revolutionary movements capable of striking imperial powers in their own capitals. Throughout the current war, even as the US, UK, and Germany have launched direct military operations against resistance forces in Lebanon, Gaza, and Yemen, resistance beyond the region has remained sporadic and individual, such as the operation carried out by Elias Rodríguez in May.

Regarding the continued imprisonment of Georges Abdallah as a political prisoner, journalist Ghassan Charbel notes in Secrets of the Black Box that no definitive link has ever been established between Abdallah and the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Factions, which he was accused of leading as part of the External Operations unit. Charbel emphasizes that, despite the chaos of the Lebanese Civil War and the complexities of the European environment in which the group operated, it remained notably resistant to infiltration.

Anis al-Naqqash adds that his own case was grouped with Abdallah’s, even though no concrete connection existed between the two. He recalls meeting Georges Abdallah during their shared time at Moulin Prison in France, where they engaged in extensive political and ideological discussions about Lebanon and the resistance movement. Al-Naqqash insists that Abdallah’s life sentence was deeply unjust, not only because the assassinations he was accused of were never conclusively linked to him, but also because a prior agreement between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Algeria with France to cease operations by the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Factions had already been reached before Abdallah’s arrest. This strongly suggests that the ongoing imprisonment is less about legal grounds and more a result of political pressure and a punitive response to his unwavering ideological convictions.

“Knowing that you’ve gathered today, just beyond the barbed wire and watchtowers, only meters from my cell, fills me with strength and warms my heart.”

— Georges Abdallah, October 2024

The case of Lebanese prisoner Georges Ibrahim Abdallah stands as an extension of France’s colonial legacy, where punishment is weaponized as a tool of domination. Refusing to release him while turning his 41-year imprisonment into a slow execution embodies the shift from public bodily torture to contemporary methods of annihilation. Through the use of time, imprisonment becomes a systematic dismantling of the human self, depriving both body and consciousness of freedom.

France’s refusal to implement the 2013 release order issued by its own Court of Cassation under US and Israeli pressure—reveals how colonial hegemony operates as a panoptic system, reproducing control and violence under the guise of legality. Through legal and media discourse, labeling the prisoner a “terrorist” strips him of rights and personhood, echoing the very logic of colonial domination.

source: Al Akhbar

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=…

#France #georgesAbdallah #lebanon #palestine #repression #resistance

The Endless Trial Georges Abdallah
abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/198…

"“Gentlemen, I stand before you simply to ask that you wash your hands, stained with our blood and the blood of our children, before claiming the right to judge us.…"


The Endless Trial Georges Abdallah


“Gentlemen, I stand before you simply to ask that you wash your hands, stained with our blood and the blood of our children, before claiming the right to judge us. Whoever tramples on the blood of 25,000 martyrs, killed during the imperialist-Zionist invasion of Lebanon in 1982, is nothing less than a direct accomplice of Reagan and Begin in their war to annihilate our people. Twenty-five thousand martyrs in three months, all for your so-called peace. Forty-five thousand wounded, all for your idea of justice. For ninety days, Beirut became a testing ground for U.S.-Israeli weapons. And yet, in your eyes, Reagan’s administration is the victim and the plaintiff. None of this is surprising, except, perhaps, to those still deluded enough to believe there’s a difference between imperial France and its notion of justice.”

— Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, Paris, February 23, 1987

In Discipline and Punish, Michel Foucault begins with the 1757 execution of Robert-François Damiens as a starting point for tracing the transformation of punishment from public physical torture to disciplinary surveillance. Damiens’ body was torn apart with red-hot pincers, his wounds filled with molten lead and sulfur before he was dismembered and burned. This was not merely a criminal punishment; it was a political ritual meant to reaffirm the king’s authority by instilling terror in the collective body.

Yet Foucault overlooks the colonial dimension of these disciplinary systems. While France transitioned to “reforming” modern prisons at home, it deployed the same techniques with even greater brutality in its colonies. In the detention centers of Algeria and Guiana, and the prisons of Vietnam, Syria, and Lebanon. The case of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah most starkly reveals this continuity, where the colonized body becomes a site of disciplinary and racial experimentation.

On June 19, 2025, the French Court of Appeals is scheduled to review the release request of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, who has been held hostage in French prisons for 41 years without a fair trial or legal justification. Abdallah has been imprisoned since October 1984, despite a court ruling granting his release. His struggle has now stretched across four decades. From a public school teacher in the northern Lebanese village of Akroum, he became a global symbol of struggle. His journey began during the 1978 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, where he was wounded in battle. He soon after joined the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Lebanese Communist Party. Driven by PFLP’s slogan “Behind the enemy everywhere,” he chose to take the struggle into the heart of the empire backing the Zionist entity.

To fully understand Georges Abdallah’s case as the longest-held political prisoner in Europe, one must go beyond his 1984 arrest. Defined by his legendary resilience in the face of imperialist violence in its most brutal forms inside prisons, Abdallah’s defiance also manifests through his unwavering solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners’ movement. Over the years, he has launched several hunger strikes in support of their collective actions: in February 2012, August 2016, April 2017, and most recently, October 2022. He has also sent numerous solidarity letters, most notably to Ahmad Saadat, Secretary-General of the PFLP, and to the martyred commander Walid Daqqa, whose death struck Abdallah deeply, despite the geographic distance and the absence of any organized prisoner movement inside Lannemezan Prison in southwest France.

In his letters, Georges Abdallah addresses a wide range of grassroots and protest movements, feeding them with intellectual and moral support. During the Arab uprisings, he voiced solidarity with protesters across the region, most notably in a message to the Lebanese people during the October 2019 revolution. To him, the uprising was a revolt against impoverishment and corruption, a rejection of the banking system’s dictates and the IMF’s prescriptions, and a stand against the violence of imperialist economic policies. During the ongoing al-Aqsa Flood battle, Abdallah issued multiple messages to the people of Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon. To follow his case as a symbol of political steadfastness now requires a timeline, not for simplification, but to begin to grasp the depth and continuity of his journey.

Following in the footsteps of Wadie Haddad


Wadie Haddad, the historical leader of external operations in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), can be seen as the foundational figure behind the theoretical and practical framework that Georges Abdallah would later adopt. In 1968, Haddad established the External Operations branch, known for its high-profile international operations; the creation of the Revolution Airport in Jordan; drawing in revolutionaries from global movements, among them, the Japanese Red Army, Nicaraguan fighter Patrick Arguello, and Venezuelan militant Carlos.

At the core of Haddad’s doctrine was a rejection of transforming the Palestinian armed revolution into conventional urban warfare, as happened in Amman. Instead, he favored the establishment of training centers in Yemen and Iraq and emphasized the importance of international operations. The defeat of this doctrine was not solely due to Zionist attacks and assassinations, but also due to internal Palestinian rifts and the failure to further develop the model. It was instead replaced with an exclusive focus on guerrilla warfare tactics and the formation of urban militias.

This article cannot fully explore the complexities of revolutionary combat theory, but the brutal assaults on guerrilla bases in Lebanon, Gaza, and the West Bank, and the geopolitical constraints during al-Aqsa Flood, highlight the cost of abandoning transnational revolutionary movements capable of striking imperial powers in their own capitals. Throughout the current war, even as the US, UK, and Germany have launched direct military operations against resistance forces in Lebanon, Gaza, and Yemen, resistance beyond the region has remained sporadic and individual, such as the operation carried out by Elias Rodríguez in May.

Regarding the continued imprisonment of Georges Abdallah as a political prisoner, journalist Ghassan Charbel notes in Secrets of the Black Box that no definitive link has ever been established between Abdallah and the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Factions, which he was accused of leading as part of the External Operations unit. Charbel emphasizes that, despite the chaos of the Lebanese Civil War and the complexities of the European environment in which the group operated, it remained notably resistant to infiltration.

Anis al-Naqqash adds that his own case was grouped with Abdallah’s, even though no concrete connection existed between the two. He recalls meeting Georges Abdallah during their shared time at Moulin Prison in France, where they engaged in extensive political and ideological discussions about Lebanon and the resistance movement. Al-Naqqash insists that Abdallah’s life sentence was deeply unjust, not only because the assassinations he was accused of were never conclusively linked to him, but also because a prior agreement between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Algeria with France to cease operations by the Lebanese Revolutionary Armed Factions had already been reached before Abdallah’s arrest. This strongly suggests that the ongoing imprisonment is less about legal grounds and more a result of political pressure and a punitive response to his unwavering ideological convictions.

“Knowing that you’ve gathered today, just beyond the barbed wire and watchtowers, only meters from my cell, fills me with strength and warms my heart.”

— Georges Abdallah, October 2024

The case of Lebanese prisoner Georges Ibrahim Abdallah stands as an extension of France’s colonial legacy, where punishment is weaponized as a tool of domination. Refusing to release him while turning his 41-year imprisonment into a slow execution embodies the shift from public bodily torture to contemporary methods of annihilation. Through the use of time, imprisonment becomes a systematic dismantling of the human self, depriving both body and consciousness of freedom.

France’s refusal to implement the 2013 release order issued by its own Court of Cassation under US and Israeli pressure—reveals how colonial hegemony operates as a panoptic system, reproducing control and violence under the guise of legality. Through legal and media discourse, labeling the prisoner a “terrorist” strips him of rights and personhood, echoing the very logic of colonial domination.

source: Al Akhbar

abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=…

#France #georgesAbdallah #lebanon #palestine #repression #resistance


Seul le Guyana, un pays sud-américain d’environ 800.000 habitants, est capable de fournir entièrement à sa population les sept catégories d’aliments essentiels sans recourir aux importations. Immédiatement après, la Chine et le Vietnam se classent au deuxième rang, ces deux nations pouvant s’approvisionner de manière autonome pour six des sept catégories d’aliments essentiels mentionnées.

Le Vietnam est l’un des pays à niveau élevé d’autosuffisance alimentaire lecourrier.vn/le-vietnam-est-l…
#alimentation #autosuffisance alimentaire

Emmanuel Florac reshared this.

in reply to ˈdälfən™🐬 💥 🌊

Iran, USA— seems trump ‘decided’ (?)

Sensitive content

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Supercharged Extractivism on Uganda: East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) journal-neo.su/2025/06/21/supe…

“In less than 36 hours, we may begin losing newborns,”

“The international community must take responsibility for what Gaza’s infants are suffering.”

“We have made it clear: Gaza’s children are now facing a real health disaster. We urgently call on the world to act – immediately.”

“These are not luxuries. These are rights. These are babies –newborns – who have no part in this war. Their nutrition is the world’s responsibility.”

in reply to Ygor

Hey, @pluralistic already described some in the "adversarial interoperability" essay: eff.org/deeplinks/2019/06/adve…

Even Ultra-Liberal Belgium Is Introducing Boder Checks Amid Illegal Immigration Crackdown

thegatewaypundit.com/2025/06/e…

WATCH: Genomic Surveillance in the Thrill Kill Medical Cult with Zowe Smith off-guardian.org/2025/06/20/wa…

"How many bodies did you guys grab today?" one ICE agent asks another. The answer is 31, and the two high-five.

Concentration camps and totalitarianism are possible only because of people like this who willingly follow any orders they're given.

... by people like Miller, Noem, and Homan.

latimes.com/california/story/2…

Harvard hired a researcher to uncover its ties to slavery. He says the results cost him his job: ‘We found too many slaves’

When the extent of the university’s involvement with slavery was unearthed, a scholar tracking descendants of enslaved workers was suddenly fired.

theguardian.com/news/2025/jun/…

#Slavery #Harvard #BlackMastodon #History #Genealogy

reshared this