Anonymous ID: a608d3 July 26, 2022, 12:52 p.m. No.16829095   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9229 >>9243 >>9357

>>16829023

Exactly.

Disarm people actually means: disarm LAW ABIDING PEOPLE, so that they can't protect themselves from a) criminals, b) a criminal corrupt government

 

Yup, I totally trust this government atm that tried to force gene therapy / poison shit into my body.

How about the government gives away its guns instead, because it made it obvious that it can't be trusted. Its guns are even tax payer funded, which means tax payer should have a say if the government get to have guns or not.

 

Let me think about it:

Guns given away by regular citizens.

  • citizens can be attacked by criminals and government, can't defend themselves from either, have to hope that government steps in, which they don't do, after all they are the ones wanting the guns in the first place, not guns of criminals of course

 

Gun-free government:

  • citizens still can't be attacked and can defend themselves and the government can get removed when they overstep boundaries without major blood shed, like force-injecting poison into the population, doing medical Nazi experiments, etc. In fact they would not even try to overstep these boundaries in the first place, because of fear.

 

I only see pros in a non-gun, non-violent government.

 

Just imagine a gun free government invading Afghanistan.

Afghani people tell it to fuck off and it would have left.

No blood shed. No one killed. Everyone is happy, except drug selling glow niggers and the military industrial complex, which wouldn't exist in the first place with a gun-free government.

Anonymous ID: a608d3 July 26, 2022, 12:53 p.m. No.16829564   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/politics/israel-purposefully-neglecting-prisoners-demands:-ppc

 

 

'Israel' purposefully neglecting prisoners demands: PPC

 

 

Palestinian prisoners are hunger-striking to protest the Israeli occupation's administrative detention, the longest of which being 111 days by prisoner Khalil Awawdeh and 76 days by Raed Rayan.

 

 

The prisoners are in critical health conditions while the Israeli occupation's prisons authorities are refusing to respond to their demands for liberation.

 

 

The Palestinian Prisoners Club said Awawdeh's case should clear up by June 26, which is the date his current administrative detention ends. However, it would not be out of the ordinary if the Israeli occupation chooses to arbitrarily extend his sentence.

 

 

The PPC later reported that prisoner Awawdeh suspended his hunger strike on the 111th day after the Israeli occupation pledged to end his arbitrary detention.

 

 

Prisoner Rayan, on the other hand, is still on hunger strike, starting his 76th day today. He is still detained in the Ramlah prison clinic after the occupation transferred him there from Ofer prison on May 23. Nothing is clear about his case so far.

 

 

The PPC underlined that the Israeli occupation was neglecting the prisoners' demands on purpose in a bid to have them reach a highly critical health condition with grave repercussions in the long run.

 

 

The head of the Palestinian Prisoners and Ex-prisoners Affairs Commission, Qadri Abu Bakr, revealed on Wednesday that the Israeli occupation threatened prisoners to deny them any access to medical treatment if they do not end their open-ended hunger strike.

 

 

Palestinian prisoners Khalil Awawdeh, 40, from the town of Idna in Al-Khalil, and Raed Rayan, 27, from the village of Beit Duqu north of Al-Quds, have been hunger-striking for months, demanding their freedom robbed by the Israeli occupation.

 

 

Rayan has been suffering from headaches and joint, flank, and knee pain, as well as difficulty in walking. He has not been examined by a doctor and has not undergone any medical examinations since the beginning of his hunger strike, while Awawdeh is suffering from severe joint pain, headaches, vertigo, and blurred vision. He is also unable to move and is wheelchair-bound.

 

 

Palestinian prisoner Zakaria Al-Zubaidi, one of the prisoners behind Operation Freedom Tunnel, which saw six brave prisoners liberating themselves from the unjust prisons of the Israeli occupation, is on the 17th day of his hunger strike launched in solidarity with the hunger-striking prisoners.

 

 

This comes as 640 administrative detainees are still boycotting the Israeli occupation courts in protest of the policy of administrative detention.

 

 

There are 682 administrative detainees in the Israeli occupation's prisons out of some 4,600 prisoners. Reports show that there have been more than 54,000 administrative detention orders since 1967.

 

 

Among the administrative detainees are two female prisoners and a child, most of whom are in the prisons of Ofer (233), Al-Naqab (259), and Megiddo (89).

Anonymous ID: a608d3 July 26, 2022, 12:53 p.m. No.16829747   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16829333

Ballots were stuffed to cover for the dominion machine fuckery, besides every little bit helps!!! Imagine the number of ballots that were stuffed. This would also help to deter anyone from trying it again this November!