Are you guys feds or satanists?
kek nuclear faggots
do y'all have it set to auto-delete? or is there an itchy finger just waiting
^(?!(Anonymous$))
you know only shills space like that, muscle memmory
nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine
Chabad tunnels in Gaza
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13183489/Unmasked-NHS-psychiatrist-Cheshire-tyre-fitter-ran-massive-global-paedophile-ring-called-Annex-King-Paedo-mastermind.html
NHS psychiatrist and Cheshire tyre fitter who ran massive global paedophile ring called 'The Annex' for 'King Paedo' mastermind
Read the Mail's exclusive report on how two British lieutenant helped run the network used by 100,000 paedophiles
You belong to your father, the devil, and you want to carry out your father’s desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, not holding to the truth, for there is no truth in him. When he lies, he speaks his native language, for he is a liar and the father of lies.
>764
https://nationalpost.com/opinion/supreme-court-decision-say-word-woman-is-confusing-unfortunate
https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/2024/2024scc7/2024scc7.html
Supreme Court decision opts for 'person with a vagina' over 'woman'
A decision in a sexual assault case implied that the complainant should be properly known as a 'person with a vagina'
>was able to decode the new signal and found that it contains a readout of the entire FDS memory
good job
>we cannot have illegal aliens coming to Florida
>cures for migraine
>If you don't believe Osama bin Laden did 9/11 you might be an anti-semite
https://forward.com/fast-forward/588719/tunnel-chabad-shovel-pin-770/
Gerlitzky had the small gold-colored shovel pin conspicuously attached to the lapel of his black jacket as he spoke on the Trauma Dump with Zach Adler podcast. The episode, titled “Interview with a Secret NYC Jewish ‘Tunnel’ Digger,” was posted on YouTube March 1.
“So he’s wearing a shovel on the lapel,” Adler, the podcast host, said. “I love that you’re wearing this and I want one by the way. Can you get me one?”
“Yeah, sure,” Gerlitzky said. Pointing to details on the pin, he said, “Here it says, ‘Expand 770,’ and there is a little 770 in the shovel,” referring to a silhouette of the building on the pin.
“Oh my God, it’s beautiful,” Adler said. “I think I want to be on Team Expand. So I would like a shovel.”
Someone posting anonymously on the Orthodox Jewish news site collive.com also referred to the item, saying: “I have seen a new lapel pin of a gold shovel. The shovelist’s.”
https://newrepublic.com/article/169554/gilbert-bigio-canada-sanctions-haiti
The Billionaire Oligarch Who’s Enabling Haiti’s Murderous Gangs
Businessman Gilbert Bigio is facing penalties for his alleged involvement with the violence that’s engulfed the country during Prime Minister Ariel Henry’s corrupt reign.
In a stunning new development amid the smoldering crisis in Haiti, Canada has imposed stiff economic sanctions on Gilbert Bigio, who is often described as the richest man in Haiti. The Canadian foreign ministry accused Bigio, along with two other superwealthy Haitians, of using their economic power “to protect and enable the illegal activities of the armed criminal gangs” that are tearing the country apart. For years, Haitians have said Bigio and other oligarchs are complicit in the violence strangling the nation: This year 1,448 people have been killed, with another 1,005 kidnapped for ransom. Until now, however, the international community has stayed mostly silent about Haiti’s corrupt elite.
Canada’s bold move should end the mistaken view in the outside world that the gang violence, which has brought 60 percent of the capital, Port-au-Prince, to a virtual standstill, is nothing but savagery contained in poor neighborhoods. As one local online publication—the respected AyiboPost—explained, the Bigio family’s broad economic holdings include its own recently constructed private port of Lafito, just north of the capital. AyiboPost speculates that Canada may have information indicating that the gangs have been able to use the port to import some of the heavy weapons that are outgunning the beleaguered Haitian police.
The Bigio family is part of what is often called the “Syro-Lebanese elite”—the descendants of people who immigrated in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries from various parts of the Middle East. There are estimates that Gilbert Bigio, the 86-year-old patriarch, is worth $1 billion, although no one knows for sure. It is a matter of public record that in 2020 he bought a Mercedes Maybach luxury auto for $132,000, quite a statement in a nation where an estimated 4.7 million people—nearly half the population—are experiencing “acute food insecurity.”
That many outside of Haiti are ignorant about these influential oligarchs is actually something of a surprise. Back in the early 1990s, after most of the wealthy supported the overthrow of the democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, foreign diplomats, including a U.S. ambassador, called them “morally repugnant elites,” or MREs for short. The appellation was inspired by the emergency rations known as “meals ready-to-eat.”
Daniel Foote, the former U.S envoy to Haiti who resigned in September 2021 to protest against the disastrous American policy, told me that he thinks Canada and the U.S. State Department are working together to economically punish Bigio and the others. But he suspects that the United States cannot follow Canada’s example by imposing stiff sanctions, possibly because Bigio may be a U.S. citizen and thus entitled to due process. In theory, however, U.S. prosecutors could bring cases against Bigio and other oligarchs for funding the vicious gangs whether these defendants have U.S. citizenship or not. As things stand, inaction is much more likely.
Why do some members of Haiti’s elite pay and even arm the gangs? There are several explanations. In conversations with well-placed Haitians who understandably asked for anonymity, several theories emerged. All agreed that the gangs today are largely paramilitary allies of the PHTK, the political party that has dominated Haiti for the past decade with a combination of election fraud and violence. These oligarchs have a vested interest in maintaining this alliance. A large-shop owner explained that Haiti’s elite profits from monopolizing certain strategic imports—the Bigios control steel—and so they cooperate with the ruling party to maintain that economic power.
All my anonymous informants agreed that Haiti’s rich evade their taxes, especially import duties. What’s more, Canada directly accused Gilbert Bigio and the two others of “money-laundering and other acts of corruption.” And one former government official told me that way back in the 1950s, the Bigios had imported Uzi submachine guns from Israel for the François “Papa Doc“ Duvalier dictatorship; the weapons trade may thus have already been a component of the family business model.
Ex-envoy Foote is somewhat skeptical about the Canadian-U.S. economic pressure. “I think they are acting for optics so it looks like they are actually doing something,” he said. “But what they should be doing right now is ending their support for Ariel Henry, the unelected, de facto prime minister, who is the biggest immediate obstacle to a solution.” Foote, like very many Haitians, endorses (with some reservations) the Commission for a Haitian Solution to the Crisis, also known as the Montana Accord, the broad-based coalition that is calling for Henry to step down and give way to a provisional government that can restore order and then eventually prepare for new elections in two years.
But the Biden administration, Canada, and the United Nations have not given up on Ariel Henry. Foote, who knows the major players, cannot hide his astonishment: “The U.S., by continuing to recognize Henry, is implying that there are two camps in Haiti: his and the opposition. But in fact, he has no support: Haitians want him gone, and he may even be linked to the assassination in 2021 of President Jovenel Moïse.”
Meanwhile, the Montana Accord, which joins together more than 650 Haitian organizations and individuals, including labor unions, community groups, Catholic and Protestant churches, women’s groups, and chambers of commerce—all along with an inclusive range of political leanings—continues to demand that the U.S., Canada, and the U.N. set aside Ariel Henry and instead recognize a transitional government. Monique Clesca, a prominent member of the accord, testified on December 9 before a committee of Canada’s Parliament: “Today Haiti is a nation under siege, by heavily armed men. Worse: The [Ariel Henry] government, the politicians, and the economic sectors finance and arm these gangs.”
Clesca, who is a writer and an international development expert, went to lengths to make two important, linked points. First, she said, Henry is in power illegally and has no right to speak for Haiti and ask foreign powers to send troops. She called his request “a crime of high treason.” But second, she charged that Henry has made no genuine effort to bring the gangs under control. Instead, she says, his government has “crossed its arms.” Her view, shared by many Haitians, is that the de facto prime minister and his political and elite allies prefer the present violence, so they can summon an international armed force to maintain them in power despite their decade of corruption and mismanagement. It is reasonable to surmise that Henry and his allies are running a con job that until now has suckered the U.S. State Department and gone unreported in mainstream U.S. press accounts.
Clesca does not deny that Haiti is in crisis. “We are against intervention,” she told the Canadian members of Parliament. “But we do want the Haitian police reinforced, and we do need immediate humanitarian aid.” Haiti is currently struggling with a resurgence of cholera, which U.N. troops first brought to the country after the 2010 earthquake; 283 more Haitians have already died in the latest outbreak of a disease that is actually quite treatable.
A few days after her testimony, Clesca, like the rest of the Montana Group, in a November 30 statement, continued to reject foreign military intervention.* She told me, “We are a sovereign state. Nobody is calling for intervention in Ethiopia, or El Salvador, and they have huge problems.” She continued: “It is time for us Haitians to take responsibility for our state. Nothing says we can’t have assistance. Nothing says we can’t have cooperation. But we have to sit down together across a table and define our needs. It is time for us Haitians to assume responsibility for our people.”
ice cream delivery
Did Sean Penn ever mention Clinton Foundation donor Gilbert Bigio?
>Did Sean Penn ever mention Clinton Foundation donor Gilbert Bigio?
https://twitter.com/madanboukman/status/1571265174752968706
Clinton imposed puppet Michel Martelly built Port Lafito & 10 miles road with public funds for the Bigio billionaire crime family, a Clinton Foundation donor. The Bigio mafia is taking over #Haiti. Illicit weapons enter the port to kill Haitians resisting the colonial takeover.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Jacques_Dessalines
>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Jacques_Dessalines
He ordered the 1804 Haitian Genocide of the remaining French population in Haiti, resulting in the deaths of between 3,000 and 5,000 people, including women and children, as well as thousands of refugees. Some modern historians classify the massacre as a genocide due to its systemic nature. Notably, he excluded surviving Polish Legionnaires, who had defected from the French legion to become allied with the enslaved Africans, as well as the Germans who did not take part in the slave trade. He granted them full citizenship under the constitution and classified them as black, along with all other Haitian citizens. Tensions remained with the minority of mixed-race or free people of color, who had gained some education and property during the colonial period.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Madonna_of_Cz%C4%99stochowa#Icon_usage_in_the_Haitian_Vodou_religion
Due to its appearance, the icon has been syncretized by some Vodou practitioners to the deity Ezilí Dantor, the main loa of the Petro family in Haitian Vodou. It is hypothesized that the image was introduced into Haiti by the reproductions of the Black Madonna brought by Polish soldiers who sided with the rebels during the Haitian Revolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wernher_von_Braun