>ben should be airdropped on the front lines in israel along with his family
^(?!(Anonymous$))
>George sore horse
looks like a retired drag queen
Zwelivele Mandela, grandson of Nelson Mandela, and Aleida Guevara, daughter of Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara, will join a new aid flotilla to sail from Turkey to break the blockade of Gaza.
They are going to sail to Gaza soon with the Marmara 2 ship.
In 2010, Marmara 1 was moving towards Gaza to help the Palestinian people, but the Israeli terrorists attacked them and martyred some of those who were on board. It should be noted that they didn't have any weapons with them and were only carrying humanitarian aid.
>In old days didn’t they just behead the King?
rolled up in a carpet and trampled by horses
https://english.almayadeen.net/news/politics/palestinians-swimming-at-gaza-s-beaches-enrages-israelis
Palestinians swimming at Gaza's beaches enrages Israelis
After videos emerged of Palestinians swimming on Gaza's beaches, Israeli settlers and officials have viewed the event as a form of defeat.
https://t.me/DDGeopolitics/108435
Speaker Johnson said Hamas "cooked infants in ovens" on October 7th
https://t.me/DDGeopolitics/108434
Speaker of the House, Johnson was booed before the press conference at Columbia University.
An Israeli soldier photographed dozens of Iron Dome batteries and sent them to a young Iranian woman who seduced him on Facebook. She turned out to be an intelligence man.
John Bolton: Demonstrations in America in support of Hamas and Iran are worrying. We need to teach these people why Israel is a legal country and not an oppressive one. They should be taught the lessons of the Holocaust.
Still waiting for Osintbros to release high-resolution images of Nevatim Airbase, Ramon Airbase, and the Hermon Intelligence Base of the IDF in the Golan Heights, which have confirmed missile impacts. For some reason, they don't.
The Iraqi Islamic Resistance: Armed factions will resume their operations against American forces as a result of the lack of progress regarding their withdrawal from Iraq.
Netanyahu arrest warrant might be issued by ICC
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13327347/israel-war-crime-netanyahu-gaza-international-criminal-court.html
Israel fears International Criminal Court is preparing ARREST WARRANT for Benjamin Netanyahu for breaking international laws in Gaza
>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13327347/israel-war-crime-netanyahu-gaza-international-criminal-court.html
>rape conviction of Harvey Weinstein has been overturned
https://kslnewsradio.com/1968557/david-leavitt-heads-to-ukraine-to-help-donor-find-500-families-to-support/
David Leavitt heads to Ukraine to help donor find 500 families to support
May 10, 2022
Utah County Attorney David Leavitt is heading to Ukraine to help an anonymous donor select 500 families to support for an entire year.
“He wants to be generous, but he doesn’t necessarily want the credit for it,” Leavitt said.
Finding 500 families to support
To help with this generous donation, Leavitt will be on the ground in Ukraine trying to identify those 500 families. Once the families are identified, Leavitt says Visa gift cards will be provided to each family for immediate financial assistance until bank accounts can be set up.
“Really what we’re trying to do is humanize what’s going on in people’s lives,” he said.
Leavitt is more than familiar with the war-torn country, it’s almost a home away from home of sorts for Leavitt and his wife. For 14 years (2004 to 2018), they worked in legal reform efforts in Ukraine as part of The Leavitt Institute for International Development.
“Our role was to teach the jury trial and American criminal law in 35 law schools throughout Ukraine and Moldova,” Leavitt said.
During their time there, the Leavitts made many friends, and even have a home there.
“Kyiv is as much a home city for us as Provo or Salt Lake is,” he said.
Second trip to Ukraine
This is the second trip to Ukraine this year for Leavitt. He says he was there just before the Russian invasion to take care of some personal family issues, regarding their home.
“And now we’re going back to help our friends and others who are refugees,” Leavitt said.
The process of identifying the families that will be supported figures to be a huge undertaking.
“We are taking applications and hearing stories and trying to identify people who have lost everything,” he said.
Getting to Ukraine won’t be easy, however. Leavitt says he will first fly from Salt Lake City to Amsterdam. From there, he will fly to Romania, and will travel by ground the rest of the way into Ukraine.
Leavitt says he is accepting donations, and that can be done by clicking here. https://leavittinstitute.org/
https://www.sltrib.com/news/2022/01/26/utah-county-attorney/
Utah County Attorney David Leavitt makes quick exit out of Ukraine, but is now stuck in Amsterdam with COVID-19
David Leavitt, who taught law in Ukraine for more than a decade, went to Kyiv to collect documents from his apartment as news of a possible Russian invasion loomed.
When Utah County Attorney David Leavitt decided to go to Ukraine earlier this week to collect documents from his Kyiv apartment, he’d planned for several contingencies in case the city was invaded by the Russian military.
He had extra cash in case the internet went down and the ATMs didn’t work. He’d also rented a car, deciding it safest to not rely on public transportation in case the trains stopped running.
But something unexpected happened that halted what was supposed to be a quick trip to Ukraine to gather a few personal items: Leavitt is stuck in Amsterdam after he tested positive for COVID-19.
It’s the second time Leavitt has been ill with the coronavirus.
Leavitt, who taught in Ukraine with the American Bar Association for more than a decade, has owned an apartment in Kyiv for several years. With news of a threat of a Russian invasion, Leavitt said in an interview on Wednesday that he’d booked the hasty trip to Ukraine to get paperwork proving ownership of his apartment and to collect some personal effects.
“We flew from Salt Lake to Amsterdam and Amsterdam to Kiev,” he said Wednesday, “and spent 24 hours there and got things taken care of then visited with some close friends of ours.”
The capital city felt different than previous visits, Leavitt said of landing in Kyiv. He added that Ukrainian friends seemed nervous.
“It felt like there was a tension,” he said. “A feeling of foreboding. It’s right at the front of everyone’s minds. It’s a sad feeling.”
“There has been so much troop movement recently,” he said. “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s tanks have a far easier time going over frozen ground than muddy ground. That’s not something we think of as Americans.”
The county attorney said he decided to go to Ukraine after seeing news that the American Embassy was evacuating families and personnel and that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints had moved its missionaries out of the country. He expedited a previously planned trip because he felt he had a window of time where he could go with his sons to collect what they needed from the Kyiv apartment.
The U.S. Embassy issued an alert on Wednesday urging Americans to leave Ukraine as soon as possible, saying “the security situation in Ukraine continues to be unpredictable due to the increased threat of Russian military action.” It further noted the situation could “deteriorate with little notice.”
Leavitt first left Utah on Sunday, flew back out of Ukraine on Tuesday and received a positive COVID-19 test result early Wednesday while in Amsterdam en route back to Salt Lake City. He’s now quarantining in a hotel room near the airport in Amsterdam, but says he’s not sure how long he will be required to stay there.
“Thankfully they have a bathrobe,” he said Wednesday. “Because I literally went with the clothes on my back. And so now my clothes are drip-drying from my hotel room sink.”
During his years teaching in Ukraine, Leavitt said he instructed law students about the principles of American jury trials. The county attorney said it was the Ukrainian law students’ confusion over how plea deals could work in the United States that made him realize the shortcomings of the criminal justice system. He is now outspoken about wanting reform.
“So much of what I do in the United States, as the Utah County Attorney, is directly tied to years in the Ukraine,” he said. “I’m sad about it, because I not only love the Ukranian people, I have worked hard to help the legal system.”
Did Michelle Obama dominate women's sports?
-
The Department of Energy discovered Trump had an active security clearance after he was indicted so theyretroactivelyterminated it
retroactively
ok Kaczynski
>a run-down gas station in the 'middle of nowhere'
Malta
what's left of Ukraine will be the new Israel?
King Jacob
I'll be the king of that