"Israel Defense Forces (IDF) fired on UN peacekeepers in Lebanon early Thursday morning, according to UNIFIL, the mission operating along the Security Council-mandated “Blue Line” of separation between the two countries which they patrol."
I know of hundreds of families with trans kids who have fled southern states. I know about a dozen others who just flat out left the country permanently. People are doing what people did when fascism came, but conservatives don't see those people as human beings so they don't count.
Robocall hits Larry Hogan for acknowledging Biden won 2020 (Ally Mutnick/Politico)
politico.com/live-updates/2024…
memeorandum.com/241101/p109#a2…
Supreme Court won't block counting of certain provisional ballots in battleground Pennsylvania (Melissa Quinn/CBS News)
cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court…
memeorandum.com/241101/p107#a2…
Judge Allows Unusual G.O.P. Strategy to Pump Money Into Senate Races (Luke Broadwater/New York Times)
nytimes.com/2024/11/01/us/poli…
memeorandum.com/241101/p108#a2…
#fedilab is my favorite. I like it because it is simple, does the job without getting in my way. The developers have not introduced drastic changes that make the app unrecognizable over the years. Why break or change things if it simply works? That is the best thing about it.
By the way, #fedilab is not exclusively a "Mastodon" app. These days I use it for my #Pleroma account. I used to use it for #Mastodon when I previously had a Mastodon account. You can actually use it for many platforms that use #ActivityPub :)
CARTING. The punishment formerly inflicted on bawds, who were placed in a tumbrel or cart, and led through a town, that their persons might be known.
A selection from Francis Grose’s “Dictionary Of The Vulgar Tongue” (1785)
--
#books #literature #dictionaries #history #society #language #slang @histodons
thedemlabs.org/2024/11/01/djs-…
#Getoutthevote
👉🏼👉🏼Ex-officer Brett Hankison violated Breonna Taylor's civil rights in deadly raid, jury finds
“A jury on Friday found a former Kentucky police officer guilty of violating #BreonnaTaylor’s civil rights in a botched raid that led to her death, NBC affiliate WAVE of Louisville reported.
The jury earlier Friday found Brett Hankison not guilty of a second count that accused him of violating the civil rights of Taylor’s neighbor.
nbcnews.com/news/us-news/brett…
✨🏳️⚧️Timelordiroh 🇵🇸 reshared this.
Got back from my mini-tour down the Silver Comet! After a later than expected start and some mechanical issues I didn't make my goal of doing my first century, and *still* haven't done the Chief Ladiga trail (I turned around at the border and came back to camp where I knew I could get more water), but I had a great time none the less.
Total distance for both days was 135.37 miles with an average moving speed of 10.4 mph. Max speed was 29.5 mph down a particularly steep hill!
A pregnant teenager died after trying to get care in three visits to Texas emergency rooms
https://www.salon.com/2024/11/01/a-pregnant-teenager-after-trying-to-get-care-in-three-visits-to-texas-rooms_partner/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into News & Politics @news-politics-Salon
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •"Also last week; the Government of Israel issued a statement notifying the United Nations Secretary General that he was now banned from Israel and was persona non grata. Within a day of that statement, IDF troops had fired on UN peacekeeping positions in Southern Lebanon."
October 14, 2024
eveningreport.nz/2024/10/14/po…
#podcasts #EveningReport #AViewFromAfar #Israel #IDF #UN
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •When authoritarians in control of a state are being challenged internally, one of their go-to moves is to start a war. This distracts the population from their policies, and helps them marginalise their political opposition, by accusing them of working in the interests of the enemy.
The classic example is the Nazis starting WW2, *and* opening up the Russian front. The Russian invasion of Ukraine is a more contemporary example. This is what's behind Likud and the IDF's attacks on Lebanon IMHO.
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •Manning and Buchanan are talking about the states in the "West" relying on Mossad (the Israeli equivalent of the CIA) to spy on the Middle East.
I suspect that historians will look back in a century and talk about a Second Cold War. Which began on 9/11 in 2001, and is still going on. Conflicts between Israel and its neighbours being yet another set of proxy wars.
EDIT: To anyone outside my head, it may not be obvious how these two paragraphs connect. See the subsequent post.
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •Ever since the predominant fuel source for modern militaries switched from coal to oil, Middle East oil reserves have been of interest to anyone with a military to maintain;
peertube.nz/w/qynACuj7cwUZS7iG…
So the Cold War included a number of proxy wars in Middle East territories. Notably Afghanistan, in which US-sponsored and CIA-trained fighters from various countries formed a Mujahedeen to help Afghanis repel the USSR.
(1/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •Until 1991, governments of Middle East states could switch their loyalties between US and USSR. Overall, or issue by issue. Depending on what they thought served their interests.
Then the Soviet Union collapsed. Only two years after the end of their failed invasion of Afghanistan. Leaving a power vacuum only partially filled by an uneasy trading truce between the Russian Federation and the EU.
(2/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •Side note: Middle East militants are often referred to as "Islamic". But Islamists represent the average Muslim about as well as the Anglo-Saxon Christian Congregation (Aryan Nations) represent the average Christian.
Like the Aryan Nations, and Likud, they are fascist groups that use religious dogma and iconography as it suits them. Like all fascists, their focus is on taking control of a perceived national "homeland". So it can be subject to thorough "ethnic cleansing" (genocide).
(3/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •Like all fascists, Middle East militant groups have both a heightened sense of being threatened by The Other. As well as a heavily inflated sense of their own importance.
The first explains why their take on Islam is so aggressively fundamentalist and xenophobic. Because of the second, they figured it was their role in the defence of Afghanistan that had defeated one of the world's great empires.
If they could bring down one, why not the other?
(4/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •But the US had cleared what its strategists thought was its last barrier to becoming the first global empire. So for a while it mostly turned to economic conquest. The so-called "globalization" and "Structural Adjustment" of the 1990s.
This economic expansion of empire was challenged by a global network of civil society groups labeled by news media as the "antiglobalization" movement. After the 'Battle of Seattle' closed down the WTO meeting in Nov 1999, imperial progress halted.
(5/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •Meanwhile the Islamist groups had been increasing their influence in the Middle East. Especially in states threatened by Israel's periodic wars of expansion. Or weakened by decades of proxy wars, like Afghanistan, where the Islamist Taliban ruled.
Islamist groups have been known in the anglophone media by many names, including Al-Qaeda and IS/IS/IL. But among their leaders were veterans of that CIA-trained Mujahedeen, including a younger son of a Saudi oligarch, one Osama Bin Laden.
(6/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •The second Cold War could be said to have begun on 9/11, 2001.
Regardless of what you believe about the events of that day, what we do know is that US warhawks used it as an excuse to begin boot on the ground invasions of Middle East territories. Since a number of them share borders with Russia, it was inevitable that some of them would become proxy wars, notably Syria.
(7/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •9/11 was also used as an excuse for a growth in state-corporate surveillance networks, both domestic and global. With Israel acting as a Middle East proxy, their spies have become increasingly essential to the US, and other anglophone and EU powers. Which brings us back to the jumping off point.
Phew!
(8/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •It's worth noting that Afghanistan also shares a border with Xinjiang in northwest China, on the ancient Silk Road. Also that Islamists calling themselves Al-Qaeda were used as proxy troops in Syria.
So there's a good chance that during the US occupation of Afghanistan, Islamists were being armed and trained by the US - Mujahedeen style - and sent into northwest China. If for no other reason than to get them out of the way. But also perhaps, to get the CCP onboard with Cold War II.
(9/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •Which seems to have worked a little too well. The CCP having declared their own US-style "War on Terror".
I support calls to respect human rights in China, including for Uighurs in Xinjiang, and other Islamic minorities in northwest China. But it's a bit rich when the US tries to occupy the moral high ground on that issue. Given that they and their allies have spent decades doing the same sorts of things in the Middle East (remember Abu Grahib, and the casual killing of journalists?).
(10/?)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •The US have no right to condemn what the CCP are doing to Muslims while they continue to make excuses for what the IDF have done to Muslim civilians, and continue to do. Not to mention continuing to send them US weapons with which to do it, and treating Mossad propaganda as "intelligence" about the Middle East.
Isn't there a biblical saying about taking the log out of your own eye before commenting on the twig in someone else's?
(11/11)
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •If anyone was wondering when I was going to explain how my crawlwise thinking connected ...
> the "West" relying on Mossad (the Israeli equivalent of the CIA) to spy on the Middle East
... with ...
> historians will look back in a century and talk about a Second Cold War
I just tried;
mastodon.nzoss.nz/@strypey/113…
Hopefully this shows the stepping stones that got me from one to the other. Historical corrections and interpretations welcome.
#ColdWar2
Tzafrir
in reply to Strypey • • •reuters.com/world/middle-east/…
Strypey
in reply to Tzafrir • • •(1/?)
@tzafrir
> you bring to have to dig up this story from almost a month ago because
... it was the first I'd heard of it. I posted the link because I thought it was notable that Likud and the IDF are now effectively at war with the UN, as well as with their neighbours.
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •(2/?)
I condemn all attacks on civilians, civilians targets, aid workers and UN personnel. Regardless of which of the many groups of armed religious fascists in the region was responsible for them.
But it's pretty clear to me that
a) the IDF pose a much more serious threat, to all four, than any of the Islamist militias
b) The violence of any one group, against any of the four, is no excuse for another group to do more of the same.
As the old saying goes, two wrongs don't make a right.
Strypey
in reply to Strypey • • •(3/3)
The article you link to says;
"UNIFIL said earlier this month it had come under several 'deliberate' attacks by Israeli forces and efforts to help civilians in villages in the war zone were being hampered by Israeli shelling."
Yet the best you can offer as a covering excuse for these multiple confirmed IDF attacks on UN Peacekeepers is to handwave at a rocket attack that UNFIL thinks was ...
"... likely by Hizbullah or an affiliated group ..."
... although this is unconfirmed.