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Comments: لیکرز بلاخره یکی بردن بعد از ۱۱ بار باخت به دنور. آنهم بخاطر اینکه ان بی ای از سویپ اصلا خوشش نمیاد. هر بازی بالای صد میلیون دلار درآمد داره.
Comments: Agha lol, he moved to Vermont because he said that he was ineluctable in a mostly jewish state. :) Here is information on his grand parents: Elias Sanders was a Polish-Jewish immigrant who immigrated to the United States in 1921 and became a paint salesman, although his family was killed in the Holocaust. Bernie's mother, Dorothy Sanders (née Glassberg) (1912–1960), was born in New York City.
Comments: Good information on Sanders. A puzzle for you: do u guys know why he moved to Vermont?
Comments: This guys is touring Australian universities and has become more popular in recent years because of the economic abuse of the united states. He was here at our university. I could not find that video but this one is available online. Interesting stuff. https://youtu.be/S3_I18eEABU?si=yyk96XpP8gsEfbJt
Comments: Friends, there are protests here in Australia. The important thing is that they site student protests in the US. So important what the US does to the rest of the world.
Comments: https://www.instagram.com/p/C5rQt4iv5H2/?igsh=MWRxZ2VtbnZ2a2ZqZg==
Comments: They sound more and more like IRI everyday! As university administrators and law enforcement crack down on campus protests over Israel’s war in Gaza, they’re invoking a familiar trope: the “outside agitator.” On April 18, the New York Police Department arrested more than a hundred people in connection with pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia University, kicking off a wave of similar demonstrations at other US colleges and universities. Following the NYPD’s arrest of more than 130 protesters at New York University earlier this week, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said in a news conference that “outside agitators” were disrupting the city and throwing bottles and chairs at police officers. NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Operations Kaz Daughtry suggested on Fox 5 New York on Tuesday that an outside entity was funding campus protests because of the similarities in tents used at student encampments, saying “there are professional agitators in there that are just looking for something to be agitated about.” Elsewhere, Emory University President Gregory Fenves referenced “highly organized, outside protesters” in a university-wide letter on Friday about the law enforcement response to demonstrations a day earlier. Videos captured police wrestling people, including at least one Emory professor, to the ground, and a CNN crew witnessed officers using pepper spray and pepper balls on the crowd. University officials said in another letter on Thursday that 20 of the 28 people arrested were Emory community members. In these instances, and others, authorities have not offered many specifics about who the “outside agitators” are, how significant their numbers are or how they differentiated outsiders from university-affiliated protesters. Large-scale social movements can certainly be vulnerable to groups who seek to capitalize on the chaos for their own ends, said Aldon Morris, a professor emeritus of sociology and African American studies at Northwestern University. But time and again, authorities have leveled the broad accusation of “outside agitators” to undermine or stifle protests. “The claim is that they (the protests) are being taken over by outside agitators who are violent, anti-government, anti-democracy and so forth,” Morris told CNN. This time around, authorities on both sides of the Gaza protests have cited “outside agitators” as people who are trying to hijack the protests for their own means. But it’s not always clear who these “outside agitators” are, and whether they can be classed as such in the first place. “It seems to me that the ‘outside agitator’ claim is one to shift the focus away from the grievances of the students and their protest,” Morris said. This is most likely the case with anti-protest authorities, but with authorities that are for the Palestinian protests also citing “outside agitators,” the term has become even more nuanced. ‘Outside agitator’ trope has a long history You don’t have to look far back in history to find examples of the “outside agitator” narrative. During a speech at the height of the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, then-President Donald Trump characterized the demonstrations occurring nationwide as being overrun with professional anarchists, violent mobs and other left-wing groups. As he spoke, police forcibly dispersed peaceful protesters outside the White House gates with tear gas, flash grenades and rubber bullets — a move that resulted in uproar and prompted a lawsuit from a coalition of civil rights groups. While there were some reports of people with extremist ties showing up at protests, an Associated Press review of court documents published in October found that most of those who were arrested or charged at the time didn’t appear to be linked to highly organized extremist groups. Many of them, the AP found, were young adults from suburban areas that Trump had vowed to protect.
Comments: [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXdb1atgg-c&ab_channel=Pavaraghi-tv2[/video]
Comments: Can you imagine the first Jewish American President opposing Israel policies - it would be unthinkable
Comments: Which makes it even worse meaning he’s earned the right to criticize the zionists
Comments: I said his grandpa was a survivor correction he was incinerated in Aushuwitch
Comments: Agha Zinsky, when they say national security, they mean financial security of some people. But if they said it like that they could not sell it.
Comments: He will die as a lone soldier
Comments: Agha Faramarz, Originally born to Jewish family in Brooklyn raised as Jew turned non believer as he entered college. He’s too practical n pragmatic to ever be electable. The AIPAC would mobilize its machine to prevent that. They’re actually scared of him being a Jew and speaking against Israel cuz they can’t label him as antisemitic. His grandfather was a holocaust survivor
Comments: It seems the young people around the world are more informed about foreign influences in US policies. They want more from their country and don’t want it be wasted halfway around the world. National security my ass. It’s one thing to worry about your own neighbors but middling in every country in every continent is just too much.
Comments: In the mean time, demonstrators have taken this to the White House chanting "Biden you cannot hide." This is all while Biden is inside preparing for the President's Dinner ball! ![]() I cannot think of any other time in American history when it has been more obvious that American policy is hostage to the Israeli lobby. This who superpower crap is just that. Power is elsewhere and Americans are just fed some good shit for a story.
Comments: Zinsky on that video, check out the rain at the beginning when the reporter is talking. :) I will have to go price out gojeh. But it may be the same price.
Comments: The other thing I wanted to say is that this is not a new thing. It is just that it is now finally getting coverage. Before the strategy was to censor it. This was on our campus about a month ago. https://youtu.be/y5WOlsbUxds?si=OjLSmADqnOH7ou_o
Comments: So far, as far as I have seen, UCLA's treatment of the encampment has been the most sympathetic. Emory, Columbia, and USC have been the worst in that order.
Comments: Zinsky, there are over a hundred schools that are dealing with the protests. The biggest protests are actually in red states. Given how many universities there are in California, for example, I only know of USC, UCLA, and Humboldt. I am not sure this is censorship (i.e. there rae demonstrations but we just do not hear about them) or students here are actually less politically active. Some data is not being shared with public. For example, the number of jewish students who are protesting in support of palestine is not insignificant. These students are actually treated the harshest. If you watch some of the videos, they are present there. One student (Sarah King) was expelled but she says that she was one of the lucky ones because some of her friends got expelled, evicted from the dorms and their food plan canceled. This is a big problem for students in high-end universities because they are mostly from elsewhere and without a place to sleep and food to eat, they are in quite a bit of disarray. Cutting food is really low, I thought. |
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