Ottawa, 5.33pm
Canada CBC News’ The National featured 42 per cent more Israeli voices than Palestinian in its first month of coverage after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, a comprehensive analysis by The Breach and Toronto Metropolitan University’s Review of Journalism has found.
CBC’s flagship broadcast continued to feature more Israelis than Palestinians even as the death toll in Gaza mounted. It also failed to identify by name more than a quarter of Palestinians and their allies.
Israel’s attacks afterward—which have included airstrikes, a ground invasion and the cutting off of essentials such as food and water—killed more than 24,000 Palestinians until now, and since ceasefire ended [Dec 1st], killed 8,200 or at least 650 - 700 Gazans killed by Israeli daily after ceasefire ended.
Choices about which voices to air on CBC have taken on greater importance because the Israeli military has prevented any international media from entering Gaza. Until CNN finally entered 28 hours ago.
Clarissa Ward
Despite not having any journalists on the ground, CBC has barred employees from sharing any information about the war on Gaza on social media that the public broadcaster has not itself reported.
original Plestia’s pict used by Guardian, and comment by Canadian poet Rupi Kaur. Rupi Kaur refused Divali invitation by Biden, most of reason, because [I believe] Plestia feed
Refaat Alareer after acknowledging that Canadian poet Rupi Kaur refused Divali’s White House party by Biden. List translation of IF I MUST DIE
This contradicts CBC’s broader social media policy, which is not publicly available but a copy of which The Breach obtained. The policy permits sharing “outside journalism if the story or piece is not available on CBC.ca and the source is credible”—meaning the broadcaster is maintaining a double standard when it comes to Gaza.
While there were no reporters on the ground in Gaza, correspondents Adrienne Arsenault, Chris Brown, Susan Ormiston and Margaret Evans all reported from Israel.
A spokesperson for CBC provided a written statement but did not answer all of The Breach’s specific questions, including about how CBC’s latest directives contradict its policies.
“CBC News is grateful for the significant amount of feedback we have received about our coverage of the Israel-Hamas war,” the spokesperson said. “Many of the comments over the past few months called our coverage too pro-Israeli or too pro-Palestinian. We look at all the examples provided to us and take them into account in our ongoing editorial review of our coverage.”
“Our journalism does not consider ‘sides,’ rather we report the news from a wide array of perspectives.”
But one CBC News staff member who spoke to The Breach said the public broadcaster’s coverage has served to “sanitize” Israeli crimes against Palestinians.
This type of coverage will one day be taught in schools and at museums as a factor that contributed to the violence against Palestinians, the CBC employee said. “That’s what makes me feel nauseous.”
In total, The National featured 138 Israelis and their allies in the first month of broadcasts, while featuring 97 Palestinians and their allies.
On some episodes, the ratio of Israeli voices to Palestinian voices was as high as seven to one.
While only 15 Israelis appeared on screen without being named, 26 Palestinians—representing 27 per cent of all the Palestinians and allies who were on the show—appeared without being identified by name.
Sometimes, such as on the broadcast that aired on Oct. 20, correspondents referenced the level of suffering in Gaza—“The number of dead is so high that people are being buried in mass graves”—without stating how many Palestinians had died.
The Breach’s analysis of CBC’s The National is even more comprehensive than its previous study of CTV National News. In addition to counting Israelis, Israeli-Canadians, Palestinians and Palestinian-Canadians, The Breach also counted allies and representatives of advocacy groups representing the interests of both groups.
While the results are not as stark as they were for CTV National News, which featured 62 per cent more Israelis than Palestinians, they still show an anti-Palestinian bias.
In an internal email sent on Nov. 9, editor-in-chief Brodie Fenlon told CBC journalists that their job was not to “take a side” but to “provide Canadians with a 360-degree view of the events in Israel and Gaza.”
But other rules he has communicated seem to contradict that mandate.
CBC does not have a journalist inside Gaza, a fact acknowledged in another internal email obtained by The Breach which was sent by inclusion strategy lead Tina Verma on Nov. 21.
Despite that fact, Fenlon has told employees they are barred from sharing information on social media that CBC itself has not reported.
He communicated that rule in an email sent on Nov. 24 about CBC journalists’ use of social media.
“In its simplest form, [the policy] means that on matters of public interest, controversy, politics or stories we are actively covering as a news organization, we do not post or share to ANY social media platform information that CBC has not or would not put on air or online,” he said. “That includes information we have not verified or are not reporting ourselves as CBC News, even when it comes from external news sources.”
The CBC employee said that Canadians rely on the broadcaster’s reporters not just for their work but for their “news judgement,” meaning the other stories they share online.
“When people aren’t allowed to share, you’re taking away the reporter’s function,” the person said.
“If people feel like we aren’t being truthful, or we’re being muzzled, you’re hurting ongoing trust in the public broadcaster.”
The employee also said they don’t believe CBC’s social media policy on this issue would stand up under the scrutiny of the organization’s journalists, which is why they believe it was communicated by email instead of at a live town hall.
The guidance in Fenlon’s email seemed to directly contradict CBC’s lengthier social media policy, called “Personal social media guidelines for journalists,” a copy of which was also obtained by The Breach.
The broadcaster’s full policy states, “What you can do:…Share links to outside journalism if the story or piece is not available on CBC.ca and the source is credible.”
The CBC spokesperson did not comment on this contradiction but told The Breach the broadcaster’s policy ensures social media posts are crafted with the same care as its journalism on other platforms.
“To be clear, meeting high journalistic standards is not ‘being muzzled,’” the spokesperson said.
CBC’s full social media policy also encourages employees to share their personality, experiences and “emotional reaction” to news stories, while Fenlon’s email said: “Avoid posting information on complex, nuanced stories that are difficult to explain in spaces with limited word counts.”
Multiple CBC journalists pointed out to The Breach that these rules are contradictory, especially for journalists of colour whose experiences and emotions have a connection to Israel’s oppression of Palestinians.
A military official with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) was able to make false claims without pushback on CBC, just as other IDF officials were able to do so on CTV.
On The National’s Oct. 13 broadcast, Lt. Col. Richard Hecht explained why the IDF showed freezers full of bodies of dead Israelis to international media.
“It’s not what we usually do,” he said. “But, I know that from tomorrow the world is going to call us war criminals again. We do not attack children. Hamas uses their children and families and civilians as human shields: we don’t do that.”
There was no comment or additional information from CBC’s correspondent or anchor.
At the time, Israel’s military had killed 583 Gazan children. And there is a long and well-documented history of Israeli soldiers using Palestinians, including children, as human shields. And now, 9600 Gazan children killed by Israel.
The IDF had an official policy to use Palestinians as human shields until a court ruled it was illegal in 2005, according to B’Tselem. Despite the ruling, human rights groups have documented credible allegations of Israeli soldiers continuing the practice and have criticized what they describe as lenient sentences for those found guilty of doing it.
In 2010, two soldiers were demoted and given suspended sentences for separating a nine-year-old boy from his mother and forcing him at gunpoint to open bags suspected of containing bombs.
There have been other alleged cases of Israeli soldiers using Palestinians as human shields, as recently as October.
CBC’s statement did not acknowledge The Breach’s questions about why the official’s statements were presented without this context.
In another example, IDF Major Shraga Sterm described what he believes are the pure motivations of Israeli soldiers.
“None of us here are bloodthirsty,” he said. “None of us here want to kill Palestinians or are motivated by that at all.”
When a weapon was heard firing in the distance, Ormiston—the CBC correspondent who was interviewing Sterm—leaned towards him and grabbed his arm.
CBC’s correspondents have sometimes used different language to discuss the deaths of Israelis and Palestinians.
On The National’s Oct. 26 broadcast, chief correspondent Arsenault described Hamas’ attack as mass murder while describing the deaths of Palestinians as a claim.
“From the mass murder of more than 1,400 in Israel by Hamas, to Israel’s bombing campaign of Gaza, which the Hamas-controlled health authority claims to have killed more than 7,000,” she said.
The employee who spoke to The Breach said that CBC’s failure is not that it’s not taking the side of Palestinians but that it is not accurately reporting what is happening to them.
“This is a situation where we’re sanitizing and masking the truth,” the employee said. “It’s not about taking a side, it’s just about being honest. Reducing the language, sanitizing the language—that, to me, is extremely biased.”
In particular, the person took issue with CBC’s policy to describe the conflict as the “Israel-Hamas war” when in fact, the violence has been almost completely one-sided since Oct. 8.
CBC has introduced an anonymous form that employees can use to provide feedback about the coverage, one of the internal emails obtained by The Breach said. And the broadcaster has updated some of its guidance for journalists in light of the feedback received.
“For example, it’s worth highlighting that there is a difference between ‘died’ and ‘killed’ and that when we use one term versus another, we should be consistent in the same story,” Verma’s Nov. 21 email said.
This story was produced in collaboration with Review of Journalism, the media criticism magazine written and edited by students at Toronto Metropolitan University’s School of Journalism. Research was conducted by: Saman Dara, Sam Jabri-Pickett, Helen Jacob, Katia Lo Innes, Hannah Mercanti, Prarthana Pathak and Julia Tramontin.
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I know a lot of high-ranking media, such as New York Times, Guardian, Anadolu, BILD, Spiegel, Financial Times, Strait Times, Washington Post etc subscribed my substack. Plestia ‘Bosbos’ Alaqad ready to be your Stringer or Keynote Speaker or Source about [everything related] Gaza, as Global Opinionator the Washington Post Rana Ayyub Rana Ayyub doing around 84 hours ago, or 22 hours ago interview with Egyptian activist Zein Rahma, please contact Plestiaa2011@gmail.com or collab@plestiaalaqad.com
Rana Ayyubis the first Indian to be an honorary member of the US National Press Club. Interview with Plestia maybe around [Dec 11] 1pm New Delhi and 8pm Melbourne [Plestia] —— 1 day after Plestia’s birthday. Plestia evacuated to Melbourne after eyewitnessing horror [at least] until 49 days of war in Gaza. As of now 13/12 [Dec 12], is Day 68 of war
Toddler with Plestia, before war, living in Northern Gaza and they evacuated to Southern Gaza. Since Friday, Oct 13, when Israel announced to every Gazans from northern move to southern, more than 5,000 killed in southern, not counting barbaric bombing in northern Gaza. Northern Gaza is being depopulated, while even residents in the south are ordered to evacuate as the israelis implement their ethnic cleansing. Refugee literally fulfilled Israel warning, and still killed with barbaric bombing by Israel. Documentation by Plestia Alaqad
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110+ languages of poem Refaat al Areer ‘IF I MUST DIE’
link YouTube Brian Denis Cox CBE [Logan Roy “SUCCESSION”] reads ‘IF I MUST DIE’
English —- original post by Professor Refaat Al Areer
Arabic / Arab, Refaat’s mother tongue ===== twitter [at]tameeolivefern
Ottoman Turkish (لِسانِ عُثمانى, Lisân-ı Osmânî, Osmanlı Türkçesi, or عثمانليجه Osmanlıca) === twitter [at]IsmailogluF
Yiddish [German dialect which uses many Hebrew words but with a very distinctive Ashkenazic pronunciation — not Hebrew] === twitter [at]antimaskilic
Hebrew ==== twitter [at]nookyelur
Subscribed
Gaeilge / Gaeilge na hÉireann / Irish === twit [at]ColmDelaney1
Gaeilge / Gaeilge na hÉireann / Irish [2nd version] === twit [at]RoscCatha
Kalenjin languages, family of a dozen Southern Nilotic languages spoken in Kenya, eastern Uganda and northern Tanzania === twitter [at]emmanuel_tunen
Bislama / bichelamar / English-based creole language in Vanuatu === twitter [at]specificisland
Haitian Creole / kreyòl ayisyen / créole haïtien, commonly referred to as simply Creole, or Kreyòl in the Creole language in Haiti ==== twitter [at]DangImole
Seychellois Creole ==== twitter [at]elia_damasy
Somali [1st version] ==== twitter [at]sefkheta
Somali [2nd version] ==== twitter [at]hausofriya
Tamachek / Tamashek / Tamasheq language, variety of Tuareg, a Berber macro-language widely spoken by nomadic tribes across North Africa in Algeria, Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso ==== twitter [at]Amajagh
Quebec Ojibwe (/oʊˈdʒɪbweɪ/ oh-JIB-way) also known as Ojibwa (/oʊˈdʒɪbwə/ oh-JIB-wə) Ojibway / Otchipwe / Ojibwemowin / Anishinaabemowin, an indigenous language of North America of the Algonquian language family. The language is characterized by a series of dialects of Ojibwemowin are spoken in Canada, from southwestern Quebec, through Ontario, Manitoba and parts of Saskatchewan ==== twitter [at]greatlakesqueer
Québécois French ===== twitter [at]politicxt
Canadian French (French: français canadien) === twitter [at]rosas_chismosas
French ==== twitter [at]tearfulparadise
Chinese / Mandarin [1st version] ==== twitter [at]blkpaws ===== she / he started initiative across globally to translating Refaat Alareer’s poem
Chinese / Mandarin [2nd version] === twitter [at]weiyuanottawa
Chinese / Mandarin [3rd version], Cantonese / 廣東話 / 广东话; Jyutping: Gwong2 dung1 waa2; Cantonese Yale: Gwóngdūng wá) part of Chinese Sinitic branch ==== twitter [at]palestine_zh
Chinese / Mandarin [4th version], Simplified Mandarin ===== twitter [at]chenchenzh
Mongolian [ˈmɔɴ.ɢəɮ xiɮ] language === twitter [at]naiad_R
Western Apache (Nḏéé biyáti’) ===== a Southern Athabaskan language spoken among the 14,000 Western Apaches in Mexico in the states of Sonora and Chihuahua and in east-central Arizona. ==== twitter [at]ShoSheepy
Shona / chiShona / Central Shonic varieties (comprising Zezuru, Manyika, Korekore and Karanga) or specifically Standard Shona in Zimbabwe ==== twitter [at]assata_burner
Wolof / Wolof làkk / وࣷلࣷفْ لࣵکّ language of Senegal, Mauritania, and the Gambia, and the native language of the Wolof people == twitter [at]drlandislife
Coptic (Bohairic Coptic: ϯⲙⲉⲧⲣⲉⲙⲛ̀ⲭⲏⲙⲓ, timetremǹnkhēmi), in detail Sahidic Coptic / Saidic Coptic ==== twitter [at]pterandydon
Ndebele / isiNdebele saseNyakatho / specific Zimbabwean Ndebele [because another language ‘South Africa Ndebele] / North Ndebele, associated with the term Matabele ==== twitter [at]NcubeBokang
Yoruba / Èdè Yorùbá / عِدعِ يوْرُبا language spoken in West Africa, primarily in Southwestern and Central Nigeria === twitter [at]ayoTweetz
Ogadēn / Somali Ogaadeen / ውጋዴ/ውጋዴን / Ogaden Language === twitter [at]FarhiaFarah
Kurdish language === twitter [at]stfuerdogan
Carribean Spanish [the translator from Cuba] twitter [at]midnucas
Puerto Rican Spanish / Español puertorriqueño —- twitter [at]mojitodeparcha
Latin America Spanish / Mexican Spanish / Español Mexicano === the translator from Mexico, twitter [at]aleximenez
Latin America Spanish / Mexican Spanish / Español Mexicano === the translator from Mexico, twitter [at]Adrialg212
South American Spanish / Chilean Spanish / castellano chileno / español chileno === the translator from Chile, twitter [at]alexbaez
Castilian Spanish ==== twitter [at]adrianaperezgr2
Catalan === twitter [at]DeeVee53657246
Valencian language / Valencian Catalan language (llengua valenciana) ==== twitter [at]davidsegarra
Basque / Euskara ==== twitter [at]leiredeitzenaiz
Danish language / dansk sprog ==== twitter [at]TakingMyZzzs
Macedonian / македонски јазик, makedonski jazik. ==== twitter [at]lofidelica
Italian [1st version] ==== twitter [at]namilait
Italian [2nd version] ==== twitter [at]TarsieroRosanna [detail: Liguria / Tuscany, or if you use wikipedia, Ligurian (/lɪˈɡjʊəriən) or Genoese (/ˌdʒɛnoʊˈiːz) (locally called zeneise or zeneize)
Italian [3rd version] ==== twitter [at]danielukes
Italian [4th version] / L’alfabet furlan / Eastern Friulano language === twitter [at]GioFassetta
Latin (lingua Latina [ˈlɪŋɡʷa ɫaˈtiːna] or Latinum [ɫaˈtiːnʊ̃]), classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages, originally spoken in Latium (now known as Lazio), the lower Tiber area around Rome ==== twitter [at]arielwroteit
Georgian / Kartvelian / ქართული ენა / kartuli ena ==== twitter [at]avtoism
Circassian (/sɜːrˈkæʃən/ sur-KASH-ən), also known as Cherkess === twitter [at]art_emissss
Eastern Armenian Language / Արևելահայերեն === romanized: Arevelahayeren
twitter [at]Karmir_Kovkas
Western Armenian Language Արեւմտահայերէն, romanized: Arevmdahayeren === twitter [at]komitas1_5
Swahili / Kiswahili [1st version] ==== twitter [at]DoktorYakub
Swahili / Kiswahili [2nd version] ==== twitter [at]catherine_amayi
Igbo / Ásụ̀sụ́ Ìgbò language ====== twitter [at]Ani_Kayode
Moroccan Darija / al-ʻArabiyyah al-Maghribiyyah ad-Dārija / Maghrebi Arabic / العربية المغربية الدارجة ==== twitter [at]alsahrawiya
Berber languages /Amazigh languages / Tamazight / تَمَزِيغت / Tamaziɣt === twitter [at]HamidOuyachi
Nkore / Nkole / Nyankore / Nyankole / Orunyankore / Orunyankole / Runyankore / Runyankole, Bantu language spoken by the Nkore ("Banyankore") of south-western Uganda in former province of Ankole, as well as in Tanzania, the DR Congo, Rwanda and Burundi ==== twitter [at]CKyobutungi
Harshen / Halshen Hausa / هَرْشٜن هَوْسَ, Chadic language spoken by the Hausa people in the northern parts of Nigeria, Niger, Ghana, Cameroon, Benin and Togo, and the southern parts of Niger, Chad and Sudan, with significant minorities in Ivory Coast ==== twitter [at]HausaTranslator
Welsh / Cymraeg / y Gymraeg === twitter [at]bradwres95
Kernewek / Kernowek / Cornish === twitter [at]NiwlenSter
Bengali / Bangla / বাংলা === twitter [at]joonknowles
Kannada / ಕನ್ನಡ / Canarese / Karnataka language [India] ==== twitter [at]faintlamps
Telugu / తెలుగు / language in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana India === twitter [at]abhignarigala
Pushto / Pashto / Pashtun / پښتو, Pəx̌tó ====twitter [at]miguel3o2
Punjabi / Panjabi presenting in shahmukhi and roman === twitter [at] MeeMmarvel
Maldivian also known by its endonym Dhivehi / Divehi / ދިވެހި, ==== twitter [at]ishahr
Marathi (/məˈrɑːti/;] मराठी, pronounced [məˈɾaːʈʰiː] / Maharashtrian / Maharashtra India === twitter [at]chamelea22
Galician === twitter [at]desdeoturonio
Albanian (shqip [ʃcip] or gjuha shqipe [ˈɟuha ˈʃcipɛ]) === twitter [at]Gentanishku
Czech / Czechia / čeština / Bohemia / lingua Bohemica ===== twitter [at]marundersea
Hungarian / magyar nyelv ==== twitter [at]Sz_Giulia
Azerbaijani / Azərbaycan dili / آذربایجان دیلی / Азәрбајҹан дили === twitter [at]NAmeetsCaucasia
Maori New Zealand / te reo Māori ===== twitter [at]aotearoalib / Haimana Hirini
Amharic / አማርኛ / Amarəñña / Ethiopian Semitic language === twitter [at]flipkoin2
Chewa / Nyanja / Chichewa / Chinyanja (spelled Cinianja in Portuguese) === twitter [at]ElizaMbamba
Fanti / Fantse / Mfantse, one of the four principal members of the Akan dialect continuum. principally spoken in the central and southern regions of Ghana as well as in settlements in other regions in western Ghana, Ivory Coast, as well as in Liberia, Gambia and Angola. ==== twitter [at]DaughterApraku
Tswana / Setswana, and previously spelled Sechuana, a Bantu language spoken in Southern Africa ==== twitter [at]kgmgobozi
Polish ==== twitter [at]kamilmozel
Serbian ==== twitter [at]weird__sister
سِنڌِي / सिन्ध [sɪndʱiː] / Sindhi language === twitter [at]DeTrop_
Bangla [1st version] ==== twitter [at]luv_dkz
Bangla [2nd version] ==== twitter [at]brotigupta
Hindi / Devanagari / मानक हिन्दी / Mānak Hindī ==== twitter [at]moonchildbichen
മലയാളം / Malayāḷam language === twitter [at]vinayaravind
Gujarati / ગુજરાતી, romanized: Gujarātī ===== twitter [at]imrevelationist
नेपाली / Nepali language ==== twitter [at]timothyaryal
Sinhala / සිංහල / Siṁhala / Sinhalese === twitter [at]_vajra
Telugu language / తెలుగు ===== twitter [at]abhignarigala
Romanize Telugu language / తెలుగు ===== twitter [at]abhignarigala
Saraiki ( سرائیکی Sarā'īkī; also spelt Siraiki, or Seraiki) / Multani, is a Western Punjabi Language ==== twitter [at]TanveerMohana
Tagalog Filipino / Philippines ==== twitter [at]horchoffee
Cebuano / Visayan / Bisaya, Southern Philippines language ===== twitter [at]maglawod
Hiligaynon / Ilonggo / Binisaya / Bisaya nga Hiniligaynon / Inilonggo, an Austronesian regional language spoken in the Philippines === twitter [at]mooIahz
Phasa Thai / Bahasa Thai / Thai language / ภาษาไทย === twitter [at]bangtanT4NNI3
Slovenian ==== twitter [at]gaiius_iunius
Greek / Ελληνικά, romanized: Elliniká === twitter [at]waitingfor2day
Korean / Hangul / 한글 ==== twitter [at]goroswe
Japanese / 日本語, Nihongo with HIRAGANA and ROMANIZE version === twitter [at]marevevivace
Japanese [2nd version] without Romanize version ==== twitter [at]NaokiQYamamoto
български език / bŭlgarski ezik / Bulgarian === twitter [at]idkonst
Romanian === twitter [at]elliebotoman
German / Deutsch === twitter [at]merlinonasunday
Basel German / Baseldytsch (Standard German: Baseldeutsch) === twitter [at]Burgi323
Russian / современный русский литературный язык – "sovremenny russky literaturny yazyk ==== twitter [at]fictionalizer
Ukrainian language / українська мова / ukrainska mova ==== twitter [at]tweegf
Icelandic language / íslenska === twitter [at]BragiPall
Afrikaans / Afrikaansch ==== twitter [at]jacksondayton_
Dutch ==== twitter [at]grafbanga
Turkish === [at]Karpuzcevirdegi
Farsi / Persian / (فارسی, Fārsī) ==== twitter [at]littlezab
Urdu / (Nastaliq: اردو; /ˈʊərduː/; ALA-LC: Urdū) ==== twitter [at]EeshaalU
Urdu but Romanize version ==== twitter [at]umkalra
Brazilian Portuguese === twitter [at]ribslyrics
European Portuguese === twitter [at]MargemSultejano
Norwegian / Norsk === twitter [at]andreas_ved
Swedish / (svenska [ˈsvɛ̂nːska]) === twitter [at]Nieszkas
Finnish / (ssuomen kieli / suomi) === twitter [at]mimisadore
Bosnian === twitter [at]namik_klaric
Slovak / slovenčina [ˈslɔʋentʂina] or slovenský jazyk [ˈslɔʋenskiː ˈjazik]) ==== twitter [at]taejinmono
hrvatski / Croatian language ==== twitter [at]simpforsurrera
Vietnamese / tiếng Việt === twitter [at]croissantmusain
Bahasa Indonesia / Indonesian language === twitter [at]SER0T0JIN
Bahasa Melayu / Malay language ==== twitter [at]sluffick
Jawi Alphabet / Jawi (جاوي; Acehnese: Jawoë; Kelantan-Pattani: Yawi; Malay pronunciation: [d͡ʒä.wi], Arabic Malay) ==== combination by twitter [at]_Ereshkigal666 for text version and twitter [at]carroteuk for brush version
Tamil / தமிழ் / Dravidian === twitter [at]ra9hu1
lingua de planeta, an international auxiliary language ==== twitter [at]st00perduck
Esperanto === twit [at]sintooth
I dont know this is essentials or not, but, Victoria Secret / VS Angel posted in her stories hours ago, which, she already on glamorous lifestyle, and then finally posted like this, imagine if you didn’t speak up for Palestine. For Gaza.
Ramy Abdu from EUROMEDHR
Statement Genocidal Netanyahu for International Crime Court
Gernika / Guernica, Spain
Plestia Alaqad in Gaza. Anne Frank in Germany
Plestia Alaqad
This is all concerning enough. But politicians, seizing on some evidence of antisemitic displays at pro-Palestinian protests to link Muslims and migrants with antisemitism, have taken the opportunity to advance an anti-migrant agenda.
In America, 82% of all U.S.-based respondents, incl. almost all assistant professors (98 %), said they self-censor when they speak professionally about the Israeli-Palestinian issue. 81 % of those said they primarily held back their criticism of Israel vs 11% of Palestinians. Can't possibly imagine why 98% of assistant Profs feel the need to do this.
motaz azaiza
2 Symbol of Gaza. Plestia Bosbos Alaqad and Motaz Azaiza. Both [even[ westernized. Motaz part of UNRWA USA. Plestia is Albert Schweitzer Scholars. As of minute-time, 1.57am Melbourne [Plestia] and 4.57pm Gaza [Motaz]
original Plestia’s pict used by Guardian, and poet Rupi Kaur. Rupi Kaur refused Divali invitation by Biden, most of reason, because [I believe] Plestia feed
Refaat Alareer after acknowledge that Rupi Kaur refused Divali’s White House party by Biden.