ICE Releases Gavin Newsom Beheading Video
ICE Releases Gavin Newsom Beheading Video
Resettling Palestinians elsewhere seems like a straightforward solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Honestly baffling no one else thought of this given how many decades this thing has been happening.
-A very stable genius, apparently
Trump wants Jordan and Egypt to accept more refugees and floats plan to 'just clean out' Gaza
>President Donald Trump says he’d like to see Arab nations increase the number of Palestinian refugees they are accepting from the Gaza Strip — potentially moving out enough of the population to “clean out” the area to create a virtual clean slate. … >“Something has to happen,” Trump said. “But it’s literally a demolition site right now. Almost everything’s demolished, and people are dying there.” He added: “So, I’d rather get involved with some of the Arab nations, and build housing in a different location, where they can maybe live in peace for a change.”
The War That Would Not End: Inside the year-long American effort to release the hostages, end the fighting in Gaza, and bring peace to the Middle East
Non-paywalled link [https://web.archive.org/web/20240925233909/https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2024/09/israel-gaza-war-biden-netanyahu-peace-negotiations/679581/] >[The Biden administration] assigned itself a larger mission than full-throated solidarity in the aftermath of the attack. It wanted to avert a regional war that might ensnare the United States. It aspired to broker an end to the conflict, and to liberate the estimated 251 hostages that Hamas had kidnapped and taken to the Gaza Strip. It sought a Gaza free from Hamas’s rule, and the dismantlement of the group’s military capabilities. And despite the scale of those tasks, it accelerated its pursuit of the Saudi normalization deal. >What follows is a history of those efforts: a reconstruction of 11 months of earnest, energetic diplomacy, based on interviews with two dozen participants at the highest levels of government, both in America and across the Middle East.
Everett confronts the paparazzi
Apparently an autograph book is “is a book for collecting the autographs of others. Traditionally they were exchanged among friends, colleagues, and classmates to fill with poems, drawings, personal messages, small pieces of verse, and other mementos.” [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autograph_book] They were popular among university students from the 15th to mid-19th century, but have since been replaced by yearbooks.
Everett provides medical assistance (April 1, 1915)
Everett makes an impression (July 27, 1909)
Everett takes a stand against age discrimination in housing (1907?)
>Get up out of that so I can take one more punch at you! Sadly, Everett would need to wait for the Fair Housing Act of 1968 [https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/fair_housing_equal_opp/aboutfheo/history] for this landlord’s behavior to be federally illegal. It’s unclear what state Mr. True lives in (besides anger, obviously).
Everett goes bananas
>“There’s no hope of my beating any sense into you, but I’ll knock some of the ignorance out of you!” >-Everett True Sometimes Everett’s angry chastising gets downright poetic. Here he throws out a one-liner worthy of an 80’s action movie, all because of a messy banana eater.
What Europe Fears
American allies see a second Trump term as all but inevitable. “The anxiety is massive.” > Fear of losing Europe’s most powerful ally has translated into a pathologically intense fixation on the U.S. presidential race. European officials can explain the Electoral College in granular detail and cite polling data from battleground states. Thomas Bagger, the state secretary in the German foreign ministry, told me that in a year when billions of people in dozens of countries around the world will get the chance to vote, “the only election all Europeans are interested in is the American election.” Almost every official I spoke with believed that Trump is going to win. Paywall removed: https://web.archive.org/web/20240603193105/https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2024/06/nato-trump-europe-allies/678533/ [https://web.archive.org/web/20240603193105/https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2024/06/nato-trump-europe-allies/678533/]