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BREAKING: LA DA Nathan Hochman confirms Nick Reiner will be charged with two counts of murder, and a special allegation that he committed multiple killings and used a weapon (knife). Reiner will face either LWOP or the death penalty. No decision has been made on seeking capital punishment.
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Forwarded from 𝐂𝖔𝖉𝖊𝖗𝖓𝖔𝖛™
“I Hear The Voice of My Ancestors Calling”: From The Camps to The Campus
Date: August 13 2024
Author: Mustapha Kharbouch
blog Series: Genocide In Gaza
Student Essays: Brown University Encampment 2024
“I hear the voice of my ancestors calling,
I hear the voice of my ancestor's call.
I hear the voice of my ancestor’s calling,
I hear the voice of my ancestors call.
Singing wake up, wake up child,
wake up wake up,
listen, listen,
listen listen
Singing wake up, wake up child,
wake up wake up,
listen, listen,
listen listen”
Author’s Note: The lyrics come from “Ancestors Song” popularized by the student movement for Palestine at Brown University. Versions vary. Adopted from the original “Grandmother Song” by Sandy Vaughn.
In the cold, early days of February 2024 in Providence, Rhode Island, I sat on the ground nestled among hundreds of my peers in a room at Brown University’s campus center. Leaning on each other, we filled the little space between us with our hands rocking back and forth in unison, striking our bodies and creating the loud percussion accompanying our chants. Those of us who were standing tapped the ground; the whole room was vibrating with music, emotion, and tactility. We had just announced the end of an eight-day hunger strike by 19 of my fellow brave student comrades, but there was something more in the air. As the genocide in Gaza continued to unfold, we held our grief in our collective solidarity and yelled out, from the deepest parts of ourselves, for a glimmer of hope. From Turtle Island to Palestine, we called upon the strength of our ancestor’s spirits to fuel the sumud (Arabic for steadfastness) of our resilient kin in Gaza. With the bittersweet end of the hunger strike as the third major action after two student sit-ins were met with arrest by the university, we left the campus center with the painful knowledge of our Palestinian kin’s inability to escape the forced Israeli blockade. This realization, though sobering, fueled our belief that this movement has only witnessed its beginning. We affirmed our commitment to continue on, unyielding, until Palestine attains its freedom. As the tune of the ancestor’s song grew louder and louder every time another person joined the crowd, an uneasy feeling fluttered in my chest: is this hope?
In the weeks after, I struggled with what to feel and think of the idea of hope. I mulled over its applicability in a context of genocide. I questioned the possibility of hope, and whether or not it holds any serious power in animating transformation on an individual level and a collective one — for the movement and the world. I talked with my parents, friends, and fellow organizers about it; I discussed it with peers in class and I read works by scholars from various geographies and temporalities. Being born and raised as a third-generation stateless Palestinian refugee in Lebanon, I came to realize early on in life what hope, or the lack thereof, means for many of us. My existence, like many others, constitutes a loophole in the nation-state project and therefore continues to threaten its sustainability and the regulated exclusions on which it is formed. Growing up like an ivy plant between the cracks of the systems that govern our world, I had pushed away hope in any endeavor as a feeble excuse for accepting powerlessness. Looking toward my exhausted and overworked father and mother has always reminded me that hope has never been a part of our familial lexicon. As Ahmad Diab eloquently puts it, “Rather than enduring existential crises, Palestinians learn to deal with existence as a crisis.”
Date: August 13 2024
Author: Mustapha Kharbouch
blog Series: Genocide In Gaza
Student Essays: Brown University Encampment 2024
“I hear the voice of my ancestors calling,
I hear the voice of my ancestor's call.
I hear the voice of my ancestor’s calling,
I hear the voice of my ancestors call.
Singing wake up, wake up child,
wake up wake up,
listen, listen,
listen listen
Singing wake up, wake up child,
wake up wake up,
listen, listen,
listen listen”
Author’s Note: The lyrics come from “Ancestors Song” popularized by the student movement for Palestine at Brown University. Versions vary. Adopted from the original “Grandmother Song” by Sandy Vaughn.
In the cold, early days of February 2024 in Providence, Rhode Island, I sat on the ground nestled among hundreds of my peers in a room at Brown University’s campus center. Leaning on each other, we filled the little space between us with our hands rocking back and forth in unison, striking our bodies and creating the loud percussion accompanying our chants. Those of us who were standing tapped the ground; the whole room was vibrating with music, emotion, and tactility. We had just announced the end of an eight-day hunger strike by 19 of my fellow brave student comrades, but there was something more in the air. As the genocide in Gaza continued to unfold, we held our grief in our collective solidarity and yelled out, from the deepest parts of ourselves, for a glimmer of hope. From Turtle Island to Palestine, we called upon the strength of our ancestor’s spirits to fuel the sumud (Arabic for steadfastness) of our resilient kin in Gaza. With the bittersweet end of the hunger strike as the third major action after two student sit-ins were met with arrest by the university, we left the campus center with the painful knowledge of our Palestinian kin’s inability to escape the forced Israeli blockade. This realization, though sobering, fueled our belief that this movement has only witnessed its beginning. We affirmed our commitment to continue on, unyielding, until Palestine attains its freedom. As the tune of the ancestor’s song grew louder and louder every time another person joined the crowd, an uneasy feeling fluttered in my chest: is this hope?
In the weeks after, I struggled with what to feel and think of the idea of hope. I mulled over its applicability in a context of genocide. I questioned the possibility of hope, and whether or not it holds any serious power in animating transformation on an individual level and a collective one — for the movement and the world. I talked with my parents, friends, and fellow organizers about it; I discussed it with peers in class and I read works by scholars from various geographies and temporalities. Being born and raised as a third-generation stateless Palestinian refugee in Lebanon, I came to realize early on in life what hope, or the lack thereof, means for many of us. My existence, like many others, constitutes a loophole in the nation-state project and therefore continues to threaten its sustainability and the regulated exclusions on which it is formed. Growing up like an ivy plant between the cracks of the systems that govern our world, I had pushed away hope in any endeavor as a feeble excuse for accepting powerlessness. Looking toward my exhausted and overworked father and mother has always reminded me that hope has never been a part of our familial lexicon. As Ahmad Diab eloquently puts it, “Rather than enduring existential crises, Palestinians learn to deal with existence as a crisis.”
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Forwarded from 𝐂𝖔𝖉𝖊𝖗𝖓𝖔𝖛™
Despite this vexed relationship with the notion of hope, as the student movement grew on campus, I felt forced to reckon with a new orientation to hope and the feelings of guilt it procured at times. How dare I feel a sense of hope stemming from the hunger strike on a safe U.S. campus while my people continue to be forcefully starved and slaughtered in the thousands? My parents and grandparents’ consistent experiences of betrayal by their leaders and the settler-colonial regime taught them better than to frivolously hope to take center stage. I believe the intergenerational cynicism I have inherited taught me to reject hope to preserve my own sanity and avoid disappointment as I navigate survival when denied existence.
How do I then grapple with a sense of intergenerational, existential hopelessness — passed on like a wretched inheritance — while tens of students from all walks of life, some of whom I have never met, put their academic lives, careers, and bodies at risk? How do I reject hope when my student comrades, who are not Palestinian, give their time, effort, and resources generously to this collective cause? How dare I not feel hope when they dare to scream in the hundreds, demanding the university divest its endowment from companies associated with the settler colony’s violence; when they dare to imagine a better, more caring, more just, and more equitable world that safeguards Palestinian life? How do I reject hope when my peers practice sustainable world-building practices from inside the campus movement that holds powerful implications for our communities, from the local to the global?
These thoughts, among others, continued to linger within me. The Brown Gaza Solidarity Encampment, which began at the end of April 2024, represents one formative moment in this trajectory of feeling and thinking hope in a time of genocide. There, the palpable theories from our Palestine in Comparative Ethnic Studies classroom converged with the material action a hundred or so of my comrades committed to and helped organize. After the accumulation of several dispersed actions for Palestine on Brown’s campus this school year, which built on a legacy of decades of student activism, the Brown student encampment was but one site of a student rebellion of historic, national, and international proportions. While our action was largely indebted to Columbia University’s student’s spearheading of a steadfast encampment, our power only grew as the number of encampments expanded across the country and beyond and continues to grow as I write this.
Retrospectively, every now and then, I have to look at the images and videos from the week of the encampment to remind myself that it was real. This sentiment is met with wonder when shared with many of my non-Palestinian friends who are committed to fighting for Palestinian liberation. How can I even begin to explain to them the tearful disbelief of my parents, who for so long had urged me not to wear my Keffiyeh in public for fear of persecution? How do I convey the transformative power the student movement has given to us Palestinians watching on and participating when a hundred or more students, mostly non-Palestinian, locked hand in hand, dancing the traditional Palestinian Dabke on the main green, while popular Palestinian music played on big speakers? Solidarity in those moments did not only take on the form of support, but it was also immersed in a courageous and accountable ethos of sharing struggle and pain. Our resolute solidarity ultimately fueled durable, radical hope.
How do I then grapple with a sense of intergenerational, existential hopelessness — passed on like a wretched inheritance — while tens of students from all walks of life, some of whom I have never met, put their academic lives, careers, and bodies at risk? How do I reject hope when my student comrades, who are not Palestinian, give their time, effort, and resources generously to this collective cause? How dare I not feel hope when they dare to scream in the hundreds, demanding the university divest its endowment from companies associated with the settler colony’s violence; when they dare to imagine a better, more caring, more just, and more equitable world that safeguards Palestinian life? How do I reject hope when my peers practice sustainable world-building practices from inside the campus movement that holds powerful implications for our communities, from the local to the global?
These thoughts, among others, continued to linger within me. The Brown Gaza Solidarity Encampment, which began at the end of April 2024, represents one formative moment in this trajectory of feeling and thinking hope in a time of genocide. There, the palpable theories from our Palestine in Comparative Ethnic Studies classroom converged with the material action a hundred or so of my comrades committed to and helped organize. After the accumulation of several dispersed actions for Palestine on Brown’s campus this school year, which built on a legacy of decades of student activism, the Brown student encampment was but one site of a student rebellion of historic, national, and international proportions. While our action was largely indebted to Columbia University’s student’s spearheading of a steadfast encampment, our power only grew as the number of encampments expanded across the country and beyond and continues to grow as I write this.
Retrospectively, every now and then, I have to look at the images and videos from the week of the encampment to remind myself that it was real. This sentiment is met with wonder when shared with many of my non-Palestinian friends who are committed to fighting for Palestinian liberation. How can I even begin to explain to them the tearful disbelief of my parents, who for so long had urged me not to wear my Keffiyeh in public for fear of persecution? How do I convey the transformative power the student movement has given to us Palestinians watching on and participating when a hundred or more students, mostly non-Palestinian, locked hand in hand, dancing the traditional Palestinian Dabke on the main green, while popular Palestinian music played on big speakers? Solidarity in those moments did not only take on the form of support, but it was also immersed in a courageous and accountable ethos of sharing struggle and pain. Our resolute solidarity ultimately fueled durable, radical hope.
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Forwarded from 𝐂𝖔𝖉𝖊𝖗𝖓𝖔𝖛™
For a full week, as I spent time on the main green, I constantly reflected on this microcosm of a world we were building together: a world where we recalled our ancestors daily to guide us, where we took care of the land which hosted us, and where belonging was defined by a shared caringness and truth to one another, rather than state citizenship. We continuously rooted every decision we collectively took in the Palestinian revolutionary tradition which rejects colonialism, carcerality, and any other agents of imperialism and oppression. This is not to say it was a perfect world, for we made many mistakes to which we held and still must hold ourselves accountable. The encampment became an experiment in an attempt to best carve spaces for collective healing, reconciliation, and moving forward through and in the aftermath of the action. This is to say, I have never learned and reflected on “solidarity as revolutionary worldmaking,” as Robin Kelly puts it, throughout all of my first year as an undergraduate at this institution as much I have done so through the praxis of being at, engaging with, and co-shaping the People’s Plaza on the main green.
As I unconsciously catch myself humming the tune of the ancestor’s song, I realize that, indeed, the voice of my ancestors never leaves me these days. I often find myself asking: what would my ancestors think of this? While I have always kept a habit of preserving my late grandfather’s spirit in my consciousness, I cannot help but recall his voice more loudly than ever since the encampment. Time and time again, I think of his trek from Akka in Palestine to Saida in Lebanon during the 1948 Nakba. I try to imagine what thoughts and emotions he must have experienced as he was expelled from the only home he had ever known. I regret never asking him for more details as a child before he passed. A lot about him and that time remains cloudy, a gap in my and our collective histories as Palestinians. But the student encampment at Brown, along with the greater transformations in Palestinian studies and Palestine solidarity movements today, teach me to fill in these holes in our hearts and histories with that which is needed to build a different world.
A queer feminist approach to world-making rooted in decolonial radical love is what I turn to here. Sarah Ihmoud powerfully explains, “to practice feminism in the midst of bearing witness to genocide is to embrace love as a radical consciousness, as a radical decolonial politic of fighting for life. To practice feminism in this moment is to hold each other through the vast darkness of our grief, to walk with each other hand in hand, to bear witness to landscapes of death, and, [...], to tell the truth.” At moments during organizing where I felt my grief transform to anger, a friend reminded me once of their favorite Palestinian truth: we keep fighting not because of hate for those who have wronged us but because of our love for a life denied and our love for one another. How can I not hold onto hope when my people in Gaza exemplify radical love of land and life every day? How can I not maintain hope when my student comrades sustain themselves and their movement with radical love for the land and life of which people in Gaza remind us daily? Our refusal to be complacent in the heart of the empire is the bare minimum of love and care we can show our people in Gaza who constantly refuse to be silenced and erased from history.
As I unconsciously catch myself humming the tune of the ancestor’s song, I realize that, indeed, the voice of my ancestors never leaves me these days. I often find myself asking: what would my ancestors think of this? While I have always kept a habit of preserving my late grandfather’s spirit in my consciousness, I cannot help but recall his voice more loudly than ever since the encampment. Time and time again, I think of his trek from Akka in Palestine to Saida in Lebanon during the 1948 Nakba. I try to imagine what thoughts and emotions he must have experienced as he was expelled from the only home he had ever known. I regret never asking him for more details as a child before he passed. A lot about him and that time remains cloudy, a gap in my and our collective histories as Palestinians. But the student encampment at Brown, along with the greater transformations in Palestinian studies and Palestine solidarity movements today, teach me to fill in these holes in our hearts and histories with that which is needed to build a different world.
A queer feminist approach to world-making rooted in decolonial radical love is what I turn to here. Sarah Ihmoud powerfully explains, “to practice feminism in the midst of bearing witness to genocide is to embrace love as a radical consciousness, as a radical decolonial politic of fighting for life. To practice feminism in this moment is to hold each other through the vast darkness of our grief, to walk with each other hand in hand, to bear witness to landscapes of death, and, [...], to tell the truth.” At moments during organizing where I felt my grief transform to anger, a friend reminded me once of their favorite Palestinian truth: we keep fighting not because of hate for those who have wronged us but because of our love for a life denied and our love for one another. How can I not hold onto hope when my people in Gaza exemplify radical love of land and life every day? How can I not maintain hope when my student comrades sustain themselves and their movement with radical love for the land and life of which people in Gaza remind us daily? Our refusal to be complacent in the heart of the empire is the bare minimum of love and care we can show our people in Gaza who constantly refuse to be silenced and erased from history.
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The Winneconne Police Department, Wisconsin, sadly announced the death of former officer, Hayley Ackerman who died unexpectedly this past Saturday.
"We still considered Hayley part of our family. She was sweet, kind, and loved people as well as animals. She had a wonderful rapport with anyone. She had an impact on many here with her positive attitude and infectious smile."
Rest Easy Sister. Prayers for her family of blue and blood.🙏🏻
"We still considered Hayley part of our family. She was sweet, kind, and loved people as well as animals. She had a wonderful rapport with anyone. She had an impact on many here with her positive attitude and infectious smile."
Rest Easy Sister. Prayers for her family of blue and blood.🙏🏻
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Footage released from the Shell gas station explosion yesterday at 16th and Guerrero in San Francisco.
🎥 akanet tt
🎥 akanet tt
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BREAKING: Today TheJusticeDept attorneys defeated an attempt to stop President Trump’s totally lawful East Wing Modernization and State Ballroom Project.
President Trump has faced countless bad-faith left-wing legal attacks — this was no different.
We will continue defending the President’s project in court in the coming weeks.
Attorney General Pamela Bondi
President Trump has faced countless bad-faith left-wing legal attacks — this was no different.
We will continue defending the President’s project in court in the coming weeks.
Attorney General Pamela Bondi
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Police frequency
Please, pray for the Huntsville Police officer who was seriously injured in the line of duty this morning.🙏🏻 Texas: A Huntsville police officer is in critical condition after being hit by a suspect fleeing in a stolen vehicle early Tuesday morning, according…
**Update on Huntsville Police Officer Sean Brinson, who was critically injured this morning during a vehicle pursuit
From Huntsville PD: "Sean was taken into surgery at 8:30AM to address severe internal injuries suffered in the crash. That surgery went well, and he has now been taken for another operation to address injuries sustained to both his legs. He is still in critical condition and will likely need several more surgeries over the coming weeks."
Officer Brinson is a former United States Marine who then served with the Dumas, TX, Police Department before relocating to Huntsville in 2021. He and his wife live in Huntsville and have two small children.
"We appreciate the outpouring of support and have had numerous questions about donating to Sean. Prosperity Bank has established an account for monetary donations. Those can be taken to Prosperity Bank on 11th Street or any other Prosperity Bank location. Donations can also be made at the Huntsville Police Department, and we will ensure that they are directed to the family.
Please continue to pray for Sean and his family.🙏🏻 We appreciate the support and will continue to update his condition moving forward," said HPD in a statement.
From Huntsville PD: "Sean was taken into surgery at 8:30AM to address severe internal injuries suffered in the crash. That surgery went well, and he has now been taken for another operation to address injuries sustained to both his legs. He is still in critical condition and will likely need several more surgeries over the coming weeks."
Officer Brinson is a former United States Marine who then served with the Dumas, TX, Police Department before relocating to Huntsville in 2021. He and his wife live in Huntsville and have two small children.
"We appreciate the outpouring of support and have had numerous questions about donating to Sean. Prosperity Bank has established an account for monetary donations. Those can be taken to Prosperity Bank on 11th Street or any other Prosperity Bank location. Donations can also be made at the Huntsville Police Department, and we will ensure that they are directed to the family.
Please continue to pray for Sean and his family.🙏🏻 We appreciate the support and will continue to update his condition moving forward," said HPD in a statement.
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DHS Assistant Secretary: Lunatics Are Emboldened By Radical Politicians
Tricia McLaughlin: "We continue to see this campaign of terror against our law enforcement and it's not just impacting ICE. These lunatics are emboldened by these really radical politicians."
Tricia McLaughlin: "We continue to see this campaign of terror against our law enforcement and it's not just impacting ICE. These lunatics are emboldened by these really radical politicians."
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"I thank God, that I fear not. I see no real cause for fear. I know our situation well, and can see the way out of it." - Thomas Paine
‘Washington’s Crossing at McKonkey’s Ferry’ — Mort Künstler (2011)
Homeland Security
‘Washington’s Crossing at McKonkey’s Ferry’ — Mort Künstler (2011)
Homeland Security
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The damage that the Biden administration did to this country cannot be overstated.
The previous administration corrupted our immigration system to allow millions of illegal aliens, including violent criminals, into the country with ZERO front-end vetting.
President Trump and Secretary Noem are now enforcing the law to keep America safe.
Tricia McLaughlin
The previous administration corrupted our immigration system to allow millions of illegal aliens, including violent criminals, into the country with ZERO front-end vetting.
President Trump and Secretary Noem are now enforcing the law to keep America safe.
Tricia McLaughlin
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The tragic Islamist terror attack against those at a Hanukkah celebration in Australia sadly should not come as a surprise to anyone. This is the direct result of the massive influx of Islamists to Australia. Their goal is not only the Islamization of Australia but the entire world—including the United States. Islamists and Islamism is the greatest threat to the freedom, security, and prosperity of the United States and the entire world. It is probably too late for Europe—and maybe Australia. It is not too late for the United States of America. But it soon will be. Thankfully, President Trump has prioritized securing our borders and deporting known and suspected terrorists, and stopping mass, unvetted migration that puts Americans at risk.
Tulsi Gabbard 🌺
Tulsi Gabbard 🌺
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Police frequency
https://archive.ph/2025.12.16-160021/https://cmes.brown.edu/people/mustapha-kharbouch Here is archived page
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Watch as Brown University President Christina Paxson says she is unaware of any web pages being removed from the university’s website, despite questions surrounding recent changes to the online website
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USBP agents stopped a black sedan in San Clemente, CA, where a K9 alert led to the discovery of 43 packages of narcotics inside a duffel bag.
🔺 19 packages of fentanyl weighing 25 lbs.
🔺 24 packages of heroin weighing 31 lbs.
The U.S. citizen driver was turned over to the DEA for prosecution, and the passenger, who overstayed his visa, is pending deportation and visa cancellation. Enforcement efforts continue to deliver real results, effectively removing dangerous drugs and criminals from our communities.
Chief Michael W. Banks
🔺 19 packages of fentanyl weighing 25 lbs.
🔺 24 packages of heroin weighing 31 lbs.
The U.S. citizen driver was turned over to the DEA for prosecution, and the passenger, who overstayed his visa, is pending deportation and visa cancellation. Enforcement efforts continue to deliver real results, effectively removing dangerous drugs and criminals from our communities.
Chief Michael W. Banks
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Forwarded from MJTruth
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🚨 BREAKING: Candace Owens says Erika Kirk admitted during their meeting that she was Mistake in publicly stating her husband, Charlie Kirk, had not sent messages saying “They are going to kill me” the day before his assassination.
Erika explained that she had only checked Charlie’s iMessages when making that statement. After later reviewing his Signal/Telegram messages, she found the messages there.
Andrew Kolvet did, in fact, tell Candace Owens that Charlie had sent him this message.
Although Candace did not personally see or verify the messages, Erika Kirk confirmed that Dan Flood had also received a similar message from Charlie, specifying “The Left is going to kill me.”
https://rumble.com/v733yji-erika-kirk-confirms-charlie-did-in-fact-message-they-are-going-to-kill-me.html
📱 ReTWEET
📱 ReTRUTH
Erika explained that she had only checked Charlie’s iMessages when making that statement. After later reviewing his Signal/Telegram messages, she found the messages there.
Andrew Kolvet did, in fact, tell Candace Owens that Charlie had sent him this message.
Although Candace did not personally see or verify the messages, Erika Kirk confirmed that Dan Flood had also received a similar message from Charlie, specifying “The Left is going to kill me.”
https://rumble.com/v733yji-erika-kirk-confirms-charlie-did-in-fact-message-they-are-going-to-kill-me.html
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Gavin Newsom you should have never come after parental rights or tried to erase our daughters.
We rose.
We fought back.
And we’re still fighting the good fight.
This is only a small fraction of the Mama Bears you unleashed 6 years ago when you came after our kids.
You miscalculated.
Now we’re linked arms across CA, relentless. Unbreakable. Unstoppable.
You will not win.
You will not destroy this nation.
You poked the wrong 🐻s 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Sonja Shaw
We rose.
We fought back.
And we’re still fighting the good fight.
This is only a small fraction of the Mama Bears you unleashed 6 years ago when you came after our kids.
You miscalculated.
Now we’re linked arms across CA, relentless. Unbreakable. Unstoppable.
You will not win.
You will not destroy this nation.
You poked the wrong 🐻s 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Sonja Shaw
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FLASHBACK: Remember when Barack Obama promised Americans that Obamacare would reduce premiums by $2,500 per year?
Time for a fact check: turns out premiums have risen over 129%.
REPOST and expose the truth - that democrats lied and caused healthcare prices to skyrocket.
Mike Netter
Time for a fact check: turns out premiums have risen over 129%.
REPOST and expose the truth - that democrats lied and caused healthcare prices to skyrocket.
Mike Netter
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Police frequency
NEW: Jesus Ayala, one of the teens who hit and killed bike rider Andreas Probst in Las Vegas, has absolutely no remorse for murdering an innocent man. Give him the same treatment he gave Probst. According to a new report, just hours after killing Probst…
BREAKING: A judge on Tuesday ordered life sentences for two men who, as teenagers, hit and killed a retired police chief with a vehicle in northwest Las Vegas.
District Judge Jacqueline Bluth ordered life sentences Tuesday for the pair of men who hit and killed Probst, a 66-year-old retired police chief with a vehicle as teenagers.
Jesus Ayala, 20, received a sentence of 20 years to life.
Jzamir Keys, 18, was sentenced to 18 years to life.
Both pleaded guilty to a count of second-degree murder with use of a deadly weapon in October. Their sentences were agreed upon by them and prosecutors.
The duo killed Probst as he was riding his bike near Centennial Parkway, then fled. The crash occurred on Aug. 14, 2023.
Read more: lvrj.com/post/3596337
District Judge Jacqueline Bluth ordered life sentences Tuesday for the pair of men who hit and killed Probst, a 66-year-old retired police chief with a vehicle as teenagers.
Jesus Ayala, 20, received a sentence of 20 years to life.
Jzamir Keys, 18, was sentenced to 18 years to life.
Both pleaded guilty to a count of second-degree murder with use of a deadly weapon in October. Their sentences were agreed upon by them and prosecutors.
The duo killed Probst as he was riding his bike near Centennial Parkway, then fled. The crash occurred on Aug. 14, 2023.
Read more: lvrj.com/post/3596337
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