ICH BIN EIN PALESTINIAN, IRAQI, AFGHANI, KASHMIRI, YEMENI, RUSSKI,... !
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"Growing evidence of atrocities against civilians has brought home the horrific toll of the war in Ukraine, prompting world leaders on Sunday to threaten even harsher sanctions.
In Bucha, a newly liberated suburb northwest of the capital, residents were still finding bodies in yards and roadways days after Russian troops withdrew. A man in a bright blue fleece lay hunched over the steering wheel of a crushed car at an intersection in the center of town. Another man lay on his back beside the road, a large bullet hole in the back of his head and his green bicycle toppled beside him.
But it was the discovery of corpses with their wrists bound, images of which quickly proliferated online, that sparked the most international outrage."
*
Well, if "Ukraine accuses," and the slippery sleazy Slimes uses the qualifier of saying that there is "growing evidence" (a precursor to claiming "irrefutable evidence" a few days from now), then it can only mean one thing to a student of REAL history --- specifically this: The "atrocities" aren't real.
Every American High School student learns about the Hearst vs Pulitzer Yellow Journalism competition and its associated atrocity propaganda of 1898 -- or at least we did up until my 1980s High Schools days. Yet the dullard captive subjects of the overlapping tyrannical kingdoms of Libtardia and Normiedom can't bring themselves to imagine that this exact type of Fake News is happening today. We're all supposed to think that 1898 was some sort of historical aberration when, in reality, it's been the "new normal" ever since. --- Nay. I'll go further than that and say that emotion-based atrocity propaganda has actually gotten much worse and far more graphic over the course of the century and a quarter since.
To better understand the present, let's review just a fraction of the real history of this treacherous tactic of mass manipulation.
Hitler, 1933: "Lies and slander, steeped in hair-raising perversions, are unleashed against Germany. Gruesome fables of hacked up Jewish corpses, eyes cut out and hacked off hands are distributed with the intention to defame the German people in the world for a second time and in the same way they have accomplished this in 1914. Millions of innocent people, nations with whom the German people only want to live in peace, are agitated against us by these devious criminals."
In addition to mass manipulation psychosis, another interesting psychological component to the atrocity propaganda at play here is PROJECTION. It would be bad enough if the Axis of Evil merely slandered their targets and then carried out their wars in as "humane" (for lack of a better word) of a manner as possible before doing the "regime change." But adding insult to injury, the "good guys" usually proceed to carry out the very same atrocities which the victim government was falsely accused of!
Regarding the aforementioned historical examples, could there have been anything more demonically "atrocious" and deadly than the World War I hunger blockade of Germany and post-war Treaty of Versailles? Or the incendiary WW2 carpet bombing of Germany's most crowded neighborhoods? Or the post World War II mass starvation of German POWs and mass rape of German women? And it wasn't just the Soviets doing this. Plenty of American GIs raped, with impunity, their way from Normandy through Belgium and into Germany!
And how about all that slow-poisoning depleted uranium that the US left all over Iraq (and Serbia) -- and the torture prison at Abu Ghraib? Remember that wretched place? And arming and unleashing the monstrous mercenaries of ISIS upon the Syrian people? And the 8 years of attacks on the eastern Russian republics by the Kiev-based gangsters? What shall we label all that? Humanitarianism?
Atrocity propaganda and hypocrisy go together like stealing and lying.
REAL ATROCITIES
1.
German women mass raped after WW 2 // 2. Yazidi women kidnapped and
held as sex slaves by CIA-Mossad ISIS mercenaries. // 3. The infamous
Abu Ghraib torture facility in Iraq, where CIA / Mossad operatives
tortured, humiliated and sodomized prisoners.
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ICH BIN EIN PALESTINIAN, IRAQI, AFGHANI, KASHMIRI, YEMENI, RUSSKI,... !
Russia, one of the greatest martyr nations of modern History, martyred by decadent Western Christendom, its own degenerate aristocracy and Tsars, US and World Money Jewry, the Bolsheviks and Communists, and again, now, by the US and the International Jewish and Zionist Mafia allied with the Vatican and Zionist Christendom.
Seeing Muslims returning to Islam, after having survived the repeated Holocausts since the conquest of their lands by Western Imperialists and Colonialists, they never stop bombing, starving, terrorising, torturing, raping, mass murdering millions and enslaving the Muslim survivors, destroying Muslim cultures worldwide, including high up in the mountains, and seeing Russians going back to Christ thanks to Vladimir Putin, a well known mass murderer of Muslims in the past (to researchers like me!), an open media war and joint mercenary military and terrorist operations are being carried out against Russia as they have been going against all Muslim countries for over a century!
With some 96% of the mainstream media in the US owned by Jews, there is no way the masses can be informed about what is really happening in the world. But, we cannot blame those Jews all the time because they are given that power through countless monopolies by the so-called Christians. Under Muslim rule, no such thing could ever happen. But, Ashkenazi Jews are a totally different breed of beastly wild creatures. FOX NEWS is the main Apartheid Israeli warmongering voice in the USA, and they are allowed by Christians to freely beat the drums of war 24/7; so why should they stop?
Adolf Hitler never wanted war, but only peace, and wanted to be left alone. But, the Anglo-Saxon West, the International Jewish Mafia and their puppet France wanted war and they never stopped to this very day in 2022, more than 75 years after Hitler’s death!
BAFS
Tuesday 5 April 2022
BERLIN, THE SEX AND PORNOGRAPHY PARADISE OF JEWRY, AND AFTER WHAT THE YANKEES DID TO THEM IN 1933-1945 INCLUDING THE FIRE-BOMBING OF GERMAN CITIES (HOLOCAUSTS), TORTURE, RAPE AND MURDER OF POW (SOME 2 MILLION) AFTER THE WAR???
SHALOM, YOU STUPID SHEEPLE!
BAFS
Monday 4 April 2022
JOHN F. KENNEDY SPEECH IN WEST BERLIN JUNE 26, 1963 " ICH BIN EIN BERLINER " SPEECH 19084
5 May 2020
(Both contributions removed almost immediately (within minutes) by PeriscopeFilm)
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"At least 50 killed"
APRIL 10, 2022
The
Deep State's "wag-the-dog" script writers on the ground in the Ukraine
-- supremely confident in the rock-like stupidity of the bewildered
subjects of western Normiedom -- aren't even trying to mimic reality
anymore. Seriously now; if Hollyweird were to produce "massacre" images
as amateurish as this, film critics would pan the film for its lousy low
budget effects. The fictional story-line is just as implausible as the
visual effects because the very idea of the Russian military firing a
missile into a crowded train station packed with thousands of RUSSIANS (Donetsk Republic) makes
no sense, at all! Only in the buried fine print of the article --
contrasted to the top-of-page shock headline -- do we discover that
Russia is denying such a deed and calling it a Ukrainian "provocation" (false flag).
More than just a false flag -- it's a hoax false flag -- for if the strike which killed 50+ was real, the "officials" of the Ukraine wouldn't need to show us crisis actors and / or plastic dummies in body bags. We would surely see actual realistic-looking destruction, body parts, rivers of blood and mutilated bodies. And given that I-phones and 24/7 surveillance cameras are ubiquitous these days (especially at places like train stations) -- why aren't we seeing the harrowing video images of the explosion and bloody chaotic immediate aftermath? Hmmm? Enjoy the made-for-TV shit-show.
Both subconsciously and deliberately, evil sociopaths always "project" their foul wishes and deeds upon their innocent targets. The scriptwriters' use of the term "for the children" on the "Russian missile" represents not merely the type of murderous mockery which (((they))) would do -- but have actually done! Prior to a 2006 Israeli attack on Lebanon, Jewish children were invited to sign heavy artillery shells directed at Lebanon, writing taunting messages like "from Israel with love." This drew a scathing commentary from a Jewish columnist named Robert C. Koehler of Tribune Media Services: "Maybe the bombs that destroyed the home of the 8-year-old girl in the southern Lebanon village of Ayta Chaeb were autographed by little Israeli girls. Maybe they were decorated with hearts and Stars of David. Maybe they said 'from Israel with love. The corruption and militarization of the young .... This is the collective obscenity of militarized hatred. It's not just a game that adults play. We pull the children into it. Welcome to the gates of hell and madness. We can no longer afford to militarize our irrational streak." * Yep. Whether it's a real shell as it was in Israel, or a fake missile as it was in the Ukraine -- only the "usual suspects" would think of writing love notes on a bomb. Boobus
Americanus 1: I read in today's New York Times that the Russians blew
up a crowded train station using a missile with a message painted on it
which read, "For the children!" Boobus Americanus 2: Oh my God! I don't even think the Nazis stooped that low! St. Sugar: You mean, the frickin' AshkeNAZIS, right Boobuss? And yess, (((they))) would, and actually have, sstooped that low! Editor: Touche. DONATIONS MIKE's BANNED BOOKs & PDFs |
One Seat in Coach, 36 Suitcases, and Enough Kevlar to Fight a War
The Ukrainian Americans supplying an army on their own.
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In a black T-shirt that says “warrior” in Ukrainian, Ivan Sikorskyi swerves around potholes on the Queens cemetery belt in his Dodge Caravan with a silver chrome skull on the top of the gear shift. Behind him are two blue duffels and a suitcase filled with body armor, drone batteries, and tourniquets; stacked on top are three combat helmets from a stranger in Pittsburgh. Sikorsyki isn’t sure how the man got his number. “People just call me and ask if I can deliver to Poland,” he says.
These calls have been coming nonstop to the 33-year-old plumber since Russia invaded the country he grew up in. Two or three times a week, he takes off from his apartment in Ridgewood with a “Stand With Ukraine” sign in the window and makes this run to JFK airport, part of a network of volunteers shipping combat supplies to the front lines 5,000 miles away.
For years, Sikorskyi and others like him have been donating to Ukrainians fighting Russian-backed separatists, sending over Salomon boots and reconnaissance drones roughly once a month through commercial shipping firms such as Meest and DSV. But when Ukraine’s airspace closed following the Russian invasion, he and others started fundraising on Facebook for a makeshift operation that sends dozens of checked bags with a passenger on Poland’s national airline, LOT, to Warsaw. Then it’s on to Ukraine by van. At first, there were some concerns about sending supplies to a warzone, but the TSA is surprisingly lenient about what goes in a checked bag, and a representative for the airline said it doesn’t object.
Despite a wrong turn on the airport’s maze of roads, Sikorsyki is early to the short-term parking lot of Terminal 7, and he runs off to grab a bunch of heavy-duty luggage carts. On his return, another SUV shows up from central New Jersey. Nataliya Douglas has brought ten military-surplus bags she bought on her credit card for $3,000 at the advice of her brother in Kyiv, who is coordinating with an understocked territorial-defense force of Ukrainian volunteers, who are not as well supplied as the country’s standing military. She heard about this supply run only two days ago. “We’re like little ants,” she says. “Our antennas are up when trouble is in our homeland far away.” Inside each olive-green duffel is a full kit for one soldier: a ballistic helmet, a bulletproof vest, military pants, a fleece top, knee pads, elbow pads, gloves, and a Ziploc with nutrition bars. On top lies a piece of computer paper with Bible passages in Ukrainian — “there stood not a man of all their enemies before them; the Lord delivered all their enemies into their hand” (Joshua 21:44).
More Ukrainians arrive with suitcases, including Sikorskyi’s partner, Dima Topchiy, a financial analyst living in Bensonhurst who’s been supplying Ukraine’s forces on and off since 2014. He started a Facebook group to solicit donations from other Ukrainian Americans to fill soldiers’ requests — especially the body armor he chases down on the bountiful American military-surplus market. Upon delivery, the soldiers send him photos of themselves giving a thumbs-up next to suitcases filled with just-add-water pizza meals and $1,100 Autel drones. As the fighting ramped up, similar groups began crowdfunded shipments for commercial flights out of Newark, Philadelphia, Miami, and Chicago.
In less than two hours, a total of six vehicles showed up with infrared binoculars, a handheld thermal sight, and plate-carrier vests loaded in donated and dollar-store luggage. A cardboard box with loose bags of hemostatic gauze, chest seals, and emergency burn dressings is placed on the ground. The volunteers, speaking mostly in Ukrainian, shove the small packets into suitcases with extra room in a game of wartime Tetris.
Then the woman they’ve been waiting for arrives. Iryna Ames, who flew six hours from central Washington, is on her way to Warsaw to help her paralyzed mother, her brother, and his two children who fled from Donetsk, in eastern Ukraine. “Old people are like trees,” she says of her mother. “They have roots, and if you take them out, they can die.” She will fly alone with all the bags, which are tagged with yellow tape and their final destination written in Sharpie. “I never knew these guys before,” she says, pleased to meet the people who contacted her on Facebook when she posted that she was going to Poland.
After about 90 minutes, the group lugs everything to LOT’s counter, tucked into a downstairs corner of the terminal. “God help us,” one airline employee says when he sees the blue-and-yellow caravan headed for him. The group paid in advance for 32 suitcases at a “pretty painful” $107 per bag, according to Topchiy. One member of the group shows up late and adds four of his bags to make it an even three dozen. But Sikorskyi’s team isn’t alone: Two more groups of Ukranians they don’t know show up at the counter towing a dozen bags each.
After Ames is through security, the crew goes outside to smoke and chat, standing in small circles with an air of accomplishment. Their conversation is interrupted by more phone calls: Sikorskyi is coordinating a pickup of body armor in Newark for another flight in less than 48 hours.
The next day, Ames lands in Warsaw on a red-eye flight she spent praying instead of sleeping. She heads to baggage claim, where her 36 pieces tagged with yellow tape and ribbons dominate the carousel. With a handful of helpers, she hauls the bags to the curb and hands them off to Arsen Drobakha, a 26-year-old Ukrainian American videographer who has been running supplies over the border for weeks. He also has had very little sleep, leaving Ukraine at 5 a.m. in a donated Fiat Ducato van with 627,000 kilometers on it.
For this run, the van is way overweight. “There’s probably less than a centimeter between the wheel and the plastic bumper,” Drobakha says over the phone. “Anytime I would hit a bump, they would hit.” A little wear on the fender liner is the kind of concern that is overlooked during wartime. “I could have fit like ten more bags,” he says. If a trip is less than 30 bags, it’s not really worth the gas. He synchronizes his arrival with another flight from Miami bringing two dozen more bags and two Ukrainian women from Florida, who saddle next to him on the van’s front bench. They’re headed to Ivano-Frankivsk, a city in western Ukraine that’s recently come under Russian attack, but he will take them only as far as his destination in Lviv.
Born in Ukraine, Drobakha moved to the United States when he was 4 and grew up in a house outside Philadelphia, where he and his older sister had to go outside if they wanted to speak English. At 23, he moved to Kyiv for an internship and met his future wife, Violetta. They and their dachshund were among the first waves of refugees to leave Kyiv. “None of my friends left, and we were made fun of for it, which is fine,” he says. After a 72-hour wait in their car at the border, they holed up with another group of friends in Warsaw, where they followed the war on social media. “It felt terrible not being able to be on the ground and helping people,” he says.
Untrained in combat, he realized he could pitch in by ferrying aid across the border. With his sister, Yulia, organizing luggage shipments at home, his father, Valentin, and brother-in-law, Andriy, flew from Pennsylvania to join him. Since the invasion, Drobakha has been making two or three runs each week across the border to Lviv, where the territorial-defense forces distribute the supplies to the front. Ukraine has forbidden men of military age from leaving the country, but Drobakha is allowed to travel across because he holds a U.S. passport. Among the volunteer drivers on the Warsaw-Lviv route, Sikorskyi considers the Drobakha family to be the best. “Very punctual,” he says.
In the beginning, the trips were fairly smooth. Long waits leaving the country were common, but coming back in, soldiers at sandbagged checkpoints in the fields of western Ukraine waved the luggage through without much scrutiny. Recently, with Lviv facing Russian missiles, checkpoints have grown more stringent. On a delivery to a military base outside Lviv in mid-March, Drobakha missed a Russian strike by an hour. “It’s a pretty surreal feeling,” he says. “Sitting in traffic, it’s always in the back of your head that a rocket could just drop on you at any moment.”
Four hours later, after some gas-station cappuccino and kebabs, Drobakha and his two passengers from Florida make it to the border, where Ukrainian soldiers ask to see their papers, poke around the bags, and ask where the gear is going. They get through, and Drobakha drops the women at a well-stocked military compound, where much of the luggage is unloaded and their contents enter the stream of military gear heading east. Drobakha isn’t sure what happens to the suitcases lifted from the spare rooms of Ukrainian Americans abroad. “They probably just throw them away,” he says. There’s little time to ponder such things. It’s getting late, and he has two more drop-offs to make tonight before driving back to Warsaw in the morning. A man from Philly needs a ride.
This post has been updated.
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