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@moqawama

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[ID: Tweet thread by @LunaOi_VN, broken up into three images. Tweet 1:
Sometimes I forgot that I was born when Vietnam was still being comprehensively embargoed by the US.
The economic sanction was lifted when I was 15 and my life change drastically since then.
Lemme tell ya, sanction sucks.
[Tweet 2:
In the sanction time: - No fresh milk except this condensed milk. It was like super fancy at that time. - No soft drinks like Coke, pepsi… - Virtually no candies or cookies except when I was sick or it was Tet holiday, my mom would buy me some Hai Chau cookies.
[images of condensed milk and the aforementioned cookies]
[Tweet 3 (beginning of second image):
- No clean water. We had to drink yellow water from our well. - No stable electricity so of course there was no fridge, no oven, no electric rice cooker… - No gas/electric stove. I had to cook with straw/wood stove my whole childhood.
[Image of a pot of something being cooked in a fireplace] [image of two people getting water from a well]
[Tweet 4:
- No new clothes. I had to wear old clothes from my older brother. - When I was 10, I was chosen to study in art class but I could not join because my mom could not afford new art supplies for me. - Meat was somethign very fancy at that time. I could only eat beef twice a month.
[image of a set of colored pencils]
[Tweet 5:
- Virtually no medicine except for some basic anti-biotics and vitamins. - Mostly all the vaccines we had were from Cuba. Thanks, Cuba! And yes, Cubans vaccines are running through my veins to this day.
[Tweet 6 (beginning of third image):
After the sanction was lifted: - I finally could have some fresh milk. - Instant noodles became affordable. - Finally new clothes! Hell yeah! - More medicine, more vaccines.
[images of consumer food products, IDK]
[Tweet 7:
My final thought:
Fuck the US and its sanction!!!
And fuck YOU if you think sanction doesn’t affect a whole country’s economy and the life of millions of people just because the US says so.
[Tweet 8:
Vietnam was under US sanction for just 25 years, meanwhile Cuba has been under US sanction for 60 fucking years!!! That is I am so pissed at any fucking bootlickers and CIA-sympathizers who blaimed Cuba for what they has been going through. #HandsOffCuba
[End of thread. End description.]
June 7, 2026 - Palestine Action target COSCO Shipping in Hamburg. The firm ships tons of weapons from across the globe to Israel, and from Hamburg, which is one of the world's most important logistics hubs. Thousands of containers with weaponry are shipped from Hamburg every year. Two to three containers are sent to Israel from the city, every single day. [video] Explaining why they're taking direct action, one of the activists said:
"I'm tired of meaningless discussions over nothing, tired of protests that lead nowhere, tired of feeling powerless and empty inside, because we let a live-streamed genocide happen in front of our eyes, while benefitting from the complicity. I decided not to get used to all of this cruelty, not to get lost in senseless consumerism and I chose to feel it all: the anger, the heartbreak, the grief. I wanted to go to the root of the matter: the genocidal war machine, which produces only death and destruction day after day"
An Entire Lebanese Family Wiped Out By Israel
Victims of the Saksakiyeh massacre in southern Lebanon, where an Israeli strike destroyed a building sheltering displaced civilians: Khadija Awada, Hani Fahs, Youssef Fahs, Rola Nasser al-Din, Mohammad Fahs, Ali Fahs, Fatima Fahs, Janna Fahs, and the child Maryam Fahs.
An entire family was wiped out.
In Gaza alone, nearly 7,000 families have been wholly or partially erased by Israel’s war.
Ramy Abdu
From Palestine to Lebanon, the same pain 💔
"They blame immigrants so you won't blame billionaires" sticker
Seen in The Hague, Netherlands

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1991 - Fidel Castro speaks about the failures of Capitalism.
Palestinian children were prevented from going to school by razor wire and israeli soldiers — so they sat down and studied right in front of them (via AndreyX)
11 year old Huda, April 26, 2026, via CNN
This Mother's Day, help mothers in Gaza survive by contributing on regular basis to Sameer Kitchen and Dahnoun Mutual Aid
Salam,
We are Dahnoun Mutual Aid, a group of grassroots organizers led entirely by Palestinians inside and outside of Gaza working to provide life-
children’s dreams / al-yarmouk, palestinian refugee camp in damascus, syria
little palestine; diary of a siege (2021) dir. abdallah al khatib
22 Million Mouths to Feed
Community, devotion, and soul-satisfying food in Karbala, Iraq.
Story and photography by Richard Collett from Saveur Spring/Summer 2025
AS THE SUN SETS in a blaze of orange over the golden domes of Karbala, drums beat and black-clad pilgrims pack the streets of one of Iraq's holiest Shia cities, a two-hour drive south of Baghdad. Some 22 million believers have descended upon Karbala (population: 600,000), as they do every August for Arbaeen, the largest annual gathering of people in the world. And those people have to eat.
From a rooftop, I watch endless processions of pilgrims inch toward the shrine of Husayn ibn Ali-a grandson of the prophet Mohammed, who was martyred at the Battle of Karbala in 680 c.e. Everywhere you look, there's food: women seasoning chicken in big copper vats, men grilling skewers of meat over hot coals, bakers slapping samoon (Iraq's signature flatbread) into makeshift tandoor ovens. Remarkably, all these delicacies are free.
"Arbaeen is a reaffirmation of our religion," says Jassam al-Saidi, a historian who works for the Al-Abbas Shrine in Karbala. He explains that Arbaeen ("40" in Arabic) marks the 40 days of mourning for Husayn, one of the 12 Shia Imams seen as the prophet's successors.
It's written in Shia histories that Husayn sacrificed himself in a triumph of good over evil. Though commemorated since the seventh century c.e., Arbaeen was outlawed under Saddam Hussein's Sunni-led regime, then revived in 2003 after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Arbaeen now attracts more pilgrims than the Hajj to Mecca, as Shias reclaim their tradition.
"Imam Husayn protected the values of the prophets [...] so people give food to pilgrims in thanks," al-Saidi explains, describing how Iraq's citizens donate their time and money to keep so many fed. "When you love someone, you gift them food. It's Iraqi culture. We always give away bread rather than seeing it go stale."
Iraq's boundless hospitality is in full force during the celebration-volunteers provide not only free food and water but also lodging, medical care, and even foot massages at service stations called mawkibs. There are some 14,500 of them along the desert roads to Karbala. Al-Saidi tells me they're "the lifeblood of Arbaeen."
Some mawkibs are little more than a guy and a grill, while others are major operations funded by sheikhs and managed by big-name Baghdad chefs. At one, I meet Syed Zaheer Abbas. A student from Pakistan, he has walked nearly 50 miles from the holy city of Najaf, starting each morning at 4:00 a.m. and resting at prayer times. "It's hot. You're tired. But you're served water and food constantly," he says. "If your shoes break, they repair them. You don't need money. You don't worry about anything because the people of Iraq serve pilgrims from all over the world." Karbala locals-along with volunteers from across the region-give as much as they can.
On Al-Jumhuriya Street, close to Husayn's shrine, I spot butchers breaking down carcasses in alleyways. Women in colorful hijabs patiently queue for plates piled high with dolmas stuffed with rice, onions, and peppers.
A bit farther down the road, the smell of shawarma draws pilgrims to a makeshift kebab kitchen. At the center of the billowing smoke is Ahmed Albayati. He had an hour's sleep last night, and sweat drips from his brow as, bleary-eyed, he shovels glistening meat seasoned with cumin and coriander into toasted samoon.
"We make 7,000 meals a day," he says, thrusting a hot, fresh kebab into the outstretched palms of a woman in a flowing black robe. That evening, Albayati's team of 15 volunteers will serve nearly 500 pounds of shawarma with assembly-line efficiency.
At breakfast tomorrow, there will be bubbling cauldrons of makhlama-eggs and tomatoes seasoned with bahar asfar, a blend of turmeric, cumin, coriander, and cardamom-to tend. Then it'll be lunchtime: hacked-up roast chicken, fluffy timman anbar (yellow rice), and rib-sticking fasolia yabsa (white beans simmered in tomato sauce).
A few stalls away, silver-bearded men dig into boiled pacha (sheep's head), their fingers dripping with grease. Behind them, a pot of kubba (dumplings in broth) simmers away on the dusty roadside, and a group of teenagers serve mugs of Iraqi coffee, squeeze pomegranate juice into plastic cups, and pat napkins into hands.
It's dark now, but the heat is still punishing. Beside the teenagers, I notice an elderly man with a keffiyeh wrapped around his head. He's covered in sweat and using a scrap of cardboard as a fan-not for himself, but for the tides of people who pass him, in a noble effort to keep them cool.

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These are the scenes the Israeli government is trying to prevent from spreading. They are paying hundreds of millions to journalists and news agencies to keep these horrific and appalling images from the Gaza Strip from being broadcast. The entire Gaza Strip has been annihilated. We are suffering genocide and ethnic cleansing.
Every day there are martyrs here in Gaza. Every day there are shells, bombs, gunfire, and injuries. Every day one or two people die from Israeli bombs. The war hasn't ended; the war continues, but slowly. We are dying slowly.
With the ongoing siege and the prevention of medicine, food, and potable water from entering, we are suffering greatly. My father has cancer and is suffering terribly from the disease. He needs surgeries and medication. Please help us and donate.
In addition to cancer, my father has recently been diagnosed with hardening of the main arteries of his heart and needs angioplasty and stenting surgery. However, there are no surgeries available here in Gaza. My father could die at any moment. Please donate and help us. Please donate.
Inshallah
Inshallah
Inshallah
Palestinian May Day posters
Why is Fidel Castro considered a hero across much of Africa?
Sean Jacobs explains how the former Cuban leader supported anti-colonial struggles and helped defeat South Africa's apartheid army in Namibia and Angola. [video]

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Resist. قاوم