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À partir d’avant-hierAnalyses, perspectives

Time For A Backyard Chicken Coop? Supermarket Egg Prices Soaring Once-Again

By Tyler Durden As of Wednesday, there are just 18 days left until Easter celebrations begin. For those who have recently visited the supermarket, egg...

Time For A Backyard Chicken Coop? Supermarket Egg Prices Soaring Once-Again

Liens entre vaccins ARNm expérimentaux et les risques de « turbo-cancers »

Normalement un « vaccin » est fait pour protéger les populations pas pour les exposer à un risque. Avec l’avènement des injections Covid émerge la théorie des “turbo-cancers”, suggérant que les vaccins à ARN messager pourraient déclencher ou accélérer la survenue de cancers. L’usage de ce terme suggère l’idée de cancers extrêmement agressifs attribués à la vaccination. Cette théorie est largement discréditée par la communauté scientifique. Des études antérieures ont pourtant déduit que la vaccination rendait vulnérable le système immunitaire de la population injectée. Si les conséquences des injections restent inconnues, chaque jour des cas suspects d’effets secondaires graves se multiplient, voire des décès. Malgré tout, ces effets secondaires n’ont eu aucune incidence sur la suite de la campagne de vaccination.

Dès leur apparition, les vaccins à ARNm contre le Covid-19 ont fait l’objet de nombreuses critiques. Le terme “turbo-cancers” ne correspond à aucun concept médical établi, popularisé par Alexandra Henrion-Caude, ancienne directrice de recherche à l’INSERM, désormais une figure influente parmi les opposants à la vaccination contre le coronavirus. Elle affirme que depuis la vaccination de masse, il a été constaté que des cancers se développent chez les personnes vaccinées.

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Two Tales from Gaza

Par : AHH

Palestinian journalist Yousef Fares reports from Gaza for Al-Akhbar

Palestinians Collectively Return to North Gaza: ‘We Will Not Be Displaced Twice’

In the old streets of Gaza, the road connecting the northern governorate of Gaza with the eastern neighborhoods of the city, such as Al-Tuffah, Haraat al-Dara, and Shuja’iyya, has become the only route for the residents of the northern Gaza Strip to reach the western areas of the city. This is due to the constant attacks on the direct routes that traverse the western neighborhoods. Over the past few days, this road has been traveled by hundreds of families who have decided to return to the neighborhoods recently vacated by the occupation forces.

From Beit Lahia and Beit Hanoun to Sheikh Radwan, Al-Alami, Tal al-Zaatar, Al-Sika, and even Sufatawi and Al-Tawam, the residents, after more than three months of displacement, have taken the incredible risk of returning home. “We have nothing to lose; we know our homes are destroyed, but a tent on the ruins of our house is a million times better than the life of displacement in shelters,” says Haji Souhaila Al-Safi in an interview with Al-Akhbar. Sitting on a cart pulled by a donkey, accompanied by 10 members of her family, covered with blankets and clothes, she adds: “We will not be displaced again, and there is nothing left to fear. Our lives are in Allah’s hands, not Netanyahu’s.”

As for Abu Mahmoud Akil, he packed his belongings to return to the neighborhood of Tal Al-Zaatar after spending about two months in the industrial building belonging to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Refugees (UNRWA) west of Gaza City. Despite the continuous artillery shelling in the area he plans to go to and he is steadfast in this plan to return. The man, carrying a large bag covered with blankets on his back, says, “We are going back, not just because we are tired of being displaced, but because we live in a peripheral area in northern Gaza, and staying there is resistance to the enemy’s plans to displace and uproot us. Today, the resistance has played its role, and now it’s our turn to stay in our homes despite the difficult circumstances.”

In Tal Al-Zaatar, the ground operation has completely cut off the electricity grid, sewage lines, and water supply, and the utterly destroyed streets of the neighborhood which require the dexterity of a circus performer to navigate them. Those who choose to return there will have to walk for two hours every morning to get water. Despite its high salinity, the locals use this water for cleaning, drinking, and cooking. Additionally, the neighborhood, located east of Jabalia camp and strategically elevated compared to the surrounding neighborhoods, experiences a severe wave of loneliness in the evening: it has no electricity and not a single source of light breaking the darkness. To add to this, the darkness of nightfall always accompanies an increased rate of occupation artillery strikes.

Despite the challenges, the influx of residents to the neighborhood increases day by day, as there is something far more important than the difficulties of this life. Abu Alaa, a father of three martyrs, whose house and four of his relatives’ houses were destroyed, said in his interview with Al-Akhbar, “Today, we returned to Tal Al-Zaatar, and we walked in the middle of the street until we were photographed by a reconnaissance plane. I am proud to live in a tent that leaks during the winter, proud that I spend every day searching for water and firewood, and proud that I live through all this suffering because all of this is in defiance of the Israeli arrogance. We thought we would be displaced from northern Gaza as soon as they said, ‘Go to the south,’ but today, we defeat them by staying here despite the fear and difficult conditions.”

In the streets, there is a significant debate about the future of the residents who left the northern Gaza Strip for the south. In her interview with Al-Akhbar, Umm Saber al-Rashayida said: “The ghosts of the first migration haunt my thoughts; they told us then it would only be for two weeks, and we would return, but we stayed for 80 years.” She added, “The Nakba is deeply rooted in my mind, so I did not leave. That’s why I returned to the Al-Sika neighborhood, even though shells fall around us all day and night.

Translation: Orinoco Tribune


Gazans Embrace Yemen: ‘The Houthis Are Our People’

Despite the divided public opinion in the Gaza Strip on the Al-Aqsa Flood Operation, the people of Gaza, with all their factions and political orientations, whether with the resistance or against it, rejoiced that the Yemenis did not hesitate to support the Gaza Strip. Gazans recognize that the Yemenis have now willingly entered into open armed conflict with the United States, all in the name of stopping the siege on Gaza.

Before October 7th, the general sentiment in Gaza was aligned with the systematic disinformation campaigns against the Ansarallah Movement, such as: “They are the Shia who bombed the Ka’aba” or “the rebels who stole the Yemeni revolution.” While everyone was preoccupied with daily concerns, the majority did not investigate the true nature of those perspectives. Even the sincere solidarity conveyed by mass marches held in the Yemeni capital of Sana’a has never received the local media coverage it deserved.

However, all of that has changed now; the streets of Gaza, for the first time, recognize the impoverished Yemeni, who is rich in resistance and absolutely ready to sacrifice for a cause that Palestinians, largely did not realize held such a significant position in the Yemeni religious and political consciousness. In the wake of the US-British airstrikes on Yemeni cities on Thursday night, Gazans faith in and sympathy with the Yemeni people has multiplied many times.

Hussein Ahmed, a local school teacher interviewed by Al-Akhbar in Jabalia camp, expressed his position: “The Houthis are our people, our closest supporters, and we owe them a great debt. We haven’t tried to get closer to them or support them during the years when the Arabs waged war on them. Yet, in this current war, they were the first to support and stand by us, the first to go all-in to stop the war.

Hajj Ramadan Mansour, who lives in the Tal al-Zaatar neighborhood, is proudly adding new names to his list of national heroes. He told Al-Akhbar: “By Allah, I am delighted by the voice of [military spokesman] Yahya Saree, I admire [political bureau spokesman] Mohammed al-Bukhaiti (lead image, on left) when he bombs the invaders and then mocks them. I love [President] Mahdi al-Mashat. These are the soldiers whom Allah has provided to the resistance here. They have surprised us with their sincerity, honesty, and simplicity… May Allah protect them.”

In the streets of Gaza, people are talking about “people like us,” who are stubborn, patient, resilient, and even “crazy” in their support for the Palestinian cause. Hajj Abu Ra’ed tells Al-Akhbar: “By Allah, no one else is like us except Ansarallah. No one else disregards logical political calculations when there is a sacred duty to defend, except us in Gaza and our people in Yemen.”

On Palestinian social media, solidarity with Yemen transcended all ideological and political differences. The hashtag #عزيز يا يمن or “Dear Yemen” has echoed across thousands of Facebook accounts. Activists also shared clips of the Yemeni armed forces seizing the “Israeli” ship Galaxy Leader, and applauding the strength and determination of the Yemeni people.

Thus, the US-British strike wiped clean the smear campaigns that have sullied Ansarallah’s image in Palestine for years. Even the fiercest opponents of armed resistance have nothing to say against these people who emerged from war and famine, returning to the fight in fierce support of resistance in Gaza.

Translation: Orinoco Tribune


Yousef Fares is a Palestinian reporter in Gaza.
He is an author at Al-Akhbar News and he regularly posts updates on his Telegram channel. 

Homelessness Soars To Record High In America

Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times, Homelessness has risen sharply in the United States, with a report from House and Urban Development (HUD)...

Homelessness Soars To Record High In America

Homesteading : qu’est-ce donc ?

Le homesteading n’est pas un passe-temps, une entreprise ou un hobby individuel ; c’est l’activité principale d’une famille. Il s’agit d’un « bouclier de vie » essentiel, un moyen de contourner les contraintes imposées par une société en ruine qui survit en parallèle, mais qui est incapable de simplement considérer des changements absolument essentiels. Il s’agit de vous isoler vous-même et votre famille des aléas d’un système qui dysfonctionne pour récupérer un avenir viable et la tranquillité d’esprit.

L’article Homesteading : qu’est-ce donc ? est apparu en premier sur Strategika.

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