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الأرض ستبقى عربية

@ PanArab @lemmygrad.ml

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Comments
77
Joined
6 yr. ago

  • I have seen Arab Christians go through additional screening upon entry to the US despite their obvious Arabic Christian names and the crosses they are wearing. Hatred of Islam is still widely acceptable in the West and they use that to hate on all peoples from south and east of the Mediterranean even those who aren't Muslim. Otherwise they will have to admit that they are just racist, which many sometimes can obviously be, see how Sub-Saharan Christians are treated in Europe.

  • No, of course not. I just recently did it on my former work's laptop that I then gifted away. I just don't want to pay for the price of Windows which is factored in the price of a new laptop.

    I have been using GNU+Linux for over 15 years now. I am just not comfortable with giving Microsoft -or Apple- any of my money even indirectly, and don't want a desktop.

  • Roads throughout the country were bursting or outright melting.

    As someone who lives where it hits +50C every year for no more than a week but it has been getting hotter in the past years; I've seen a lot of things melt but not roads. What do they make roads of where you live? Here it is asphalt concrete.

  • I'm currently using an old MacBook from 2015 that I installed LinuxMint on. I am considering a new laptop but nothing comes preloaded with GNU/Linux and I don't want a MacBook. If Huawei brings their HarmonyOS MateBook I might give it a try out of sheer curiosity, but their current offering where I live comes preloaded with Windows and has iffy Linux support.

  • I just don't send back the work laptop and install GNU/Linux on it. Though with the last job I left, I gifted the laptop instead.

  • Can you still be denaturalized after leaving the US? I left but still required to pay taxes and renouncing the citizenship involves an exit tax. I'm assuming denaturalization doesn't come with a tax burden.

  • How many are accepting of losing the eastern territories?

  • I say to US lawmakers: Do it!

  • I hope they realize that Iran is necessary for them and don't abandon it.

  • The US couldn't defeat Afghanistan and Afghanistan is a significantly poorer and less populous country. The US though can still weaken or ruin Iran for years to come. Iraq is a shell of its former self more than a decade after the US invasion.

    I want to be optimistic but the US is dangerous and no one will hold it accountable if it decided to use nuclear weapons.

  • And I say this with great caution: The Iranians have not said their final word. Those who don’t understand the Shiites, the Arab world, or the Iranians don’t realize that as the Bedouins say: Revenge is served cold.

    Why is this Israeli confusing Arab Bedouins, with Iranians?

  • Attacking military bases in Occupied Palestine would have accomplished the same without condemnation from its Arab neighbours. I don't agree with them, but I'm not surprised by it.

  • Many of the settlers were just looking for a place where they can colonize to be safe and prosperous at the expense and doom of Palestinians and their neighbours. They didn't sign up to be martyred in a religious war Netanyahu's attempt to avoid corruption charges.

    I wish them a safe and fast return to their ancestral home in Europe, India and elsewhere.

  • 2 Moroccan high ranking soldiers

    traitors

  • Every time the US attacks, Iran should respond by attacking the Zionist colony. US politicians care more about the settlers than their own citizens, and also keeps public opinion in the US against a war with Iran.

  • It hasn't been a month, imagine them going through 20 months of this. How would they handle it?

  • I wouldn't call Qatar with less than a million citizens a regional power, but they do host one of the US's biggest military bases in the region, as well as hosting Turkish troops. What Qatar is good at is diplomacy and resource-planning proven by how they out-maneuvered the Saudi-led embargo.