View allAll Photos Tagged strangulation

Which apparently is the strangulation table...

Green Trail, Fair Hill Natural Resources Area, Fair HIll, MD

Celebrating Al's bday at Failte Irish Pub. Good times =D

The Segway craze hits ITU, roughly 3 years after it was all the rage.

Mũ Lễ Cũ của các Thánh Linh Mục Tử Đạo Việt Nam

 

Seen above is the birettas belonging to St. Iosephus Hiển, O.P. and St. Bernard Duệ, O.P. (who is actually not a member of the Dominican Order despite being labeled so). Birettas are a traditional hat wore during the Rites and Holy Mass before falling out of use after the implementation of the New Mass. They are also sometimes an academic honor as seen on the very left biretta. These birettas were taken from their time serving Quần Phương Parish Shrine (Diocese of Bùi Chu) and are now displayed at a side museum room of the Vietnamese Martyrs Auditorium in Carthage, MO. Also seen below is one of the ropes used in the strangulation of the martyrs.

 

Trước mắt đây là các mũ lễ của Thánh Giuse Hiển, O.P. và Thánh Bênađô Duệ. Biretum, hoặc Anh Ngữ là biretta, là các mũ được sử dụng trong nghi thức hoặc Thánh Lễ trước khi bị bỏ sau khi công bố Thánh Lễ Mới ("Thánh Lễ Vaticanô II"). Có khi các mũ này được danh dự học thuật như được thấy ở bên trái. Các mũ linh mục này được lấy từ thời gian hai ngài phục vụ Giáo Xứ Đền Thánh Quần Phương - Giáo Phận Bùi Chu và nay được lưu giữ tại Hội Trường CTTĐVN (Carthage, MO). Ở dưới, còn thêm một đoạn dây thừng dùng để xiết cổ (xử giảo) các Thánh Tử Đạo VN.

Hogarth in 21st Century.

 

Or alternatively the result of taking someone to a Puccino's Coffee Bar

in progress

acrylic & pencil on found print

2006

Pattern used: Felted Baby Yoda Hat by Sunshyne Leland

Yarn used: Cascade 220 in Chartreuse

 

The pattern calls for earflaps and i-cord to tie the hat under the chin, but I thought the parents might worry about strangulation hazards.

 

(Also: I'm pretty sure that this hat will not be staying on a baby's head, ties or no.)

Based on the novel Woman in Black, we have to respond to elements within the novel. I decided to focus on the themes of the children's deaths. These are Drowning, Strangulation and Barbed Wire. This is a design bored highlighting my initial ideas.

Mohammed Ali Mohammed, 35 years old, father of five, used to be a farmer and a police officer before ISIL occupied his village. In 2015, he was kidnapped and tortured. Today he is a shop owner in Gharib, a village some 10 km outside Hawija city, near areas where ISIL cells continue to carry out attacks and terrorise the population.

 

Conflict and climate change have largely destroyed the livelihoods of farmers and small agribusiness owners in Hawija. It was once Iraq’s most prosperous agricultural centre. Cordaid joined hands with others to assist hundreds of farmers and SME owners in Hawija in growing their businesses. Despite the odds and traumas of extreme drought, violent extremism, nepotism, and 21st-century warfare and geopolitics, they carry on. Mohammed is one of them.

 

“It was August 5, 2015”

“When ISIL came, everything stopped. I tried to make a living by secretly trading cigarettes for a while, but I knew that at one point I had to run. I am a farmer but I had also been a police officer for seven years. And they were after anyone related to the authorities. So I fled with other men who were wanted by ISIL, but without my family. It would have been too risky for them. I tried to reach Salah Al-Din, but we were caught in the mountains. A dozen cars full of ISIL fighters suddenly surrounded us. We were ambushed. It was August 5, 2015.”

 

“Most of those who had tried to escape, including women and kids, were released. But I and five other police officers were taken away, blindfolded, to a house in Hawija city. Others had been taken there before us. We were about fifty imprisoned in one room. Some of the inner walls had been broken down. For a month we were tortured. They did all kinds of things. Strangulation, suffocation, starvation, beatings with guns. And electric shocks. They specifically applied shocks on my kidneys.

 

It was extremely scary. They threatened to kill us many times. When they entered the room, you knew it could be your last hour. And we were so hungry. But sometimes we couldn’t eat even the little rice or meat they gave us because of the fear inside.

 

Somehow, I managed to not go crazy. The idea that everything was in the hands of God gave me some peace.”

 

From farmer to shop owner

“After a month, our captors took half of the detainees away. They released the other half, including myself. Later, we found out they had executed all of the men in the other group.

 

I went back home. My wife and kids were in disbelief. They thought I had been killed. I was happy to be back, but I couldn’t cope with my life any longer. Before, I was a farmer, and now I couldn’t farm anymore. I was too ill, both my kidneys had been destroyed. My brother ended up donating one of his kidneys. Still, farming is out of the question. That hurts. We have been farmers for generations, growing wheat, onions, tomatoes… We still have the family land, but others now do the farming.

 

I am confident things will work out well in the future.

 

So I changed my course. With all the medical costs I had to cover and household expenses, we desperately needed money. Two years ago I opened a small grocery shop. I sell all kinds of things, rice, flour, sugar, sweets for kids, chickpeas, and even clocks. At one point I was even too ill to run the shop, I almost had to close it down. Because of the medicine I take to stop my body from rejecting the newly donated kidney, my immunity levels are very low. Since Covid-19, I constantly wear a face mask and gloves.”

 

Slowly growing business

“The support we got from the Blossom Up project helped us a lot. It taught us how to attract more customers, to find the right price/quality ratio in our assortment, so that people can afford what we offer and still come back. Here, people have little to spend, so high prices won’t work. Still, we need to make some profit.”

 

“With the grant we received, I bought storage racks, fridges, and a freezer. And I was able to expand my assortment. Before, that kind of investment was impossible because of all the medical costs.”

 

“Business is slowly increasing. I did better as a farmer though. Today, I earn about half of the money I made by working the land. For three years now, I have tried to get some of the financial compensation I am entitled to as a victim of ISIL atrocities. We went to Kirkuk to apply for that, and we even have a lawyer on the case. No results.”

 

“But I am confident things will work out well in the future. Now, with the support we received, I feel that my new business can grow. The least I can do is work hard and make sure that my kids can go to school and successfully finish their education. So far, I manage to do that, and it fills me with pride. Myself, I dropped out at the age of ten, because I had to work on my father’s land. I still regret that. During the ISIL occupation, my oldest daughter couldn’t attend classes any longer. Luckily, afterward, she continued studying.”

 

Conflict and climate change have largely destroyed the livelihoods of farmers and small agribusiness owners in Hawija. It was once Iraq’s most prosperous agricultural centre. Cordaid joined hands with others to assist hundreds of them in growing their businesses against all odds.

 

Twenty years ago, on March 20th, 2003, the war in Iraq brutally kicked off. It propelled human suffering, already so pervasive under the dictatorship of Saddam, to unprecedented levels.

 

Hawija, a district in the northern governorate of Kirkuk, was particularly hard hit. Up to this day, its people continue to suffer. They have seen it all. Vertical and remote warfare from the air by an untouchable enemy and horizontal warfare by troops on the ground. The rise of violent extremism from Al Qaeda and a three-year siege by ISIL. Mass executions, kidnappings, and human shield tactics against an entire population during a brutal war of liberation. Two decades of war and extremism have turned this district in the north into one of the most violence-wracked parts of the country.

 

To support Hawija in addressing this double burden of conflict and climate adversity, Cordaid joined hands with others in the ‘Blossom Up, Agriculture for growth’.

 

This project started in September 2022, with UNDP as its implementor, funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), provided through KFW Development Bank. UNDP implements this project in partnership with a consortium consisting of Cordaid, Al-Ghad and Delphy. Its aim? To revitalise Hawija’s agricultural and agri-business sectors.

 

“We saw there was hardly any international support for Hawija. Therefore, we decided to assist the hardest-hit farmers and agri-business owners. We do this in an area many organisations prefer to stay away from for security reasons”, explains Cordaid programme lead Nynke Schaap.

 

“Altogether, in six months, with Blossom Up, we have provided practical and theoretical crash courses and training to 249 farmers and 77 owners of small agri-business owners”, Business Support and Youth Employment Expert Othman Khalil adds. Of these, 105 farmers received a 3500 USD grant and 40 SME owners received 3200 USD to invest in their businesses. Grant money was used for major investments such as generators, solar panels, construction work, and, most importantly, new irrigation systems that are better adapted to water scarcity.

finally died becoz of asphyxia due to manual strangulation

Strangulation

K-1 mII, A100f2.8 Macro

Fake strangulation vs. a sucker-punch to the gut - Saro lost.

Don't you ever try to solve a problem in distress

The infected smile upon your face

looks so godly in this mess

Shut down- all your dreams

Confess- you're released

You know- what I mean

can't stop this strangulation alone

 

wait for chaos

Mohammed Ali Mohammed, 35 years old, father of five, used to be a farmer and a police officer before ISIL occupied his village. In 2015, he was kidnapped and tortured. Today he is a shop owner in Gharib, a village some 10 km outside Hawija city, near areas where ISIL cells continue to carry out attacks and terrorise the population.

 

Conflict and climate change have largely destroyed the livelihoods of farmers and small agribusiness owners in Hawija. It was once Iraq’s most prosperous agricultural centre. Cordaid joined hands with others to assist hundreds of farmers and SME owners in Hawija in growing their businesses. Despite the odds and traumas of extreme drought, violent extremism, nepotism, and 21st-century warfare and geopolitics, they carry on. Mohammed is one of them.

 

“It was August 5, 2015”

“When ISIL came, everything stopped. I tried to make a living by secretly trading cigarettes for a while, but I knew that at one point I had to run. I am a farmer but I had also been a police officer for seven years. And they were after anyone related to the authorities. So I fled with other men who were wanted by ISIL, but without my family. It would have been too risky for them. I tried to reach Salah Al-Din, but we were caught in the mountains. A dozen cars full of ISIL fighters suddenly surrounded us. We were ambushed. It was August 5, 2015.”

 

“Most of those who had tried to escape, including women and kids, were released. But I and five other police officers were taken away, blindfolded, to a house in Hawija city. Others had been taken there before us. We were about fifty imprisoned in one room. Some of the inner walls had been broken down. For a month we were tortured. They did all kinds of things. Strangulation, suffocation, starvation, beatings with guns. And electric shocks. They specifically applied shocks on my kidneys.

 

It was extremely scary. They threatened to kill us many times. When they entered the room, you knew it could be your last hour. And we were so hungry. But sometimes we couldn’t eat even the little rice or meat they gave us because of the fear inside.

 

Somehow, I managed to not go crazy. The idea that everything was in the hands of God gave me some peace.”

 

From farmer to shop owner

“After a month, our captors took half of the detainees away. They released the other half, including myself. Later, we found out they had executed all of the men in the other group.

 

I went back home. My wife and kids were in disbelief. They thought I had been killed. I was happy to be back, but I couldn’t cope with my life any longer. Before, I was a farmer, and now I couldn’t farm anymore. I was too ill, both my kidneys had been destroyed. My brother ended up donating one of his kidneys. Still, farming is out of the question. That hurts. We have been farmers for generations, growing wheat, onions, tomatoes… We still have the family land, but others now do the farming.

 

I am confident things will work out well in the future.

 

So I changed my course. With all the medical costs I had to cover and household expenses, we desperately needed money. Two years ago I opened a small grocery shop. I sell all kinds of things, rice, flour, sugar, sweets for kids, chickpeas, and even clocks. At one point I was even too ill to run the shop, I almost had to close it down. Because of the medicine I take to stop my body from rejecting the newly donated kidney, my immunity levels are very low. Since Covid-19, I constantly wear a face mask and gloves.”

 

Slowly growing business

“The support we got from the Blossom Up project helped us a lot. It taught us how to attract more customers, to find the right price/quality ratio in our assortment, so that people can afford what we offer and still come back. Here, people have little to spend, so high prices won’t work. Still, we need to make some profit.”

 

“With the grant we received, I bought storage racks, fridges, and a freezer. And I was able to expand my assortment. Before, that kind of investment was impossible because of all the medical costs.”

 

“Business is slowly increasing. I did better as a farmer though. Today, I earn about half of the money I made by working the land. For three years now, I have tried to get some of the financial compensation I am entitled to as a victim of ISIL atrocities. We went to Kirkuk to apply for that, and we even have a lawyer on the case. No results.”

 

“But I am confident things will work out well in the future. Now, with the support we received, I feel that my new business can grow. The least I can do is work hard and make sure that my kids can go to school and successfully finish their education. So far, I manage to do that, and it fills me with pride. Myself, I dropped out at the age of ten, because I had to work on my father’s land. I still regret that. During the ISIL occupation, my oldest daughter couldn’t attend classes any longer. Luckily, afterward, she continued studying.”

 

Conflict and climate change have largely destroyed the livelihoods of farmers and small agribusiness owners in Hawija. It was once Iraq’s most prosperous agricultural centre. Cordaid joined hands with others to assist hundreds of them in growing their businesses against all odds.

 

Twenty years ago, on March 20th, 2003, the war in Iraq brutally kicked off. It propelled human suffering, already so pervasive under the dictatorship of Saddam, to unprecedented levels.

 

Hawija, a district in the northern governorate of Kirkuk, was particularly hard hit. Up to this day, its people continue to suffer. They have seen it all. Vertical and remote warfare from the air by an untouchable enemy and horizontal warfare by troops on the ground. The rise of violent extremism from Al Qaeda and a three-year siege by ISIL. Mass executions, kidnappings, and human shield tactics against an entire population during a brutal war of liberation. Two decades of war and extremism have turned this district in the north into one of the most violence-wracked parts of the country.

 

To support Hawija in addressing this double burden of conflict and climate adversity, Cordaid joined hands with others in the ‘Blossom Up, Agriculture for growth’.

 

This project started in September 2022, with UNDP as its implementor, funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), provided through KFW Development Bank. UNDP implements this project in partnership with a consortium consisting of Cordaid, Al-Ghad and Delphy. Its aim? To revitalise Hawija’s agricultural and agri-business sectors.

 

“We saw there was hardly any international support for Hawija. Therefore, we decided to assist the hardest-hit farmers and agri-business owners. We do this in an area many organisations prefer to stay away from for security reasons”, explains Cordaid programme lead Nynke Schaap.

 

“Altogether, in six months, with Blossom Up, we have provided practical and theoretical crash courses and training to 249 farmers and 77 owners of small agri-business owners”, Business Support and Youth Employment Expert Othman Khalil adds. Of these, 105 farmers received a 3500 USD grant and 40 SME owners received 3200 USD to invest in their businesses. Grant money was used for major investments such as generators, solar panels, construction work, and, most importantly, new irrigation systems that are better adapted to water scarcity.

Police Bastard European Tour April 11th-18th 2009

Inside the basement below the creatorium. the hooks on the wall are where prisoners were hung and left to die of strangulation

I felt slightly under dressed. I felt unity, peace and love.

Ban the suit, throw away the strangulation of the tie, keep Britain colurful....

Mohammed Ali Mohammed, 35 years old, father of five, used to be a farmer and a police officer before ISIL occupied his village. In 2015, he was kidnapped and tortured. Today he is a shop owner in Gharib, a village some 10 km outside Hawija city, near areas where ISIL cells continue to carry out attacks and terrorise the population.

 

Conflict and climate change have largely destroyed the livelihoods of farmers and small agribusiness owners in Hawija. It was once Iraq’s most prosperous agricultural centre. Cordaid joined hands with others to assist hundreds of farmers and SME owners in Hawija in growing their businesses. Despite the odds and traumas of extreme drought, violent extremism, nepotism, and 21st-century warfare and geopolitics, they carry on. Mohammed is one of them.

 

“It was August 5, 2015”

“When ISIL came, everything stopped. I tried to make a living by secretly trading cigarettes for a while, but I knew that at one point I had to run. I am a farmer but I had also been a police officer for seven years. And they were after anyone related to the authorities. So I fled with other men who were wanted by ISIL, but without my family. It would have been too risky for them. I tried to reach Salah Al-Din, but we were caught in the mountains. A dozen cars full of ISIL fighters suddenly surrounded us. We were ambushed. It was August 5, 2015.”

 

“Most of those who had tried to escape, including women and kids, were released. But I and five other police officers were taken away, blindfolded, to a house in Hawija city. Others had been taken there before us. We were about fifty imprisoned in one room. Some of the inner walls had been broken down. For a month we were tortured. They did all kinds of things. Strangulation, suffocation, starvation, beatings with guns. And electric shocks. They specifically applied shocks on my kidneys.

 

It was extremely scary. They threatened to kill us many times. When they entered the room, you knew it could be your last hour. And we were so hungry. But sometimes we couldn’t eat even the little rice or meat they gave us because of the fear inside.

 

Somehow, I managed to not go crazy. The idea that everything was in the hands of God gave me some peace.”

 

From farmer to shop owner

“After a month, our captors took half of the detainees away. They released the other half, including myself. Later, we found out they had executed all of the men in the other group.

 

I went back home. My wife and kids were in disbelief. They thought I had been killed. I was happy to be back, but I couldn’t cope with my life any longer. Before, I was a farmer, and now I couldn’t farm anymore. I was too ill, both my kidneys had been destroyed. My brother ended up donating one of his kidneys. Still, farming is out of the question. That hurts. We have been farmers for generations, growing wheat, onions, tomatoes… We still have the family land, but others now do the farming.

 

I am confident things will work out well in the future.

 

So I changed my course. With all the medical costs I had to cover and household expenses, we desperately needed money. Two years ago I opened a small grocery shop. I sell all kinds of things, rice, flour, sugar, sweets for kids, chickpeas, and even clocks. At one point I was even too ill to run the shop, I almost had to close it down. Because of the medicine I take to stop my body from rejecting the newly donated kidney, my immunity levels are very low. Since Covid-19, I constantly wear a face mask and gloves.”

 

Slowly growing business

“The support we got from the Blossom Up project helped us a lot. It taught us how to attract more customers, to find the right price/quality ratio in our assortment, so that people can afford what we offer and still come back. Here, people have little to spend, so high prices won’t work. Still, we need to make some profit.”

 

“With the grant we received, I bought storage racks, fridges, and a freezer. And I was able to expand my assortment. Before, that kind of investment was impossible because of all the medical costs.”

 

“Business is slowly increasing. I did better as a farmer though. Today, I earn about half of the money I made by working the land. For three years now, I have tried to get some of the financial compensation I am entitled to as a victim of ISIL atrocities. We went to Kirkuk to apply for that, and we even have a lawyer on the case. No results.”

 

“But I am confident things will work out well in the future. Now, with the support we received, I feel that my new business can grow. The least I can do is work hard and make sure that my kids can go to school and successfully finish their education. So far, I manage to do that, and it fills me with pride. Myself, I dropped out at the age of ten, because I had to work on my father’s land. I still regret that. During the ISIL occupation, my oldest daughter couldn’t attend classes any longer. Luckily, afterward, she continued studying.”

 

Conflict and climate change have largely destroyed the livelihoods of farmers and small agribusiness owners in Hawija. It was once Iraq’s most prosperous agricultural centre. Cordaid joined hands with others to assist hundreds of them in growing their businesses against all odds.

 

Twenty years ago, on March 20th, 2003, the war in Iraq brutally kicked off. It propelled human suffering, already so pervasive under the dictatorship of Saddam, to unprecedented levels.

 

Hawija, a district in the northern governorate of Kirkuk, was particularly hard hit. Up to this day, its people continue to suffer. They have seen it all. Vertical and remote warfare from the air by an untouchable enemy and horizontal warfare by troops on the ground. The rise of violent extremism from Al Qaeda and a three-year siege by ISIL. Mass executions, kidnappings, and human shield tactics against an entire population during a brutal war of liberation. Two decades of war and extremism have turned this district in the north into one of the most violence-wracked parts of the country.

 

To support Hawija in addressing this double burden of conflict and climate adversity, Cordaid joined hands with others in the ‘Blossom Up, Agriculture for growth’.

 

This project started in September 2022, with UNDP as its implementor, funded by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), provided through KFW Development Bank. UNDP implements this project in partnership with a consortium consisting of Cordaid, Al-Ghad and Delphy. Its aim? To revitalise Hawija’s agricultural and agri-business sectors.

 

“We saw there was hardly any international support for Hawija. Therefore, we decided to assist the hardest-hit farmers and agri-business owners. We do this in an area many organisations prefer to stay away from for security reasons”, explains Cordaid programme lead Nynke Schaap.

 

“Altogether, in six months, with Blossom Up, we have provided practical and theoretical crash courses and training to 249 farmers and 77 owners of small agri-business owners”, Business Support and Youth Employment Expert Othman Khalil adds. Of these, 105 farmers received a 3500 USD grant and 40 SME owners received 3200 USD to invest in their businesses. Grant money was used for major investments such as generators, solar panels, construction work, and, most importantly, new irrigation systems that are better adapted to water scarcity.

If you don't know the history of this location trust me...setting up this shot was EERIE!!!

La revanche des geeks #disquette #d7 #80s #retro #revenge #geek #nerd #computer #movie #old #frankenstein #tshirt #battle #strangulation #collage #lyonarty

.

~-~.

--~ --'=-. -,----~ .

AI SA .

FIGHT AGAINST US IMPERIALIST AGGRESSION I RE-ASSERTING LENIN AND THE LEGACY OF THE REVOLUTIONARY COMMUNIST MOVEMENT .

11Capltallsm has grown into a world system of colonial oppression and of the .

financial strangulation ofthe overwhelming majorityofthe population ofthe world .

by a handful of 'advanced' countries. And this booty Ia shared between two or three powerful world plunderers anned to the teeth, who are drawing the whole .

V.I. Lenin, Imperialism-the Highest Stage ofCapitalism .

In the present atmosphere ofimperialist aggression and the rise of fascism, and especially today, on the birth anniversary .

world Into theirwar." .

of Lenin, we would do well to understand that our condemnation of the US' attack on Iraq should be infonned by the .

.

..Unless the economic roots of this phenomenon are understood and its political .

fundamental link between capitalism and imperialist war. Today, more than eightdecaqes afterLenin wrote his masterwork .

on the rise of imperialism in his time, his words still ring true. .

tion ofthe practical problems of the communist movement and ofthe impending .

.

and social significance is appreciated, not a step can be taken toward the solu-.

mises made by the two existing Communist parties of the time with elements of the national bourgeoisie and capitalist Today also marks the 341h foundation day of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist). As a result of the compro-.

social revolution." (Ibid) ofthe Indian proletariat, of the workers and landless peasants of India, to lead the Indian revolutionary movement towards forces, and their abandoning of the principles of communist revolution in India, the CPI (ML) was formed as the vanguard .

from 1946 to 1948, when the people's armies came close to the capture of state power from a decadent feudal ruler. and the establishment of a true people's republic. The CPI (ML) holds high the revolutionary legacy ofthe Telangana uprising, .

people. That1~acy of revolution, that memoryof the people raising the red flag against oppressive caste-based feudal-.

a people's revolution seemed imminent. The uprising was brutally crushed by the forces-of the new Indian state, its .

leaders were killed or imprisoned and its legacy was sought to be erased from the memory of the young nation and its .

(ML), arose as a protest against the surrender of those who called themselves the representative parties of the Indian .

that was rekindled at Naxalbari in 1967. The revolutionary movement inspired by Naxalbari, which gave rise to the CPI .

ism and the exploitative forces ofcapitalism protected by the armed might ofthe state -it was that legacy of Telangana .

~ cism has once more bared its fangs to capture state power in our country. Multinational companies are protected by the .

.

proletariat at the feet of the bourgeois capitalist forces of the Indian state. Today, imperialism has once more shown itself to be the inevitable result of capitalist expansion across the globe. Fas-fascist state while they dispossess our people and plunder our forests, rivers and land. Farmers and artisans commit .

.

suicide by the hundreds and the tillers of the land are left to starve and die while their produce is locked up by the state. Innocent citizens are slaughtered by the state in the name of its gods. All those who raise their voice in protest are either thrown in prison or shot dead in fake encounters. The bonds of people's unity and the potential for national and interna-.

tional revolution are thus being systematically weakened and eroded. The Indian state is content to surrender its sovereignty and accept its role as a client of the imperialist power. America is .

~ .

and Pakistan and facilitatiing a solution to the Kashmir dispute, Washingon has already entrenched itself strategically in .

both Pakistan and India. Yet the Indian ruling classes have chosen to effectively endorse the Angler-American invasion .

., .

tightening its grip on India's defence and foreign policies. In the name of fighting global terrorism, mediating between India .

the Indian rulers want American intervention to deal with Pakistan. Tomorrow, these people will invite American troops and occupation of Iraq. Their only complaint is why the Americans are not targeting Pakistan in a similar fashion! Today \ .

Today, the need is even greater for all those who believe in the uncomprising principles of communist revolution to unite .

inside India in the name of tackling dom~tic unrest. solidarity with the struggling peoples of the world and to hold high the revolutionary legacy of Telangana and Naxalbari. .

against any attempt to compromise with the exploitative and divisive forces of capital and the Indian state, to rise in · .

Every major crisis in the history of capitalism has been marked by wars and the new century has already witnessed lwo .

wars or two episodes ofan unfolding mega-war But even wh1le imperialism goes on producing a chain of cnses and wars. .

and to the unity of revolutionary forces under the red flag. because a strong and unified revolutionary party holds the key resistance and revolution will not be far behind. Let us rededicate Ollrselves to the completion of the unfmrshed revolutron .

..Imperialism is the eve of the social revolution by the proletariat." (Ibid) .

Sd/-lnteshar. Gen Secy. AISA. JNU to every decisive step forward. .

,.J .

~ .

Sd/-Radhika, President, AISA, JNU.

. .

... ·~.., -.

... 1 .

I. .

.

 

mais um brinquedo que perdeu a graça depois de grande.

This happy picture was preceded by a sad story: at four months old, Otis was found on the street of Tacoma, starving, with multiple wounds, and showing signs of strangulation; he was nearly dead. The strangulation caused brain damage. As a result, Otis doesn't have the sensation of "thirst." He has to be given water every day. Despite all that's happened to him, Otis has more joy in him than any dog I've ever known.

Dan Hagen, Port Orchard

The strangler Fig is found plentiful in this area. It is very evident in this image just how much strangulation goes on. Does this mean that Fig Trees are the bullies of the tree world. After all when they strangle something they do a great job of this. The completely take it over. Sounds so similar to the human world and its bullies.

The sky is falling around me. You choke in the saturated bliss. A sky so much bluer than mine. Strangulation of your warm soul. Your flesh weakens me. Joyless under the falling sky, your sky seems so much bluer. Buried in displeasure. I sink up through the sky rising into the grave in my mind. Fly your dove, kill your love. Bleed for me. A tear shed without sincerity. Open your heart and bleed for me I will never set your soul free. A fossil of you tempter, only flesh of what was. Ashes of your fallen dreams. I look into your eyes and I can't recognize you but your sky is so much bluer than mine.

The Invisible Man in strangulation mode

Reportedly there was no foul play in Sushant’s death. Visra report is yet to come, so far 23 people have recorded their statements Daily newspaper Jun 24, 2020, 08:00 PM…

  

www.todaymynews.in/2020/06/24/death-occurred-due-to-suffo...

2004 Oldsmobile Alero returns to Look and Sons for a final LOF in May 2010. GM closed the dealership the following October. This was the last Oldsmobile this dealership sold. Dealerdship had only 4 new GM cars to sell at this time...death by strangulation as they could not order any new cars the last year or so. Very sad!!

1 2 ••• 26 27 29 31 32 ••• 35 36