Brian Banks lost 6 years of his life
— MissFacto (@missfacto) February 7, 2024
What punishment did the girl get for doing this to him ? https://t.co/q4LNJ9o6jo
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Thursday, February 8, 2024
Brian Banks lost 6 years of his life. What punishment did the girl get for doing this to him?
Wednesday, February 7, 2024
One of the early signs of dementia is a tendency toward craving sweet foods like ice cream and candy
I see this in my assisted living home every day. We keep the sweets away but often have to remind families not to bring it in. https://t.co/eh5ZQeBers
— A Paradise for Parents (@HalCranmer) February 7, 2024
Just eat more meat, salt, and fat. These are the savory flavors that man, and woman, loves. Dump the sweets, choose the savory. Two years ago, I craved sweets and justified ice cream as a healthy option. But once I went keto and carnivore, my cravings for sweets are off my radar. Though I do like the occasional date with cheddar cheese. Fruit does not help. Remember: red meat, salt, and fat.
Tuesday, February 6, 2024
Documentary on The Prisoner and Patrick McGoohan
CLASSIC. For some this is not propaganda, it's a mandate.
I wish it wasn't propaganda https://t.co/uwmwabB1EF
— Capitalist Exploits (@capitalistexp) February 6, 2024
Irish patriots march in Dublin against their traitorous government.
"Twas far better to die ‘neath an Irish sky / Than at Suvla or Sud el Bar".
Irish patriots march in Dublin against their traitorous government.
— Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) February 6, 2024
🚨🚨🚨
🔊 pic.twitter.com/xgDXd2UTxD
The song is titled "Foggy Dew," a war or rebel song.
from Wikipedia,
"The Foggy Dew" is a product of the political situation in Ireland in the aftermath of the Easter Rising and World War I.
Approximately 210,000 Irishmen joined up and served in the British forces during the war. This created mixed feelings for many Irish people, particularly for those with nationalist sympathies. While they broadly supported the British war effort, they also felt that one of the moral justifications for the war, "the freedom of small nations" like Belgium and Serbia, should also be applied to Ireland, which at that time was under British rule. The 1915 Battle of Gallipoli, in which many young and mainly middle-class Irishmen who had joined up in response to John Redmond's call were killed, turned many people against the war.
In 1916, Irish patriots led by James Connolly and Patrick Pearse, taking advantage of Britain being preoccupied by World War I, seized some of the major buildings in Dublin including the General Post Office, while others came out in Ashbourne and Galway in the Easter Rising.
The brutal response to the Rising, and the execution of its leaders that followed, marked a turning point for many Irish people. The public revulsion at the executions added to the growing sense of alienation from the British Government.
Canon O'Neill reflected this alienation when he wrote The Foggy Dew commemorating the few hundred brave men who had risen out against what was then the most powerful empire in the world. In 1919, he attended the first sitting of the new Irish Parliament, Dáil. The names of the elected members were called out, but many were absent. Their names were answered by the reply faoi ghlas ag na Gaill – "locked up by the foreigner".
These events had a profound effect on O'Neill and some time after this he wrote The Foggy Dew telling the story of the Easter Rising and reflecting the thoughts of many Irish people at the time who now believed that the Irishmen who fought for Britain during the war should have stayed home and fought for Irish independence instead.
O'Neill sums up this feeling in the line, "Twas far better to die ‘neath an Irish sky / Than at Suvla or Sud el Bar".