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#desecration
satangod666 · 3 months
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hailblasphemy · 6 months
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Hail blasphemy! Ave Satanas!
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intersectionalpraxis · 3 months
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Original post:
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The world: So does a tunnel actually exist, or are you making it up to bomb/raid an area?
IOF: Hamas is there. Hamas has used these tunnels.
The world: Can we see it? Can we go inside the tunnels?
IOF: No, it's too dangerous.
The world: Then why should we believe you?
IOF: Do you support Hamas? Do you support terrorism??
How many more times? How many more times will they be allowed to do this? To desecrate cemeteries/places of rest for Palestinian people in order to build over mass graves. I'm beyond enraged. Even CNN said they couldn't confirm/verify a tunnel.
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aka-seco-svart · 3 months
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0068
Angelgoat 🇷🇸 (raw black metal)
Unholy carnage: everything
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agentfascinateur · 4 months
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Another expression of Israeli racism:
youtube
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xxcod · 4 days
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help me😋
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neilamina · 1 month
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booknerd693 · 1 month
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Burn it, smash it, beat it, piss on it, defecate on it, DESTROY THE BOOK SHIT FILTH BIBLE AND EVERYTHING ELSE THAT STANDS AGAINST LORD SATAN!!!!!!
Hail Lord God Satan and defile all that stands against the Legions of the Unholy!!!!!!
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satangod666 · 7 months
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pvffer · 4 months
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Church
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evilgodfuckers · 4 months
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If you have a ROSARY put the cross on your tongue then put the entire Rosary in your mouth and cover it with your Slavia. Take it from your mouth then DEFILE it more anyway you can think of and offer your Blasphemy and Desecration of the Rosary to SATAN. It Will please SATAN and His Demons . Let us all hear how you DEFILE the Holy ROSARY????????????????????????? HAIL SATAN!!! FUCK Jesus!!!
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intersectionalpraxis · 4 months
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🚨A CEMETERY DESTROYED AND BULLDOZED WITH NO RESPECT TO THE DEAD. Al Batsh Cemetery which was razed by the occupation forces whilst raiding the Shejaeya neighborhood in Gaza city. [@/ PalestineNW on X. 01/05/24.]
I will never forget watching footage of a Palestinian mother trying to protect her late son's grave -by refusing to be moved by IOF officials who were trying to forcibly take her away so they could bulldoze over his resting place. And why were they doing this to her? It was so they could start building a water park, and his grave site was 'in the way' -can you fucking imagine how depraved you have to be to bulldoze over someone's grave/a cemetery?
I will never forget watching the IOF smash into and destroy Palestinian shops, monuments, and homes like they're nothing -and then having the audacity to joke and laugh about it like the sadistic settlers they are. I don't know how anyone in this world could be desensitized to things like this. The occupation must end.
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aka-seco-svart · 5 months
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0023
Archgoat 🇫🇮 (black-death metal)
Lord Angelslayer: bass/vocals
Ritual Butcherer: guitars
Sinisterror: drums
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agentfascinateur · 12 days
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Doctors were able to identify these bodies as patients. They still had medical bandages and catheters attached to their bodies.
... this is not the first time mass graves have been discovered. People have been killed and buried under the dirt or run over by Israeli tanks or bulldozers for the past six months.
#alShifaMassGrave
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By: Jeff Brumley
Published: Sep 18, 2023
A U.S. agency has added 11 nations to its list of countries willing to use fines, imprisonment or the death penalty to punish those accused of insulting religious beliefs or institutions.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Liberty increased its list of the number of countries with blasphemy laws from 84 in 2020 to 95 this year, a 13% increase. The list includes democracies, theocracies and several traditional American allies spanning the globe.
The commission’s newly released report defines blasphemy as any “act of insulting or showing contempt or lack of reverence for God or sacred things,” while laws criminalizing the behavior typically seek to “punish expressions or acts deemed blasphemous, defamatory of religions, or contemptuous of religion or religious symbols, figures or feelings.”
But whether the ordinances call for fines, imprisonment or capital punishment, such measures violate basic human rights standards established by the United Nations General Assembly, USCIRF said. “Under international human rights law, freedom of religion or belief includes the right to express a full range of thoughts and beliefs, including those that others might find blasphemous.”
While proponents of blasphemy rules and practices claim they promote social harmony, “in practice, blasphemy laws empower government officials to punish individuals who express minority viewpoints. In Bangladesh, a tribunal recently sentenced a Hindu man to seven years in prison for allegedly insulting Islam in a Facebook post,” the report said. “In Russia, blasphemy charges are often, though not exclusively, used to target individuals who are perceived to have insulted the Russian Orthodox Church.”
Yet nearly half the world’s nations have adopted blasphemy laws, often claiming the provisions promote internal security and social and religious cohesion, the agency said. “Blasphemy laws can be contained in a variety of legal instruments, including constitutions and statutory laws, and are often part of national penal codes.”
The countries USCIRF added to its 2023 blasphemy fact sheet are the Bahamas, Barbados, El Salvador, Guatemala, Cambodia, Kiribati, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Monaco, Portugal and Cape Verde.
Language from the Bahamian constitution and penal code, which USCIRF provides for the nations listed, declares itself a Christian nation where the sale of “any blasphemous book, writing or representation shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.”
In newly added Monaco, where Catholicism is the state religion, anyone “who has, by word or gesture, desecrated the objects of worship, either in the places intended or currently used for its exercise … or even outraged the ministers of religion in their functions” can face one to six months imprisonment and a fine.
A nation’s addition to the list does not necessarily mean its anti-blasphemy practices are new. The same holds for countries whose maximum sanction designations have changed. Saudi Arabia, for example, was listed with “no sanction specified” in 2020, but now has joined Brunei, Iran, Mauritania and Pakistan as those open to the death penalty in blasphemy cases.
And a country’s absence from a maximum punishment designation may not preclude it from using those sentences. Afghanistan is currently described as having no specific sanction for blasphemy, but the Taliban has stated a reliance on a form of Islamic jurisprudence that designates blasphemy as a capital offense, USCIRF explained.
Italy is included with Columbia, Spain, Switzerland, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan as countries that levy fines for blasphemy. Its criminal code includes a provision for up to a year in prison for anyone who “insults the state religion,” which is Catholicism.
Eighty nations include imprisonment for blasphemy violations, USCIRF said. In addition to the Bahamas, they include Austria, Brazil, Germany, Finland, Burma, Cambodia, Egypt, India, Israel, Ukraine and Yemen.
Countries in all categories span the globe, with 13 in the Americas, 28 in the Asia Pacific region, 16 in Europe, 18 in the Middle East and North Africa and 20 in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Such laws, however light the punishment called for, foster discrimination and intolerance against religious minorities, USCIRF added. “While it is legitimate for individuals to speak out against blasphemy, legislation criminalizing blasphemy violates the right to freedom of religion or belief and the right to freedom of opinion and expression. International human rights law protects the rights of individuals; it does not protect religious feelings, figures or symbols from behavior or speech considered blasphemous.”
Another danger of blasphemy laws is that they open the door to persecution and mob justice, the report explains. “Individuals accused of blasphemy risk retribution from individuals and non-state actors in addition to government officials. In February 2023, a crowd in Pakistan stormed a police station and killed a man being held on suspicion of blasphemy. … In May 2023, Sri Lankan authorities arrested stand-up comedian Jayani Natasha Edirisooriya for allegedly ‘defaming Buddhism’ during a comedy show.”
Blasphemy statutes also can be manipulated by individuals to settle personal or business disputes, USCIRF said. “In January 2023, the colleague of a Christian woman working with Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority threatened to accuse her of blasphemy following a workplace dispute. In July 2022, a Pakistani court reportedly sentenced Ashfaq Masih to death for blasphemy. The blasphemy allegation emerged following a dispute Masih, a bicycle mechanic, had with a customer.”
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We're going backwards.
There are some actions which are unnecessary to do—until someone tells you that you can’t do them. And then you must do them, if only to retain your right to make your own decisions on the matter. It is not really important, for example, whether you sit at the front or the back of a bus—until someone tells you that you can’t sit at the front. It’s not worth risking your life to eat at a lunch counter or to cross a bridge—until some thug tells you that you can’t cross it. And then you must. -- Robert Tracinski
When believers demand that even those who don't subscribe to an ideology must obey it, we have to keep blaspheming, insulting their religious ideas, and desecrating their religious symbols.
Simply to oppose the demand.
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