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#gerald kaufman
belleandre-belle · 7 months
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Gerald Kaufman (1930-2017🙏🏼🌹🕊️), British MP, speaking from the rostrum of Parliament in 2009.
Gerald Kaufman was the son of Polish Jewish immigrants. Born in the UK, Kaufman was one of the country's most famous Jewish politicians. He was also a fervent critic of Israel, calling for sanctions against the Jewish state for its policies towards the Palestinians, and comparing Israeli soldiers to Nazis.
For years, Kaufman has been one of Britain's most outspoken critics of Israel.
In April 2002, at the start of Israel's Operation Rampart to halt the wave of suicide bombings in the country's cities, Kaufman declared Israel an "international pariah" and accused then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon of ordering "his troops to use barbaric methods against the Palestinians", according to the BBC.
Kaufman, who was Foreign Secretary between 1987 and 1992, told the House of Commons in 2002 that it was "time to remind Sharon that the Star of David belongs to all Jews and not to his repulsive government. His actions sully the Star of David with blood."
In 2004, in an editorial published in the Guardian, he called for economic sanctions against Israel similar to those used against South Africa.
In 2009, during the war between Israel and Hamas, Operation Cast Lead, he accused Israel of exploiting Holocaust guilt to justify its actions in the Gaza Strip.
"The current Israeli government ruthlessly and cynically exploits the guilt of gentiles [non-Jews] after the murder of Jews during the Holocaust as justification for its murders of Palestinians," Kaufman had declared before Parliament.
Speaking of his personal history as the son of Jewish refugees from Poland, he had said that "my grandmother was in bed, sick, when the Nazis came to her town. A German soldier shot her in her bed. My grandmother did not die to provide cover for Israeli soldiers murdering Palestinian grandmothers in Gaza."
Kaufman had compared Hamas fighters to Jewish resistance fighters in the Second World War, claiming that "Israeli army spokesman Major Leibovich was asked about Israeli murders of, at the time, 800 Palestinians. The total is now 1,000. She replied instantly that '500 of them were militants'. That's the response of a Nazi. I suppose the Jews fighting for their lives in the Warsaw ghetto could have been considered militants."
His opposition to Israel has persisted with age. In 2012, he had written an editorial published by the Huffington Post claiming that Israel was a "rogue state", and that the fact that Israel is a democracy "means that the Israeli electorate is complicit in its government's war crimes."
In 2015, he had told the Palestine Return Centre, a Hamas-affiliated association, that "Jewish money" was the reason why British Conservatives were pro-Israel.
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claraameliapond · 7 months
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Gerald Kaufman speech
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drsonnet · 6 months
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Sir Gerald Kaufman MP (21 June 1930-26 February 2017): On Israeli terrorism against Palestinians
During the Gaza War in January 2009, Kaufman gave a speech to the Commons where he stated: "The present Israeli government ruthlessly and cynically exploits the continuing guilt from Gentiles over the slaughter of Jews in the Holocaust as justification for their murder of Palestinians". About the death of his grandmother in the Holocaust, he said: "My grandmother did not die to provide cover for Israeli soldiers murdering Palestinian grandmothers in Gaza". After the Israeli army's spokeswoman replied to the deaths of 800 Palestinians that "500 of them were militants", he called her statement the "reply of a Nazi" and remarked that members of the Jewish resistance during the Holocaust also "could have been dismissed as militants".  He urged the British government to implement a total ban on arms sales to Israel. In June 2009, Kaufman compared Israel's treatment of the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank to South Africa under apartheid.
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badmovieihave · 7 months
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Bad movie I have Divide and Conquer 2021
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deadpresidents · 5 months
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2023's Best Books
I meant to do this a few days ago so there was more time before the holidays, but here's a quick list of the best books that I read that were released in 2023. Obviously, I didn't read every book that came out this year, and I'm only listing the best books I read that were actually released in the 2023 calendar year.
In my opinion, the two very best books released in 2023 were An Ordinary Man: The Surprising Life and Historic Presidency of Gerald R. Ford by Richard Norton Smith (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO), and True West: Sam Shepard's Life, Work, and Times by Robert Greenfield (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO).
(The rest of this list is in no particular order)
President Garfield: From Radical to Unifier C.W. Goodyear (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
The World: A Family History of Humanity Simon Sebag Montefiore (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
France On Trial: The Case of Marshal Pétain Julian Jackson (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
The Last Island: Discovery, Defiance, and the Most Elusive Tribe on Earth Adam Goodheart (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
Emperor of Rome: Ruling the Ancient Roman World Mary Beard (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
City of Echoes: A New History of Rome, Its Popes, and Its People Jessica Wärnberg (BOOK | KINDLE)
We Are Your Soldiers: How Gamal Abdel Nasser Remade the Arab World Alex Rowell (BOOK | KINDLE)
Edison's Ghosts: The Untold Weirdness of History's Greatest Geniuses Katie Spalding (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
Waco Rising: David Koresh, the FBI, and the Birth of America's Modern Militias Kevin Cook (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
The Summer of 1876: Outlaws, Lawmen, and Legends in the Season That Defined the American West Chris Wimmer (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
King: A Life Jonathan Eig (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
LBJ's America: The Life and Legacies of Lyndon Baines Johnson Edited by Mark Atwood Lawrence and Mark K. Updegrove (BOOK | KINDLE)
Who Believes Is Not Alone: My Life Beside Benedict XVI Georg Gänswein with Saverio Gaeta (BOOK | KINDLE)
Eighteen Days in October: The Yom Kippur War and How It Created the Modern Middle East Uri Kaufman (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
The Rough Rider and the Professor: Theodore Roosevelt, Henry Cabot Lodge, and the Friendship That Changed American History Laurence Jurdem (BOOK | KINDLE)
White House Wild Child: How Alice Roosevelt Broke All the Rules and Won the Heart of America Shelley Fraser Mickle (BOOK | KINDLE)
Romney: A Reckoning McKay Coppins (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
Founding Partisans: Hamilton, Madison, Jefferson, Adams and the Brawling Birth of American Politics H.W. Brands (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
The Earth Transformed: An Untold History Peter Frankopan (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
LeBron Jeff Benedict (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
Ringmaster: Vince McMahon and the Unmaking of America Abraham Riesman (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
The Fight of His Life: Inside Joe Biden's White House Chris Whipple (BOOK | KINDLE | AUDIO)
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clementinecompendium · 10 months
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To Be Read July 2023
The Mind
The Molecule of More: How a Single Chemical in Your Brain Drives Love, Sex, and Creativity―and Will Determine the Fate of the Human Race by Daniel Z. Lieberman & Michael E. Long
The Brain: A Very Short Introduction by Michael O'Shea
Consciousness: A Very Short Introduction by Susan Blackmore
The Mind-Gut Connection: How the Hidden Conversation Within Our Bodies Impacts Our Mood, Our Choices, and Our Overall Health by Emeran Mayer MD
Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion by Jia Tolentino
Sensitive is the New Strong: The Power of Empaths in an Increasingly Harsh World by Anita Moorjani
The Highly Sensitive Person by Elaine Aron
Laziness Does Not Exist by Devon Price Ph.D.
Wired to Create: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Creative Mind by Scott Barry Kaufman & Carolyn Gregoire
The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel A. van der Kolk
Music & The Mind (Art Philosophy, Aesthetics, Neuroaesthetics)
Saved by a Song: The Art and Healing Power of Songwriting by Mary Gauthier
The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory by John Seabrook
This is What it Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You by Ogi Ogas & Susan Rogers
Why You Like It: The Science and Culture of Musical Taste by Nolan Gasser
The Story of Music: From Babylon to the Beatles: How Music Has Shaped Civilization by Howard Goodall
Of Sound Mind: How Our Brain Constructs a Meaningful Sonic World by Nina Kraus
Aesthetics: A Very Short Introduction by Bence Nanay
Equipment for Living: On Poetry and Pop Music by Michael Robbins
How Music Works by David Byrne
General Non-Fiction / History / Science
The Russian Revolution: A Very Short Introduction by S. A. Smith
The French Revolution: A Very Short Introduction by William Doyle
Linguistics: A Very Short Introduction by P. H. Matthews
Mathematics: A Very Short Introduction by Timothy Gowers
After the End of Art: Contemporary Art and the Pale of History by Arthur C. Danto
Flappers by Judith Mackrell
Marketing for Dummies, 6th edition by Jeanette McMurty MBA
Sinatra: The Chairman by James Kaplan
Get Happy: The Life of Judy Garland by Gerald Clarke
Self-Improvement
Self-Compassion: The Proven Power of Being Kind to Yourself by Dr. Kristin Neff
Self Compassion for Dummies by by Steven Hickman PsyD (in progress)
The Nice Girl Syndrome: Stop Being Manipulated and Abused -- and Start Standing Up for Yourself by Beverly Engel
The Assertiveness Guide for Women: How to Communicate Your Needs, Set Healthy Boundaries & Transform Your Relationships by Julie de Azevedo Hanks, PhD, LCSW
Anatomy of a Breakthrough: How to Get Unstuck When it Matters Most by Adam Alter
Fierce Self-Compassion: How Women Can Harness Kindness to Speak Up, Claim Their Power, and Thrive by Kristin Neff PhD
The Art of Possibility by Rosamund Stone Zander
Be Angry: The Dalai Lama on What Matters Most by His Holiness the Dalai Lama,
Anger: The Conflicted History of an Emotion by Barbara H. Rosenwein
The Power of Fun: How to Feel Alive Again by Catherine Price
In Awe: Rediscover Your Childlike Wonder to Unleash Inspiration, Meaning, and Joy by John O'Leary
Creating a Life That Matters: How to Live and Love with Meaning and Purpose by Manis Friedman & Rivka Goldstein 
Fiction
Babel by R. F. Kuang
The Last Bookshop in London by Madeline Martin
A Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne (narrated by Tim Curry)
In/Spectre #2
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt (in progress)
The Poisoner's Handbook ed. Raymond T. Bond
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yemme · 6 months
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Peace. Old video and still relevant. Sir Gerald Kaufman.
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susanai6 · 7 months
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Gerald Kaufman speech
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ksstradio · 2 years
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Wildcat Football’s Senior Night Pushed Forward to Thursday Due to Fears of Inclement Weather
Wildcat Football’s Senior Night Pushed Forward to Thursday Due to Fears of Inclement Weather
Wildcat football hosting Senior Night has been moved forward to Thursday, Nov. 3.  Coach Brandon Faircloth’s team now hosts Senior Night versus Anna on Thursday, Nov. 3, still at Gerald Prim Stadium.  Kickoff is still at 7:30 P.M.  It’s the second straight week Sulphur Springs has faced weather concerns.  Last Friday in Kaufman, the Wildcats could only play the first half before consecutive…
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outoftowninac · 2 years
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MARGIN FOR ERROR
1940
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Margin for Error was a two-act play by Clare Boothe Luce. It was originally produced by Aldrich & Myers with Otto Preminger directing and starring as Baumer. The cast also included Bert Lytell and Sam Levene. 
Officer Finkelstein, a Jewish policeman, is assigned to protect Karl Baumer, the consul for Nazi Germany in an American city. While hosting a group of people listening to a radio broadcast of a speech by Adolf Hitler, Baumer is apparently murdered. Finkelstein's investigation discovers that each of the others present has a motive for murdering Baumer. 
Dr. Jennings paid to get relatives out of Germany, only to discover Baumer has cheated him. 
Sophie Baumer hated her husband's cruelty and amorality. 
Baumer threatened to expose the Jewish ancestry of Baron Max von Alvenstor... 
and planned to kill Otto Horst. 
Thomas Denny, an American journalist, hates Baumer's Nazi ideology. 
All the suspects are found to be innocent; Baumer accidentally drank poison that he had prepared to murder one of his guests.
The play was based on an incident that occurred in 1938, when New York Mayor Fiorello La Guardia appointed Police Captain Max Finkelstein to head a special squad of Jewish officers tasked with protecting the German consulate. The police officer character's name was originally Max Finkelstein but was changed to Moe Finkelstein after the real Finkelstein's suicide in May 1940.
Luce was best known for her hit 1936 play The Women, which featured an all-female cast. Conversely, Margin for Error only had two female characters. 
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This was Preminger’s US acting debut. It was also his only acting credit on Broadway. In Hollywood, he went on to be nominated for three directing Oscars. On the small screen he played Mr. Freeze on “Batman” in 1966, taking over the role from George Sanders, and handing it off to Eli Wallach for the character’s third apparance. 
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By 1940, Atlantic City was not longer a destination for out-of-town tryouts. Theatrical venues had been given over to cinematic presentations. 
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Margin for Error still tried out in New Jersey, but in Princeton, at McCarter Theatre. Since its opening in 1930, the venue hosted the world premieres of Thornton Wilder’s Our Town and Kaufman and Hart’s You Can’t Take It With You. 
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A famous German Princetonian was in the audience at the McCarter premiere. Actor Levene was well known for his thick Yiddish accent. 
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After Princeton, the play visited Washington DC, where Reuters reduced it to a “woman’s skit” and “the most unneutral play staged in neutral America since the war began.”
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Dear Adolf... 
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After concerns about the play’s setting were voiced, author Luce had to issue a statement that the play takes place a German embassy in an unnamed American city, not the Germany embassy in New York. 
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After the DC opening, the cast gathered around to read the German Embassy’s published letter of complaint!  
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Controversy continued right up to the Broadway opening, which was delayed by a week for in-town rehearsals.  During this time Philip Coolidge replaced Matt Briggs in the role of Otto B. Horst. 
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The play opened on Broadway at the Plymouth (now the Gerald Schoenfeld) Theatre on November 3, 1939. For the final three weeks of its 264 performance run, the play moved to the Majestic Theatre, where it closed on June 15, 1940. Two weeks before closing, it marked its 250th performance, briefly becoming Broadway’s third longest running play. 
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After closing the play immediately moved to a two week sit-down in Brighton Beach. There, an actual German refugee, Kurt Katch, was cast to replace Preminger as Baumer. Sheldon Leonard also joined the cast. The production then went to Ohio’s Yellow Springs Summer Theatre. 
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Just three weeks after Broadway, on July 8, 1940, the production played Atlantic City’s Garden Pier Theatre, which was then programming proven Broadway hits, instead of unknown new plays.  The Atlantic City cast featured Sheldon Leonard, Kurt Katch, Josephine Dunn, Kirk Brown Jr., Evelyn Wahle, Franklin George, and Robert J. Mulligan. Wahle was the lone member of the original Broadway cast. 
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In 1943, after much delay, a film version was released. It again was directed by and starred Preminger. Supporting cast included Milton Berle and Joan Bennett.  Lillie Hayward and Samuel Fuller turned Luce’s playscript into a screenplay. It premiered in Atlantic City at the Strand Theatre, opposite Steel Pier. The venue opened in 1910 as the Criterion.  
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Coincidentally, at the same time, Atlantic City cinemas were playing Hitler’s Children (at the Stanley), and Commandos Strike at Dawn (at the Colonial). Like Margin for Error, both films were about Nazi Germany and World War II.  
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danismm · 3 years
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“An Architectural Fantasy” by Gerald Lynton Kaufman, 1923.
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ofhouses · 5 years
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731. Franklin Andrus Burr & Ann Kidston McCallum /// Gerald R. Hoepfner House (Berkshires House I) /// Williamstown, Massachusetts, USA /// 1987
OfHouses presents Record Houses, part XIV. (Photos: © Elliott Kaufman. Source: “Architectural Record Houses of 1988″, Mid-April 1988.)
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Disillusionment
An election day reflection on Labour, history repeating itself and being disappointed but not surprised. 
‘If I lived then I would have stood up against the regime. I would have made a difference. I would have made a change.’
It’s hard, to come to terms with the fact that, in fact, I am doing none of the above. The most recent election has felt like such a big shadow hanging over many in our generation. Sometimes less like a shadow and more like a pigeon, flying over us, constantly threatening to shit all over us. And it feels like this time it has.
It seems that Labour have always had to fight harder than Conservatives to gain power anyway. Even in 1964 when Harold Wilson came to power, had 900 voters in 8 key constituencies voted Tory not Labour (or simply not voted) then Conservatives would have won. Despite the increasing unpopularity of the Tories in the lead up to the election- it followed a series of damaging scandals for the Tories (such as the Profumo Affair or the Vassal Affair), increasing economic problems, (such as unemployment reaching 800,000) and a rejection from the EEC (which ironically, was at the time seen as a testament to how weak Britain was as a country for the inability to join what would become the EU, how the turn tables table)- it was a closely fought election. Conservatives have also had longer runs in parliament-‘13 Wasted Years’ being the slogan for Wilson’s campaign in 1964, and then again a long lasting run from 1979-1997 under Thatcher and Major, adding up to 18 years before a Labour government would return to power under Blair and ‘New Labour’. Furthermore the times Labour have done well has been as a moderate Labour government that has expelled extreme left members in order to appeal to more of the electorate, including voters sympathetic to some Tory policies shifting the outcome to the left.
Admittedly, I write this following the Exit Poll, there are no ‘definite results’ yet, but deep down we know that’s a bit of an empty hope. And even as an eighteen year old with little political expertise, it still seems obvious to see ‘What Went Wrong’ for Labour.
Because it’s what went wrong in 1983. It’s what always goes wrong. And when it hasn’t gone wrong for Labour it has been when the exact opposite of what happened with Labour this time round has happened. It is time for Labour to understand that there is no place for a completely socialist Britain, and that the extreme left voters that they are pandering to have not got enough influence in our current political affairs. That we can still protect the NHS, still protect education, still decrease homelessness without taking on such an extreme stances that alienate many of the centre left and in many cases the centre right.
In 1983 Labour underwent a not dissimilar lurch to the extreme left under Michael Foot, who will no doubt be discussed a lot in the aftermath of this 2019 Election. The 1983 Election was the most decisive victory since 1945 when Attlee beat Churchill to become Prime Minister post-war. In this election both Foot and his policies lacked any appeal to anyone other than traditional and hardy left wing Labour voters. Moderates from the Party had split to form the Social Democratic Party two years prior to the election and the manifesto was described as the ‘Longest Suicide Note in History’ by Labour MP Sir Gerald Kaufman. Ultimately Labour had gone too far left to be able to present a viable and unified opposition to the Tories. Foot was forced to resign mere days following the defeat, and was succeeded, crucially, by Neil Kinnock, who went on to be Labour leader from 1983-1992.
(I’ve just got the update Blyth Valley has been won by Tories. The mining constituency. That has been Labour since 1950. Won by the Tories. It’s going to be a long night.)
Neil Kinnock was a key player for Labour’s revival by 1997. He expelled the extreme left members of the Labour party, and was focussed on moving Labour back closer to the centre, described by the BBC as being in ‘better shape than in 1983’ due to the fact he had ‘halted its leftward drift’. Kinnock recognised that it was not by being seen as The Socialist Party™ that Labour would regain electorate popularity. In fact, quite the reverse, and he laid the foundations on which Blair would build and which would see the worst defeat for the Conservatives since 1906.
Labour’s return from the extreme left saved their image and the party.
Which is why Richard Burgon, Shadow Secretary of State for Justice and Shadow Lord Chancellor’s most recent tweet has done nothing but worsen any hopes for the future. ‘Johnson must continue to be fought with radical alternatives’.
To think that Labour want to continue their ‘leftward drift’ is a chilling concept. Labour won in 1997 largely down to Blair’s reform of Clause IV (Clause IV of the Party’s 1918 constitution was the clause promising to nationalise British industry and seen as very left wing, the reform reassured the British public that this ‘New Labour’ were not a socialist Party, but rather a moderate centre-left party) and the contradiction to the Tory campaign that Blair and Labour were ‘socialists in disguise’.
There needs to be a return back from the extreme left course that Corbyn has set his party on.
And so in the face of one of the biggest political moments of my country in my life to date, I am sat in my bedroom, listening to the updates as they come in, writing a blog post. Disappointed but not surprised by how it’s unfurling. Coming to terms with the fact that, living through tumultuous times isn’t nearly as fun as it seems in the films.
Because it feels as though I am not the protagonist of this unfolding times. It feels, instead, that I am Extra No. 37. As though nothing I can do will make a difference. That there is nothing more I can do, having put that cross in that box this morning.
But we can do so much. Maybe we feel like Extra No. 37 because we’re in that stage of the film where nothing’s going right. It’s probably raining and there’s sad string music as we look out of the window thinking that we’re done. That we’ve run out of options.
As if we only had two options in the first place.
It’s like climbing Snowdon. So what we missed the train up. Now it’s harder, for sure. But there are still footpaths to get to the top. This way’s just harder.
But if we really want to get to the top, see our country through these times we gotta just put one foot in front of the other.
We can’t lose hope now. Not when there’s so much to lose. Not when we have so much to fight for. Now when people need hope.
OK, it sucks. It’s desperate. But we still have a voice, even if we feel like a dragonfly trying to make a point in a meeting of dragons.
We will be heard, one day.
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1997 The Roswell Report: Case Closedby McAndrew, James, 1963-
https://archive.org/details/AFD-101027-030
Contents Foreword Guide for Readers v Introduction i SECTION ONE Flying Saucer Crashes and Alien Bodies 5 1.1 The "Crash Sites," Scenarios, and Research Methods 11 1.2 High Altitude Balloon Dummy Drops 23 1.3 High Altitude Balloon Operations 37 1.4 Comparison of Witnesses Accounts to U.S. Air Force Activities 55 SECTION TWO Reports of Bodies at Roswell Army Air Field Hospital 75 2.1 The "Missing" Nurse and the Pediatrician 81 2.2 Aircraft Accidents 93 2.3 High Altitude Research Projects 101 2.4 Comparison of the Hospital Account to the Balloon Mishap 109 Conclusion 123 Notes Section One 127 Section Two 139 APPENDIX A Anthropomorphic Dummy Launch and Landing Locations 155 APPENDIX B Witness Statements Charles E. Clouthier 160 Charles A. Coltman, Jr., Col., USAF, MC (Ret) 162 Dan D. Fulgham, Col., USAF (Ret) 164 Bernard D. Gildenberg, GS-14 (Ret) 166 Ole Jorgeson, MSgt., USAF (Ret) 169 William C. Kaufman, Lt. Col., USAF (Ret) 171 Joseph W. Kittinger, Jr., Col., USAF (Ret) 174 Roland H. Lutz, CMSgt., USAF (Ret) 178 Raymond A. Madson, Lt. Col. USAF (Ret) 180 Frank B. Nordstrom, M.D 182 APPENDIX C Interviews Gerald Anderson 187 Glenn Dennis 197 Alice Knight 213 Vern Maltais 214 James Ragsdale 215 Selected Bibliography of Technical Reports 221 Index 225
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alxndrasplace · 7 years
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(Mondoweiss/WhatReallyHappened)  Gerald Kaufman – From Labour Zionist to Israel’s bitterest critic 
British MP, Sir Gerald Kaufman (RIP), speaking truth to corrupt power.
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indigo-boots · 5 years
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hey y’all, a bunch of boots have come off NFT this month and i’m on the search! i need these ones:
Aladdin
3/7/19 ~ US Tour ***NFT until 5/15/19
Clinton Greenspan (Aladdin), Lissa Deguzman (Jasmine), Major Attaway (Genie), Jonathan Weir (Jafar), Jay Paranada (Iago), Jerald Vincent (Sultan), Michael Bullard (U/S Omar), Zach Bencal (Babkak) Jed Feder (Kassim), Albert Jennings (s/w Prince Abdullah)
Cats
3/15/19 ~ US Tour ***NFT until 5/15/19
Phillip Deceus (Alonzo), McGee Maddox (Bill Bailey/Rum Tum Tugger), Lexie Plath (Bombalurina), Mariah Reives (Cassandra), PJ DiGaetano (Coricopat), Liz Schmitz (Demeter), Keri Rene Fuller (Grizabella), Maria Failla (U/S Jellylorum), Emily Jeanne Phillips (Jennyanydots), Tion Gaston (Mistoffelees), Tony d'Alelio (Mungojerrie), Dan Hoy (Munkustrap), Timothy Gulan (Peter/Bustopher Jones/Asparagus), Tyler John Logan (Plato/Macavity), Anthony Michael Zas (Pouncival), Rose Iannaccone (Rumpelteazer), Ahren Victory (Sillabub), Ethan Saviet (Skimbleshanks), Halli Tolland (Tantomile), Devin Neilson (Tumblebrutus), Brandon Micheal Nase (Victor/Old Deuteronomy), Laura Katherine Kaufman (U/S Victoria)
Miss Saigon
9/2018 ~ US Tour ***
Emily Bautista (Kim), Red Concepcion (The Engineer), Anthony Festa (Chris), J Daughtry (John), Stacie Bono (Ellen), Jinwoo Jung (Thuy), Christine Bunuan (Gigi). Act 1 starts during The Dance, act 2 full, show halted in act 2 mid-Nightmare.
Les Miserables
10/2018 ~ US Tour ***
Nick Cartell (Jean Valjean), Josh Davis (Javert), Mary Kate Moore (Fantine), J Anthony Crane (Thenardier), Allison Guinn (Madame Thenardier), Jillian Butler (Cosette), Paige Smallwood (Eponine), Joshua Grosso (Marius), Matt Shingledecker (Enjolras).
Wicked
1/2019 ~ London *** NFT until 5/20/19
Aimee Fisher (1st cover Elphaba), Maria Coyne (standby Glinda), David Witts (Fiyero), Melanie La Barrie (Madame Morrible), Chris Jarman (1st cover Wizard), Rosa O'Reilly (Nessarose), Scott Sutcliffe (1st cover Boq), Rhidian Marc (1st cover Doctor Dillamond). MP4
Miss Saigon
2/2019 ~ UK Tour ***
Leo Tavardo Valdez (Engineer), Sooha Kim (Kim), Ashley Gilmour (Chris), Elana Martin (Ellen), Ryan O'Gorman (John), Gerald Santos (Thuy), Aicelle Santos (Gigi), Kayla Münz (Tam), Youngyoo Park, Pierce Rogan, Kerry Spark, Louis Stockil, Eloisa Amalia Tan, Joaquin Pedro Valdes, Brad Veitsch, Amadeus Williams, Gabriella Williams, Sian Yeo, Zheng Xi Yong, Gerald Zarcilla
Waitress - Broadway - January 12, 2019
CAST: Sara Bareilles (Jenna), Anastacia McCleskey (u/s Becky), Lenne Klingaman (Dawn), Gavin Creel (Dr. Pomatter), Christopher Fitzgerald (Ogie), Benny Elledge (Cal), Larry Marshall (Joe/Josie), Ben Thompson (Earl), Tiffany Denise Hobbs (s/w Nurse Norma), Riley Summer Perler (Lulu), Stephanie Torns (Francine Pomatter), Molly Hager (Mother)
ik this is a lot lol i’ve been super busy with traveling and testing all this month but summer is almost upon me and i’ll be able to trade any hour of the day! if you have any of these videos, please do not hesitate to msg me here on tumblr or email me at [email protected] ! i would love love love to trade! my list is under “#my list” on this blog, but if you can’t find it feel free to msg me! i’m also open to general trades so just do not hesitate to msg me with your list if you’d like to trade! have a great day all :)
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