Thinking about the poor/magnificent WhatABard ladies and the absolute chaos that must be ensuing in their worlds with this absolute avalanche of new stills
seen from China
seen from Lithuania
seen from United States
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seen from United States
seen from Venezuela
seen from Japan
seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore

seen from United Kingdom

seen from China

seen from Switzerland

seen from Philippines
seen from United States

seen from Switzerland
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seen from Switzerland
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seen from United States
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Thinking about the poor/magnificent WhatABard ladies and the absolute chaos that must be ensuing in their worlds with this absolute avalanche of new stills
Two portraits of Francesca Lechi
1. By Giovanni Battista Gigola, 1800
2. By Andrea Appiani, 1803
Francesca Lechi was involved in Napoleonic events in Italy, such as the Revolution in Brescia, which took place when Napoleon’s army entered the region in 1797. She met Joachim Murat at a ball, and the two had an affair. She even followed him to Paris, until her husband wrote to Napoleon complaining of the situation. She was active in political events, procuring the fabric used for the tricolor flag hoisted on the Broletto in Brescia.
Stendhal, in Vie de Napoléon, said of her:
“Countess Gherardi, daughter of Count Lecchi, had perhaps the most beautiful eyes in Brescia, the land of beautiful eyes. She added to all her father’s genius a gentle cheerfulness, a real simplicity, which was never altered.”
(Source)
silly thing I made for @kevkandyland
Countering An Arab Propaganda Claim
It is difficult at times to counter Arab falsification of history. Other times, a bit of research will solve the difficulty.
For example,
here,
where it is claimed:
The Deir Yassin massacre followed in 1948. A join contingent, containing the Tsel, Irgun, and Haganah, assaulted the 600-person village near Jerusalem. A cistern alone was found to contain 150 mutilating bodies and the full death toll remains unknown. Irgun leader Menachem Begin falsified the Red Cross’s reports, ironically labelling it the fabrication by anti-Semites. [3]
Well, I went to
the source quoted
.
There, on page 297, I found this:
How could he falsify the reports of the Red Cross? Did the writer mean he misrepresented them? Or that he quoted from them what they did not contain? So I went to Begin's memoir as Commander of the Irgun, The Revolt, and on page 164 I found this footnote:
and as I presumed, Begin insisted not that the battle took place but that there was no "massacre". The charge of a "massacre" is a lie. That claim is correct as Eliezer Tauber's new Hebrew-language bookdetails (see here). He also used "Jew-haters", not "anti-Semites" if we are to be exact in quoting someone. And he certainly did not "falsify" the Red Cross reports. In fact, "Red Cross reports" are not mentioned at all by Begin. Were those reports false? That is another issue. They claimed that there was "great savagery"; that "Woman and children were stripped, lined up, photographed, and then slaughtered by automatic firing"; that "survivors have told of even more incredible bestialities"; and that those "who were taken prisoner were treated with degrading brutality". Those claims are false. ^
Playlist I made!! Enjoy :>
Can I blow confetti at lechi then yeet lil ves at them💥💥
Yes, yes you can
Teehee
Lil thing I made-