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Virtual Ministry Archive
🚨URGENT: Sources close to the family of Aqil Keshavarz, a 27-year-old architecture student sentenced to death, say his family has had one final visit with him at Urmia Central Prison in West Azerbaijan Province, raising fears that his execution could be carried out within hours. During the final visitation, Keshavarz's mother reportedly lost consciousness due to severe emotional distress. A source familiar with the case told the Kurdistan Human Rights Network that Keshavarz was transferred to solitary confinement on Wednesday, December 17, in preparation for the execution. The following day, his family was summoned from Isfahan Province for a final visit. According to the source, the family arrived outside Urmia Central Prison on Thursday evening but were initially told that Keshavarz had been transferred to Tehran. They were ultimately allowed to meet him on Friday, December 19, in an in-person visit. The source added: “Due to threats from security interrogators, he and his family had refrained from speaking publicly about the case.” Keshavarz, who is from Isfahan, was arrested in June 2025 by forces of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Intelligence Organization while traveling to Urmia during Israel’s military attack on Iran. He was later charged with espionage and sentenced to death. Espionage allegations in Iran are frequently used against political opponents and ordinary citizens to crack down on dissent and terrorize the public. Additionally, death sentences are routinely handed down after sham trials that violate the most basic standards of due process, including the denial of access to independent legal counsel. Capital convictions are often built on forced “confessions” extracted through torture. CHRI calls on all international and human rights bodies to take immediate action and pressure Iranian authorities to halt the unjust execution of Keshavarz. The lack of sustained international attention has emboldened Iranian authorities to escalate the use of the death penalty with complete impunity.
fucken psycho bitch -Mangione’s lawyers said they want to investigate Bondi’s ties to Ballard and the firm’s relationship with UnitedHealth Group, and will ask for various materials, including details of Bondi’s compensation from the firm, any direction she’s given Justice Department employees regarding the case or UnitedHealthcare and sworn testimony from “all individuals with personal knowledge of the relevant matters.”
Madame Dimanche, often called Widow Sunday, lived in Paris in the early 1800s and became well known because of an extraordinary cutaneous horn that grew from the center of her forehead. The growth began as a small lesion when she was in her mid-70s and slowly lengthened over several years until it reached about 25 centimeters, or roughly 10 inches, curving upward and slightly backward. Cutaneous horns are made of densely compacted keratin, the same material as hair and nails, and while they look dramatic, they are not horns in the animal sense and have no bone inside. In Madame Dimanche’s case, the horn caused social stigma and physical discomfort but surprisingly very little pain. In 1815, surgeon Joseph Souberbielle removed the horn in a relatively straightforward procedure, and contemporary reports note that she recovered well afterward. The specimen was preserved as a medical curiosity and eventually became part of the collection of the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia, where it is displayed today.
Its important to empathize with the average american and not the ruiling caste -"There are many pockets of [the United States] where people are not doing that well," "They have a hard time making a living.… They don't know what the future holds for their children." its imperative that we support the vulnerable including these people locked away in a racist gigantic concentration camp with challenges like flesh eating drugs and zones where it is impossible to eat healthy foods for example and rampant gang violence, spousal abuse and out of control MK ultra mind control-record unfathomable debt, gender and sexuality violence, and complex addictions
Is Donald Trump still governing at all?
Is Donald Trump still governing at all?: The president appears to have ceded much of his authority to advisors and cabinet members. One columnist explains why that's not good.
They framed michael back in the 90's and they are even doing it today because they think he is an easy target but they underestimate how many people empathize and support him with their entire soul and he is the one sole reason the dimension catastrophically fell and was reset and they could never really recover it fully
"All nonsense!": Michael Jackson’s former bodyguard slams the Trump administration for releasing a deceptive photo of Jackson and Epstein to try to make it appear that the two had ties.
Washington D.C., 1970s. Martha Mitchell was doing something dangerous: telling the truth. As the wife of John Mitchell—President Nixon's Attorney General and later his campaign director—Martha had access to the inner workings of the most powerful administration in the world. She attended dinners with presidents and cabinet members. She heard conversations that were supposed to stay secret. And unlike everyone else in Washington, Martha talked. She had a habit that terrified the Nixon administration: she called reporters. Often at midnight. Sometimes after a few drinks. Always with the unfiltered truth about what she was seeing behind closed doors. "My husband tells me nothing," she'd say. "But I know everything anyway." She spoke about corruption. About dirty tricks. About the rot she could see spreading through the Nixon White House. While everyone else in Washington whispered behind closed doors or stayed carefully silent, Martha picked up the phone and told journalists exactly what she thought. The Nixon administration had a name for this problem: "The Martha Problem." And they were about to solve it in the most brutal way possible. June 17, 1972. The Watergate break-in. Five men were arrested breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex. It seemed like a bizarre burglary—until reporters started connecting the burglars to Nixon's reelection campaign. Martha Mitchell was in California when she heard the news. And she knew immediately that this went all the way to the top. She tried to call her friend Helen Thomas, the legendary UPI reporter. She wanted to tell her everything—about the break-in, about the cover-up that was already beginning, about how deep the corruption really went. That's when her husband's security guard, a man named Stephen King, physically restrained her. Martha fought back. She tried to reach the phone. King ripped it from the wall. She kept fighting. She was screaming, trying to get away, desperate to tell someone what was happening. So they sedated her. Against her will, Martha Mitchell—the wife of the Attorney General of the United States—was forcibly injected with psychiatric medication to keep her quiet. She was held in that California hotel room (in Newport Beach) like a prisoner. Her fingernail was torn during the struggle. Her body showed bruises and injuries from being physically restrained. When she finally managed to contact reporters days later, Martha told them what had happened. "I'm a political prisoner," she said. "They're holding me against my will." The response from Washington was swift and coordinated: Martha Mitchell was crazy. Hysterical. Unstable. Delusional. An embarrassment to her husband. Her own husband—John Mitchell, the Attorney General—didn't defend her. Instead, he suggested she was having a mental breakdown. That she'd been drinking. That she couldn't be trusted. The media largely went along with this narrative. The Attorney General's wife, making wild claims about being kidnapped? It sounded absurd. But Martha kept talking. Over the following months, as the Watergate scandal slowly unraveled, Martha Mitchell continued calling reporters with information. She warned that the cover-up went all the way to Nixon. That her husband was involved. That the administration was capable of anything to protect itself. And with each revelation, the Nixon administration's response was the same: dismiss her as crazy. This wasn't accidental. It was a deliberate strategy—one that has been used against women throughout history. When a woman tells an inconvenient truth, question her mental stability. Call her hysterical. Suggest she's paranoid. Make people doubt her sanity so they'll stop listening to her words. Richard Nixon himself complained about "The Martha Problem" on the White House tapes. His advisors discussed how to handle her, how to silence her, how to make sure no one took her seriously. The gaslighting—literal and figurative—almost worked. But then everything Martha had warned about turned out to be true. The Watergate break-in was ordered by senior officials. There was a massive cover-up. John Mitchell himself was deeply involved. The corruption went all the way to Nixon. Martha Mitchell had been right about everything. The "crazy" woman who claimed she'd been kidnapped and sedated? Actually kidnapped and sedated. The "paranoid" accusations about a cover-up? Completely accurate. The warnings about corruption at the highest levels? All confirmed. In 1973, as John Mitchell faced criminal charges for his role in Watergate, Martha divorced him. She'd lost almost everything—her marriage, her social standing, her health. The stress and trauma had taken a terrible toll. FBI investigations would later confirm much of Martha's account of what happened in that California hotel room. She hadn't been delusional. She'd been telling the truth the whole time. But the vindication came too late. Martha Mitchell died on May 31, 1976, at age 57, from multiple myeloma (a type of blood cancer). She lived long enough to see her warnings proven correct, to watch her husband go to prison, to see Nixon resign in disgrace. But she never got the full recognition she deserved as the woman who told the truth when everyone else was lying. Here's what most people don't know: the psychiatric profession created a term because of Martha Mitchell. It's called the "Martha Mitchell Effect." It refers to when mental health professionals dismiss a patient's claims as delusional or paranoid—when those claims are actually true. When a psychiatrist mistakenly diagnoses someone as having delusions because the psychiatrist doesn't believe the person's story could possibly be real. The term is taught in psychiatry programs now. Medical students learn about the danger of dismissing patients' claims just because they sound improbable. About how important it is to investigate before diagnosing delusions. Martha Mitchell's name became a reminder to doctors: sometimes the person you're calling crazy is actually the only one telling the truth. Martha's story matters now more than ever. Because the tactics used against her—the gaslighting, the forced medication, the coordinated campaign to paint her as unstable—are still used against women who challenge powerful men. Call her crazy. Say she's hysterical. Suggest she's been drinking. Question her mental stability. Make her the problem instead of addressing the problem she's pointing to. These tactics have a name now too: DARVO (Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender). But Martha experienced them decades before the term existed. She was dismissed as the "crazy wife" when she was actually the whistleblower. She was medicated and restrained when she should have been protected. She was mocked when she should have been believed. And she was vindicated only after she'd lost almost everything. Martha Elizabeth Mitchell Born: September 2, 1918, Pine Bluff, Arkansas Died: May 31, 1976, New York City (age 57) Married: John Mitchell (1957-1973) Known for: Whistleblowing during Watergate scandal Legacy: "Martha Mitchell Effect" - psychiatric term for when true claims are dismissed as delusions She called reporters at midnight warning about corruption. They kidnapped her, sedated her, tore the phone from the wall, and called her crazy. Her own husband didn't defend her. The media dismissed her as hysterical. Nixon complained about "The Martha Problem" on tape. And she was right about everything. Watergate unfolded exactly as she warned. John Mitchell went to prison. Nixon resigned. Martha died at 57, vindicated but destroyed. Now there's a psychiatric term named after her: the "Martha Mitchell Effect"—when doctors dismiss true claims as delusions. Medical students learn her name. They learn that sometimes the person you're calling crazy is the only one telling the truth. Martha Mitchell refused to stay silent when powerful men wanted her quiet. It nearly destroyed her. But she was right. And now her name reminds doctors, journalists, and all of us: believe women. Investigate their claims. Don't dismiss truth-tellers as crazy just because their truth is inconvenient. Rest in power, Martha. You warned us all. You paid the price. You were right. And we're finally listening
oh great to watch a whole bunch of lesbians in xmas movies this holiday -----These 10 lesbian Christmas movies will add some sapphic cheer to your holidays
These 10 lesbian Christmas movies will add some sapphic cheer to your holidays: These Lesbian Christmas movies are the girly gifts that keep on giving. Come enjoy the sapphic celluloid this holiday season.
What a fucking pig !!! - Donald Trump Goes on Lengthy Tangent About Melania's 'Panties' at N.C. Rally: 'I Think She Steams Them' - on the DAY AFTER THE FUCKING EPSTEIN FILES HELLO ??? fucken rank as fuck pig-he is rubbing his sow hole in everyones face and there is nothing anybody can do about it because he hides behind armed masonic guards
its nice knowing i will get to heaven either way hahaha I dont have a preoccupation with it- just a confidence that I have done my work and am invited -I worked tirelessly 19 hrs a day for most of my life fighting for the peace matrix forever and for all of time for most of us -some of us I dont really know about but I will put a good word for you when it does happen be it in a week or when I am an old koot at age 97 or even with advances I could now live to 8000 years like most of us so who knows I just will try and advocate for a lot of the felines I have seen first-sorry they get first dibs :)
Probably only 1 in 10,000,000 are "invited" the rest *must* at least return a few more times to get it right- sorry and some of the super wealthy and powerful ones are not welcome AT ALL -EVER! sorry but you have disgraced urself in the eyes of the divine. pretty much 10 out of 10 cats get in :)
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