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General Discussion / Re: For all the...
« Last post by Visualmon on Today at 05:17:37 PM »
The Bibis family tells Nentanyahu to 'shut the fawk up'. Oct 7 is another propaganda tool to smear Palestinian after Nentanyahu did to Iraq on 9/11 about the twin towers.  Same old pattern. Nobody buying this bullsh!t.
https://youtu.be/wVaHCoFca8Y?si=9g2Bi0uQ59KVJZCQ&t=311
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General Discussion / Re: For all the...
« Last post by Visualmon on Today at 05:04:41 PM »
She got no photograph of herself in Gaza. What a baloney.  ::)  I can't believe anyone like HL would fall for this.  :idiot2:
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General Discussion / For all the...
« Last post by Hung_Low on Today at 12:15:02 PM »
'Closet Nazis' that's still spreading love for Palestinian, Gazans, Hamas and condemning Israel...

Listen to a person that actually grew up in Gaza... not just some supposedly 'expert' who had never lived nor grew up there talking about the conflict.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0ja85V7Ovw

I also find it interesting that when the 'Palestinians' were under the control of Egypt (Gaza) and Jordan (the West Bank)... they don't call it 'OCCUPATION'... but as soon as Israel defeated Egypt and Jordan, handed the land back to the people living in these land... they all screamed 'OCCUPATION'.
Maybe Israel should have left these people be under the control of Egypt and Jordan.
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General Discussion / After Grassroots Democratic group...
« Last post by Hung_Low on Today at 11:01:11 AM »
called for Chuck Schmemer (Schumer) to resign as Minority Leader... he took it to 'The View'.  :2funny: :2funny: :2funny: He went to the cackling hens to get hugs and nods LMAO!!!

I'm sort of you know, I'm sort of the orchestra leader and I have a lot of talent in that orchestra. So, what I do is
I show them off.  We have some great spokespeople, people like Chris Murphy and Brian Shots. We have, you know, Democrats are learning to do the digital uh social media much better than we did before.  I put Cy Booker and Tina Smith in charge and then we have Bernie going out to Republican areas and doing rallies and rallying. So, we have a load of talent in our caucus and I'll tell you one thing, we are totally united in one thing, many things but one thing above all... we are united in going after Trump.


So, out of all the things the Dems claimed they're after... Climate Change, DEI, Lowering Cost, Helping American people, Women's right (accept when it comes to Trans) and love of Ukraine/Palestine... their number one priority and all united on is 'Going after Trump'. So, are the Lefties/Demmies truly all about... going after Trump is their number 1 priority while everything else can take a back seat?

It's no wonder the Dem lost the presidential election... Their priority and agenda is just to get Trump and nothing else.
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Hmong market farmers in Tasmania not immune to agriculture industry changes

Farming is what Dee Thao's family is best known for.

Members of her Hmong community are familiar to most Tasmanian market-goers looking to buy fresh vegetables on a weekend.

For 30 years, Ms Thao has cultivated a plot of land at Richmond on Hobart's outskirts.

Together with her husband, Lia Xiong, the couple have sold produce to support their growing family.

Farming has traditionally been a strong part of Hmong culture.

For Ms Thao, whose parents grew rice in the mountains of Laos, she worries her way of life is fading.

"I'm not sure what [will] happen to my kids, because they are the new generation, whether they will continue or not," she said.

"Because a farm is not a small job, it's a hard job.

Alongside university and school commitments, the Xiong's eight children often help out on the farm and run the market stalls.

"[The kids] say, 'Mum, you and Dad, [have] no holidays. Every time it's on the farm, hurrying and then doing veggies," she said.

From jungle potatoes to building a new home
Living off the land saved Ms Thao's life in the 1960s.

During the Laotian war in the 1950s and 60s, her mother was too malnourished to breastfeed. Ms Thao survived because her father foraged potatoes, crushed them up and strained them through a bag into her mouth to make "milk".

She survived, while her siblings were among thousands of persecuted Hmong who didn't.

"My mum said, 'you're really lucky'," Ms Thao said.

Her parents came to Australia as migrants in 1976 when she was 10 years old, after living in a Thai refugee camp.

The Hmong people, ethnically a hill-tribe people that researchers believe originated from Siberia, have migrated increasingly south throughout their long history.

Most recently, many Hmong hail from northern Laos, where the minority group were persecuted after the Laotian civil war for helping the United States fight communist forces the Hmong felt threatened their autonomy and farming way of life.

Ms Thao's father was a soldier in the conflict, and while the US evacuated some Hmong when it recalled its troops, her family wasn't among them.

A Hmong baby in a pink hoodie sits on the ground in farm holding up freshly harvested carrots
Dee Thao is thankful her own family has never seen conflict. (Facebook/Lia Farming Produce)

It's believed more than 100,000 Hmong died trying to flee Laos in the war's aftermath.

"They were chasing us like animals, if they see us then they just shoot and you die," Ms Thao said of the Lao communist army.

Ms Thao explained the US promised to aid Hmong resettlement.

"Because my people helped them do the war, they had a paper that said if we lost, [America] had to sponsor or take my people to their country," she said.

Hmongs not immune to changing agricultural tide
As farmers nationwide grapple with concerns around the longevity of living on the land, the Hmong diaspora is not immune.

Ms Thao's children have chosen mostly to not follow in her farming footsteps — one wants to be a plasterer, another an engineer.

She said her children wanted to find jobs that allowed more free time and were more lucrative.

While other students "were going camping or somewhere" during the school holidays, Ms Thao said her daughter had to tell them "'my holiday is on the farm, helping Mum do the veggies, cleaning, [things] like that."

Damian Xiong, 29, is studying a plastering apprenticeship .

He says while he enjoys farm work, he doesn't see himself doing it long-term.

"You don't really have holidays," he said.

He said he also felt younger generations were "more ambitious to do more things".

a 29 year old Hmong male with black beard and hair in a red sports tee, adjusting bok choy and other veggies on a trestle table
Damian Xiong helps his mum Dee Thao by working at farmers' market stall in Hobart. (ABC News: Madeleine Rojahn)

"The world's growing up, you know, involving new technology. And then you have young generations, they have more ideas, more opportunities to look at things that different way."

"So I wouldn't really see the new gens taking this up as a career path, unless they really do enjoy it themselves."
A short Hmong woman in an apron stands smiling with her taller son outside their veggie market stall
Dee Thao and her son Damian Xiong at their farmers' market stall in Hobart. (ABC News: Madeleine Rojahn)

Flourishing through farming
Researcher Margaret Eldridge played a pivotal role in helping the Hmong set up their first market stall at Salamanca.

While mostly a shy, unassuming people, she said Hmong refugees had triumphed in farming — in a new country with plants, processes, language and culture that were "completely alien" to them.

Margaret Eldridge says the Hmong people were able to make their mark in Tasmania through market gardening. (ABC News: Madeleine Rojahn)

Markets were largely where they interacted with the wider public, often introducing unfamiliar vegetables to Westerners.

Ms Eldridge's interest in the Hmong community led her to develop 'English for Salamanca', a course to help non-English speaking stallholders communicate with customers at Hobart's popular Salamanca market.

She said Hmong culture, which is rich in shamanism, was strongly tied to farming.

While living in Laos, she observed shamanism being relied on for decision making, such as "creating a good place for farming or for moving villages".

A woman in a black ponytail and apron organises produce at her farmers market stall holding a black bucket and parsley bunch
The Hmong are regular stallholders at Hobart's many weekend markets. (ABC News: Madeleine Rojahn)

Ms Eldridge said many cultural customs could be lost if the next generation of Tasmanian Hmong farmers didn't take up the mantle.

"Along with the potential to lose the farming community is the social structures, the customs, the traditions, which are very much associated with farming."

"The [young people] still have farming in their blood, but they also saw the opportunity of education would take them from poverty to riches, and so that's the way they went,"  she said.
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Gal Gadot’s Walk of Fame Ceremony Disrupted by Confrontation Between Pro-Palestine and Pro-Israeli Demonstrators, Police Respond

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Doesn't matter if the Husky sockets are sold at Home Depot or Amazon, none are "coated" like the idiot's "don't know anything" claim while "showing off" his daddy's tools.. :2funny:



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Nice drop from these photos I took:



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USA is a big country
just like back in the laos village
different village has different customs and ways


when i visited my cousin in california
all they talk about is money, career, and more money


here in the midwest
we are more chill and relaxed
midwest nice they say
it gets done when it gets done


than you go down south
and those hmong brother down there are like country redneck

Just another LIE from hmgLIAR like the time he LIED about being in Laos crossing over to Thailand just get called out by the neutral PH members because his "math is off"...

Plus...

hmgLIAR also claimed that he doesn't travel because every place is the same...

Yep, same idiot that put PH member nkaujsee down for traveling and claimed that every place is the same so it's waste of time... He even went as far as posting an invalid photo he found on Google to back up his invalid point... :idiot2:





THEREFORE:

yeah i just make that stuff up

Just lied, dude



BECAUSE:

dang...somebody is salty
somebody's is jello.
all I hear is, "I'm jealous."
Yup, that’s all that is. Jealous.

THE NEUTRAL PH MEMBERS' WORDS, NOT MINE Per the "legit" .."ALL CATTLE" PROOF quotes above

Those of us "legit" folks can easily provide "legit" "ALL CATTLE" PROOF quotes like the ones above to back up what we say... O0 O0 O0


"SEEING IS TRULY BELIEVING YO"

 ;D ;D ;D



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