hi
- Last 7 days
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kour.io kour.io
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- Dec 2025
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www.bilibili.com www.bilibili.com
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hi
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www.nplusonemag.com www.nplusonemag.com
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This same sympathy was later extended to a disturbing Department of Defense “BigDog” robot named Confidence, whose handler directed it to waggle its hips and peer up inquisitively at onlookers. Its thin frame resembled a miniature fuselage with imitation deer legs attached to the bottom. Its hooves looked like the wheels of an office chair, and it had a
Why can the agents show kindness to a dog, but not to the people they arrest?
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Willow’s presence elicited coos of sympathy from agents whose job it is to impose unshakable traumas on the wretched of the earth.
The contrast between sympathy and cruelty highlights the moral confusion inside the system.
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Back at the ICE booth, a lone protester was at last present, asking a simple question. At the deportation officer recruiting table, he asked the agent, “Have you read Eichmann in Jerusalem?”
The author introduces Willow to show a softer side of law enforcement, but this gentle image contrasts with ICE’s harsh duties.
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The man, ever on his guard, sizes up the threat posed by each passerby: “I can take him,” “I can take him,” or “I’d need backup,”
In this sentence, the author compares the common situation to a grand sense of mission. The author criticizes male safety fantasies and the construction of violent identities.
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The ICE video began with jittery, sepia-toned photographs of the founding fathers and the Federalist Papers, then jumped ahead to immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, and from there to mugshots of the September 11 attackers. Though the narration was inaudible, I believe that September 11 was cited to justify the deployment of the men who appeared onscreen next, the ICE agents arresting meatpackers with their hairnets still on.
In that paragraph, the author describes the video as a strong visual contrast. This video is kind of propaganda, which connects the migration to terrorism.
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www.unrefugees.org www.unrefugees.org
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Nearly 8 million Venezuelans have been displaced, with most living in Latin American and Caribbean countries. At the end of 2024, there were 370,200
Venezuela’s crisis shows how authoritarian rule and economic collapse can push entire populations into exile.
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Gang-related violence, food insecurity, increasing poverty and climate change are driving forced displacement in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.
Unlike traditional wars, the displacement here caused from social collapse and environmental pressure
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The war in Sudan triggered one of the world’s largest displacement crises. By the end of 2024, a total of 14.3 million people—a third of the nation’s population—was displaced.
This statistic shows how civil war can completely destabilize a nation’s social structure and create a humanitarian emergency that goes beyond national borders.
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