Aboard an IDF helicopter, the families of Naama, Liri, Karina, and Daniella come together with their daughters on the way to the hospital after the girls were freed from 477 days of Hamas captivity. Welcome home ♥️🎗️🇮🇱
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“Go ahead, privileged little white boy from far away, tell me what’s REALLY going on here.” - via matanperetz___
stopterrornow
This winter, our scientists and engineers traveled to the world’s northernmost civilian town to launch rockets equipped with cutting-edge scientific instruments.
This is the beginning of a 14-month-long campaign to study a particular region of Earth’s magnetic field — which means launching near the poles. What’s it like to launch a science rocket in these extreme conditions?
Our planet is protected by a natural magnetic field that deflects most of the particles that flow out from the Sun — the solar wind — away from our atmosphere. But near the north and south poles, two oddities in Earth’s magnetic field funnel these solar particles directly into our atmosphere. These regions are the polar cusps, and it turns out they’re the ideal spot for studying how our atmosphere interacts with space.
The scientists of the Grand Challenge Initiative — Cusp are using sounding rockets to do their research. Sounding rockets are suborbital rockets that launch to a few hundred miles in altitude, spending a few minutes in space before falling back to Earth. That means sounding rockets can carry sensitive instruments above our atmosphere to study the Sun, other stars and even distant galaxies.
They also fly directly through some of the most interesting regions of Earth’s atmosphere, and that’s what scientists are taking advantage of for their Grand Challenge experiments.
One of the ideal rocket ranges for cusp science is in Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard, off the coast of Norway and within the Arctic circle. Because of its far northward position, each morning Svalbard passes directly under Earth’s magnetic cusp.
But launching in this extreme, remote environment puts another set of challenges on the mission teams. These launches need to happen during the winter, when Svalbard experiences 24/7 darkness because of Earth’s axial tilt. The launch teams can go months without seeing the Sun.
Like for all rocket launches, the science teams have to wait for the right weather conditions to launch. Because they’re studying upper atmospheric processes, some of these teams also have to wait for other science conditions, like active auroras. Auroras are created when charged particles collide with Earth’s atmosphere — often triggered by solar storms or changes in the solar wind — and they’re related to many of the upper-atmospheric processes that scientists want to study near the magnetic cusp.
But even before launch, the extreme conditions make launching rockets a tricky business — it’s so cold that the rockets must be encased in styrofoam before launch to protect them from the low temperatures and potential precipitation.
When all is finally ready, an alarm sounds throughout the town of Ny-Ålesund to alert residents to the impending launch. And then it’s up, up and away! This photo shows the launch of the twin VISIONS-2 sounding rockets on Dec. 7, 2018 from Ny-Ålesund.
These rockets are designed to break up during flight — so after launch comes clean-up. The launch teams track where debris lands so that they can retrieve the pieces later.
The next launch of the Grand Challenge Initiative is AZURE, launching from Andøya Space Center in Norway in March 2019.
For even more about what it’s like to launch science rockets in extreme conditions, check out one scientist’s notes from the field: https://go.nasa.gov/2QzyjR4
For updates on the Grand Challenge Initiative and other sounding rocket flights, visit nasa.gov/soundingrockets or follow along with NASA Wallops and NASA heliophysics on Twitter and Facebook.
@NASA_Wallops | NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility | @NASASun | NASA Sun Science
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This article was posted on the 10th August 2021.
Heres a link to the crowd funding page for Rukhsana Media.
Der beim türkischen Erstligisten Antalyaspor spielende israelische Fußballer Sagiv Yehezkel (28) ist am Sonntag festgenommen worden, weil er nach einem Torerfolg mit einer Aufschrift auf einer Bandage seine Solidarität mit den von der Terrororganisation Hamas festgehaltenen Geiseln bekundet hatte. Die Staatsanwaltschaft in Antalya habe eine Untersuchung wegen "Aufstachelung zu Hass und Feindseligkeit" gegen Yehezkel eingeleitet, sagte der türkische Justizminister Yilmaz Tunc.
Tunc sprach nach Angaben der Nachrichtenagentur Reuters von einer "hässlichen Geste in Unterstützung des israelischen Massakers in Gaza". Tatsächlich hatte Yehezkel eine weiße Bandage auf dem Handgelenk ins die Kameras gehalten, auf die er handschriftlich "100 Tage, 7.10." geschrieben hatte, ergänzt um einen Davidstern. Er meinte damit offenkundig die Terrorattacke der Hamas am 7. Oktober, seit der 100 Tage vergangen sind. Über 100 Personen, die damals verschleppt worden sind, befinden sich immer noch in der Gewalt der palästinensischen Terroristen. Weltweit wurde der Geiseln mit Demonstrationen und Solidaritätsaktionen gedacht, auch in Wien.
Der israelische Nationalspieler wurde auch von seinem Klub gefeuert. Wie Antalyaspor auf seiner Internetseite mitteilte, wurde der Fußballspieler mittels einer Entscheidung des Klubvorstandes gekündigt, weil er mit seiner Äußerung "gegen die nationalen Werte unseres Landes gehandelt hat". Auf Yehezkels Tor verzichtete der Klub freilich nicht. Der Israeli hatte in der 68. Minute den Ausgleich zum 1:1 im Heimspiel gegen Tranzonspor erzielt und rettete seiner bisherigen Mannschaft einen Punkt.
Das Vorgehen gegen Yehezkel löste große Empörung in Israel aus. "Schämt euch, türkische Regierung", schrieb Ex-Premier Naftali Bennett auf Twitter. Er wies darauf hin, dass nach der "einfachen Geste" Yehezkels in der Türkei "die Hölle los" sei. Der Spieler sei nämlich zunächst vom türkischen Fußballverband verurteilt, dann von seinem Team suspendiert und gefeuert worden. Schließlich habe die türkische Polizei ihn noch festgenommen und verhört. Der Fußballer, der zuvor unter anderem bei Hapoel und Maccabi Tel Aviv gespielt hatte, war erst im Vorjahr in die türkische SüperLig gewechselt.
Israeli soccer player, Sagiv Yekhezkel, who plays for Antalyaspor, a Turkish team, dedicated a goal to the Israeli hostages today.
On his wrist he wrote “100 days ✡️ 7.10”
Following the show of support:
1. He was condemned by the National Football Association.
2. His team first announced that he was suspended and then said he would be fired.
3. Turkish police arrested him and interrogated him. He is accused of “supporting the Israeli massacres in Gaza and inciting the public,” per Turkish media.
Anyway back to the scheduled program: a massive congratulations to all of you who have denied rape by Hamas. You have set the clock back on women’s rights against sexual violence even further than it was before. You’re a bunch of fakes. Here’s a note about rape denial. Perpetrators who are successful in discrediting their victims do so because they have dehumanized their victims, and this dehumanization becomes echoed by a world that sides with the perpetrator. That is what Hamas has achieved. The total dehumanization of its victims. Posters ripped down. Rapes denied.
Trauma specialist Judith Herman writes:
"When the traumatic events are of human design, those who bear witness are caught in the conflict between victim and perpetrator. It is morally impossible to remain neutral in this conflict. The bystander is forced to take sides. It is very tempting to take the side of the perpetrator. All the perpetrator asks is that the bystander do nothing.… The victim, on the contrary, asks the bystander to share the burden of pain."
History shows us that we need movements around women in order to protect our rights and our bodies. What is happening currently with the denial of sexual violence against women in Israel sets all women back. And it does so by design. Women who are victims of the October 7 attacks are far less likely to come forward and testify knowing how the world has taken enormous pleasure in the suffering of Jewish women, and in the sordid details. Efforts to seek justice often require further traumatization, too. Perpetrators of trauma know this.
The more evidence against the perpetrator, the more extreme lengths the perpetrator has to go to deny the truth, and instead to focus on humiliating the victims, for there is great social currency in this. As we have seen even before this war, rape has become a subject of sickening entertainment on apps like TikTok. Hamas know this too. Hamas know that the more Israel issues evidence, the more those who take glee in the rapes will post their depraved responses. Does that mean we should stop releasing evidence? Absolutely not.
The element of joy found in extreme prejudice is a crucial element of both antisemitism and misogyny. When the two are combined, the effect is nuclear. By the way, this is all fairly textbook stuff. What's shocking is that it should be familiar to and recognized by every feminist. And it's not, because the movement protects all women, except Jews. Jews are imperfect victims. Israel is an imperfect victim. Israel doesn’t just roll over and die when she’s attacked. So Israel’s a little hard to get behind.
The world denies the sexual violence by Hamas because it sides with Hamas, and if it were to accept these acts there is no possible way the world could remain a bystander. All arrows point in the direction of Israel as the victim. Hamas is the perpetrator of unspeakable acts.
There is no justification for Hamas's continued existence, or any group of people who support Hamas. Whereas Israel has a right to exist free from such crimes against humanity, and Israel is perfectly within its rights to wage this war. Rape denial is part of the brainwashing. The only way to continue to ignore Israel's victimization is to discredit the individuals targeted by Hamas on October 7 and since. And failing that, mocking and humiliating the victims and/or anyone who speaks out in their defense, or dehumanizing us with libelous claims (racist! TERF! ZIONIST! — OK that one’s true). They can single us out as "Zionists" and warp the definition of Zionism to suit their needs, but it doesn't absolve them. Those who participate in such antisemitic rhetoric are no longer mere bystanders, but active assailants to the perpetrators, ie Hamas.
Steve Tyler looks like Joker.