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McDonald’s faces boycott over DEI rollback: Who’s protesting and when

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Mobility   来源:Numbers  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:“Yes, no doubt about that at all,” Musk said in response to a question on whether he planned to stick around as Tesla CEO.

“Yes, no doubt about that at all,” Musk said in response to a question on whether he planned to stick around as Tesla CEO.

– a result of a mixture of pro-peace sentiment and more prevalent anger at the government’s handling of the war – posing a risk to Israel’s war effort, which is reliant upon the active participation of the country’s youth.The war’s critics say that the man they oppose, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, has become reliant upon the extreme right to maintain his coalition, and an opposition too cowardly to confront him in the face of mounting international accusations of genocide.

McDonald’s faces boycott over DEI rollback: Who’s protesting and when

It is important not to confuse the growing domestic criticism of the Israeli government’s handling of the war with any mass sympathy for the Palestinian people.reported that 82 percent of Jewish Israeli respondents would still like to see Gaza cleared of its Palestinian population, with almost 50 percent also backing what they said was the “mass killing” of civilians in enemy cities occupied by the Israeli army.And on Monday, thousands of Israelis led by the country’s far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir,

McDonald’s faces boycott over DEI rollback: Who’s protesting and when

rampaged through occupied East Jerusalem’s Old City, chanting “death to Arabs” and attacking anyone perceived to be either Palestinian or defending them.

McDonald’s faces boycott over DEI rollback: Who’s protesting and when

Also addressing the crowd at the “Jerusalem Day” march was the country’s ultranationalist finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, who has been vocal in his push for the annexation of the occupied West Bank, and the displacement of Palestinians from Gaza.

Smotrich asked the crowd: “Are we afraid of victory?”; “Are we afraid of the word ‘occupation?’” The crowd – described as “revellers” within parts of Israeli media – responded with a resounding “no”.The renewed violence has raised fears of igniting a

, akin to the wars that the DRC endured in the late 1990s, involving several African countries, which killed millions of people.The current fighting has already displaced about 700,000 people this year, according to the UN.

On Tuesday, Amnesty International accused M23 of committing abuses against civilians in areas under its control, “including torture, killings and enforced disappearances”.“These acts violate international humanitarian law and may amount to war crimes,” the

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