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5 hours ago, YorkshireBlue said:

idn’t make it right then either, but looking at history and using that as an excuse for modern day behaviour is a non argument, we don’t stone people in the street any more, burn girls alive to test if they are witch’s etc 

 

2 hours ago, robsblubot said:

Yes, but I think the point here is that what worked back then may not necessarily work now.

Thing is the article was a comedy satire, not meant to be taken seriously. Yorkshire, you copied and pasted half a sentence just to make a point about immigrants, when the article was a piss take about him saying God has given him a right to do what he wants 🤣

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2 hours ago, Fulham Broadway said:

 

Thing is the article was a comedy satire, not meant to be taken seriously. Yorkshire, you copied and pasted half a sentence just to make a point about immigrants, when the article was a piss take about him saying God has given him a right to do what he wants 🤣

I knew it was a joke bud, but that particular point is constantly talked about 

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Trump and Infantino: Two presidents and a sporting political bromance that isn’t slowing down

https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/6085431/2025/01/24/trump-infantino-fifa-world-cup/

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President Donald Trump has long had a tendency to namecheck high-profile figures in concise terms of affection or derision. It is clear how much he likes allies such as UFC president Dana White and Tesla chief executive Elon Musk, and how much he dislikes others — his White House successor/predecessor Joe Biden and California’s governor Gavin Newsom included.

Add soccer’s most powerful statesman to the bromance list.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has been singled out repeatedly by Trump as he has retaken office, with a new eagerness to celebrate the 2026 men’s World Cup coming to North America. He attended Trump’s inauguration on Monday and has this week posted nine times about the new U.S. president on Instagram, even wearing a red tie to Sunday’s pre-inauguration rally.

Infantino’s support crystallized in early 2020, when Trump, in the final year of his first term as president, was faced with the United States Senate laying its ground rules for his initial impeachment trial.

Back then, while introducing him to a dinner of CEOs in the Swiss ski resort Davos, Infantino lauded Trump as a “sportsman” and a “competitor.”

This week, Infantino was rewarded for his unstinting loyalty. Inauguration invites are largely for family members, administration officials, Supreme Court Justices, other world leaders and the inbound president’s most trusted associates.

Representing sports, Infantino was joined by staunch Trump supporters including White and Miriam Adelson, owner of the Dallas Mavericks basketball team and the incoming president’s third-largest campaign donor. In a statement, FIFA said neither “FIFA nor the FIFA President contributed to the Inauguration Committee.”

As for that 2026 World Cup, Trump has taken a cheerleading role, touting it as an example of significant events coming to the United States in the next few years. But it is potentially awkward.

As soccer’s worldwide governing body, FIFA represents 211 national associations. The U.S. will co-host the tournament with Mexico and Canada, both neighbouring countries Trump has threatened with hefty import tariffs.

During the inauguration, Infantino was filmed laughing animatedly as Trump stated that the Gulf of Mexico would be renamed the Gulf of America.


With Trump and Infantino, it may be a special relationship — or, as FIFA pointed out Thursday, consistent with the FIFA head regularly accepting invitations from world leaders. 

FIFA staged its men’s World Cup in Russia in 2018, despite Vladimir Putin’s first incursions into Ukraine four years earlier. Then in 2019, Putin awarded Infantino the Order of Friendship for his “enormous contribution” to that tournament.

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Infantino receives the ‘Order of Friendship’ from Putin in May 2019 (Evgenia Novozhenina/AFP via Getty Images)

Ahead of the 2022 edition in Qatar, Infantino wrote to the 32 competing federations and implored them to “focus on the football” and avoid political and social disputes such as labour conditions for migrant workers and the rights of women and the LGBTQ+ community. He also made multiple visits to 2034 World Cup host Saudi Arabia as the Gulf country became the sole option for that edition.

But even for a sports leader reliant on political diplomacy, Infantino’s bond with Trump appears unusually close.

In some respects, Trump’s level of engagement may be a positive for FIFA. Infantino visited Washington last May but was not granted photo opportunities or meetings with Biden or Vice-President Kamala Harris. He did, however, meet the homeland security secretary to discuss visas.

FIFA had been struggling to make progress with Biden’s administration on the speed of visa processing, raising concerns that visitors from some of the 2026 World Cup’s 48 competing nations may be unable to attend.

As of Thursday evening, wait times for a visitor visa appointment at a U.S. embassy in Bogota, Colombia, were 700 days. With the World Cup 500 days away next week, some supporters would already be too late. Other concerning wait times include Casablanca (Morocco, 332 days) and Ankara (Turkey, 560 days).

As Trump pursues deportation policies, it remains to be seen how willing his administration is going to be to swing open the doors for the six weeks of the tournament, particularly if that means facilitating thousands of Central and South American visitors.

Contrasted with Russia, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, FIFA may have hoped a World Cup held across the U.S., Canada and Mexico would have fewer public relations headaches, with the added boon of $14billion (£11.3bn) in projected revenues.

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Infantino and Trump in the White House’s Oval Office in 2018 (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

However, the shared nature of 2026 presents challenges, and Trump’s policies could test FIFA’s ability to manage relationships.

FIFA has a four-year agreement with the World Health Organisation (WHO) “to promote healthy lifestyles and equal access to health services worldwide”. Trump has this week withdrawn his country from the WHO.

In his first week back in office, Trump described Mexican cartels as foreign terror organizations and replied “could happen” when asked if he would send U.S. special-forces troops to Mexico to target them. He has also warned his administration will impose 25 per cent tariffs on Mexico and Canada, starting February 1.

Addressing the World Economic Forum on Thursday, Trump told Canada it could avoid tariffs by becoming a U.S. state.

And that’s all before we get onto the president of Panama, a contender to compete at next year’s  World Cup, being asked this week if he worries about the possibility of the U.S. invading his country, or possible tensions with Denmark over Greenland’s future.


The closeness between the Trump family and Infantino originated in Trump’s first term, when the so-called ‘United bid’ defeated Morocco for 2026 World Cup hosting rights. During and after that process, Infantino visited the White House three times, golfed with Trump in New Jersey and lunched with him at the 2020 World Economic Forum.

There was a need for personal involvement by Trump, most notably in providing federal guarantees essential to the hosting requirements of a showpiece global event: FIFA requires visa access for competing players, staff from federations and fans who may wish to visit.

Trump’s presidential guarantees — albeit not binding — were an important signal of intent during a presidency in which he’d signed an executive order banning foreign nationals from several predominantly Muslim countries from entering the United States for 90 days. FIFA also required assurances regarding certain tax exemptions.

The touchpoint for all of this became Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. When Trump left office, Kushner remained a go-to contact for Infantino, organizing a lunch of New York City business and political leaders to help swing the World Cup final to MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, a few miles from Manhattan.

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Infantino visited Trump at the White House in 2019 (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

In Davos, as Trump dismissed the 2020 charges against him (abuse of power and obstruction of Congress) as a “total hoax” — he was acquitted weeks later — he was introduced for his own speech by Infantino.

“President Trump is definitely a sportsman,” Infantino gushed. “I am lucky enough in my life to come across some of the most talented athletes in soccer. And President Trump is made of the same sort of fibre. He is a competitor. He wants to compete, he wants to win. He wants to show who is the best.”

Now, Infantino’s ongoing support appears to have put him in a prized position within Trump’s circle of trust.

It wasn’t just an inauguration ticket. Infantino had almost a week of cosying up to the incoming administration. He visited Trump at the latter’s Florida home Mar-a-Lago last Friday, revealing on Instagram that the meeting centred on the World Cup, plus this summer’s U.S.-hosted Club World Cup.

On the day Infantino donned his red tie and attended Trump’s rally, the Swiss soccer executive got publicly name-checked (although Trump initially appeared to mix him up with the president of the International Olympic Committee). After Trump’s mention, Infantino posted a video thanking him.

In a FIFA press release, Infantino said: “I would like to thank President Trump, with whom I have a great friendship, and to assure him that, together, we will make not only America great again, but also the entire world, of course, because football — or soccer — unites the world.”

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Trump gave a recorded video address at the Club World Cup draw in December (Giorgio Viera/AFP via Getty Images)

It is just the latest episode of recent bonhomie.

At December’s draw for the group phase of the Club World Cup draw, Trump delivered a recorded video address, described Infantino as a “winner” and claimed he (Trump) was “very responsible” in bringing the World Cup to North America. Trump’s daughter Ivanka, Kushner and grandson Theodore all attended the event in Miami, with the latter even making the draw’s ceremonial first pick.

While Trump trumpets the World Cup, one obscured aspect is how, as previously revealed by The Athletic, those behind the 2026 bid actively downplayed concerns about his rhetoric.

Where once they attempted to persuade voters he did not reflect the bid, or he did not mean exactly what he said, or to reassure them it was unlikely he would be president in 2026, now he feels very much front and centre.


Infantino will surely hope the closeness, and Trump’s positive attention, lasts through the tournament.

As the president’s second term began, Infantino was once again mentioned by Trump at Davos.

On Thursday, he said: “Here in America, we have big events coming up. Next year we have the 250th anniversary of America’s founding. We also have the World Cup, and I understand Gianni — Gianni is in the room — Infantino. He was very instrumental in helping us get it — he’s there with you someplace, I think — and I want to thank him for that.”

And by that night, Infantino was back on Instagram, saying “Thank you, Mr. President” and, repeating once again, that #footballunitestheworld — as soccer’s political bromance continued at full speed.

Edited by Vesper
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Denmark “In Crisis Mode” After Terrible Trump Phone Call on Greenland

Donald Trump has fully freaked out the Danes after a phone call with the country’s prime minister.

https://newrepublic.com/post/190698/denmark-crisis-trump-phone-call-greenland-prime-minister-fredericksen

1fa1724f9c9124057875f53fe9fd1c0b8f8ae01d

Danish Prime Minister Mette Fredericksen

Trump reportedly doubled down on his threat to seize Greenland in a phone call with Denmark’s prime minister, sending the country’s government into a panic.

Trump spoke to Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen on the phone for about 45 minutes last week. While neither leader has commented specifically on the call, officials close to the situation said it went poorly, as reported by The Financial Times. They stated that Trump was “aggressive and confrontational” on the call.

“It was horrendous,” one official said. “He was very firm,” another added. “It was a cold shower. Before, it was hard to take it seriously. But I do think it is serious, and potentially very dangerous.”

“The intent was very clear. They want it. The Danes are now in crisis mode,” another official told the publication. “The Danes are utterly freaked out by this.”

“It was a very tough conversation. He threatened specific measures against Denmark such as targeted tariffs,” said a former Danish official.

Trump has threatened to buy Greenland since his election victory, along with vows to take back the Panama Canal and make Canada the 51st state. And while many took his comments in jest, the recent phone call shows that he is seriously interested in seizing Greenland, perhaps due to its unique geopolitical position, its significant U.S. air base, or its potential real estate development.

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Jan. 24, 2025
An illustration of a black-and-white side profile picture of President Trump. A red illustration of a wailing dog with his mouth opened covers part of Trump’s profile.
Credit...Illustration by Sam Whitney/The New York Times

By Brendan Ballou

Mr. Ballou is a former federal prosecutor.

On Jan. 6, 2021, Jalise and Mark Middleton, a married couple from Texas, trespassed onto the Capitol grounds and joined thousands of rioters gathered at the building’s West Front.

The assembled mob was assaulting a thin line of officers, and pepper spray wafted through the air. Rather than retreating in the face of violence, the couple pushed up against the makeshift barrier the police had established, hit officers and tried to drag one into the crowd. They gave up only after they were pepper-sprayed themselves, and though they did not make it into the Capitol, they were proud of what they did: Afterward, Ms. Middleton wrote on Facebook, “We fought the cops to get in the Capitol and got pepper-sprayed and beat but by gosh the patriots got in!”

I know this because I was one of the scores of lawyers who prosecuted the rioters, and was part of the team that tried the Middletons specifically. (On Thursday, I left the Justice Department, and speak only for myself.) One moment from their trial has stuck with me. Sitting in the courtroom in the awkward minutes before their verdict was announced, I noticed that Mr. Middleton was wearing “TRUMP” socks, with the president’s face stitched into the side. That small sign of fealty struck me as incredibly sad. The Middletons were ready to go to prison for a man who, quite likely, didn’t care about them at all.

The Middletons were convicted on all counts, including charges of assaulting federal officers. But on Monday, Mr. Trump pardoned them and nearly 1,600 other people who attacked the Capitol in his name. I think he did so not out of sympathy for the rioters, but because their freedom serves his interests.

 

For while some convicted rioters seem genuinely remorseful, and others appear simply ready to put politics behind them, many others are emboldened by the termination of what they see as unjust prosecutions. Freed by the president, they have never been more dangerous.

Sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter  Get expert analysis of the news and a guide to the big ideas shaping the world every weekday morning. 

Take Stewart Rhodes, whose Oath Keepers group staged firearms and ammunition near Washington on Jan. 6 in anticipation of a “bloody and desperate fight.” Or Enrique Tarrio, whose Proud Boys led rioters into the Capitol and who had declared just after the 2020 election that while he and his followers would not start a civil war, they would be sure to “finish one.”

They are now free to pursue revenge, and have already said they want it. Upon his release this week, Mr. Tarrio declaredthat “success is going to be retribution.” He added, “Now it’s our turn.”

The effect — and I believe purpose — of these pardons is to encourage vigilantes and militias loyal to the president, but unaccountable to the government. Illiberal democracies and outright dictatorships often rely on such militia groups, whose organization and seriousness can range widely, from the vigilantes who enforce Iran’s hijab dress code to the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia that have killed government opponents.

Here in America, lynch mobs and the Ku Klux Klan bolstered a racial caste system with violence that state governments, for the most part, were unwilling to commit themselves. But for decades, we had little reason to fear that vigilantes or militias would enforce the will of the state.

That may be changing. Rioters who assaulted police officers at the Capitol have called for politicians who oppose Mr. Trump to be hanged, declared that “there will be blood,” and that “I plan on making other people die first, for their country, if it gets down to that.” But it’s not just their readiness for violence. One officer, who’d worked lots of riots, explained to me how Jan. 6 felt different: Most rioters know at some level what they’re doing is wrong, he said, but these guys thought they were right. Monday’s pardons will reinforce these rioters’ beliefs in their cause, and their loyalty to the man who leads it.

Mr. Trump seems excited about this possibility. When asked Tuesday if groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers had a place in the political conversation, he said, “We’ll have to see,” adding that “these were people that actually love our country.”

There is great value to him in having members of these groups released, doubly loyal to him, and eager to carry out his agenda and silence his critics through violence. Mr. Trump has shown his willingness to use his pardon power, and little stops him from doing so again.

What might happen next? Vigilantes could harass, assault or even kill perceived enemies of the state. Under the thin pretext that these vigilantes were acting in self-defense, the president could pardon them for federal crimes, or pressure pliant governors to do the same for state ones. In such a scenario, the president could put those loyal to him above the law, quite literally. This kind of violence was a part of our past; it may be a part of our future.

This is a frightening possibility, but it is not an inevitable one. Groups like the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown Law are already working with state officials on legislation to shut down paramilitary activity that, among other things, interferes with government proceedings or people’s constitutional rights. Local law enforcement can and should prioritize protecting the groups that unlawful private militias may target first, such as immigrants, trans people and opposition politicians.

 

These efforts are particularly urgent now, because of how many of our elected officials have changed their calculus about the attack. Elise Stefanik, a Republican in the House, once said that the rioters should “be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.” Three years later, she was calling them “hostages,” and she is now the president’s pick for ambassador to the United Nations.

Shortly after the attack, Kelly Loeffler, then a Republican senator from Georgia, said that “the violence, the lawlessness and siege of the halls of Congress are abhorrent.” Yet in the years that followed, she repeatedly called the House investigation into the attack a “sham,” and said that any indictment based on its work “should be dismissed out of hand.” She, too, is now nominated to serve in the president’s cabinet. Even Mr. Trump once called Jan. 6 a “heinous attack,” and said “to those who broke the law, you will pay.” His position, quite obviously, has changed.

Though Congress is required by law to establish a plaque honoring police officers who defended the Capitol, congressional leaders have failed to do so. It seems astounding that they would deny recognition to those people who saved their lives. But some officials’ ambitions require doing exactly that.

The president’s pardons are part of this collective attempt at forgetting. Illiberalism depends on hiding the crimes of its past, whether it is Jair Bolsonaro, when he was president of Brazil, celebrating the 1964 military coup in his country, or Vladimir Putin’s government repudiating the acquittals of the Soviet Union’s political enemies.

The past matters a great deal to the enemies of democracy, and we should not cede it. Victims of Jan. 6 should sue Congress to have their memorial installed. And academics should save the hundreds of criminal complaints on the federal docket that explain in irrefutable detail what each defendant did that day.

 

The rest of us, too, must keep the horrors of Jan. 6 from being forgotten. Memorialize the day. Read about the attack, and watch the videos. Keep it alive in your conversations. Doing so matters. For in a time when many politicians’ careers depend on forgetting, memory itself is an act of resistance.

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NY-PREPPER who was born in NY and who lives in NEW JERSEY. JUST PUT OUT A  VIDEO OVER 1 HOUR AGO ABOUT NEW YORK NUCLEAR TRAINING EXERCISE from 26 to 31 of January 2025.

Over 2 years ago New York released a PSA NUCLEAR ATTACK VIDEO.

EMERGENCY ALERT!! LARGE NUCLEAR INCIDENT EXERCISE IN NEW YORK!! TRUMP TO SEND TROOPS INTO MEXICO!!

 

 

Edited by KEVINAA
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Trump orders all overseas aid to cease. 

“It’s manufactured chaos,” said an official with the US Agency for International Development (USAid), speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Organizations will have to stop all activities, so all lifesaving health services, HIV/Aids, nutrition, maternal and child health, all agriculture work, all support of civil society organizations, education,” said the official.

“Freezing these international investments will lead our international partners to seek other funding partners – likely US competitors and adversaries – to fill this hole and displace the United States’ influence the longer this unlawful impoundment continues,” 

Israel will still get its $3.3bn from US taxpayers every year though. for foreign military financing

AP Press

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Gonna be a mad 4 years....

Brazil has reacted with outrage after 88 of its nationals arrived in their homeland handcuffed following their deportation from the United States. Brazil blasted Washington over its “degrading treatment” of the passengers and its “flagrant disregard” for their rights, demanding an explanation. Colombia, meanwhile, said it will not allow US deportation flights to land in the country.

AP Press

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19 hours ago, Fulham Broadway said:

Gonna be a mad 4 years....

Brazil has reacted with outrage after 88 of its nationals arrived in their homeland handcuffed following their deportation from the United States. Brazil blasted Washington over its “degrading treatment” of the passengers and its “flagrant disregard” for their rights, demanding an explanation. Colombia, meanwhile, said it will not allow US deportation flights to land in the country.

AP Press

Colombia now getting hit hard by USA with tariffs and other stuff. 

I think Petro will not last longer. 

People there don't like petro and they see USA as it's ally. Since so many people depend of the USA-Colombia connection. 

Edited by Fernando
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39 minutes ago, Fernando said:

Colombia now getting hit hard by USA with tariffs and other stuff. 

I think Petro will not last longer. 

People there don't like petro and they see USA as it's ally. Since so many people depend of the USA-Colombia connection. 

Think it is only 'some people'  many still see the US as a big bully especially since they released papers from the 90s -and blame the US for it being a violent country.

According to author Robin Kirk, most Americans in 2003 remained naïve about the role of the United States in Colombia's historical development and the nation's continuing violence. 

''US military assistance may have actually worsened domestic violence in Columbia by introducing a higher level of paramilitary attacks as well as decreasing anti-narcotic operations. Also, empirical evidence suggests that US aid does not help reduce violence related to the production of drug crops such as coca.

Anyway, Trumps threats of tariffs seems to have a result -I just heard that Colombia will allow flights to land now. 

 

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Russia Funds Trump

Trump's businesses went bankrupt so many times in the 1990s that many legitimate banks wouldn’t lend to him anymore. He turned to Russian oligarchs -- Putin’s ruling clique -- to bankroll his projects, and launder their dirty money for them. This was, and continues to be, a huge part of his business. He’s a Russian money launderer.

"We don’t rely on American banks. We have all the funding we need out of Russia."
Donald Trump  2014

This isn’t speculation or hyperbole. There's mountains of evidence. Trump’s former election campaign Chairman, Paul Manafort, has deep ties to Russian oligarchs, and is currently in jail awaiting trial on, among other charges, money laundering!

Here are 5 more top facts everyone should know about Trump's long collusion with Russian organised criminals -- 


1

Trump’s main financial backer for the Trump Tower Toronto was a Russian-Canadian billionaire who got the money by selling a massive steel mill in Ukraine for nearly a billion dollars. $100 million of that money was paid to a Kremlin-backed fixer, likely as a bribe to VERY high Russian officials. The Chairman of the Bank who financed the deal? Vladimir Putin.


2

Trump bought his home in Palm Beach, Florida for $41 million. A few years later, with no real increase in the value -- he sold it for $95 million -- the most expensive home in America at the time! Why? A major Russian oligarch bought it -- we don’t know yet why he effectively ‘gave’ Trump $54 million. But it’s classic money laundering practice.


3

Trump's real estate deals were often fuelled by Russian money, typically passed through shady shell companies. 77% of Trump Soho apartments were bought with cash by such mysterious companies. At least 13 people with links to Russian oligarchs or mobsters lived in Trump properties, including one of Russia's top mobsters. One even ran a high-stakes illegal gambling ring in the apartment right below Trump's!

"Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a lot of our assets"
Donald Trump JR, 2008


4

Trump’s financial broker and “Senior Advisor” was a Russian convicted felon named Felix Sater, widely known as a mafia figure who once stabbed someone in the face with a broken margarita glass, requiring over 100 stitches. Sater helped set up shell companies, and arranged funding for Trump’s projects, including plans for Trump Tower Moscow. He’s also part of Putin’s inner circle. Here’s one email he wrote to Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen in November, 2015:

"Michael I arranged for Ivanka to sit in Putins private chair at his desk and office in the Kremlin. I will get Putin on this program and we will get Donald elected. We both know no one else knows how to pull this off without stupidity or greed getting in the way. I know how to play it and we will get this done. Buddy our boy can become President of the USA and we can engineer it. I will get all of Putins team to buy in on this, I will."

New York Times, August 27, 2017


5

Trump’s other main business is casinos -- which are classic money laundering vehicles. One of his casinos was 100 times found in violation of federal rules protecting against money laundering, and paid the largest fine ever levied against a casino for having “willfully violated” anti-money laundering rules. Trump has a legal obligation to do “due diligence” for all his businesses to prevent laundering. His senior executive’s comment on this was “Donald doesn’t do diligence”.

 

 

Avaaz is a 47-million-person global campaign network that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people shape global decision-making. ("Avaaz" means "voice" or "song" in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 18 countries on 6 continents and operates in 17 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz's biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

 

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