@8.iir7: ما خلتني ارقد مع المسلمين #fyp #foryoupage #viral #hospital #explore

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Wednesday 17 September 2025 06:24:04 GMT
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ssii0_i
. . 𝒮𝒾 :
ي حياتي😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
2025-09-17 08:06:00
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nt2.5l
nt2.5l :
هههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههههه
2025-09-17 07:34:57
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hamadd518
الحمدالله رب العالمين 🤍 :
ههههههههههه
2025-09-17 07:57:49
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user315098100598
عسيري :
افا ليه
2025-09-17 14:23:33
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000_6k1
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😭😭😭
2025-09-17 06:42:16
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sii3300
ماكو اسم :
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2025-09-17 11:43:50
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😭
2025-09-17 08:25:43
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wdha_44
وضحى الحربي🦋🇸🇦 :
زين انها فلبينيه البلا اذا صارت هنديه 😅
2025-09-17 10:59:02
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This is what it looks like when private resource extraction interests are allowed to operate on your National Wildlife Refuges.  At Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge in Montana, livestock interests are permitted to graze cattle—something most people are shocked to learn given that refuges are set aside solely for wildlife and the public good. Red Rock Lakes is home to trumpeter swans, sandhill cranes, sage grouse, bald eagles, moose, elk, grizzly bears, wolves, and wolverines.The Refuge provides crucial habitat within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, offering the largest wetland complex in the region where mountains, grasslands, sage-steppe, and riparian areas converge, supporting both migratory and resident wildlife.The Refuge also shelters one of only two native Arctic grayling populations left in the lower 48.  This rare, vibrantly colored fish has lost 96% of its range due to impacts from livestock, dams, drought, and climate change. In 2024, only 150 spawning grayling were observed at Red Rock Lakes—a marked collapse from the thousands that once thrived here. Congress gave the Refuge System one mandate: to conserve, manage, and restore fish, wildlife, and plant resources for the benefit of present and future generations. Nothing in that mandate authorizes resource extraction for private profit. Yet multiple ranching operations, including a multi-millionaire’s herd, graze here. Refuge managers haven’t meaningfully monitored grazing impacts in nearly 30 years, and in 2023 they renewed grazing permits despite conservationists’ requests for lawful review. That’s why Western Watersheds Project and @wildearthguardians, represented by @advocateswest, sued Red Rock Lakes NWR and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Our case demands they simply follow the law and assess how livestock grazing impacts a refuge meant for wildlife, not private gain. Stay tuned as this fight unfolds.
This is what it looks like when private resource extraction interests are allowed to operate on your National Wildlife Refuges. At Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge in Montana, livestock interests are permitted to graze cattle—something most people are shocked to learn given that refuges are set aside solely for wildlife and the public good. Red Rock Lakes is home to trumpeter swans, sandhill cranes, sage grouse, bald eagles, moose, elk, grizzly bears, wolves, and wolverines.The Refuge provides crucial habitat within the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, offering the largest wetland complex in the region where mountains, grasslands, sage-steppe, and riparian areas converge, supporting both migratory and resident wildlife.The Refuge also shelters one of only two native Arctic grayling populations left in the lower 48. This rare, vibrantly colored fish has lost 96% of its range due to impacts from livestock, dams, drought, and climate change. In 2024, only 150 spawning grayling were observed at Red Rock Lakes—a marked collapse from the thousands that once thrived here. Congress gave the Refuge System one mandate: to conserve, manage, and restore fish, wildlife, and plant resources for the benefit of present and future generations. Nothing in that mandate authorizes resource extraction for private profit. Yet multiple ranching operations, including a multi-millionaire’s herd, graze here. Refuge managers haven’t meaningfully monitored grazing impacts in nearly 30 years, and in 2023 they renewed grazing permits despite conservationists’ requests for lawful review. That’s why Western Watersheds Project and @wildearthguardians, represented by @advocateswest, sued Red Rock Lakes NWR and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Our case demands they simply follow the law and assess how livestock grazing impacts a refuge meant for wildlife, not private gain. Stay tuned as this fight unfolds.

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