@flower_tks: người như anh xứng đáng cô đơn mashup không đau nữa rồi🌺

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Sunday 29 March 2026 05:46:38 GMT
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tnkmedoannhat
23h di ngủ. :
"6 tháng 3 năm có khi là không bao giờ VẾT XƯỚC trong em mất bao lâu để phai mờ để lúc ta tình cờ gặp lại nhau Trái tim không nhắc em những lần đau.. "
2026-05-18 10:18:43
9
mihaha004
26th1🙈🎶 :
Bài này hay dã mannn
2026-06-10 14:01:29
1
usergrape_
câm mồm cho tao :
người như anh xứng đáng cô đơn mashup không đau nữa rồi🍇
2026-05-22 12:01:49
0
lna_2508
Nhật Anh :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-04-09 01:19:00
0
ngocminhh19
ngminh :
😳😳😳
2026-07-04 10:38:20
0
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“we trained up the forces which eventually expelled the Palestinians while disarming the Palestinians, crushing their villages and expelling and imprisoning their leaders.” William Dalrymple has written several books, including The Last Mughal and The Anarchy, his history of the East India Company. He co-hosts the Empire podcast with Anita Anand and is currently writing a history of the Palestinians. This clip is taken from the podcast Bold Politics with Zack Polanski in a video titled The British Empire’s Downfall: From India to Palestine In 1922, following the Anglo-Irish Treaty, around 650 Black and Tans arrived in Haifa to form the Palestine Gendarmerie. The force had been recruited from battle-hardened World War I veterans and was known for brutal tactics in Ireland, including burning towns and killing civilians. During the Arab Revolt of 1936 to 1939, British forces suppressed Palestinian resistance with collective fines, village demolitions and brutal interrogation methods. Arthur
“we trained up the forces which eventually expelled the Palestinians while disarming the Palestinians, crushing their villages and expelling and imprisoning their leaders.” William Dalrymple has written several books, including The Last Mughal and The Anarchy, his history of the East India Company. He co-hosts the Empire podcast with Anita Anand and is currently writing a history of the Palestinians. This clip is taken from the podcast Bold Politics with Zack Polanski in a video titled The British Empire’s Downfall: From India to Palestine In 1922, following the Anglo-Irish Treaty, around 650 Black and Tans arrived in Haifa to form the Palestine Gendarmerie. The force had been recruited from battle-hardened World War I veterans and was known for brutal tactics in Ireland, including burning towns and killing civilians. During the Arab Revolt of 1936 to 1939, British forces suppressed Palestinian resistance with collective fines, village demolitions and brutal interrogation methods. Arthur "Bomber" Harris, who later led RAF Bomber Command, suggested in 1936 that a single bomb dropped on each rebellious village would settle the revolt. He commanded the RAF in Palestine from 1938 to 1939, when the tactic was implemented. At the same time, British intelligence officer Orde Wingate, a fervent Christian Zionist, formed the Special Night Squads in 1938 to combat the revolt. He trained Haganah fighters, among them Moshe Dayan and Yigal Allon, in tactics that included collective punishment and, in multiple recorded instances, lining up the men of a village and shooting them in cold blood. Despite this, Wingate was awarded the Distinguished Service Order in 1938 for the unit's actions, and was expelled from Palestine the following year. Dayan and Allon went on to lead the Palmach, the Haganah's strike force formed in 1941, and later commanded in the Israeli army. Israel named its national sports institute after Wingate in 1957. Yemin Orde, a youth village founded in his memory in 1953, was named a Guardian of the Child, Israel's highest honour for work with children, by the Prime Minister's Office in 1996.

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