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@darian_parrish
9d8417a350cc5642f038d69a224ec32282bdbbc5ab092e0375f941d981851989

We know where to target

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@DegenDudes
49377003e597c87ceb28e6d78a1946cce53d8b9aa84095ccdece3ef2d80aa997

@Silto_Nascao
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Over 220 journalists have been killed in Gaza, Palestine. I am really without words.

Speak Up. I am not sure who is winning, but it certainly is not the people on planet earth. Put yourself in the situation of the Palestinian people. Free the algorithm. Peace through Peace

Sharif Abdel Kouddous

Hossam Shabat’s Last Article

Filed hours before his killing in an Israeli airstrike, journalist Hossam Shabat describes the resumption of Israel's scorched earth campaign in his hometown of Beit Hanoun.

Drop Site News

Mar 24, 2025

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Hossam Shabat is dead. I am beyond rage and despair as I write these words. The Israeli military bombed his car this morning as he was traveling in Beit Lahia. Videos fill my screen of his body lying on the street, carried to the hospital, grieved by his colleagues and loved ones. These are the kinds of tragic scenes Hossam himself would so often document for the world. He was an exemplary journalist: brave, tireless, and dedicated to telling the story of Palestinians in Gaza.

Hossam was one of a handful of reporters who remained in northern Gaza through Israel’s genocidal war. His ability to cover one of the most brutal military campaigns in recent history was almost beyond comprehension. He bore witness to untold death and suffering on an almost daily basis for seventeen months. He was displaced over twenty times. He was often hungry. He buried many of his journalist colleagues. In November, he was wounded in an Israeli airstrike. I still can’t believe I am referring to him in the past tense. Israel obliterates the present.

When I contacted Hossam in November to ask him to write for Drop Site News, he was enthusiastic. “Greetings habibi. May God keep you. I am very happy to have this opportunity,” he wrote. “There are so many ideas, scenes, stories.”

His first dispatch for Drop Site was a searing account of a vicious mass expulsion campaign by the Israeli military in Beit Lahia that forced thousands of Palestinian families to flee one of the last remaining shelters in the besieged town:

Some of the wounded fell on the road with no hope of getting treatment. "I was walking with my sister in the street,” said Rahaf, 16. She and her sister were the sole survivors in their family of an earlier airstrike that killed 70 people. “Suddenly my sister fell due to the bombing. I saw blood pouring from her, but I couldn't do anything. I left her in the street, and no one pulled her out. I was screaming, but no one heard me."

His writing was lyrical and arresting. I struggled to translate and edit his pieces—to do them justice, to convey his emotive use of Arabic into something relatable in English. In the typical editorial see-saw back and forth of finalizing a piece, I would often return to him with clarifications and questions, asking him for additional details and direct quotes. He was always quick to respond despite his extraordinary circumstances.

In January, Hossam filed a piece about the three days between when the “ceasefire” deal was announced and when it was scheduled to be implemented, a period when Israel escalated its bombing campaign across Gaza:

They targeted the al-Falah school; they bombed an entire residential block in Jabaliya; they killed families, like the Alloush family, whose bodies have not yet been recovered and still lie under and over the rubble. The children I saw that night appeared happy but they were no longer living, their faces frozen in a mix of smiles and blood.

In early December, when writing a preamble to one of his articles, I asked him to confirm his age. “Hahaha. I’m young. 24,” he wrote. Then moments later he clarified: “Actually, I haven’t turned 24 yet. I’m 23.” I told him he was young in age only, but in experience he was old (it sounds better in Arabic). “I'm really tired,” he responded. “I swear I have no strength left. I can't find a place to sleep. I've been displaced 20 times.” He continued: “Did you know that I am the only one in my family who lives alone in the north?” Last month, during the “ceasefire,” he was reunited with his mother for the first time in 492 days.

In October, the Israeli military placed Hossam and five other Palestinian journalists on a hit list. At the time, he said it felt like he was “hunted.” He called on people to speak out using the hashtag #ProtectTheJournalists: “I plead everyone to share the reality about Journalists in order to spread awareness about the real plans of the Israeli occupation to target journalists in order to impose a media blackout. Spread the hashtag and talk about us!”

In December, after the Israeli military killed five journalists in an airstrike on their vehicle, I messaged to check in on him.

“Our job is only to die,” he responded. “I hate the whole world. No one is doing anything. I swear I've come to hate this job.” About his surviving colleagues he wrote, “We've started saying to each other: "Ok, whose turn is it?…Our families consider us already martyred.”

When Israel resumed its scorched earth bombing last week, I messaged again to check in on him. He responded with one word: “Death.”

Throughout it all, Hossam would message with ideas for stories, or just to relay what was happening in the north. In his messages and voice notes, he often somehow still managed to be warm and funny—a kind of rebellion against the death all around him.

After the “ceasefire” went into effect, he returned to his hometown of Beit Hanoun on the northeastern edge of Gaza. Hardly a structure was left standing, but he was determined to stay and document the destruction.

He messaged me late Sunday night, just hours before he was killed. He had been forced to leave his hometown of Beit Hanoun on the day of Israel’s renewed assault last week and was forcibly displaced yet again—this time to Jabaliya. We had agreed on him writing a piece about the attack last week and what he had witnessed.

“Habibi,” he wrote. “I miss you.” I asked him what the situation was like in Jabaliya. “Difficult,” he said.

He sent his piece, and I read through it, sent my follow-up questions. He only answered one before going offline. I messaged him again as soon as I woke up this morning. I didn’t yet know that he had been killed.

What you are about to read is Hossam’s last article. I translated it through tears.

—Sharif Abdel Kouddous

Read Drop Site's statement on Israel’s murder of our colleague Hossam Shabat

Report from the Frontline of Israel’s War of Annihilation

Story by Hossam Shabat

BEIT HANOUN, GAZA—The night was dark and cautiously quiet. Everyone fell into an anxious sleep. But the tranquility was quickly shattered by deafening screams. As the bombs rained down, the wails of neighbors announced the first moments of the resumption of Israel’s military campaign. Beit Hanoun was plunged into panic and terror. Cries of distress rose amid the screech of the shells in a scene that reflected the magnitude of the disaster engulfing the city. This was only the beginning. The massacre of entire families quickly followed. Columns of smoke rose everywhere. The bombing did not cease for a moment, drowning everything in a relentless hail of fire and suffering.

The Israeli attack is continuing. The occupation is practicing its brutality with unprecedented bombardment leaving behind horrific scenes of destruction and bloodshed. According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the number of martyrs over the past six days has topped 700, reflecting the degree of such immense human suffering. OCHA also reports how Gaza is suffering from a severe shortage of medicines and medical aid, exacerbating an already dire situation.

In the first six days of this renewed military operation, northern Gaza witnessed four bloody massacres. The most notable was the Mubarak family massacre, which took place as the family was gathering in mourning to offer their condolences to Dr. Salim Mubarak. In an instant, their collective grieving was turned into a sea of blood and body parts. The entire family was killed: Dr. Salim, his wife, his children, his parents. No one survived. One eyewitness summed it up plainly: “They were all killed.” The victims were not on a battlefield but in a house of mourning. It was a crime in every sense of the word.

This massacre was not the only one—it was followed by successive attacks on other families, including the Abu Nasr family, then the Abu Halim family—bringing to mind the vicious bombardment in the very beginning of the war after October 7. The aggression is ongoing, relentless, targeting innocent civilians indiscriminately, leaving behind only destruction and death.

When I arrived on the scene, I wasn’t ready for the horror before my eyes. The streets were filled with the dead. Under every stone lay a martyr. Dozens were crying for help from underneath the rubble of their homes but there was no one to respond. Screams filled the air while everyone stood helpless. My tears didn’t stop. The scenes were more than any human being could bear. The ambulances were filled with corpses, their bodies and limbs piled on top and intertwined with one another. We could no longer distinguish between children and men, between the injured and the dead.

At Al-Andalus hospital the scene was even more painful. The hospital was filled with martyrs. Mothers bid silent farewells to their children. Medical staff worked in horrific conditions, trying to treat the injured with only the most basic means available. It was an impossible situation with massive numbers of dead and wounded being brought in at a terrifying rate.

Israel’s aggression continues. Massacre after massacre, leaving only the screams of mothers in its wake and the dreams of children that have turned to ash. There is no justification for this. Everything is being crushed: the lives of innocent people, their dignity, and their hopes for a better future.

* Translation by Sharif Abdel Kouddous

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@DegenDudes
d68eed839cd2d867c6ae82b1dd48765947e793d1f7954f2c1e5f7e12e1b4b036

If you edit a repost you did from your feed, you can turn it to a quote repost. 😎

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@DegenDudes
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@WHALEM
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👀 Good morning deso.
I'm hungry.

@WhaleDShark
4b7451dc4bf107889492a097ebd3759a1e5711f4efc9044750fde19765829c92

Wanna hear the voice behind the posts?

I'll be hosting WHALE Hour on the Whale Members Discord later tonight:

discord.gg/whale

For those of you who might be unfamiliar with some of the projects I've founded, Whale Members is the largest community owned NFT collection with a focus on high-end digital art, metaverse real estate and other digital collectibles.

The latest valuation of these assets was conservatively estimated at $43.6 million:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1RqbJ3dF030a7lQzleb5Y88lAOZi7ItMA/view

$WHALE was the OG social token (i've been in the space a while) and has moved on to now representing ownership of the assets in the WHALE Vault.

We'll be going live at 9pm (+8 GMT) so if you're interested, feel free to drop by. Will probably be talking about some DESO and Focus in addition to a quick recap on the project as well as where we are headed ❤️

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@DegenDudes
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Epic launcher loading.....

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@WhaleDShark
b8e3eee002d98d7b8575fe058e36d1f7f5f574265310fd5d42daa82c653c48ca

6 moar hours before Nyan Heroes Playtest 4 goes live for the broader community ❤️

If you enjoy Arena Shooters I'd definitely give this Web3 game a try. Available on Epic Games Launcher.

Not sponsored, I just enjoy the game 🐱

https://nyanheroes.com/

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@paulmp
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I think I'm about done with Bitclout / DeSo / Focus... I keep giving it chances, but honestly unless you are a hard core crypto enthusiast (which I'm not), there is really nothing on offer here... I post regularly on my other social media, so you can find me there.

If you're into actually earning money for good content I suggest you check out HIVE (I use peakd.com as an interface for that), I regularly earn quite good money for my content there... as opposed to barely getting 1c per post here, despite the many promises made. It seems if you don't post content about crypto or deso, then you are ignored.


As much as I would like to see this all succeed, I can't really split my efforts as much as I have been, so I'm dropping a few platforms, this one included. I may lurk from time to time, but after more than 4 years on here, it just doesn't seem to be worth my time or effort.

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@DegenDudes
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Whilst everyone is distracted exponentially with digital this and digital that, the hidden gems of man are being spun in the minds and hands of the true artists.

This drowned out real physical art form is being silenced and lost by oversaturation. These arts will emerge in the future with exponential scarcity value attached.

I am going to start making real physical art because that's what I feel I was meant to do. I like digital and AI, but I also see how everyone else, even mainstream artists, are becoming influenced and distracted by this low value, generated junk. It may be appealing, but it's not and never will be rare.

🎩

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@DegenDudes
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@DegenDudes
6e1ea976beda355d0a5d4a30e01f24037bf39a9028e5543822b2bc75e015be73

I lived offgrid for 3 years using my survival instincts and skills. I brought sustainment for 3 months, and that was more than enough to get to self sustainment. I built shelter, survived winter, make clothes, made tools etc. I had a few cheats and hacks along the way (solar panels, batteries, wind turbine, well drilled on property). But I stayed detached from human civilization the entire time. Honestly in the Pacific Northwest USA, food is the least of your worries 😂

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@clayoglesby
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Found this to be a useful tool for tracking US Recession probabilities.

To view this post, subscribe to $clayoglesby's feed at https://focus.xyz/@clayoglesby

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@clayoglesby
46259c5357f65f4bfcc0ee0a122ae09c04f2ea3551efee1032304a53bcd3bf92

Anyone ever used spot.cash?

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