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This one (email shown) reveals a close relationship between Monsanto executives and a former EPA Director Jess Rowland. Plaintiffs say he worked with Monsanto to suppress studies of the product's main ingredient, glyphosate. I doubt EPA and Jess can kill this, a Monsanto executive wrote, but it's good to know they are going to actually make the effort. In another email, a Monsanto executive suggested the company ghostwrite a positive report on and get experts to back it up saying they would just edit and sign their names.”
https://x.com/laralogan/status/2029597825282044004

Lara Logan @laralogan - Is London about to get spicy?
Quote:
Tommy Robinson @TRobinsonNewEra
Video: May 16th, we rise as one, four nations, one Kingdom, under God 
We don't just Unite the Kingdom, but the West. 
Make your plans, the time is now.
Unite The Kingdom 
@GommCarl 
https://x.com/laralogan/status/2029598285741125994

Lara Logan @laralogan - What a brave woman. Terrible.
Quote:
Dolunay @Dolunay1727 
Video: Translated from Arabic
· Most Discussed in Turkey Today 
- (Fatma Nur Çelik) A 30-year-old Turkish woman who works at a center affiliated with the Qur'an Service Foundation in Istanbul, her story was initially unknown to anyone, but what she experienced later made her name echo in the media and on social media platforms.
- The story begins in 2017, when Fatma says she was raped inside her workplace by one of the foundation's most prominent employees, a man named (Ayhan Şengüler), and months after the incident, the man proposed marriage to her.
- When Fatma refused to marry him for the aforementioned reasons, she faced intense family pressure, and with justifications tied to the man's reputation for piety and conservatism, Fatma found herself compelled to accept marriage to him, despite the fear and hatred she harbored inside.
- It wasn't easy for her to recount what happened; every time she tried to tell her family the truth that preceded the marriage, her husband would threaten her, and his threat was shocking—that if she spoke, he would harm their 4-year-old daughter.
- Years passed, but the anxiety Fatma lived with did not subside; then the child herself began recounting painful details about her father's behavior toward her. She said he would hit her on the head, undress in front of her, and touch her private areas; she would cry and feel pain and beg him to leave her alone, but he wouldn't stop.
- At that point, Fatma decided to break the silence and filed an official complaint with the prosecutor's office; the case moved to the courts, and during the investigations, the medical and psychological report confirmed that the child's statements were consistent and coherent, which many considered important evidence in the case.
- But the course of the case took a different turn; after several hearings, the Second Istanbul Peace and Penalty Court refused to detain the defendant pending trial, justifying this by his fixed place of residence and the ongoing divorce case between the parties.
- And in the final hearing, a decision was issued to close the case definitively on the grounds of insufficient evidence, due to the lack of camera recordings or witnesses, in addition to the defendant's denial of all charges, and in the video clip below that spread later, Fatma appeared crying bitterly after the decision was issued:
https://x.com/laralogan/status/2029598773517684798
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