@chitchattaci: Chiesa Livorno #chiesa #livorno #jesus #parrocchia #parroco #perte #christiantiktokcomunity

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Region: IT
Tuesday 29 July 2025 12:07:13 GMT
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galaxyaddicted
Galaxy Addicted :
Il primo commento è un genio assoluto
2025-07-29 18:20:32
99
_giuseppe__05
Peppino_05🖤💗 :
la sua risata:🪔🪔🪔🪔
2025-07-29 13:18:35
127
imperiamola
Imperia Mola :
la risata uscita dal cuore è stupenda
2025-07-30 10:50:11
1
dio_valletta
Dio_Valletta :
Il primo commento idolo di sempre
2025-07-31 13:57:27
1
18_dome
💫𝗕𝗢𝗝𝗔𝗡 𝗝𝗥💫 :
Che bel video!Ora lo guardo
2025-07-29 17:46:29
1
rogerscorvino
Rogers Corvino :
all'inizio pensavo fosse un concerto di fedez
2025-07-29 19:19:45
4
marracash_fan
gineee :
mi piacete mi iscrivo
2025-07-29 23:25:33
0
valentinabenedettarivolt
Valentina Benedetta :
gli invidiosi diranno AI
2025-07-29 15:58:29
6
lowroots
Mario Lorusso :
ho le lacrime 🤣🤣🤣
2025-07-29 17:54:02
6
anto.ven.77
Antonello :
acqua benedetta
2025-07-29 15:01:58
2
lucio.colagiacomo
Lucio Colagiacomo :
già la risata iniziale 😇😇😇
2025-07-29 15:09:07
5
__salvatore_gerem
S.G 🖤 :
Il primo giuro merita l’oscar 😂💯
2025-07-30 20:35:50
1
marcelloseceleanu
marcelloseceleanu :
quella camminata!!!! sembro io uscito da ortopedia
2025-07-29 13:23:56
15
aracat6
aracat6 :
ma le difficoltà vogliono impedirti di uscire 😳😳😳😳😳
2025-07-29 13:02:39
4
ra_s_al_ghul
Ra's al Ghul :
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
2025-07-31 17:44:41
0
appleuser59994468
appleuser59994468 :
😂😂😂
2025-07-31 14:28:49
0
appleuser59994468
appleuser59994468 :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-07-31 14:28:47
0
tizianacardone759
tizianacardone759 :
😂😂😂😂
2025-07-30 21:48:40
0
donatella00007
Donatella :
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
2025-07-30 20:46:07
0
ralf.o.russ
RALF O RUSS :
😂😂😂
2025-07-30 18:37:35
0
morissimaa82
La Lupa NERA 🐺🐺🖤🖤 :
🤣🤣🤣
2025-07-30 12:19:42
0
nessuno19270
….. :
😂😂😂
2025-07-30 11:57:56
0
albertolastrada
La strada per il caffè :
😂😂😂
2025-07-30 09:41:53
0
fraangelini_
fra🎱 :
🖤🖤🖤
2025-07-30 08:54:29
0
carloabate6
carloabate6 :
😂😂😂😂
2025-07-30 06:54:52
0
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Other Videos

Since its founding in 1979, the Islamic Republic has been known for kidnapping and killing its critics at home. But the regime has also become notorious for chasing down its dissidents abroad, from the US to France to the Netherlands. Iran is keenly aware at all times that a single person can spark a revolution — after all, the charismatic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was once an exile in France, before leading the modern state of Iran as we now know it. For formal naval officer Mohammad Rezaie, like many Iranian dissidents fleeing their country, the first step was crossing the border into Turkey. But staying in Turkey is dangerous — the Iranian regime has reach and connections in that country that it does not elsewhere. Nevertheless, Turkey still functions as an opposition haven, hosting the largest number of migrants — about 3.2 million, including thousands of asylum-seekers waiting for resettlement to a third country. Timur Soykan, a Turkish investigative journalist who authored a book about a drug lord conspiring with Iran to kidnap and kill targets on Turkish soil, says the Islamic Republic recruits local criminals with connections inside the Turkish government. “If you have a connection within the government … you can get into the guarded security systems. From there, you can find out where the person’s phone signal is coming from and use the plate number recognition system — what [freeway] exits they used, where they came from, where they’re going, if they’ve left the country.” There’s also a facial recognition system that finds people, Soykan says. With a photo of an escaped dissident, the regime’s hired help can retrieve an address and go directly to the dissident’s home. The Iranian regime can appropriate all of the Turkish police’s technological resources to capture its opponents. The surveillance dragnet deployed by Iran and the viciousness of its tactics are well documented through a long history of kidnappings, renditions, and assassinations. You can read more from Fariba Nawa in The Verge's collaboration with The World at the link in our bio. Illustrations by Jovana Mugosa Design by Cath Virginia
Since its founding in 1979, the Islamic Republic has been known for kidnapping and killing its critics at home. But the regime has also become notorious for chasing down its dissidents abroad, from the US to France to the Netherlands. Iran is keenly aware at all times that a single person can spark a revolution — after all, the charismatic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was once an exile in France, before leading the modern state of Iran as we now know it. For formal naval officer Mohammad Rezaie, like many Iranian dissidents fleeing their country, the first step was crossing the border into Turkey. But staying in Turkey is dangerous — the Iranian regime has reach and connections in that country that it does not elsewhere. Nevertheless, Turkey still functions as an opposition haven, hosting the largest number of migrants — about 3.2 million, including thousands of asylum-seekers waiting for resettlement to a third country. Timur Soykan, a Turkish investigative journalist who authored a book about a drug lord conspiring with Iran to kidnap and kill targets on Turkish soil, says the Islamic Republic recruits local criminals with connections inside the Turkish government. “If you have a connection within the government … you can get into the guarded security systems. From there, you can find out where the person’s phone signal is coming from and use the plate number recognition system — what [freeway] exits they used, where they came from, where they’re going, if they’ve left the country.” There’s also a facial recognition system that finds people, Soykan says. With a photo of an escaped dissident, the regime’s hired help can retrieve an address and go directly to the dissident’s home. The Iranian regime can appropriate all of the Turkish police’s technological resources to capture its opponents. The surveillance dragnet deployed by Iran and the viciousness of its tactics are well documented through a long history of kidnappings, renditions, and assassinations. You can read more from Fariba Nawa in The Verge's collaboration with The World at the link in our bio. Illustrations by Jovana Mugosa Design by Cath Virginia

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