Opinion

‘I lost both legs’: Palestinians scale separation wall for chance to work

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Olympics   来源:Books  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:She said: "The cross is beautifully decorated on both sides, which suggests it was designed to hang around the neck with the suspension loop on the missing arm.

She said: "The cross is beautifully decorated on both sides, which suggests it was designed to hang around the neck with the suspension loop on the missing arm.

"If you get a balanced audience, it looks like you're increasing the other side's votes just as much as your own," he said.Harris's Facebook page is currently running more than 300 ads targeting voters in Pennsylvania, compared with 22 on Trump's page, many of them pitched to younger audiences and women, a BBC Verify analysis found.

‘I lost both legs’: Palestinians scale separation wall for chance to work

But mass advertising on traditional television - which tends to reach a population of older, more reliable voters - continues to account for the majority of spending for both campaigns.Over the summer, campaign ads focused on issues important to each candidates' base: immigration for Trump and healthcare and abortion for Harris.But in more recent weeks, the economy - an issue of importance to voters in both camps and one in which Trump and Republicans have historically held the advantage - has gained focus, Prof Fowler said.

‘I lost both legs’: Palestinians scale separation wall for chance to work

In Pennsylvania, Trump has attacked Harris over fracking, an advanced oil and gas drilling technique which she previously supported banning. Fracking plays a key role in the state, which is the second biggest producer of natural gas in the US.Harris has spotlighted adverts aimed at traditional Republicans and rural voters, in which former Trump voters and farmers argue that he worked only for the wealthy.

‘I lost both legs’: Palestinians scale separation wall for chance to work

All the ads can make for awkward moments in politically diverse company, said Tim Anzelone, a 36-year-old from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who recently hosted a watch party to celebrate the start of the season for his NFL team, the Steelers.

Worried about political ads spurring arguments among his guests, he strategised ahead of time to mute the television during every commercial break.that it centred on a boy called Abdullah who is the son of Hamas's deputy minister of agriculture. Hamas is proscribed as a terrorist organisation by the UK and others.

It also launched a review into the film, and the BBC's Board met earlier on Thursday to discuss it.In the statement, a BBC spokesperson said both the production company and the BBC had made "unacceptable" flaws and that it "takes full responsibility for these and the impact that these have had on the corporation's reputation".

It added the BBC had not been informed of the teenager's family connection in advance by the film's production company.The spokesperson says: "During the production process, the independent production company was asked in writing a number of times by the BBC about any potential connections he and his family might have with Hamas.

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