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#Crown Heights brooklyn
quickienewyork · 2 years
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nansheonearth · 3 months
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Man attempts to attend a women's boxing class. Gets denied. Now he wants the business shut down. Please remember this when they say "why don't you just make your own xyz?" Men are parasites.
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Feels intimidated by other men, but he's ok with women feeling intimidated by him being there.
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Doesn't mention the fact that he's a man until the end of the conversation. All men do is lie.
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If you can get to the crown heights area, especially if you have Class Pass, please check out Boxe Studios. Like all female only spaces, they need you to support and utilize the space.
Leave a positive google review for them creating a genuine safe space.
If you're not in the area you can follow them on ig
Please reblog to help them out.
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wanderingnewyork · 2 months
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continuants · 1 year
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blessed by the internet gods in crown heights
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daemonicdasein · 4 months
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2023: Did You Know That There's a Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd
2024: Did you know that there is a secret tunnel under the World Headquarters of the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement at 770 Eastern Parkway, Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York City, New York?
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federer7 · 24 days
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Crown Heights Riot. Brooklyn, New York. 1991
Photo: Eli Reed
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filmap · 1 year
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Good Time Benny Safdie, Josh Safdie. 2017
Connie’s apartment Tivoli Towers, 49-57 Crown St, Brooklyn, NY 11225, USA See in map
See in imdb
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deadassdiaspore · 1 year
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Crown Heights, Brooklyn (1973). Skaters enjoy themselves at the Empire Roller Rink on Empire Blvd & Bedford Ave. Photographed by Peter Simins.
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newyorkthegoldenage · 2 years
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Two students and a superintendent at the Brooklyn Training School & Home for Young Girls (also known as the Protestant Problem Girls School), 1483 Pacific Street, 1923.
Despite the alternate name, the school was anything but a Dickensian horror house. It admitted girls between the ages of 14 and 21 who would otherwise be out on the street or in dire straits, and gave them a general education and training for work as maids or housekeepers (anything else required advanced education). There were many such schools for boys, but this one, opened in 1889, was the first one for girls. Admission was originally voluntary, but soon courts began sending girls there who got into trouble with the law. It closed in 1949.
Photo: Byron Co. via MCNY
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unity-is-strength · 8 months
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feral-possum-posting · 6 months
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Oops I have a temporary new house mate.
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Poor guy (only guessing it's a guy) was outside in the cold on my way home, but just so friendly. Idk I guess if you're near Bed-Stuy Brooklyn tell me if you lost a cat. We'll probably have to get him off to a foster if we can't get in contact with the owner.
Bonus here's my confused lady trying to wrap smol brain around these events.
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quickienewyork · 1 year
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A walk down Nostrand Ave in Crown Heights, Brooklyn.
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zayo-zayo · 7 months
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JUST DROPPED 🏁🔥
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wanderingnewyork · 5 months
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Houses in #Crown_Heights, #Brooklyn.
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eretzyisrael · 1 year
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A series of pop-up culinary events taking place over the course of three days in New York has chefs from Israel collaborating with local chefs and restaurateurs as a way to introduce foodies to Tel Aviv-inspired cuisine and Israeli products.
Tel Aviv Groove kicked off Sunday night at the kosher restaurant called MEAT in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, where the restaurant’s chef Roger Mifsud hosted chef Jonathan Sharvit. Together they created an exclusive menu for diners that featured Sharvit’s style of cooking while also highlighting wines, whiskey and award-winning olive oils, all made in Israel. Dishes included beef tartare, amberjack bruschetta, lamb ragout, dry aged tagliata and a chocolate creme dessert that featured whiskey from Israel.
Sharvit was a finalist on the cooking reality show Chef Games. He has worked for a number of establishments in Israel and around the world, including in Italy and Australia, and runs an upscale catering service.
Also on Sunday, the non-kosher ice cream and gelato shop Bambina Blue turned into a pop-up where chef Assaf Maoz hosted chef Yossi Sherf and they jointly created dishes centered on an Israeli olive oil boutique brand, including salty snacks, olive oil cookies and yogurt ice cream with olive oil. A separate event in New York as part of Tel Aviv Groove is an Israeli wine and olive oil tasting workshop where attendees can also talk to two Tel Aviv chefs about Israeli cuisine and enjoy dishes by chef Tal Abaov from the Rothschild TLV non-kosher restaurant in Manhattan.
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Yet soon after, mainstream leaders like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton helped anti-Zionism gain a US political foothold. Their hate-mongering involved Jackson remarking that he had an “evil feeling” when visiting Israel, and referred to Jews as “Hymies” during a 1984 Washington Post interview. Sharpton’s eulogy for 7-year-old Gavin Cato following the 1991 Crown Heights riots denounced the neighborhood’s “apartheid ambulance service,” and invoked the diamond merchant libel to describe Jews. Still, Jackson garnered almost seven million votes during his 1988 presidential run, with Sharpton reportedly making over 60visits to the White House during President Barack Obama’s time in office. Despitecomparing Jews to “termites” and blaming them for the evils of racism and slavery, noted antisemite Louis Farrakhan’s list of admirers consists of former Women’s March co-chairTamika Mallory and celebrities like Nick Cannon.
For their part, organizations like the Jewish Council for Public Affairs backed Sharpton’s 2020 Virtual March on Washington, and encouraged followers to engage with groups promoting racial justice even if led by those “with whom we may disagree. As for the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the watchdog group has recently stepped up efforts to address left-wing antisemitism. While offering financial rewards for information on those responsible for the Brooklyn attacks, the organization remains restrained in its rhetoric on the racial makeup of those assaulting Orthodox Jews.
Those who fail to condemn leaders espousing Jew hatred also lend cover to antisemitic criminals, and leave those who are visibly Jewish exposed and vulnerable to attack. Rather than ingratiating themselves with unsavory characters, the Jewish establishment must support minority groups who believe in the IBSI’s goals, and must speak the truth about the minority groups committing attacks on Jews. Refusing to speak the truth about their racial background harms all communities.
Following his 2019 article, titled “The Moral Case for Israel Annexing the West Bank-and Beyond,” Jamaican-born professor of philosophy Jason Hill was censured by DePaul University colleagues and revealed in a Fox News interview that he needs security while walking around the Chicago campus. The ideological debate framing the smear campaign against Hill mirrors the progressive commentary contributing to the rise of antisemitism within Black communities. The gravitational shift from Rustin to Sharpton and Randolph to Farrakhan did not occur in a vacuum. Rather, society’s collective commitment to advancing intersectional myths coupled with the Jewish establishment’s fear of alienating a segment of the Black population is placing Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods in the crosshairs of a misguided political pedagogy.
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