User Panel
Originally Posted By GoldenMead: SecDef today said the US won’t allow deep strikes into Russia with US weapons. Also people at the Pentagon and White House were hinting that Ukraine was going to get a lot less ATACMS in the future due to a limited number available. Saddest part of all of this is we say it out loud so Russia knows what we are doing. View Quote Ukraine was never going to get a lot of ATACMs, because there just weren't that many in the first place. Ukraine needed to maximize their effect by choosing targets carefully. The US was dumb to restrict them so severely. And more importantly, the US should never have said anything out loud about them at all. Either when they were delivered, what the restrictions were, or when the supply ends. The Biden administration is working hard not only to restrict Ukraine but also to make the US a party to the war, and they should stop on both counts. |
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Originally Posted By Capta: This is one question I keep coming back to. I sincerely believe the Russian Empire is all-in against the west and aren’t going to rethink or go quietly. The war in Ukraine is grinding up their mass of legacy gear, their first-class new gear is not that great, basically on par with our legacy gear, and their next-gen gear is non-functional/non-produceable. Yes, they can still send a lot of infantry and make things unpleasant, but they can’t possibly win even against Europe alone. The US is pumping out F-35s that, alone and with conventional munitions, could wipe out the Russian ability to wage conventional war and even attack strategic nuclear forces. So, what is the Russian angle? I think part of it is bankrolling political division and strife in the west, but IMO they must have a hard power component in mind too. Smuggling in nukes and detonating them? Surprise attack by Wagner sabotage groups against strategic targets? Space-based attacks with EMP? First nuclear strike with whatever they can launch with no notice? View Quote True. I don't think they set out to wage war on the entire West simultaneously any more than Hitler did. Shit just went sideways on them and now their pride and lack of self awareness have turned into obsession. Like some members with TDS posting about Trump, Russia cannot stop themselves and the "war" has taken on a life of its own. |
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Originally Posted By absael: I remember when the F-35 was first announced and people who supposedly knew what they were talking about were crapping all over it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By absael: Originally Posted By spydercomonkey: Originally Posted By AlmightyTallest:
Go Japan.
This short video is from 11 years ago. It shows an F-35 automatically picking up enemy fire AA, rockets and artillery guns and classifying and locating targets for quick destruction by other units, or the F-35 itself. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHZO0T5mDYU I briefly talked to a Dutch pilot here in Vegas to train on the F35: "I dont want to ask any secret stuff, but is the F35 as cool as they say?" "It's even cooler" - he said with an enthusiastic grin. Probably a Russian disinfo op. Their best chance of not having to face a program they couldn’t compete with was to kill it or cripple it outright. |
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No man knows the day and the hour, but if the time comes, better to stand with the righteous than piss your pants like a coward.
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Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: I would as well, as in better times than these, those two would be ideal presidential material. Unfortunately, we do not live in those "better times". IF we wish to be recover as a Nation, we need some SoBs who are willing to do the needful, which involves a serious enema to the entire FedGov and restoring accountability, as well as some really hard decisions. As stated earlier, the next President will be a wartime President; that cake has already been baked and is just waiting for the frosting. We can also expect, at best, a major Economic Recession as a best-case scenario going forward, with potentially a LOT worse coming down the pike. Budget deficits combined with the necessary increase in Defense spending will require both a serious haircut to benefits AND the liquidation of entire departments within the government. Then there is the matter of mobilizing a nation that has essentially demoralized itself over decades to both fight and fix a mountain of existential problems that have been allowed to fester. On top of that, this will also require massive reform of the defense procurement system as well as rebuilding domestic productive capability and the logistic infrastructure to support it for a war whose first battles are already being fought in Ukraine and the Levant, with the Philippines and potentially Taiwan fixing to go hot as well. In short, the next President has to be willing to come out swinging BEFORE Day 1 and have vision and an iron will. While we WANT intelligent people who are relatable policy wonks that understand 2nd- and 3rd-order effects (of which both Rubio and Cruz are prime examples), we NEED a couple of Sons of Bitches who are driven by will and are not put off by the massive amounts of Scheiß that is going to be flying into the rotational single-stage ventilation system (which describes both Trump and Vance). Otherwise, we are stuck in a spiral of "half-rude" foreign policy notable for folding like an accordion in the face of adversarial opposition and an increasing level of domestic repression as we skate toward complete moral, political, and economic collapse. Oh Well... View Quote IF I were a lot smarter and articulate, I would have said it like this! |
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Originally Posted By Capta: Agreed on most of that. It’s hard to say what Harris’ policy on Russia/Iran/China/Ukraine would be. I think it’s fair to say her Ukraine/Russia policy would continue to be similar to Biden’s, which has a Democratic and Republican consensus behind it, and which has been not great but not terrible. It’s certainly been adequate to stalemating the war and may be moving in a more positive direction as no one much believes Russian shrieking anymore. Iran seems likely to be a major problem unless Israel establishes some facts on the ground while the Biden administration is basically paralyzed. IMO the Israelis have 2-4 months to make a play that Harris can’t stop. China, plenty of dirt in both Democrat and Republican closets there. I think really pivoting to China will break a lot of, well, china in both parties and will not be so easy unless China makes a move soon. I don’t accept any longer either side’s ad-hominem memes about the other side. One of them is “Harris is so stupid that even the Biden white house pigeonholed her where she couldn’t do any damage.” And that may be true, but it’s also clear that the Biden team had plenty of reasons to isolate the President from non-team members. I would have to do some reading and see some current policy proposals, or see who she was looking at for foreign policy advisors. View Quote I don't think much if anything will change in a Kamala administration since Xiden and Kamala have been just figureheads for the "Deep State", "Establishment", or the Neo-communists that run DC. She probably doesn't even know the policy or why it is. Ukraine would limp along maybe with some minor changes since Kamala probably isn't compromised in both Ukraine AND Russia (and may others) like Xiden. She will probably be even worse with Iran/Israel and China. If Tampon Tim has any influence on her we will all be learning Mandarin. |
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This was a real Terminator one, Russian fiber optic FPV (ghetto TOW) stalks then flies into a mostly sealed building, traveling through an open door to get a group of Ukranians resting inside.
Nets/ barricades on all entranceways needs to be SOP
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Originally Posted By Prime:
View Quote RIP Fuck Russia! |
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ISW assessment for September 6th.
https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-september-6-2024 |
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By Capta: Russian sources have frequently said a Trump win will be a net positive for them. Trump and Trump-orbit people have made statements and taken positions that lend credence to this idea. I’m not sure how that is contentious. View Quote I only trust Russian sources if they are anti Trump. I'm just trying to figure out if Russian sources liking Trump is pro-Trump or anti-Trump. It's all very confusing. |
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Originally Posted By CleverNickname: The seat is permanent. Who holds the seat isn't. If the UN could take China's security council seat from the RoC and give it to the commies, then the UN could take the USSR's security council seat from Russia and give it to another one of the USSR's successor states. I can think of a better country to hold it than Russia, can you? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By CleverNickname: Originally Posted By borderpatrol: Because they don't have a choice. The security council is permanent, whether we like it or not. The seat is permanent. Who holds the seat isn't. If the UN could take China's security council seat from the RoC and give it to the commies, then the UN could take the USSR's security council seat from Russia and give it to another one of the USSR's successor states. I can think of a better country to hold it than Russia, can you? Y'all made me read the UN Charter. There is no provision in the Charter for expelling a permanent member of the UNSC (there is a provision for expulsion from the GA). The USSR is a permanent member of the UNSC. So is the Republic of China. United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 transferred the RoC seat to the PRC, recognizing the PRC as the legitimate government of China. I have previously posted the text of that resolution, which is very simple and direct. So the precedent already exists for a change in status of member States to be reflected and recognized at the UN, including changing UNSC representation. Given all nasty things Russia has done, including flagrant and repeated violations of Geneva conventions, the suggestion I had made earlier still has merit, even after reading the UN Charter. The UN GA can, in recognition of the dissolution of the USSR and the war crimes perpetrated by the Russian Federation, vote to transfer the USSR's seat to Ukraine. BUT - Ukraine had its own UN seat. We think of the USSR as a single state that encompassed Ukraine & Belarus. That's how it worked in practice, but at the UN, Ukraine & Belarus were independent republics and each were original members (this was one of Stalin's requirements). But that's only for the UN. As we all know, Ukraine & Belarus were fully controlled from Moscow. In fact, the US never recognized Ukraine as a nation until 1991 after the people voted to support independence by a wide margin. As a side note, the US recognized Estonia in 1922, and never officially recognized USSR's annexation of it. Something else I read in the UN Charter. When a dispute affects a UNSC member, that member must abstain from UNSC action on the dispute it question. Not sure why this provision hasn't been invoked yet. The UN is just proving how useless and irrelevant it is. The US needs to eliminate donations to the UN. |
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Originally Posted By AlmightyTallest: It is a good thing that F-35's aren't the only thing we make then. They are making new F-15's, new F-16's. F-18's are workhorses for the Navy as well. And when the new 6th gen stuff comes online, the F-35 will be like the F-16 is today a stealthy work horse. But the F-35 is such a leap over any other aircraft at a price that is hard to ignore other countries go with it when they see what it offers vs. the competition. And we are mass producing them. I thought that is what people wanted, lots of stealthy planes to destroy the enemies most advanced SAM sites and war production quickly and efficiently Then it is safer for the non stealthy aircraft to perform their missions. What if we know the Chinese stealth aircraft vulnerabilities and can hack their system? View Quote Reminds me of the start of WWII in the Pacific...some designs (torpedo planes iirc) were a disaster against the Japanese and suffered nearly 100% casualties. Then they discovered the dive bombers...But then the Bismarck was disabled by a torpedo plane...A bi-plane so slow it avoided the modern AAA on the Bismarck... |
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Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Y'all made me read the UN Charter. There is no provision in the Charter for expelling a permanent member of the UNSC (there is a provision for expulsion from the GA). The USSR is a permanent member of the UNSC. So is the Republic of China. United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 transferred the RoC seat to the PRC, recognizing the PRC as the legitimate government of China. I have previously posted the text of that resolution, which is very simple and direct. So the precedent already exists for a change in status of member States to be reflected and recognized at the UN, including changing UNSC representation. Given all nasty things Russia has done, including flagrant and repeated violations of Geneva conventions, the suggestion I had made earlier still has merit, even after reading the UN Charter. The UN GA can, in recognition of the dissolution of the USSR and the war crimes perpetrated by the Russian Federation, vote to transfer the USSR's seat to Ukraine. BUT - Ukraine had its own UN seat. We think of the USSR as a single state that encompassed Ukraine & Belarus. That's how it worked in practice, but at the UN, Ukraine & Belarus were independent republics and each were original members (this was one of Stalin's requirements). But that's only for the UN. As we all know, Ukraine & Belarus were fully controlled from Moscow. In fact, the US never recognized Ukraine as a nation until 1991 after the people voted to support independence by a wide margin. As a side note, the US recognized Estonia in 1922, and never officially recognized USSR's annexation of it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Originally Posted By CleverNickname: Originally Posted By borderpatrol: Because they don't have a choice. The security council is permanent, whether we like it or not. The seat is permanent. Who holds the seat isn't. If the UN could take China's security council seat from the RoC and give it to the commies, then the UN could take the USSR's security council seat from Russia and give it to another one of the USSR's successor states. I can think of a better country to hold it than Russia, can you? Y'all made me read the UN Charter. There is no provision in the Charter for expelling a permanent member of the UNSC (there is a provision for expulsion from the GA). The USSR is a permanent member of the UNSC. So is the Republic of China. United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 transferred the RoC seat to the PRC, recognizing the PRC as the legitimate government of China. I have previously posted the text of that resolution, which is very simple and direct. So the precedent already exists for a change in status of member States to be reflected and recognized at the UN, including changing UNSC representation. Given all nasty things Russia has done, including flagrant and repeated violations of Geneva conventions, the suggestion I had made earlier still has merit, even after reading the UN Charter. The UN GA can, in recognition of the dissolution of the USSR and the war crimes perpetrated by the Russian Federation, vote to transfer the USSR's seat to Ukraine. BUT - Ukraine had its own UN seat. We think of the USSR as a single state that encompassed Ukraine & Belarus. That's how it worked in practice, but at the UN, Ukraine & Belarus were independent republics and each were original members (this was one of Stalin's requirements). But that's only for the UN. As we all know, Ukraine & Belarus were fully controlled from Moscow. In fact, the US never recognized Ukraine as a nation until 1991 after the people voted to support independence by a wide margin. As a side note, the US recognized Estonia in 1922, and never officially recognized USSR's annexation of it. Huh, interesting. That's fucking dumb on the part of the western Allies though. If Stalin wanted to play it that way, each of the 50 states should also have had a GA membership (DC being on the UNSC), along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. |
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Originally Posted By CleverNickname: Huh, interesting. That's fucking dumb on the part of the western Allies though. If Stalin wanted to play it that way, each of the 50 states should also have had a GA membership (DC being on the UNSC), along with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. View Quote That exact comment was made back then. The context was that when Stalin, Churchill, & Roosevelt met to hash out the post-war plans, Roosevelt was tired and worn out, near the end of his life, and Stalin was of course a bully. So Roosevelt gave in rather than have Stalin refuse to join. We talk about ambiguity over Taiwan, but way back in the formative days of the UN a fiction of 'independent' Ukraine & Belarus was created to give Russia more power in the UN. And Stalin got away with it. |
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Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Y'all made me read the UN Charter. There is no provision in the Charter for expelling a permanent member of the UNSC (there is a provision for expulsion from the GA). The USSR is a permanent member of the UNSC. So is the Republic of China. United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2758 transferred the RoC seat to the PRC, recognizing the PRC as the legitimate government of China. I have previously posted the text of that resolution, which is very simple and direct. So the precedent already exists for a change in status of member States to be reflected and recognized at the UN, including changing UNSC representation. Given all nasty things Russia has done, including flagrant and repeated violations of Geneva conventions, the suggestion I had made earlier still has merit, even after reading the UN Charter. The UN GA can, in recognition of the dissolution of the USSR and the war crimes perpetrated by the Russian Federation, vote to transfer the USSR's seat to Ukraine. BUT - Ukraine had its own UN seat. We think of the USSR as a single state that encompassed Ukraine & Belarus. That's how it worked in practice, but at the UN, Ukraine & Belarus were independent republics and each were original members (this was one of Stalin's requirements). But that's only for the UN. As we all know, Ukraine & Belarus were fully controlled from Moscow. In fact, the US never recognized Ukraine as a nation until 1991 after the people voted to support independence by a wide margin. As a side note, the US recognized Estonia in 1922, and never officially recognized USSR's annexation of it. Something else I read in the UN Charter. When a dispute affects a UNSC member, that member must abstain from UNSC action on the dispute it question. Not sure why this provision hasn't been invoked yet. The UN is just proving how useless and irrelevant it is. The US needs to eliminate donations to the UN. View Quote Currently China and Russia are trying to expand the security council permanent members. I’ve seen China state they want India and Saudi Arabia as permanent members. |
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A lot like GD. Obsessed with the latest shiny weapon but never budgets enough for the ammo... jwnc 5/9/2024
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🇺🇦👍 Female fire mobile groups shot down Russian "Shakhed" from "Maxim" near Kyiv.
https://t.me/combatfootageua/22987
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“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione https://t.me/arfcom_ukebros |
"SIGNUM" unit of the 93rd separate mechanized brigade shared video footage of their FPV drones to destroy 49 different drones (48 mid-sized recon drones and 1 lancet). This is really interesting, because it demonstrates that using FPV drones to down ISR drones is not just something that happens occasionally by random chance, but rather something that can actually significantly attrit enemy ISR assets. It also corroborates earlier reports from Russian milbloggers that the new TTP of using FPVs to target ISR drones was having a noticeable effect. Although this almost certainly isn't open source information, I'd be curious what the targeting process is for this. I'd also be curious whether this is another instance where we see Ukraine come up with a new invention/TTP and Russia standardizes it better. There's probably less incentive for the Russians to do that, though, given that Ukraine doesn't have nearly as much in the way of legitimate ISR drones.
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Field grade officer in the Ukebro Army
Globalist shill |
Originally Posted By Capta: Probably a Russian disinfo op. Their best chance of not having to face a program they couldn’t compete with was to kill it or cripple it outright. View Quote The F-35 has been in the works for a long time and there are still a few issues to address. It will never have the range of something like an F-111 simply because it's not F-111 sized. That said, it offers capabilities that nothing else can match and even some F-22 pilots have said that if they were to fly into battle and they had their pick of any fighter flying today. They would pick the F-35. Their sensor package and information sharing capability is quite impressive. |
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It’s… probably not as bad as you think it is.
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Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: "SIGNUM" unit of the 93rd separate mechanized brigade shared video footage of their FPV drones to destroy 49 different drones (48 mid-sized recon drones and 1 lancet). This is really interesting, because it demonstrates that using FPV drones to down ISR drones is not just something that happens occasionally by random chance, but rather something that can actually significantly attrit enemy ISR assets. It also corroborates earlier reports from Russian milbloggers that the new TTP of using FPVs to target ISR drones was having a noticeable effect. Although this almost certainly isn't open source information, I'd be curious what the targeting process is for this. I'd also be curious whether this is another instance where we see Ukraine come up with a new invention/TTP and Russia standardizes it better. There's probably less incentive for the Russians to do that, though, given that Ukraine doesn't have nearly as much in the way of legitimate ISR drones. View Quote A different source said their FPVs were set up to receive guidance from air defense radars. It isn’t clear if this means they’re flying a manual GC intercept, or the radars are actually controlling the drones. Or the radars provide coarse guidance and a pilot makes the final corrections. |
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No man knows the day and the hour, but if the time comes, better to stand with the righteous than piss your pants like a coward.
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Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: I only trust Russian sources if they are anti Trump. I'm just trying to figure out if Russian sources liking Trump is pro-Trump or anti-Trump. It's all very confusing. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: Originally Posted By Capta: Russian sources have frequently said a Trump win will be a net positive for them. Trump and Trump-orbit people have made statements and taken positions that lend credence to this idea. I’m not sure how that is contentious. I only trust Russian sources if they are anti Trump. I'm just trying to figure out if Russian sources liking Trump is pro-Trump or anti-Trump. It's all very confusing. Couldn’t that be an excuse to dismiss information you don’t want to hear? Sure, sources should be questioned and we should retail some skepticism. That’s healthy. But if what they’re saying lines up with what Trump is saying, that’s a point for confirmation. It doesn’t have to be good for them, it just has to be better than the alternative. |
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No man knows the day and the hour, but if the time comes, better to stand with the righteous than piss your pants like a coward.
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Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: It should be obvious Russia supports Trump!! Can you imagine dragging this war out for another 4 years if you were Russia. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: Originally Posted By Capta: So what about the large amount of Russian-source commentary (going back more than a year) saying they’re betting everything on Trump’s election? It should be obvious Russia supports Trump!! Can you imagine dragging this war out for another 4 years if you were Russia. Russia doesn't have 4 years to end this war. Either the war will end long before then or Russia will end long before then. |
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Originally Posted By 4xGM300m: Russian Fiber-Optic FPV Drone attack a group of Ukrainian soldiers inside a building Note the quality of the video feed. View Quote Fiber can carry a lot of bandwidth allowing for much better picture quality. However, really thin fiber optic cable isn't all that durable and so there's likely to be a very high failure rate. And, once the fiber gets cut, the drone is deaf, dumb, and blind because there's no RF backup C2 link. |
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No man knows the day and the hour, but if the time comes, better to stand with the righteous than piss your pants like a coward.
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Originally Posted By lorazepam: Less than 50 bucks to make. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By lorazepam: Originally Posted By planemaker: Drones I have. Thermite canisters, not so much. Less than 50 bucks to make. Testing it would be a bit of a bitch though. You'd have to find a big lake to fly over to test it. Otherwise you end up causing massive fires. (Which is actually the point.) |
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Originally Posted By HIPPO: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GWy44FuW4AAwBLE?format=jpg&name=largeDOD Transcript: Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh Holds a Press Briefing View Quote |
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Coyote with 40 people crammed into a minivan gets into a chase with DPS, Paco over estimates his driving abilities and *whmmo!* the Astrovan of Immigration becomes a Pinata of Pain, hurling broken bodies like so many tasty pieces of cheap candy...
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Originally Posted By spydercomonkey: China is asshole
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GWzZH6dWEAAM-Gu?format=jpg&name=900x900 View Quote The oil drilling is being done by Brunei |
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"We will always remember. We will always be proud. We will always be prepared so we may always be free." Ronald Reagan 1984
"Mitch the democrat bitch" 2024, the new and improved democrat election fraud |
Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: RIP Fuck Russia! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: Originally Posted By Prime:
RIP Fuck Russia! https://apnews.com/article/ukraine-russia-missile-attack-lviv-a6496aa810c33a4f4be41cc1e299cd1c |
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"We will always remember. We will always be proud. We will always be prepared so we may always be free." Ronald Reagan 1984
"Mitch the democrat bitch" 2024, the new and improved democrat election fraud |
Coyote with 40 people crammed into a minivan gets into a chase with DPS, Paco over estimates his driving abilities and *whmmo!* the Astrovan of Immigration becomes a Pinata of Pain, hurling broken bodies like so many tasty pieces of cheap candy...
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Originally Posted By CarmelBytheSea: https://www.reuters.com/world/biden-sign-250-million-ukraine-security-assistance-2024-09-06/ https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/459941/IMG_1995-3315002.jpg View Quote |
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Coyote with 40 people crammed into a minivan gets into a chase with DPS, Paco over estimates his driving abilities and *whmmo!* the Astrovan of Immigration becomes a Pinata of Pain, hurling broken bodies like so many tasty pieces of cheap candy...
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Originally Posted By AlmightyTallest:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/GW0F676WAAAA91j?format=jpg&name=small View Quote |
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Coyote with 40 people crammed into a minivan gets into a chase with DPS, Paco over estimates his driving abilities and *whmmo!* the Astrovan of Immigration becomes a Pinata of Pain, hurling broken bodies like so many tasty pieces of cheap candy...
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Originally Posted By Cypher15: The same govt that wouldnt go after Taliban in Pakistan View Quote Joe Biden was the only person in the room who wouldn’t vote yes on the Bin Laden raid. Everyone else gave it the thumbs up. So the people making the decisions these days must be a bunch of spineless hacks that he surrounded himself with before he became incapable (not just unwilling) of making a decision |
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„From a place you will not hear, comes a sound you will not see.“
Thanks for the membership @ Toaster |
We are all wearing brown pants now. 1 min video.
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„From a place you will not hear, comes a sound you will not see.“
Thanks for the membership @ Toaster |
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30 sec video in tweet |
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„From a place you will not hear, comes a sound you will not see.“
Thanks for the membership @ Toaster |
MI6 and CIA warn of 'reckless campaign of sabotage across Europe' being waged by Russia | Sir Richard Moore and Bill Burns did not list examples but there has been a spate of mysterious sabotage and arson attacks on infrastructure in the UK, Germany and in the Baltics. Link to FT article from the heads of the CIA and MI6 |
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Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Archive link This is a good read. Post-WWII was an age where America dominated in all places in all things. That era is over. In the new era, China will be the one dominating in all places and in all things. The age of the American Empire is ending. Our leaders don't seem to have a comprehensive plan to effectively manage America's decline. I'm not saying this to be negative, and it should not be taken that way. All empires end, there is a rise and fall to every civilization & nation in world history, there are no exceptions. For better or worse, we live in the time of transition from the era of America to the age of China. You can try to argue that I'm wrong, but good luck making a case that will hold up over the next five years. View Quote China benefitted to the maximum extent possible over the last 20 years and now some of the chickens of bad decisions are coming home to roost. So, it's tough to say just how ascendent China will be going forward. |
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Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Archive link This is a good read. Post-WWII was an age where America dominated in all places in all things. That era is over. In the new era, China will be the one dominating in all places and in all things. The age of the American Empire is ending. Our leaders don't seem to have a comprehensive plan to effectively manage America's decline. I'm not saying this to be negative, and it should not be taken that way. All empires end, there is a rise and fall to every civilization & nation in world history, there are no exceptions. For better or worse, we live in the time of transition from the era of America to the age of China. You can try to argue that I'm wrong, but good luck making a case that will hold up over the next five years. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Originally Posted By HIPPO: FT Article: China’s new back doors into western markets
Archive link This is a good read. An intensifying rivalry between China and the US-led west is driving a fragmentation in the world’s economic order. Beijing, Washington, Brussels and other capitals have imposed a range of tariffs, export controls and other measures to protect their domestic markets and stymie competitors’ technological progress. ... China’s emergence as an economic superpower over the past four decades has been propelled to a large degree by globalisation. Open markets and free trade underpinned China’s long export boom and helped facilitate huge transfers of capital, knowledge and technology from the west to Chinese companies. Many have gone on to become world leaders in their sectors: examples include BYD and CATL in electric vehicles and batteries, Huawei in telecoms and ByteDance in social media. Post-WWII was an age where America dominated in all places in all things. That era is over. In the new era, China will be the one dominating in all places and in all things. The age of the American Empire is ending. Our leaders don't seem to have a comprehensive plan to effectively manage America's decline. I'm not saying this to be negative, and it should not be taken that way. All empires end, there is a rise and fall to every civilization & nation in world history, there are no exceptions. For better or worse, we live in the time of transition from the era of America to the age of China. You can try to argue that I'm wrong, but good luck making a case that will hold up over the next five years. Been saying this on here forever. |
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spicy jiffy pop action in the videos. |
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Originally Posted By Capta: Yes, absolutely. Japan has already said that a Chinese move against Taiwan is an existential crisis for them. Add to that potential for us going wobbly, They don’t have a choice. Even if China doesn’t go for Taiwan, I rate their likelihood of acquiring nukes at 75% due to the deteriorating world situation. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Capta: Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: Originally Posted By jwnc: Nope. Just getting ahead of the curve. If China invades Taiwan, Japan would have to go nuclear as the only alternative to China looking at them next. Technically, the Tomahawks aren't nukes anymore, but they could be again if required. In any case, if Japan builds their own nukes, they would now have instant delivery systems if they fit into Tomahawk warheads. Does anyone really think Japan will get nukes? And consider using them for anything short of Godzilla? Against China who has hundreds? They would be better off getting a shit ton of conventional missiles since even China will believe they may use them. Yes, absolutely. Japan has already said that a Chinese move against Taiwan is an existential crisis for them. Add to that potential for us going wobbly, They don’t have a choice. Even if China doesn’t go for Taiwan, I rate their likelihood of acquiring nukes at 75% due to the deteriorating world situation. For South Korea, that chance of going nuclear is closer to 99% IF the US backs out from confronting China over Taiwan. |
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3 min video in tweet |
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Facing Dire Domestic Woes, Gaza and Lebanon Fighting Have Become an Increasing Burden for Iran Link.
Iran fears that the 'response equation' policy it devised with its proxies against Israel may backfire, drawing it into a regional conflict that could worsen its already severe economic challenges and hinder the new government's efforts to pursue rehabilitation. Entire article in quote box Facing domestic woes, the Gaza and Lebanon conflicts have become a growing burden for Iran At the first meeting between Iran's supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, and the government formed by new Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, Khamenei listed two top national priorities – lowering inflation and reducing prices. Pezeshkian explained what these orders mean in practice in his first media interview, in which he said he hoped to boost economic growth to eight percent and lower inflation by 30 percent. To achieve this goal, he said, Iran needs $200 billion in investments. Half of that could come from local investors and businessmen, he continued. But the other half, around $100 billion, would have to come from outside. In other words, without an end to the sanctions on Iran, it won't be able to meet this goal. Unlike other senior Iranian officials, including Khamenei himself, Pezeshkian doesn't hide the enormous damage the sanctions have caused and are still causing the Iranian economy, or the fact that the "resistance economy" – the term coined by Khamenei to justify strangling belt-tightening to withstand the sanctions – is boomeranging on the government, because it is harming the poorest Iranians. And the results of this policy aren't felt only on the macro level. Shortly before the start of the school year, Iran's Education Ministry released worrying data showing that 167,000 elementary school students had dropped out of school. And the true number is apparently much higher. According to estimates released by the Iranian parliament's research center, about a million students dropped out of the school system at every level in 2023. Moreover, the Education Ministry said, the schools are short 176,000 teachers. It is therefore trying at the last minute to hire retired teachers or student teachers who haven't yet finished their education degrees. Other data released by the parliament's Education Committee shows that some 14 million students come from families with trouble providing for their basic needs, meaning that many of them are forced to go to work instead of going to school. The Health Ministry also had no good news to share. Since August 2, nurses have been on strike in most Iranian cities to demand better wages and working conditions. They want their salaries adjusted for inflation, which is currently over 40 percent. They also want more nurses to be hired, payments for overtime and reimbursement for travel expenses. According to the Supreme Council of the Nursing System, between 150 and 200 nurses emigrate from Iran every month, and about 20 percent of nursing school students say they intend to leave the country. The above are just two prime examples of how this crisis not only affects the quality of life of Iranian workers today, but also the next generation. Nurses, teachers and other professionals aren't interested in major policy issues or plans for retaliation against Israel for its assassination of former Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh. It's true that the strikes and school dropouts aren't bringing masses of people into the streets like the murder of Mahsa Amini by the Morality Police did two years ago. They do, however, undermine the narrative that the Islamic Revolution and the regime it established are vastly preferable to the shah's government. Pezeshkian, who was elected thanks to the votes of the reformists, is very familiar with this political minefield. He entered it with open eyes and is walking through it with great care, and for now, this has earned him Khamenei's support. Granted, it's not clear how much his urging of Khamenei to exercise "restraint" in retaliating for Haniyeh's assassination was worth. But the fact that Khamenei gave prior approval to all 19 members of Pezeshkian's new cabinet (according to the president himself) shows that there's coordination and understanding between Iran's two top leaders. No less important is Khamenei's statement, referring to the West in general and America in particular, that "we must suspect the enemy, but there's no obstacle to conducting negotiations with him," assuming that negotiations serve the country's interests. This statement was interpreted as a green light for Pezeshkian and his government to take steps that could yield sanctions relief or even a full removal of the sanctions. And indeed, in the brief time since he took office, Pezeshkian has already sent hints that he intends to negotiate with Western countries, and even with the United States. This would naturally require Iran to present a new outline for its nuclear program that would be acceptable to the West in general, and the countries that signed the original nuclear deal with Iran (America, France, Britain, Russia and China) in particular. What options is Iran considering, and will it agree to resume negotiations on a new nuclear deal? Tehran has been scattering hints, but it's hard to infer any practical steps from them. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said recently that resuming nuclear talks is no longer a goal and that the idea has become irrelevant. And yet, he added that Iran plans to unveil a new "military and diplomatic" strategy in order to reach a new kind of deal that would allow for the removal of the sanctions. He didn't explain what he meant, but the very fact that he was appointed foreign minister, with Khamenei's approval, is an important signal in its own right. That's because Araghchi, a fluent English speaker who had close ties with American negotiators back when he was running the talks on a nuclear deal, is suspected by Iranian conservatives of "working against the principles of the revolution" – that is, of being someone willing to capitulate to America. And not only is Araghchi now serving in a very senior post, but Mohammad Javad Zarif – the former foreign minister who presided over the original nuclear deal and was originally appointed by Pezeshkian as vice president for strategic affairs, only to resign in protest over the composition of Pezeshkian's cabinet – returned to his vice presidential office last week. Thus, if Khamenei decides to change Iran's policy, the Zarif-Araghchi duo will likely breathe new life into dialogue with the West about the nuclear deal. Perhaps Pezeshkian will be clearer on this issue at the UN General Assembly, which will take place in New York in two weeks. At the same time, Iran remains concerned and wary of developments in the Middle East, pursuing a cautious policy aimed, at least publicly, at avoiding a full-scale war, which would likely be centered around Lebanon. Tehran sees that the "ring of fire" it created to defend itself may well backfire and hurt not only Lebanon – its most important regional asset – but also itself, particularly without the backing of a superpower like Israel has in the United States. China remains Iran's most important trading partner, but it isn't a military ally, and Iran's confidence in Russia's support is also far from absolute. Discussions between Tehran and Moscow on a new strategic cooperation deal to replace the one signed more than 20 years ago are being delayed, and recently, Russia has already infuriated Iran by announcing its support for establishing the Zangezur corridor between Azerbaijan and the enclave of Nakhchivan in Armenia. This transportation corridor would run along the length of the border between Armenia and Iran, and allow free movement, with no border control checkpoints, between Azerbaijan and Turkey. Under the Russian-mediated peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia, the corridor will be overseen by Russia and Azerbaijan, rather than by Armenia, as Iran had demanded. Iran fears that this corridor would effectively block its access to Armenia, and from there to Europe. It therefore views it much like Israel views the Philadelphi corridor that runs along the Gaza Strip's border with Egypt. Yet precisely on an issue of such strategic importance, Russia wasn't on its side. To demonstrate its displeasure with Russia's conduct, Iran sent a warm congratulatory message to Ukraine in honor of its Independence Day in August, a gesture that clutched Russia's stomach. Although Russia buys Iranian missiles and drones, the Iranians consider it a country that threatens its interests in the Caucasus, allows Israel to strike Syria, and tends to support the United Arab Emirates in the issue of control of the Lesser Tunb and Abu Mussa islands in the Straits of Hormuz, which Iran claims. This week, former Iranian MP Ali Motahhari posted on X a letter to President Pezeshkian, stating, "Russia has never considered Iran's interests. Especially now, when it is entangled in a war with Ukraine." With a perforated "security belt" and a dire economic situation pushing it towards dialogue with European countries, the Gulf states, and possibly the United States, the war in Gaza and Lebanon has increasingly become a burden on Iran, threatening its own strategic and economic interests. At the moment, Tehran has no exit strategy from the "response equation" it jointly devised with Hezbollah and its other proxies. View Quote |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
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"A dying culture invariably exhibits personal rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration for others in minor matters. A loss of politeness, of gentle manners, is more significant than is a riot."
Robert A. Heinlein, Friday |
”I’m a victim too!” |
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