Dick Hard Cock
10K posts





🇮🇷🇺🇸 Iran’s President: Iran will not enter imposed negotiations under pressure, threat, and siege The President, in his FIFTH phone call with the Prime Minister of Pakistan, emphasized: 🔹As long as hostile actions and operational pressures by the United States do not stop, rebuilding trust and progress in the path of dialogue will face difficulties. 🔹The Islamic Republic of Iran has not started a war and has never sought to expand insecurity in the region; however, the continuation of hostile actions by the United States, including the naval blockade, does not align with the country's declared claims of willingness to resolve issues politically, and this contradiction has increased the level of distrust among the Iranian people and officials of the Islamic Republic of Iran. 🔹Our clear advice to the United States is that to create the groundwork for resolving issues, it must first remove operational obstacles, including the blockade, because the Islamic Republic of Iran will not enter imposed negotiations under pressure, threat, and siege.


Absolute horror. An expert military analyst details the Pentagon's terrifying plan for Iran. By staggering aircraft carriers, the Trump administration is preparing a suffocating 24/7 continuous bombing campaign with absolutely zero pauses. A calculated plan for mass destruction.


Israeli settler groups abduct Palestinian boys at the entrance to the town of Al-Eizariya in occupied Jerusalem.


BREAKING: The failed assassination attempt against Donald Trump may have been carried out on the orders of IRGC commander Ahmad Vahidi, the same individual who sabotaged Iran–U.S. negotiations and is now attempting to have Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf arrested and imprisoned (as he previously did to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad).


🇺🇸 What we know so far about the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting The Facts: • Around 20:35 ET, shots were fired inside the Washington Hilton during the event • Trump and attendees were rushed out as Secret Service agents secured the room • Police say the suspect charged a security checkpoint armed with a shotgun, handgun, and multiple knives • 5–8 shots were reportedly fired; law enforcement exchanged fire with the suspect • One officer was hit but survived due to a bulletproof vest • The suspect was apprehended on site and taken to hospital for evaluation • Identified as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen of Torrance, California • Authorities say it appears to be a “lone wolf” attack • Federal charges (firearms + assault on federal officers) expected tomorrow • FBI raided a property linked to the suspect in California • Hundreds of guests sheltered under tables as the incident unfolded The assumptions: • Early indications suggest the suspect intended to target Trump administration officials • The attacker likely did not have direct access to the ballroom, he was stopped at the final checkpoint • Security inside the ballroom held, but perimeter access to the hotel appears softer • Officials are leaning toward no wider conspiracy, but that could change The unanswered questions: • How did an armed suspect get so close inside a heavily secured event venue? • Were there intelligence or warning signs missed beforehand? What was the suspect’s motive: ideology, grievance, or something else? • Was he truly acting alone? Bottom line: The Secret Service stopped a potential mass-casualty attack, but the fact it got this close is raising serious questions.



🇵🇸🇮🇱 Video allegedly shows dozens of Israeli settlers torching a Palestinian home in the occupied West Bank. 8 people were reportedly hurt, among them an infant. This can’t be our new normal.







🇮🇷🇺🇸 The body count from the Iran war is going to be much higher than most people can imagine. The first effects of the war are easy to see: missile strikes, stranded ships, oil price spikes, and press conferences where each side blames the other. The second wave will be harder to film. It will show up months later in empty fields, smaller harvests, higher food prices, and families quietly cutting meals until there's nothing left to cut. The Strait of Hormuz is usually discussed as an oil chokepoint, but it is also a fertilizer chokepoint. When war disrupts fertilizer exports, the damage moves into farms across Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The number to watch is 45 million. That's how many additional people could be pushed into acute hunger by the war. That's hunger severe enough that survival becomes a daily calculation. And that would come on top of hundreds of millions already facing crisis-level food insecurity around the world. This is what makes the fertilizer shortage so dangerous. It doesn't kill like a bomb; it kills by subtraction. A farmer uses less fertilizer because prices exploded, then the crop comes in smaller, food prices rise, aid agencies can't keep up, a mother waters down porridge, a child gets sick, a weak immune system meets cholera, malaria, or measles. And then hunger becomes a death certificate with another name written on it. So when people ask how many could die, the honest answer is that nobody can give a clean number yet, but that doesn't mean the risk is small. If even a fraction of those 45 million fall into famine-level conditions, the death toll could climb into the tens or hundreds of thousands. If the war drags on, fertilizer stays expensive, harvests fail, and aid funding falls short, the number could be far worse. A fertilizer shortage isn't just an agricultural problem; it's a delayed humanitarian disaster. The places most exposed are already fragile: Sudan, Yemen, Nigeria, Afghanistan, Congo, Somalia, Kenya, and other countries that depend on imported food, fertilizer, or outside aid to keep people alive. That's how modern war works now: a missile is launched in one region, and months later, a child starves in another. A shipping lane closes, and a farmer thousands of miles away can't afford to plant crops properly. A government talks about strategic leverage, and poor families absorb the cost in calories. The world will count the dead from airstrikes, but it may never properly count the dead from the wider impacts of this war.












