Klaus Wiemers

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Klaus Wiemers

Klaus Wiemers

@KlausJ

Chairman, MEng, Master Industrial Marketing, Manager, Troubleshooter, Moderator, Banker, Photographer, Officer. Ethical values are important to me.

انضم Şubat 2009
313 يتبع83 المتابعون
Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@nettermike Poor navy soldiers. Reports state that they feel being treated exceptionally poorly. Time to build up morale by showing appreciation of their suffering.
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Mike Netter
Mike Netter@nettermike·
USS Gerald R. Ford heading back to Crete after a fire reportedly wrecked part of the ship… 600+ sailors left without beds. Now they’re checking if it was set on purpose to dodge the extended deployment. Crew already got caught earlier clogging toilets for the same reason. Ship’s been out since June 2025… pushing record deployment time. Navy hasn’t confirmed anything yet.
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@OccupyDemocrats You complain? This is how business is done in the US. Or do you still believe that a Casino (!) could go bankrupt? For the average american: a casino is basically a money printing machine.
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Occupy Democrats
Occupy Democrats@OccupyDemocrats·
BREAKING: HOLY SMOKES! Bombshell report accuses Trump and Rubio of "the largest fraud in the history of the U.S. immigration system" amounting to over $1.3 billion stolen from migrants. And the details will absolutely enrage you... According to the Cato Institute, a right-wing think tank, Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and outgoing DHS Secretary Kristi Noem extracted at least $1.3 billion from migrants in fees for visa processing and other immigration services that they never intended to provide. They took the money, then took no steps to hold up their end of the agreement. The administration is taking money from immigrant hopefuls from over 90 countries despite the fact that Trump's own xenophobic travel bans have made it so that those same people are "banned from receiving immigrant visas and immigrating permanently to the United States." Trump is having it both ways: taking the money he would get for allowing immigration while simultaneously blocking that immigration. "During testimony before the US Senate, I called it the largest fraud in the history of the US immigration system. In fact, it is likely the first $1 billion fraud—a theft of processing fees for services never rendered," wrote David J. Bier for Cato. But the corruption goes so much deeper... Rubio's State Department has issued internal rules that prohibit his staff from informing the migrants in question that they have no chance of success and their money is essentially being stolen. It's a systemic graft operation. “Cubans represent the largest group of affected applicants with nearly a million affected applications at a combined cost of $543 million. The second most common was Venezuelans, with 239,000 applications at a cost of $138 million,” Cato reports. Cato estimates that over 2 million immigrant applicants were affected by the travel bans and had their money taken when there no intention on the part of the administration of rendering the services in question. "The fees came primarily from applications for work permits and filings to adjust status to permanent residence or immigrant visas—the two ways in which people receive green cards to stay permanently in the United States," writes Bier. Congress must immediately investigate this blatant, rampant fraud and begin the long, difficult process of ensuring that every single victim is paid back with interest. These people came looking for a better life in the United States and were instead fleeced for what little money they had. This is a kind of cruelty and greed that could only exist with Donald Trump as president. Please ❤️ and share to demand full refunds!
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@jurgen_nauditt @Sunnymica You know that Cuba has its own oil fields? On the northern coast? Operated by chinese companies? Working, not standing still. They are not secret (but you better not photograph them).
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Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦
Two Russian oil tankers are en route to Cuba, despite the US blockade. Expected arrival around March 23. For the first time in three months, Cuba could receive a large quantity of fuel. Faced with Cuba's energy crisis, Russia has sent two tankers carrying oil and diesel. Will the US stop the ships or allow them to pass?
Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦 tweet media
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The Observer Effect
The Observer Effect@Observe_It68·
@MarioNawfal I never understood why someone would go on a major news network and spill the beans like this. Why give our enemies information so easily.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🚨🇮🇷 Germany's largest defense company, Rheinmetall's CEO on CNBC today: "If the war lasts another month, we will have nearly no missiles available." All of them. European. American. Middle Eastern. Iran has been rationing its launches for weeks. The West has been burning through interceptors at full speed. The attrition war has a winner emerging. It isn't who the briefings said it would be. CNBC
Mario Nawfal tweet media
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇮🇷 Mines in the Strait of Hormuz could keep gas prices high for weeks Even the threat of Iranian mines is freezing tanker traffic, clearing them under fire could take days or weeks. One minefield and the world’s biggest oil artery stays shut.

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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@MarioNawfal He not only did his CEO job. He also acted as Chief Sales Officer. Now everybody will ring him and ask how much more they have to pay for the ammunition. Prices (and profits) will skyrocket (yes, I know). Hope you bought his shares before this interview.
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@Spunkfunker81 @NoLieWithBTC Good! You understood. Actually, goose liver is not so bad. You should try it with caviar (may be we should call it fishy eggies here, haha). Long live the king! At après, la revolution…
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No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen
A top Republican just told Americans how they should deal with rising gas prices under Trump: “Maybe take one less trip to Starbucks... Let’s just try to be patriots about this.”
No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen tweet mediaNo Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen tweet media
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@novemberinrie @jonatanpallesen Easy. The information is fake. IQ does not measure absolute intelligence. IQ measures relative intelligence, compared to the average of the rest of the population.
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♱
@novemberinrie·
@jonatanpallesen I’m so confused by this. how is it possible
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Jonatan Pallesen
Jonatan Pallesen@jonatanpallesen·
The total number of smart people in the world has just peaked. And now it's about to crash.
Jonatan Pallesen tweet media
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@littlewisehen Which is probably the combined muslim and jewish population as they believe in ONE god. What about the others? Confused catholics, who think the number is 3 (trinity)? But beware: the chart is 8 years old. And it is from German ZDF. Does not sound very reliable.
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Littlewisehen
Littlewisehen@littlewisehen·
Götterglaube im 21. Jahrhundert
Littlewisehen tweet media
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@DrEricDing Hydrogen escapes much faster. I do not like stories that contain lies.
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Eric Feigl-Ding
Eric Feigl-Ding@DrEricDing·
FUN FACT—helium cools the superconducting magnets in more than 14,000 MRI machines used in hospitals worldwide. We lost the largest helium extraction plant in the world in Qatar. US reserves running low. Helium cannot be produced de novo. Any helium escape is permanent.
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

Helium is the only element that escapes Earth’s atmosphere permanently. Once released, it rises through the troposphere, passes the stratosphere, and leaves the planet. It cannot be manufactured. It cannot be synthesised at industrial scale. It accumulates over billions of years in the same geological reservoirs as natural gas. And one third of the world’s supply just went offline because Iran hit the facility that extracts it. Qatar produced roughly 63 million cubic metres of helium in 2025, accounting for 30 to 36 percent of global supply from a total of approximately 190 million cubic metres. QatarEnergy’s three large helium purification plants at Ras Laffan form the world’s biggest helium production base. When LNG production stopped after Iranian drone strikes on March 2 and the subsequent missile damage on March 19, helium extraction stopped automatically because helium is recovered during natural gas liquefaction. You cannot produce helium without producing LNG. The byproduct dies with the primary product. Spot helium prices have roughly doubled since the crisis began. Industry consultants warn that prolonged disruption could push contract prices toward $2,000 per thousand cubic feet. A major industrial gas supplier has already begun assessing customers a helium surcharge. Phil Kornbluth, the most cited helium market consultant, stated the assessment directly: the world cannot compensate for the loss of a third of its helium supply. South Korea imports 64.7 percent of its helium from Qatar. SK Hynix and Samsung operate high-volume fabs producing the DRAM and high-bandwidth memory that power every AI accelerator, every data centre GPU, and every cloud computing cluster on Earth. Helium cools silicon wafers during fabrication. It serves as a carrier gas in deposition and etching tools. It enables leak detection in vacuum systems. Modern extreme ultraviolet lithography requires helium-cooled environments for precise temperature control. Without helium, the fabrication process degrades or stops. SK Hynix and Samsung hold two to three months of helium inventory. Two to three months is not a buffer. It is a countdown. If Ras Laffan remains offline beyond that window, South Korean memory production faces rationing. TSMC in Taiwan is somewhat more diversified but still uses Qatar-linked supply chains. The entire AI hardware supply chain, from HBM3E memory stacks to advanced logic chips, sits inside helium-dependent ecosystems. Beyond semiconductors, helium cools the superconducting magnets in more than 14,000 MRI machines operating worldwide. It pressurises rocket fuel tanks and purges propulsion systems in aerospace. CERN’s Large Hadron Collider depends on helium cryogenic systems. There is no substitute for helium in any of these applications at industrial scale. The United States and Qatar together account for more than 70 percent of global production. The US federal helium reserve and private suppliers offer partial relief, but global prices and spot availability are still governed by Qatar’s market share. Japan’s Iwatani has drawn on US reserves. Canada and the Rockies are seeing renewed investor interest. None of this replaces 63 million cubic metres in weeks. The war hit uranium first. Then oil. Then nitrogen. Then water. Then plastic. Then medicine. Then sulfur. Now helium. Eight layers. Each one deeper. Each one closer to the infrastructure that sustains modern civilisation. The chip that processes your data, the magnet that scans your body, and the rocket that launches your satellite all depend on an atom that leaves the planet when you lose it. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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auonsson
auonsson@auonsson·
A French officer exercised on deck of carrier Charles de Gaulle with his watch recording and uploading the training to web, hereby outing the position for the world to see. Not the first uniformed professional to do this, likely not the last.
Mediavenir@Mediavenir

⚓️🇫🇷 FLASH - Le porte-avions français Charles de Gaulle a été localisé par des journalistes du Monde grâce à… l'application de sport Strava d'un officier qui fait son jogging sur le pont du navire.

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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@RepMikeLevin Probably too late already. The game follows new rules, not the constitution. Sounds exactly like the stories German grandparents me told about 1933. The game was already over in 1934. Let us pray for our siblings in the US.
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Rep. Mike Levin
Rep. Mike Levin@RepMikeLevin·
$200 billion. No briefing, strategy, or end game. No respect for Congress. I sit on the Appropriations Committee. I have received zero justification. Hegseth’s entire case to the American people is “it takes money to kill bad guys.” That’s an insult. To Congress and the Constitution. And most of all, to the men and women putting their lives on the line right now. Our service members are the best this country has. They are brave, skilled, and they deserve leadership worthy of their sacrifice. They deserve a clear mission. A defined objective. A strategy that someone in this administration has actually thought through. They are not props for a policy that nobody can consistently explain. Yes, a nuclear-armed Iran is a threat. I believe that. But how we confront that threat matters. The path we take matters. The cost in lives and dollars matters. And who gets to weigh in on all of that matters. That’s not weakness. That’s the Constitution. First the reports were $50 billion. Then $100 billion. Now $200 billion. With no breakdown, no timeline, no accountability. Where the hell are my Republican House colleagues? Collins and Murkowski are asking questions in the Senate. The House is silent. That silence is a dereliction of duty. We are a co-equal branch of government. The power of the purse is ours. This is not a technicality. It is the last line of defense against exactly this kind of reckless blank-check governance. Our troops deserve better. The American people deserve better. nytimes.com/2026/03/19/wor…
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Zenzeni Sangweni
Zenzeni Sangweni@Zenzeni_sangwen·
Hey @grok How accurate are Trump's assertions about obliterating Iran's air force and navy, given conflicting reports from U.S. intelligence and Iranian sources? What strategic implications does the claimed degradation of Iran's military have for the potential duration and outcome of Operation Epic Fury? Could these statements be aimed at domestic audiences to bolster support for the war, or do they signal an impending de-escalation phase? In light of ongoing Iranian retaliatory attacks, how might depleted capabilities affect Tehran's reliance on proxies like Hezbollah or the Houthis? What risks do exaggerations in such briefings pose to U.S. credibility, especially with allies reluctant to join the effort?
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Fox News
Fox News@FoxNews·
BREAKING: “Our powerful military campaign against the Iranian regime has continued in full force... They have been literally obliterated. The Air Force is gone. The Navy is gone... Other than that, they're doing quite well.” — President Donald Trump
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@disclosetv Perfect! Obliterated!! Thank you, potus! We trust your words. Thank god and الحمد لله! That means that the Strait of Hormus is free again and no further troops are needed? Right? Right?
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Disclose.tv
Disclose.tv@disclosetv·
NOW - Trump on Iran: "They have been literally obliterated."
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@gepardtatze @MCDJ_Swiss After setting up defences for Canada and Greenland, which are under threat, we have to see whether additional ressources might be available.
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Der Gepardkommandant
Der Gepardkommandant@gepardtatze·
Orla Joelsen@OJoelsen

Denmark prepared for a possible U.S. attack: Flew blood supplies to Greenland and planned to blow up runways Key sources in Denmark and Europe are now revealing for the first time what happened during the most critical days, when Donald Trump threatened to take Greenland “the hard way.” When Danish soldiers were rapidly deployed to Greenland in January this year, they brought explosives with them. The plan was to destroy runways in Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq to prevent American military aircraft from landing troops on the island, should the U.S. president ultimately decide to seize Greenland by force. They also transported blood supplies from Danish blood banks so wounded personnel could be treated in case of combat. This is reported by DR, which over the past year has spoken with central sources in the Danish government, top military officers, and high-ranking officials and intelligence sources in Denmark, France, and Germany. All sources have played—and continue to play—key roles in the international crisis triggered by the United States’ demand for control over Greenland. Together, the sources describe an unprecedented year marked by sleepless nights. None of them had concrete intelligence of specific American attack plans against Greenland. Still, many feared in January that the historically important ally, the United States, could attack at any moment. At the same time, Denmark reached out to its European allies, leading to closer cooperation. “With the Greenland crisis, Europe realized once and for all that we must be able to handle our own security,” said a French senior official involved in the intense period. A rapid-response force consisting of Danish, French, German, Norwegian, and Swedish soldiers was first deployed to Nuuk and Kangerlussuaq. Shortly after, a main force followed, including: -Soldiers from the Danish Dragoon Regiment in Holstebro -Elite troops from the Jaeger Corps -French alpine troops trained for cold and mountainous warfare At the same time, Danish fighter jets and a French naval vessel were sent to the North Atlantic. According to several sources, the goal of having multinational troops on the ground was to ensure that any U.S. attempt to take Greenland would require a large-scale hostile action—thereby deterring such an attempt. “We have not been in such a situation since April 1940,” said a Danish defense source, referring to the days before Denmark’s occupation during World War II. Unlike in 1940, when Denmark chose not to resist militarily, the government and defense leadership this time decided—after extensive confidential discussions—to take the opposite approach: If the U.S. attempted an attack, Danish forces would be armed and ready to fight. Danish F-35 fighter jets deployed north were also fully armed. All this despite the understanding that Denmark could not realistically withstand a U.S. military attack. “The cost for the U.S. had to be raised. The U.S. would have to carry out a hostile act to take Greenland,” said a senior Danish defense source. Source: DR

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MCDJ🇨🇭Ministry for Combatting Dubious Journalism
Trump/Vance wanted Europe to pay the fair share in NATO and reminded them that NATO exists for Europe‘s safety (the US don’t need it). The Europeans cried and called it an offense. „The US no longer is a reliable partner“, they said. Here’s some European reliability in action:
TONY™@TONYxTWO

“Trump just ran the most brutal loyalty test in NATO history and every single ally failed it.” One of many reasons to leave NATO!

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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@MCDJ_Swiss This is not about NATO. This is about Israel’s war. Unfortunately, after foreign threats (you might have heard of them) against Kanada and Greenland, troops are needed to defend these homeland areas. Surplus capacity might help the US, providing the US start to support Ukraine.
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Klaus Wiemers
Klaus Wiemers@KlausJ·
@shanaka86 “Helium is the only element…” Really? No! Please do not spread #FAKE information! Typical escape rates: •Hydrogen: ~1–3 kg per second •Helium: ~50–100 grams per second •Heavier gases: orders of magnitude lower Regarding industry supply, you have a point.
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Helium is the only element that escapes Earth’s atmosphere permanently. Once released, it rises through the troposphere, passes the stratosphere, and leaves the planet. It cannot be manufactured. It cannot be synthesised at industrial scale. It accumulates over billions of years in the same geological reservoirs as natural gas. And one third of the world’s supply just went offline because Iran hit the facility that extracts it. Qatar produced roughly 63 million cubic metres of helium in 2025, accounting for 30 to 36 percent of global supply from a total of approximately 190 million cubic metres. QatarEnergy’s three large helium purification plants at Ras Laffan form the world’s biggest helium production base. When LNG production stopped after Iranian drone strikes on March 2 and the subsequent missile damage on March 19, helium extraction stopped automatically because helium is recovered during natural gas liquefaction. You cannot produce helium without producing LNG. The byproduct dies with the primary product. Spot helium prices have roughly doubled since the crisis began. Industry consultants warn that prolonged disruption could push contract prices toward $2,000 per thousand cubic feet. A major industrial gas supplier has already begun assessing customers a helium surcharge. Phil Kornbluth, the most cited helium market consultant, stated the assessment directly: the world cannot compensate for the loss of a third of its helium supply. South Korea imports 64.7 percent of its helium from Qatar. SK Hynix and Samsung operate high-volume fabs producing the DRAM and high-bandwidth memory that power every AI accelerator, every data centre GPU, and every cloud computing cluster on Earth. Helium cools silicon wafers during fabrication. It serves as a carrier gas in deposition and etching tools. It enables leak detection in vacuum systems. Modern extreme ultraviolet lithography requires helium-cooled environments for precise temperature control. Without helium, the fabrication process degrades or stops. SK Hynix and Samsung hold two to three months of helium inventory. Two to three months is not a buffer. It is a countdown. If Ras Laffan remains offline beyond that window, South Korean memory production faces rationing. TSMC in Taiwan is somewhat more diversified but still uses Qatar-linked supply chains. The entire AI hardware supply chain, from HBM3E memory stacks to advanced logic chips, sits inside helium-dependent ecosystems. Beyond semiconductors, helium cools the superconducting magnets in more than 14,000 MRI machines operating worldwide. It pressurises rocket fuel tanks and purges propulsion systems in aerospace. CERN’s Large Hadron Collider depends on helium cryogenic systems. There is no substitute for helium in any of these applications at industrial scale. The United States and Qatar together account for more than 70 percent of global production. The US federal helium reserve and private suppliers offer partial relief, but global prices and spot availability are still governed by Qatar’s market share. Japan’s Iwatani has drawn on US reserves. Canada and the Rockies are seeing renewed investor interest. None of this replaces 63 million cubic metres in weeks. The war hit uranium first. Then oil. Then nitrogen. Then water. Then plastic. Then medicine. Then sulfur. Now helium. Eight layers. Each one deeper. Each one closer to the infrastructure that sustains modern civilisation. The chip that processes your data, the magnet that scans your body, and the rocket that launches your satellite all depend on an atom that leaves the planet when you lose it. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
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