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VENOM
1.6K posts

VENOM
@Emma_UD_Adams
Digital creator || Liverpool Stan⚽ || CR7 🇵🇹 || steady on cruise || there are lot's of racists on x don't stress on them, they are not intelligent 🧠🤓🤓🤓
Beigetreten Mayıs 2026
1.2K Folgt1.2K Follower

@_belikebaddy Some of them have the mentality of "growing organically" you never see anything, you think say e dey easy. "Organic" k1ll you there 😂😂
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Omo we fit buy for up to 500 people oo🎉🎉
𝔸b𝕒𝕫𝕫@abazwhyllzz
This Elon musk money I go use am buy blue tick for atleast 100 people next week🎉
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@DanielRegha "if" now wey you no con be @abazwhyllzz wetin you go do now na to shut! Up!
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If you had used that N15m to fulfil your pledge to entrepreneurs that would've been much better, and much more impactful as a lot of business owners are struggling to stay in business; But of course, clovt is the goal.
Davido@davido
Send ur account abbaz 15 m for u love u
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@TheChiefMK @TheChiefMK 🤚🏻🤚🏻🤚🏻 Nobody 30BG reach me...the level wey I dey now self, I go soon reach 30TR.
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Send ur account abbaz 15 m for u love u
𝔸b𝕒𝕫𝕫@abazwhyllzz
@Tufab My love for him is greater than any thing or any amount of money in this world. 001 till I dyeee🐐❤️
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@FoAnimated @ThomasEWoods *making the "monopoly on violence" argument
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You are you are justifying neo colonialism by saying with 'monopoly on violence " Argument.....
(*)José Santos Zelaya (Nicaragua, 1909): Modernizing leader who sought independent infrastructure and resisted US concessions. US supported rebels who ousted him, citing threats to American interests.
(*)Other Latin American interventions: US actions in Honduras, Dominican Republic, Haiti, etc., often involved supporting opposition to leaders seen as unstable or anti-US business interests (e.g., occupations and backed changes in the 1910s-1930s).
(*)Mohammad Mossadegh (Iran, Prime Minister, overthrown 1953): Nationalized the British-controlled oil industry (Anglo-Iranian Oil Company), asserting economic sovereignty. US (CIA Operation Ajax) and UK backed a coup, restoring the Shah and reversing nationalization. Classic resource-nationalization case.
(*)Jacobo Árbenz (Guatemala, President, overthrown 1954): Land reforms threatened US-owned United Fruit Company. CIA-orchestrated coup (Operation PBSuccess) with propaganda and rebel support installed a pro-US regime.
(*)Patrice Lumumba (Congo/DRC, Prime Minister, assassinated 1961): Pan-Africanist who sought Soviet aid after independence and against Belgian.
influence; nationalized resources. CIA and Belgian complicity in his capture and killing; replaced by pro-Western Mobutu.
(*)Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana, President, overthrown 1966): Pan-Africanist, socialist policias non-aligned. CIA supported the coup that ousted him
(*) Salvador Allende (Chile, President, overthrown 1973): Socialist, nationalized copper (US companies affected), closer Soviet ties. Nixon/Kissinger/CIA supported opposition and Pinochet's coup; Allende died during the assault (suicide per official accounts).
(*)Juan José Torres (Bolivia, President, overthrown 1971): Leftist reforms; US-supported coup by Hugo Banzer. Torres later assassinated under Operation Condor (US-backed South American repression).
(*)Maurice Bishop (Grenada, Prime Minister, killed 1983): Marxist-Leninist, aligned with Cuba/USSR. US invasion (Operation Urgent Fury) ousted the regime after internal coup.
(*) Saddam Hussein (Iraq, 2003); 2003 US-led invasion (WMD claims, regime change) toppled him. Long adversarial with the West post-Gulf War.
(*) Muammar Gaddafi (Libya, 2011): Shifted toward pan-Africanism, independent gold-backed currency plans threatening Western financial interests, national resources. NATO intervention (US/UK/France-led) supported rebels; he was killed amid the uprising.
Cancers upon the face of the earth.
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Cancers....
(*)José Santos Zelaya (Nicaragua, 1909): Modernizing leader who sought independent infrastructure and resisted US concessions. US supported rebels who ousted him, citing threats to American interests.
(*)Other Latin American interventions: US actions in Honduras, Dominican Republic, Haiti, etc., often involved supporting opposition to leaders seen as unstable or anti-US business interests (e.g., occupations and backed changes in the 1910s-1930s).
(*)Mohammad Mossadegh (Iran, Prime Minister, overthrown 1953): Nationalized the British-controlled oil industry (Anglo-Iranian Oil Company), asserting economic sovereignty. US (CIA Operation Ajax) and UK backed a coup, restoring the Shah and reversing nationalization. Classic resource-nationalization case.
(*)Jacobo Árbenz (Guatemala, President, overthrown 1954): Land reforms threatened US-owned United Fruit Company. CIA-orchestrated coup (Operation PBSuccess) with propaganda and rebel support installed a pro-US regime.
(*)Patrice Lumumba (Congo/DRC, Prime Minister, assassinated 1961): Pan-Africanist who sought Soviet aid after independence and against Belgian.
influence; nationalized resources. CIA and Belgian complicity in his capture and killing; replaced by pro-Western Mobutu.
(*)Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana, President, overthrown 1966): Pan-Africanist, socialist policias non-aligned. CIA supported the coup that ousted him
(*) Salvador Allende (Chile, President, overthrown 1973): Socialist, nationalized copper (US companies affected), closer Soviet ties. Nixon/Kissinger/CIA supported opposition and Pinochet's coup; Allende died during the assault (suicide per official accounts).
(*)Juan José Torres (Bolivia, President, overthrown 1971): Leftist reforms; US-supported coup by Hugo Banzer. Torres later assassinated under Operation Condor (US-backed South American repression).
(*)Maurice Bishop (Grenada, Prime Minister, killed 1983): Marxist-Leninist, aligned with Cuba/USSR. US invasion (Operation Urgent Fury) ousted the regime after internal coup.
(*) Saddam Hussein (Iraq, 2003); 2003 US-led invasion (WMD claims, regime change) toppled him. Long adversarial with the West post-Gulf War.
(*) Muammar Gaddafi (Libya, 2011): Shifted toward pan-Africanism, independent gold-backed currency plans threatening Western financial interests, national resources. NATO intervention (US/UK/France-led) supported rebels; he was killed amid the uprising.
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Lets creat a space here on x then I will add you....can we do that
(*)José Santos Zelaya (Nicaragua, 1909): Modernizing leader who sought independent infrastructure and resisted US concessions. US supported rebels who ousted him, citing threats to American interests.
(*)Other Latin American interventions: US actions in Honduras, Dominican Republic, Haiti, etc., often involved supporting opposition to leaders seen as unstable or anti-US business interests (e.g., occupations and backed changes in the 1910s-1930s).
(*)Mohammad Mossadegh (Iran, Prime Minister, overthrown 1953): Nationalized the British-controlled oil industry (Anglo-Iranian Oil Company), asserting economic sovereignty. US (CIA Operation Ajax) and UK backed a coup, restoring the Shah and reversing nationalization. Classic resource-nationalization case.
(*)Jacobo Árbenz (Guatemala, President, overthrown 1954): Land reforms threatened US-owned United Fruit Company. CIA-orchestrated coup (Operation PBSuccess) with propaganda and rebel support installed a pro-US regime.
(*)Patrice Lumumba (Congo/DRC, Prime Minister, assassinated 1961): Pan-Africanist who sought Soviet aid after independence and against Belgian.
influence; nationalized resources. CIA and Belgian complicity in his capture and killing; replaced by pro-Western Mobutu.
(*)Kwame Nkrumah (Ghana, President, overthrown 1966): Pan-Africanist, socialist policias non-aligned. CIA supported the coup that ousted him
(*) Salvador Allende (Chile, President, overthrown 1973): Socialist, nationalized copper (US companies affected), closer Soviet ties. Nixon/Kissinger/CIA supported opposition and Pinochet's coup; Allende died during the assault (suicide per official accounts).
(*)Juan José Torres (Bolivia, President, overthrown 1971): Leftist reforms; US-supported coup by Hugo Banzer. Torres later assassinated under Operation Condor (US-backed South American repression).
(*)Maurice Bishop (Grenada, Prime Minister, killed 1983): Marxist-Leninist, aligned with Cuba/USSR. US invasion (Operation Urgent Fury) ousted the regime after internal coup.
(*) Saddam Hussein (Iraq, 2003); 2003 US-led invasion (WMD claims, regime change) toppled him. Long adversarial with the West post-Gulf War.
(*) Muammar Gaddafi (Libya, 2011): Shifted toward pan-Africanism, independent gold-backed currency plans threatening Western financial interests, national resources. NATO intervention (US/UK/France-led) supported rebels; he was killed amid the uprising.
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@Emma_UD_Adams @ThomasEWoods I don't have one. I don't do tiktok
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@FoAnimated @ThomasEWoods This guy is dvmb for real...the video you are presenting is the consequences of my argument..how dvmb could you be more than this?😂
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No one is arguing about "understanding" power..the argument is African leaders who shift away from the west are being killed and outsted...they are basically viewed as western enemies and as a result of the cycle and constant re-occurrence the continent has been turned to a shit-hole...guess how long it has been happening...over 500 years....give me your tiktok handle let's go live.😂
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@Emma_UD_Adams @ThomasEWoods I understand what power is. Whereas you complain about it. That's the difference.
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