Mitchell Lee
53 posts



@Mulletchester @Reckavelli1 @AngryAndHere @kokesi_nojob @GOVUK come get your beans and toast sucking unattended citizen out of our comment section. He’s also being mean so you should, like, arrest him or whatever you guys do over there 🤷♂️
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@Reckavelli1 @AngryAndHere @kokesi_nojob What with a picture of a police officer? Maybe you Americans actually are retarded if you think that's me getting fried 😂
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@bee_mellon @kylegman3 @Mappy6984 Landscap. Norway sits in granite and bedrock. USA has clear lakes too but a lot of it sits on clay, or loose soil. Our rivers and lakes are just way more tropical, which create more tannin, than the Norwegian glacial streams
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@kylegman3 @Mappy6984 then how come lakes in norway arent brown like this when you get water from them
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@FurkanGozukara We’ve seen Russia during a ground invasion. Easy clap GG
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@SubzeroeosS @catturd2 @NXT4EU Go suck on some beans and toast. Itll be your last after the welfare stops
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Close down all US bases in Europe.
Leave NATO.
The US is no longer our ally.
Mike Newman@MikeNew19512115
Close down all US bases in Europe. Leave NATO. France, Spain and UK are no longer our allies.
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“We will no longer purchase American weapons,” said the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, in response to the acting leader of the United States.
Until now, the money flowing into the American military-industrial complex was not just business. It was, in fact, a ritual of loyalty. You weren’t just buying missile systems — you were buying the right to belong.
As of today, it’s over.
This is how the Crown Prince responded to the insulting remarks made by the idiot Trump toward him.

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@LSmxrf @GMEMartian147 @TaraBull ‘Had power’ is past tense. So was black face racist but now it’s not? Asking for a friend
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@GMEMartian147 @TaraBull bc white people had power over Africans for years treating the like pets👍🏽
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@EricSpracklen America is crumbling? Nah that’s the Bronx. We don’t associate with their roads
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@CuriosityonX Because atoms never actually meet.
Their electron clouds repel each other via electromagnetic force, so “touch” is just that repulsion you feel.

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@reddit_lies Did putting him on trial unite or heal the country last time?
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@ultras_antifaa He’s okay with being taxed now because his health is about to kill him
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@Sandhiya_vijay7 @shitoixo The guy laying down drank to much on a party boat so their friend threw him over board to wake them up
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@SerbianFish You have to turn it 45 degrees. Otherwise, it’s traditionally Svastika which means good fortune in Buddhism/Hinduism
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@charlieINTEL Legacy halo Devs but the game still sucks. Might be the captains fault.
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@RickyDoggin If you want to listen to Selena, just pull up the Elmo song. You’ll get the same nasally screeching you’d get from her new music.
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@Ravelations716 @LowkeyEnergy_ Maybe you just naturally talk this way when you become aggressive
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@LowkeyEnergy_ Why are all these white people talking like theyre black
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@RickyDoggin Drop the EU, make a pac with the Middle East and take Europe back. And take away their healthcare too. Make em pay for it
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A MASTERCLASS IN MILITARY INCOMPETENCE
The Starmer administration’s handling of the Iranian crisis is being whispered about in the corridors of Whitehall as a historic "cock up" of the highest order. Despite receiving a formal request from the Americans on 11 February—a full 17 days before the offensive actually commenced—the British government appears to have spent that critical window in a state of paralyzed indecision. The U.S. request was not an invitation for Britain to join the initial "decapitation strikes," but rather a plea for the Royal Navy to help shield vulnerable Gulf allies from the inevitable Iranian retaliation. Instead of stepping up to protect the 240,000 British citizens living in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, the Ministry of Defence oversaw a period of baffling inaction that has left regional partners feeling utterly betrayed.
The diplomatic fallout has been described by insiders as nothing short of catastrophic, with Middle Eastern allies expressing "undiluted fury" at the lack of British support. A former minister with deep ties to Amman reports that Jordan is "fking furious," while leaders in Kuwait and the Emirates are openly questioning whose side Britain is actually on. The Cypriots are reportedly "incandescent" after learning that military assets were actually withdrawn from their vicinity just as the threat level spiked. Only this week did it emerge that HMS Dragon would finally deploy—nearly three weeks after the initial American SOS—a timeline that military experts say is far too little and far too late to restore trust.
Strategic failures have been compounded by what veteran commanders call a total lack of foresight regarding naval positioning. The only available Astute-class submarine was permitted to continue its journey toward Australia, despite having passed through the Gulf just weeks ago when it could have been held as a vital contingency. Security officials now warn that the Trump administration is viewing the UK’s "free riding" with growing contempt. There is a palpable fear in the MOD that the Americans, tired of London’s dithering, will simply cut Britain out of the loop entirely and strike a direct deal with Mauritius to secure the long-term use of Diego Garcia for future operations.
Inside the government, the situation is being described as "incoherent" and "unconscionable." By allowing the United States to utilize British bases like RAF Fairford for strikes while simultaneously refusing to participate in the missions themselves, Starmer has managed to achieve the worst of both worlds. Critics say they have invited the risk of being targeted by Tehran without the benefit of having any say in the coalition's strategic direction. One former defence chief has branded this policy "reprehensible," arguing that Britain has effectively surrendered its seat at the table in exchange for a front-row seat to its own strategic irrelevance.
The sobering reality in Whitehall is a growing sense that the UK no longer has the capacity to shape events in the Middle East. A former Downing Street adviser noted that the "intensity of Labour’s feelings" on the conflict is now matched only by their lack of influence. Allies have stopped listening because they no longer believe Britain can—or will—deliver on its security promises. As the Trump administration continues its high-tempo campaign to dismantle the IRGC, the United Kingdom finds itself sidelined, watched with suspicion by its friends and emboldened by its enemies, all due to a fortnight of inexcusable hesitation.

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