Dave

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Dave

Dave

@TechPostsEU

Tech guy. Pro Europe, pro EU.

Amsterdam शामिल हुए Aralık 2025
285 फ़ॉलोइंग116 फ़ॉलोवर्स
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
straitsweeper.com "Iran begins mining Strait of Hormuz as Washington's tanker escort claim collapses"
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Dave@TechPostsEU·
@mandyarthur We all know what they did. The problem is nobody holds them accountable. Republicans in Congress don't care.
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Mandy Arthur
Mandy Arthur@mandyarthur·
They’re going to blow up the world before they admit what they did on that island.
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Eduardo García-Molina
Eduardo García-Molina@eduardo_garcmol·
The current US administration is actually living up to its promise of bringing back Spartan military ethos by talking loudly and losing more than winning.
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
@APHClarkson NATO is not sustainable with the current US administration in its current form
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Alexander Clarkson 
Alexander Clarkson @APHClarkson·
The "we'd stomp you Euros" jingoism on this from the same MAGA accounts that only 5 minutes earlier demand that Euros provide more bases and ships that Trump needs for his war on Iran is a further datapoint for how NATO is not sustainable in its current form
Shashank Joshi@shashj

Remarkable story from Denmark's nat'l broadcaster. "When Danish soldiers were flown to Greenland in January...they brought explosives so they could destroy, among other things, the runways in Nuuk & Kangerlussuaq [to] prevent US mil aircraft from landing" dr.dk/nyheder/indlan…

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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
THIS is what we should do. No reopening North Sea drilling or Groningen gas fields. The lesson that fossil fuels are geopolitically and economically unreliable needs to be fully absorbed and accepted, once and for all.
Jan Rosenow@janrosenow

Spain's renewables build-out has structurally decoupled its electricity prices from gas markets. Gas now sets the price in only 15% of hours, compared to 90% in Italy. Countries that invested early in clean power are far less exposed to fossil fuel price shocks.

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Shashank Joshi
Shashank Joshi@shashj·
France—"Would you like more soldiers? You could have them. Would you like more naval support? You could have that. Would you like more air support? You could have that too. A number of other allies also offered their support early on – including Germany." dr.dk/nyheder/indlan…
Shashank Joshi tweet media
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
Yeah-yeah, some folks inherit star-spangled eyes Hoo, they send you down to war, Lord And when you ask 'em, "How much should we give?" Hoo, they only answer, "More, more, more, more"
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Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦
The American delegation has come to Minsk to negotiate the participation of the Belarusian Navy's aircraft carrier strike group in the opening of the Strait of Hormuz.
Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦 tweet media
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David Frum
David Frum@davidfrum·
If you wonder why Europeans flinch from helping US in Gulf - in January, NATO allies were seriously preparing for a US sneak attack on Greenland, planning to blow up runways to prevent a Trump re-enactment of Putin's failed strike on Kyiv.
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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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
@POTFES Dismantling is underway: 70 of roughly 300 wells have been sealed and six of 22 locations have been fully dismantled. The Senate banned extraction in 2024. Reversing that requires new legislation, which is politically toxic. It's not "just restart gas extraction"
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Pindo 🇪🇺
Pindo 🇪🇺@POTFES·
Yes, but not the political capital to make a faster push. There's no way that GasUnie the dutch gas reserve exploiter will not take the extra revenue with a closing contract that ends when renewables and electricification is done. We can't have old world principles rule the new world.
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Pindo 🇪🇺
Pindo 🇪🇺@POTFES·
As an environmental scientist it hurts to say, but we are getting fucked in Europe because the Americans can't keep their missiles in their pants. We should open our own gas fields and oil fields again. The investment should be entirely justifiable now, while we transition to green energy and nuclear.
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
It just astounds me that some peoples' reactions to all the destruction in the ME is "we need more oil and gas extraction" How much more of the world needs to burn before we stop this insanity?
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
@POTFES Multiple European nations now go weeks entirely powered by renewables. We need to accelerate this further. Massive investment in grid battery deployments, not in oil and gas fields
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
@POTFES You don't "just open oil and gas fields you closed", this kind of simplification of everything is what gets us into these messes. Oil and gas companies make long term plans and need credible ROIC or they won't do it. We have sufficient renewable resources to power our societies.
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
@teroterotero The last 10% of its missiles? Do you truly believe that? Is it based on what Trump said, or Hegseth, or do you have some source that's actually based on evidence?
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Tero Kuittinen
Tero Kuittinen@teroterotero·
As Iran is left with the last 10% of its missiles, it faces a choice. Should it face the end alone or take USA down with it? I hope we made the right move when we forced this choice on Tehran! Because otherwise Disney World foot traffic in June is gonna be pretty fkng grim.
OSINTtechnical@Osinttechnical

The Middle East descended into a series of strikes on oil and gas facilities over the past 24 hours after Iran responded to Israel's attack on the South Pars. The Iranian response scored varying hits, including ones that caused "severe damage" to Qatar's Ras Laffan gas complex.

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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
@Geiger_Capital Because they're a sovereign state...
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Geiger Capital
Geiger Capital@Geiger_Capital·
We heavily subsidize Israel’s defense… Why are they taking any military action that could impact us without explicit approval?
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Dave
Dave@TechPostsEU·
@davidfrum They should. But Trump will probably announce a podcast host.
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David Frum
David Frum@davidfrum·
The United States is fighting Iran, the world's leading state sponsor of terror. Americans face a great danger that Iran might activate terror strikes inside the US. Shouldn't the next DHS secretary be a counter-terrorism professional, selected for experience and competence?
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Tekee
Tekee@Tekeee·
Gold is crashing. Silver is crashing. Crypto is crashing. Stocks are crashing. The dollar is crashing. Real talk what should we buy now?
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