Nigel is baffled

6.7K posts

Nigel is baffled

Nigel is baffled

@NigelIs9734

参加日 Eylül 2024
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Nigel is baffled
Nigel is baffled@NigelIs9734·
@ThePosieParker You're getting madder and more extreme with each day. Get off the net, you're losing your marbles.
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Kellie-Jay Keen
Kellie-Jay Keen@ThePosieParker·
I don’t trust men around small children. I mean, all men, unless I have reason *to* trust them. Harsh, but fair.
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UK Back in the Day
UK Back in the Day@UKBackintheDay2·
200 years from now, people will hold this in the same regard as people hold Mozart or Beethoven right now… An absolute classic.
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🇺🇸 Pamela Geller 🇮🇱
International Monetary Fund: Israel’s GDP Per Capita Surpasses England and France Astounding. Under constant and unending attack, they have achieved the impossible. Remember when then-French Ambassador described Israel to the UK's Daniel Bernard  as "that shitty little country," who's that shitty little country now? gellerreport.com/2026/04/intern…
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Speshal
Speshal@The_Speshal·
@disco___cat The uk is suffering because the public were stupidly allowed to vote on Brexit without being given any facts about it. Also because Trump is fucking up the world economy.
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Nigel is baffled
Nigel is baffled@NigelIs9734·
@Jenny_1884 Me. A recent diabetes diagnosis has prompted me to limit carbs, and get my calories from fat. And guess what, instant weight loss
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Jen k 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
I’ve gone back to drinking full fat milk, use real butter & lard because I think we were wrongly advised these products were bad for you when in fact they aren’t. Have others changed back?
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James Dueck🇻🇦
James Dueck🇻🇦@JamesDueck·
Why are Canada, the UK, and Australia, despite being thousands of kilometers apart, all collapsing in the same way?
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John Wright
John Wright@1engine·
@JamesDueck Canadians are blaming our economic woes on Trump but he's only been in power for a year and we've had a 10+ year decline.
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Marvel
Marvel@marcvelitrae·
@JamesDueck Multiculturalism. They all chose to throw away their history and culture by inviting droves of people from alien cultures to settle in their countries.
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Bill M.
Bill M.@pr0cs·
@JamesDueck It's a "managed decline" that our betters have decided they'd prefer to rule over. The dirty poors were enjoying life way too much, stinking up their air travel and resorts. Crushing the middle class ensures the right people are in charge
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Caldweab
Caldweab@LeftyTalk·
@NigelIs9734 @libertarian_ass @DA_Stockman The JCPOA was 3.67%. Reactor grade material & it was coupled with the most stringent IAEA monitoring & inspections. We didn’t need this war. We could have gotten a deal where they down blend their HEU, limit enrichment levels & agree to US/IAEA monitoring & inspections.
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David Stockman
David Stockman@DA_Stockman·
I'll tell you what, Dinesh. Even if you had 400 kilos of 90% U-235 and a box of matches, the length of time it would take you to make a nuke is NEVER. The fact is, 60% enriched uranium like the Iranians had isn't even 10% of the way to a bomb. The rest--- engineering, machining, fabrication and assembly of the watch-like innards of a nuclear implosion bomb---is the real hard part. And even that ignores the fact that no one in their right mind---even the mullahs---would attempt to launch against the USA a beginners bomb that had never been tested and which no Iranian missile could carry for the 10,000 kilometer trip to the US in any event. And that's to say nothing of reentering the atmosphere successfully under blistering heat and percussion. In short, Iran's possession of 10 bombs worth of HEUs was not remotely an imminent threat, and that's according to the repeated attestations of the 17 US intelligence agencies, including DNI Tulsi Gabbard's testimony to Congress in March 2025. So what in the hell are you gumming about in year pathetic, self-evidently barking ignorance?
Dinesh D'Souza@DineshDSouza

60 Minutes has admitted @potus was right about Iran’s nuclear abilities: “If you enrich it just a little bit more, for 10-11 nuclear bombs.” Trump was right!

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MILO
MILO@Nero·
Lord, have mercy.
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Connor Tomlinson
Connor Tomlinson@Con_Tomlinson·
Why is there Star Wars dialogue on the back of my creatine, MyProtein?
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Itumeleng Mocumi
Itumeleng Mocumi@ItumelengMocum1·
@pookiepolls Too long and really not bothered.... LOOK BRA.... WHAT WORKED FOR YOU BACK B4 1994 DIDN'T WORK FOR US... HOWEVER SUCCESSFUL SA WAS-black people didn't get to enjoy that success... IT WAS PAINFUL... SO FUCK YOU FUCK WHAT U MISS GO LOOK FOR PRE 94 CONDITIONS ELSEWHERE... FUCK OFF
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Pookie's Polls & Opinions
Pookie's Polls & Opinions@pookiepolls·
A whole generation of South Africans would be shocked to read this, especially when they look at where the country is today. Before 1994, South Africa built capabilities that few countries in the world could claim. It developed nuclear weapons, a rocket programme, large-scale synthetic fuel production, a globally respected defence industry, and medical breakthroughs that made world history. At the southern tip of Africa, one country achieved all of this before the Cold War had even ended. Today, Africa is often spoken about as if it is still waiting to industrialise, still dependent, still trying to build what others already mastered long ago. That is what makes this history so striking. While South Africa was enriching uranium at Pelindaba, testing rockets at Overberg, producing fuel from coal at Secunda, and carrying out the world’s first human heart transplant at Groote Schuur, much of the rest of Africa was being pulled in a very different direction. Instead of industrial self-reliance, many newly independent states were sold ideology. Instead of building durable technical capacity, they were pushed toward socialist models that too often ended in weak institutions, dependency, and collapse. The pattern repeated itself across the continent. South Africa, by contrast, built real strategic capability under sanctions and international pressure. It developed its own uranium enrichment process, built six nuclear weapons, and then voluntarily dismantled them before the democratic transition, opening its programme to international inspection. No other nuclear state has done that in the same way. It also built a serious rocket programme. Vehicles in the RSA series were designed and tested, and the country came close to having its own orbital launch capability. That programme was not simply paused. It was dismantled. Sasol achieved something equally remarkable: turning coal into fuel on a huge scale. When South Africa could not secure enough oil, it used chemistry and engineering to produce its own supply. That was not theory. It was functioning industrial independence. The defence sector was another pillar of that capability. South Africa designed and produced advanced artillery, armoured vehicles, aircraft projects, and attack helicopters. Some of these systems went on to influence military designs far beyond its borders. Then there was medicine. In 1967, Christiaan Barnard and his team performed the world’s first successful human heart transplant in Cape Town. That was not an isolated achievement. It reflected a wider culture of scientific and medical excellence. So the uncomfortable question is this: if all of this is documented, why is so little of it widely remembered? The answer may be that it does not fit neatly into the version of history most people are taught. Pre-1994 South Africa is rightly remembered for apartheid and injustice, but that is not the whole story. It was also the most technologically advanced state Africa had produced, and acknowledging that forces people to confront how much capability existed, and how much has since been lost. South Africa did not inherit these achievements. It built them under pressure, under sanctions, and largely on its own. That is not nostalgia. It is history. And the fact that so many people barely know it happened says a great deal about how history is told.
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Cormac
Cormac@Cormaca2022·
@Bbmorg Yes. No cheese for me though. Nice bread, bit of real butter, beans and black pepper. Done. My go to vegetarian delicacy.
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