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@NotBI48
Shia | anti the Trump-Netenyahu-Epstein axis of evil
Basra, Iraq 参加日 Şubat 2026
88 フォロー中16 フォロワー
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Hamas's charter is significantly more liberal in what it believes should happen to Israeli Jews than the Israeli center-left's actual policy towards Palestinians. Israel has also killed countless more Palestinians than Hamas has killed Israelis. What's the basis for this claim?
nathan🇵🇷🥥🌴@naaycoqui
Hamas is worse than Israel ideologically and literally
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Good on them if they’re reforming their economy and living a little better but there’s no need to romanticize a closed-off bunker state.
julia 🔻🪂@haesoook
Americans don't even try to deny the DPRK's success anymore they just look at you like this
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That’s one way of framing it. The other is to ask the obvious question: what is Iran doing by proxy in a separate sovereign nation and what business is it of theirs what Lebanon and Israel negotiate? Of course, you never address this, because it would reauire an admission of the Islamic Republic’s Islamist expansionist goals in, let’s remember, what was one a majority Christian nation.
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The magnitude of what just happened may take some time to sink in.
This is the first time Iran has struck Israel after Israel struck another country's territory (that is, not Iran).
This means that the battle lines have been moved.
Iran's deterrence had already been restored in the sense that Israel knew that any strike on it would be responded to.
But now, Iran has proven that it will also respond to Israeli strikes on Lebanon.
This is the first time in decades that a regional power has the means, capacity, and willingness to put hard power against Israeli military maneuvers or aggression against a third party.
Read full analysis here: tritaparsi.substack.com/p/the-profound…

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@BaalJolani what a f@ggøt any jordanian nationalist should be sent to a labor camp
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@buckadeath @SocialistMMA I been saying they didn’t go hard enough since the day it happened.
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How I sleep at night knowing I explicitly defended Hamas and October 7th

Nick Cruse 🥋@SocialistMMA
How I sleep at night knowing that I never condemned Hamas
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wow crazy how spotless it was
SKD@7B_SKD
Baghdad from the British Museum archive, during the 1960s.
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@batbuta00 @RashmanTheHorse Yes but syria quasi normalized with Israel and is still worse off. So OPs point is reinforced
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@NotBI48 @RashmanTheHorse Having Syrians clean your streets doesn’t make it any less of a shithole
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@batbuta00 @RashmanTheHorse No worries we have Syrians who’re willing to clean our streets rather than go back home to their new Israeli hand-picked terrorist of a leader 👍🏼
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@RashmanTheHorse This is stupid. Iraqi HDI is probably inflated by the high income per capita from oil revenues, not because the standard of living is high. Most of the country doesn’t have consistent running water or electricity, and their sewage flows out into the street.
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The first time I was flying to Beirut, the desk officer at London Heathrow asked before checking us in, “have you been to Israel?”
We had rehearsed the answer to this question before. But Winston can't lie, so he said yes. I gave him the dirty look. There goes our vacation!
"Well, you don't have the stamp on your passports so just make sure you tell the officer in Beirut that you haven't," she intoned.
I was stressed out for the next 5 hours, and even more so when we had to face the border officer who, by the grace of God, did not ask us THE question (even though he took our passports to a secondary office for extra checks).
Spending time in Beirut, you realize that it's the same Mediterranean light that bathes Tel Aviv; the sea is the same shade of shimmering blue because... well, it's the same sea.
In both places, young people spill out of clubs at sunrise, the bass still thumping from rooftops that overlook the same ancient coastline. Both cities pulse with the same Levantine hunger for life: the clink of arak glasses, endless plates of hummus swirled with olive oil, the sudden eruption of dabke or house music that pulls strangers into a circle. Parties start on the rooftops of Gemmayze in Beirut and tumble down into Mar Mikhael’s narrow alleys; in Tel Aviv they begin on the sand at Gordon Beach and migrate to the warehouses of the Florentin district. These are both stylish people who love life, and who love to party. The energy is truly infectious. The accents may differ but something about this weird combination along with a deep sense of rootedness in community and the extended family really underscore how similar they were.
And yet, there's been a wall between these two peoples. There are no flights stitching the 45 min hop across the water. No commercial trucks rumbling between the ports. Lebanese law forbids its citizens - inside the country or in the diaspora - from so much as speaking to an Israeli, a rule so absolute that some Lebanese friends of mine who live in Europe still glance over their shoulders before typing a reply to any Israeli even outside the country, whether for business or pleasure.
I spent evenings in Beirut listening to Lebanese friends speak of Israelis not as the enemy but as people caught in the same endless loop of fear and longing.
Decades of Hezbollah’s shadow have hollowed out parts of Lebanon, turning the south into a garrison and the economy into a ruin. Yet in the cafés of Achrafieh and the mountain villages above the city you hear it more and more: a quiet, exhausted recognition that the real hostage-takers are not across the border but inside it.
I keep imagining the day the question at Beirut airport changes. I keep picturing the first flight from Rafic Harari to Ben Gurion. One day the music will be louder than the fear. One day the Lebanese and the Israelis will throw the party the rest of the world has been waiting for.
I hope this is the first step:
Open Source Intel@Osint613
History in the making: Israel’s ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter and Lebanon’s ambassador meet for the first round of Israel Lebanon talks. This is very interesting.
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