leaf がリツイート
leaf
28.7K posts

leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート

This is Iran's 10 point plan - which Trump has accepted as "a workable basis on which to negotiate."
Have no doubt:
This is the biggest strategic defeat suffered by the US since its emergence as a superpower.

Owen Jones@owenjonesjourno
Donald Trump has backed down from his threat to commit genocide against Iran.
English
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート

The staggeringly lucrative secret behind Trump's war lust rawstory.com/raw-investigat…
English
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート

Before Donald Trump's second presidency, warnings that the US could become an authoritarian regime or even a dictatorship under his leadership were often dismissed with the argument that the country had strong institutions such as laws, Congress, and independent judges that would prevent this.
Today, with the US already exhibiting clear signs of an authoritarian state and Trump publicly suggesting that the next election be canceled, the danger is becoming tangible that America is following in the footsteps of totalitarian regimes like present-day Russia under Putin—a scenario in which democratic principles gradually erode, opposition is suppressed, and power remains concentrated in the hands of a few.

English
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート

A man attempted to transfer files from his Commodore 64 to his Apple computer. 1984...
This photograph from 1984 captures a scene familiar to the earliest pioneers of personal computing: a man bridging two worlds of incompatible technology.
The Commodore 64 and the Apple II were the flagships of rival ecosystems, each with its own software, storage formats, and technical languages. Enthusiasts who attempted to move data between them were part engineer, part artist, and part hacker.
The image shows the creative chaos of early digital life, cables snaking across desks, CRT monitors glowing with blue screens, and the faint promise of a connected future. For those who lived through the dawn of home computing, every experiment like this one marked a small step toward the networked world we now take for granted.
The Commodore 64, released in 1982, remains the best-selling single computer model in history, with an estimated 17 million units sold worldwide.
© Reddit
#archaeohistories

English
leaf がリツイート
leaf がリツイート
















