
SF Bay Sports Royalty
55.7K posts

SF Bay Sports Royalty
@SFSportsAndTech
Tech Attorney, Entrepreneur, Investor: RE/Startups | @Wharton MBA | Love Art: Exploring web3 via Moonbirds | SF Sports, The U, Tech, Politics, Travel





Balaji is a bright guy but he fled the USA and has set his mind totally against our future success. He lives in a world where US is losing and China is winning. This is his fixation. It’s dangerous, and it’s wrong. And this war has embarrassed China, destroyed their 100 cargo planes of war materials and their military ally, and frustrates them. It’s fair to disagree about the attack. But saying that its architects are guilty of any downside is childlike nonsense. They should be proud of their work and their courage to take on this evil. If you’re against the war, do you get credit for the last two decades of literal mass torture and mass rape and repression by this regime, and its terror funding and death around the region? Do you get credit for “supporting” the billions it spends on social media bots and information operations to polarize the US against ourselves, and weaken the west? Do you also get credit for what would have been the next twenty years of that? Are you, Balaji, responsible for that side of it? No? But if you are for it, you get zero credit for fixing any of that, but blamed for ALL the possible downsides? Total BS. The mullahs holding the region hostage shouldn’t get your help to blame others for the damage they do. Geopolitics and war is complex and there are risks on all sides. There is risk in acting, and in not acting. I’m really glad we are taking advantage of the massive innovation and competence gap that exists at this moment, and finally eliminating so much evil. I hope for freedom for the Iranian people and know that the situation is hard and complex, but either way it is good to stop the bad guys and eliminate so many of the worst groups, who have done so much damage, from history. Nobody should get away with what those bastards did for so long; this was long overdue.




Ali Larijani’s successor, Hossein Dehghan, holds a PhD in Management. He was one of the students who occupied the US embassy in Tehran. He also commanded the IRGC forces in Lebanon and was among the orchestrators of the 1983 bombing of the US Marine barracks in Beirut. The look on his face says it all.







The #FBI seized multiple domains linked to Iranian intelligence that were actively used to facilitate cyberattacks, post stolen data, and call for the killing of regime dissidents and U.S. residents. The FBI and @TheJusticeDept will continue to defend the homeland by disrupting Iranian hacking and repression schemes that target dissidents and impact Americans. justice.gov/opa/pr/justice…

YESTERDAY IRAN FIRED MISSILES AT THE UNITED STATES AND ISRAEL, AND THEY DID HURT. TODAY WE WILL HIT THEM WITH A FORCE THAT THEY HAVE NEVER EXPERIENCED BEFORE.





A humanitarian aid convoy from Tajikistan, reportedly consisting of ~110 large trucks, departed on March 18 and is expected to arrive in Iran soon. At the same time, there are separate reports raising concerns about materials reaching Iran from China/Russia that could support military programs, including so-called “dual-use” items like chemical components for rocket fuel and also drones. However, ordinary Iranians have not been subject to widespread hardship or disasters that would require this aid. Recent events, including precision strikes, have largely targeted IRGC-linked military sites suggesting the convoy’s main beneficiaries are regime or military forces rather than the general population. While labeled “humanitarian,” the shipment’s timing and context raise questions about who truly benefits. There is currently no verified evidence linking the Tajik aid convoy itself to weapons or disguised military equipment.















