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I have never once heard Europeans complain about Turkish influence until
Israelis started their campaign
Clash Report@clashreport
EU's von der Leyen: We must succeed in completing the European continent so that it is not influenced by Russia, Türkiye, or China.
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I have a secret to share
After your first $2–$3 million, a paid off home and a good car, there is no difference in quality of life between you and Jeff Bezos. Both of you have limited amount of time on earth; you have twice if not more than Jeff, so you are richer than him. A cheeseburger is a cheeseburger whether a billionaire eats or you do.
Money is nothing but a piece of paper or a number in your app. Real life is outdoors.
Become financially independent; that’s usually 2–3mil. Have good food. Enjoy the relations. Workout. Sleep well. Call your parents. That’s all there is to life. Greed has no end.
Repeat after me: Time is the currency of life. Money is not.
Sooner you figure this out, happier you will be.
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B-2 BOMBERS DECIDE INTERNATIONAL LAW
This exchange exposes a deeper truth about today’s global order: international law exists, but it is not applied equally.
In a sharp debate, Dr George Szamuely points to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), which clearly allows countries like Iran to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes. Civilian enrichment at low levels is not a weapons program, a fact widely understood within nuclear science.
But Will Chamberlain's response cuts through the legal argument entirely. His justification is not based on treaties or evidence, but on force: “The B-2 bomber decides.” The message is clear: the authority to decide does not come from international agreements, but from military dominance and the willingness to use it.
This is not a rules-based order. It is enforcement rooted in imperial hierarchy.
The contradiction becomes even sharper when you look at who is inside and outside the system. Nearly every country in the world is part of the NPT — except Israel, a nuclear-armed state and close U.S. ally that has never signed the treaty and faces no comparable scrutiny.
At the same time, Iran — a signatory — is accused of pursuing nuclear weapons despite repeated assessments that it has not built one, not even close to building one, while being denied rights explicitly outlined in the treaty.
What emerges is a familiar pattern: rules that apply to some, but not to others.
From sanctions to military threats, to cold-blooded murder, the justification often shifts, but the outcome remains consistent — pressure, isolation, and the assertion of control over states that attempt to act independently within the system.
And in this moment, the debate reveals something deeper than policy disagreement. It shows a crisis of credibility. When international law can be openly dismissed, and enforcement is selective, the question is no longer what the rules are — but who gets to ignore them.
The US is saying it loud and clear: we are your masters, we will come after you if you do not obey, and we do not respect or follow international law. This is a war for empire against sovereignty.
@venanalysis @VoxUmmah @qiaocollective @ProgIntl @blkagendareport @OrinocoTribune @KawsachunNews
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Iran knew Israel 🇮🇱 might attack, yet it chose not to strike first.
Israel says it launched a pre-emptive attack because it believed Iran was planning one.
So Israel attacks first, calls it “pre-emption,” and when Iran responds, the world labels Iran the aggressor.
Amazing how the one who strikes first somehow never becomes the aggressor in the global narrative.
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