Ken Lancy

104 posts

Ken Lancy

Ken Lancy

@KenLancy007

Canton, GA Katılım Nisan 2024
174 Takip Edilen57 Takipçiler
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein @elonmusk It’s also called training. Pilots need hours flying to become more experienced and proficient.
English
0
0
0
384
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
HEY @elonmusk any thoughts on this “Waste and abuse”. Didn’t think so… Military chopper flies by Kid Rick’s home to pay tribute.
English
248
437
3.8K
251.2K
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
BREAKING: Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi: “There are no talks with the U.S.”
English
123
222
1.8K
33.7K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@Jvnior “The line between disorder and order lies in logistics.” “An army without its baggage train is lost; without provisions it is lost.” — Sun Tsu
English
0
0
0
4
Jvnior
Jvnior@Jvnior·
Donald Trump and Netanyahu just bombed a fish market in Iran. Not a military target. A fish market. Now you know who the real terrorists are.
English
2.9K
25.4K
55.7K
1.1M
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
Seems like maybe they are recruiting high-schoolers to patrol the airports as ICE agents since most educated people realize how stupid all of this is.
Brian Krassenstein tweet media
English
1K
529
2.4K
70.7K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein Did you say anything about the 2 ICBMs that Iran supposedly did not have that were launched toward Diego Garcia? 2300-3000 miles away.
English
0
0
4
272
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
MAJOR BREAKING: Trump threatens to “obliterate Iran’s Power plants,” at 7:44pm Et on Monday if the Strait of Hormuz is not open. Here are five reasons why this would be such a horrible move: First, it would be a major escalation of the war. This is already a highly combustible moment: Trump publicly threatened to “obliterate” Iran’s power plants unless Tehran reopened the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours, after weeks of U.S.-Israeli strikes, Iranian missile attacks, and a major energy shock tied to the strait’s disruption. Reuters and AP both describe the conflict as already expanded, with Iranian strikes reaching Diego Garcia and southern Israel, and with the Strait of Hormuz still central to the crisis. Second, Iran would likely retaliate far beyond just the battlefield inside Iran. A strike on power plants would hit core civilian infrastructure, so Tehran would have strong incentive to answer with attacks on U.S. bases, Gulf energy sites, shipping, partner states, and possibly diplomatic facilities. Reuters has already reported Iranian warnings to Gulf energy installations, ongoing attacks on major regional oil and gas facilities, and broader threats tied to Hormuz. The Wall Street Journal also reports increased pressure on U.S. diplomatic missions. Third, it could create a humanitarian disaster inside Iran. Knocking out major power generation is not like hitting a discrete military target. It can cascade into water treatment failures, hospital disruptions, food spoilage, communications blackouts, fuel distribution problems, sewage failures, and mass civilian suffering. Even if the U.S. framed it as coercive pressure, the real-world effect would likely be to punish civilians broadly. That would invite international condemnation and serious questions under the laws of war, especially if the attacks were viewed as disproportionate or as targeting dual-use infrastructure with predictable civilian harm. The EU has already called for an end to strikes on energy and water infrastructure. Fourth, it would probably make the global energy crisis even worse, not better. The current war has already driven a historic supply disruption: Reuters reports the effective closure of Hormuz and related attacks have removed massive supply from the market, pushed oil sharply higher, and threatened LNG availability for years. G7 governments are already discussing action to protect energy supplies and maritime security. A U.S. attack on Iran’s electrical grid could push Tehran to make Hormuz even more dangerous, expand attacks on Gulf producers, and harden the crisis rather than resolve it. Fifth, it would deepen the political blowback at home and abroad. AP reports Congress is already demanding an exit plan and questioning the administration’s legal authority and strategy as the war drags on and costs mount. A deliberate strike on national power infrastructure would intensify those concerns, especially if it looked like mission creep, collective punishment, or a step toward regime-change war without congressional authorization. Allies that support keeping Hormuz open might still oppose turning the war into a systematic attack on civilian infrastructure.
Brian Krassenstein tweet media
English
308
374
1.3K
141.1K
Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 LMFAO! New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is being mocked nationwide after she BEGGED people to move back from Florida 4 years ago, she was GLOATING, saying Republicans should "jump on a bus and head down to Florida" Mamdani will make the problem EVEN WORSE!
English
4K
15.5K
55K
1.5M
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein Did you say anything when oil went to $140 a barrel after Russia attacked Ukraine. Or just put an Ukraine flag in your bio?
English
0
0
2
15
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
Biden didn’t cause high gas prices. Trump actually did.
English
470
1K
4.8K
86.3K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@EdKrassen Oh so you toured Irans enrichment labs and made sure they were not going past the 3-4% for nuclear fuel rods?? Why would they need so many centrifuges and put them a mile under a mountian?
English
0
0
2
17
Ed Krassenstein
Ed Krassenstein@EdKrassen·
BREAKING: Trump claims that the Obama Nuclear deal with Iran would have led to them nuking America. FACT: Iran was adhered my to the deal. They began enriching Uranium farther when Trump pulled us out of the deal. Trump did this. All of it! For no good reason.
English
534
2K
11.9K
826.8K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein Tell us about all your infinite knowledge of being a war fighter?!?! We will wait.
English
0
0
2
11
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
BREAKING: The US and Trump have been incredibly unprepared for this war. Below you will see an Iranian-backed militia use an FPV drone to carry out a reconnaissance mission through the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad yesterday. This was done unchallenged and undetected. War isn’t what it used to be.
English
411
891
4.2K
305.6K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein Did you care when it reached $140bbl after Russia attacked Ukraine. Or did you just turn your profile picture into the Ukraine flag?
English
0
0
2
20
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
BREAKING: Oil surges above $102 a barrel. Thanks Trump.
Brian Krassenstein tweet media
English
382
514
2.1K
51.3K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein Did you care when oil is $140 bbl when Russia attacked Ukraine?. Or did you just change your stupid bio photo to the Ukraine flag?!?!
English
0
0
0
9
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
How many Trump stickers have you put places so far?
English
479
532
2.9K
89.6K
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
BREAKING: Trump released video of the Kharg Island attack, which he claims was the “most powerful bombing raid in the history of the Middle East”. It shows what appears to be attacks on a civilian airport used to transport oil workers, attacks on empty fields and nothing remotely close to the “most powerful bombing raid in the history of the Middle East.”
English
291
695
3.1K
193.4K
Jennifer Griffin
Jennifer Griffin@JenGriffinFNC·
US defense official confirms to Fox News that the Pentagon is sending the USS Tripoli, a Marine Amphibious Ready Group, and the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) to Mideast. The Tripoli is stationed out of Japan and would take about 2 weeks to get to the Mideast. Accompanying the ARG and the MEU are approx. 2500 US Marines. First reported by @laraseligman @WSJ
Visegrád 24@visegrad24

BREAKING: The U.S. is deploying 2,200 Marines and three amphibious warships from Japan to the Middle East, led by the Tripoli Amphibious Ready Group: USS Tripoli (LHA-7) USS San Diego (LPD-22) USS New Orleans (LPD-18) The deployment includes roughly 20 F-35B Lightning II. The USS Tripoli and the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit are based out of Sasebo and Okinawa, Japan.

English
181
825
2.3K
1.1M
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@DerrickEvans4WV Remember the game Sim City. Mamdani should play it. See when you raise taxes to much, people leave your city. Just like in the game.
English
0
1
1
34
Derrick Evans
Derrick Evans@DerrickEvans4WV·
🚨 JUST IN: NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani claims he can stop people from leaving New York City by raising taxes. "I'll ask those who make the most amount of money [to] pay a little bit more so everyone can stay in this city!"
English
151
33
133
37.6K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein No. They died because of an accident of two planes possibly running into each other.
English
0
1
4
58
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
BREAKING UPDATE: 12 Americans are now dead thanks to Trump’s pathetic war. Four crew members were killed when a US KC-135 refueling aircraft crashed in Iraq.
Brian Krassenstein tweet media
English
470
886
3.7K
92.3K
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@PeteHegseth @POTUS Bring in the Navy Dolphins 🐬 . They will find them if there are any.
English
0
0
6
134
Ken Lancy
Ken Lancy@KenLancy007·
@krassenstein Looks like the Navy will bring in their dolphins to detect them like they have done before. 🐬
English
0
0
1
60
Brian Krassenstein
Brian Krassenstein@krassenstein·
MAJOR BREAKING: Iran has already started to mine the Strait of Hormuz. Here's what this means: - Even a small number of mines can shut down a shipping lane because ships refuse to risk hitting one. - Clearing mines is slow and dangerous, requiring ship-by-ship inspection of routes. - Iran could deploy hundreds of mines very quickly, potentially within hours to 1–2 days using small boats, submarines, or disguised civilian vessels. - Iran reportedly possesses 5,000–6,000 naval mines, enough to seriously disrupt the strait. - Once mines are places, it would take as long as a month for them to be removed once the war is over, meaning long term oil transit issues.
Ed Krassenstein@EdKrassen

BREAKING: Iran has now begun laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz, according to CNN. So far a few dozen mines have been laid, but there is a possibility that they could lay hundreds more in the coming days. This could send the price of oil skyrocketing. "Catastrophic consequences for oil markets".

English
198
545
1.6K
116.8K