Mark

343.6K posts

Mark

Mark

@MG92__2

#MUFC #GlazersOut

Under belly of Twitter Katılım Ocak 2011
3.2K Takip Edilen2K Takipçiler
Mark retweetledi
Mark retweetledi
CBS News
CBS News@CBSNews·
Iranian authorities have sentenced to death four more people, including a woman, over last January's protests. cbsn.ws/4cpIVtx
English
222
701
1.1K
95.1K
Mark retweetledi
sтevan ⚕️🧼
sтevan ⚕️🧼@ImStevan·
big fan of magyar's post victory tour where he simply visits institutions to tell them that they're dogshit *visits president* -resign you piece of shit *visits state broadcaster* -pieces of shit, you'll be shut down
English
30
811
10.6K
164.4K
Mark retweetledi
Nick Tyrone
Nick Tyrone@NicholasTyrone·
Viktor Orban didn't concede the election because he's a fine, upstanding democrat. He did it because he lost so badly, he had absolutely no choice.
English
26
127
2.3K
17.3K
Mark retweetledi
Danny Miller
Danny Miller@DanielMillerEsq·
Smart people are trying to convince me this fucking guy should be in the pro democracy Big Tent. That’s absurd. By all means, go on his podcast. Appeal to his followers, while standing up to his craziness. But someone who is pro Hamas cannot be part of a pro democracy coalition.
Shannon Watts@shannonrwatts

Jon Favreau: "When you say Hamas is a thousand times better, do you mean that?" Hasan Piker: "I do mean it … I would vote for Hamas over Israel every single time.”

English
108
73
602
34.1K
Mark retweetledi
Ramin Nasibov
Ramin Nasibov@RaminNasibov·
I used Nero to burn CDs as a kid and only later got the joke: Nero burned Rome, and "Burning ROM" is such a perfect reference.
Ramin Nasibov tweet media
English
447
6.8K
43.6K
989.3K
Mark retweetledi
Constance
Constance@Constan63413921·
Iran is no longer functioning as a normal state. What is emerging instead is a system where the IRGC has overtaken civilian governance and is increasingly relying on foreign militias to maintain control inside the country itself. The most striking development is the visible presence of non-Iranian paramilitary forces operating in Tehran. Flags and units associated with groups such as Zeynabiyoun (Pakistani fighters), Fatemiyoun (Afghan fighters), and Hashd al-Shaabi (Iraqi militias) are now reported across checkpoints, highways, and key intersections. This is not a symbolic shift. It is structural. For a regime to rely on imported militias to police its own capital signals a deep erosion of internal trust. It suggests that the leadership increasingly depends on forces that are mercenaries and have no qualms killing protesters because they aren’t Iranians. At the same time, everyday Iran is being reshaped by coercion. IRGC-linked networks and paramilitary groups are reportedly extracting resources directly from civilians. Small businesses are pressured to hand over goods under ideological pretexts. Farmers lose production. Refusal brings threats—closure, confiscation, or accusations of disloyalty. Meanwhile, the civilian state is fading. Government offices barely function. Public services are unreliable. Banks are strained, cash is scarce, transportation is degraded and taken over by Basiji to change their clothes because their barracks were bombed, and schools are largely inactive. Institutions exist, but their capacity to operate has eroded. In parallel, Tehran is being transformed into a garrison city: 1-armed units occupy public spaces 2-checkpoints dominate infrastructure 3-movement is slowed and monitored 4-civilian life is subordinated to security presence What emerges is a clear picture: This is no longer a conventional authoritarian system. It is a militarized structure under strain, where: —-power is concentrated in the IRGC —-enforcement is increasingly outsourced to foreign militias —-and the population is subjected to both economic pressure and coercive control And that leads to the most important signal of all: People fear war. But many fear the continuation of this system even more. x.com/constan6341392…
Constance tweet mediaConstance tweet mediaConstance tweet media
The Iran Watcher 🇮🇷@TheIranWatcher

🚨 IRGC-linked paramilitary enforcers are terrorizing and extorting small businesses across Iran A group known as “Sons of Haider” is forcing shopkeepers to hand over food and basic supplies for free, claiming it is “support for the mujahideen” and regime-backed activities. Refuse, and they threaten to shut down your business, confiscate your assets, and label you a traitor to the revolution. These tactics mirror the same coercion and forced “contributions” used by ISIS, where civilians and small businesses are pressured into handing over goods under ideological pretexts. One dairy farmer in Iran was forced to hand over 100 liters of milk he had just collected, wiping out his entire day’s income and leaving his family without support. Extortion and embezzlement are hallmarks of the regime, but its lack of political leadership and growing internal rifts are making these forces even more chaotic and predatory, digging deeper into the lives of ordinary people. This is systematic, organized extortion targeting Iranians trying to survive under mounting economic pressure.

English
2
8
22
751
Mark retweetledi
Nick Tyrone
Nick Tyrone@NicholasTyrone·
Marxist Labour Theory of Value is the only one people who are well-educated will still defend, even though it might be the dumbest one on the list with the exception of Flat Earth.
Nicolas Alfonsi@NicolasAlfonsi

Top 5 des croyances populaires scientifiquement réfutées les plus tenaces: 1. Homéopathie (1796) 2. Valeur-travail marxiste (1867) 3. Terre plate (1849/1956) 4. Pyramides par les ET (1968) 5. On n'est jamais allé sur la Lune (1976) Le marxisme est une des + longévives. Respect.

English
0
1
17
1.5K
Mark retweetledi
Aleph א
Aleph א@no_itsmyturn·
Syrian 🇸🇾 authorities in Homs uncovered a tunnel used by Hezbollah to smuggle weapons from Syria into Lebanon 🇱🇧, reports Al-Ikhbariyah. Authorities also seized several warehouses containing weapons and ammunition prepared for smuggling.
Aleph א tweet mediaAleph א tweet mediaAleph א tweet mediaAleph א tweet media
English
2
12
83
7.1K
Mark retweetledi
Daniel
Daniel@VoteLewko·
This is @RhondaGarad who sits on Greater Dandenong Council. In particular the Audit and Risk Committee.
Daniel tweet media
English
84
133
583
9.3K
Mark retweetledi
Khadija Khan
Khadija Khan@KhadijaKhan__·
Muhammed as child used to go with his uncle Abu Talib to do trade with Taravans. Since he was illiterate, it was the only place where he received verbal education about different cultures (particularly about Judaism and Christianity). Then he was employed by a businesswoman, named Khadija, in his early twenties. Khadija was one of the richest businesswomen of her time. So this trade culture predates Islam. The dirham was not "gold-backed currency," either. The word "dirham" comes from the Greek "drachma," which circulated in Arabia as a result of Byzantine trade. Originally, it was a silver coin. Ancient Greek civilization was the first to use coins, and the Roman Empire later standardized coin use throughout its domains for trade. Between 660 and 750 AD, Anglo-Saxon England and the Frankish kingdoms (France/Netherlands) underwent a significant renaissance following the fall of Rome, switching from gold to silver coins. And there’s never been an “Islamic civilization," for goodness sake. It’s Islamic imperialism/colonization. A casual Google search will tell you all about it.
The Thinking Muslim Podcast@thinking_muslim

Islam invented free trade and globalisation. Watch our full episode with @MehreenKhn, Financial Editor at The Times, on our YouTube channel: @thethinkingmuslim" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">youtube.com/@thethinkingmu

English
27
75
405
24.6K
Mark retweetledi
Nicole Lampert
Nicole Lampert@nicolelampert·
Owen Jones would fail at the first hurdle to be a Telegraph journalist which also pledges to be ‘fact-based journalism’. The new owners say simply: ‘We support the right of Israel to exist and oppose all forms of antisemitism.’ Supporting the right of a country to exist doesn’t mean you have to support the country. I support the right of Iran to exist while hoping there is regime change. But there’s only ever one country that the ‘anti genocide’ movement would like to genocide. Oh Owen.
Nicole Lampert tweet media
English
47
149
872
24.7K
Mark retweetledi
Vatnik Soup
Vatnik Soup@P_Kallioniemi·
Finland’s President Alexander Stubb says he’s “been smiling for four days” after Orbán’s crushing defeat in Hungary. After 16 years of illiberal rule, a pro-EU supermajority now promises to bring Hungary back closer to Europe.
Vatnik Soup tweet media
English
78
1.1K
6.5K
43.2K
Mark retweetledi
Hamidreza
Hamidreza@justchangingun·
“Has gas become more expensive in Europe? We, the Iranian people, hereby strongly condemn the rising fuel prices and urge European governments to show restraint and patience.”
دیانا بهادر@PatriotGirlRise

بنزین تو اروپا گرون شده؟ ما ایرانیان گرون شدن بنزین تو اروپا رو محکوم میکنیم و آنها را به خویشتن داری و صبر دعوت میکنیم.

English
82
1.6K
5.7K
83.8K