Pete

11.1K posts

Pete

Pete

@Prymefactor

Engineer | Tech Enthusiast | Speed Reader | One of the good ones, most of the time 😀

Katılım Temmuz 2023
109 Takip Edilen213 Takipçiler
Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
@Abe_Kowo @Wizarab10 @the_beardedsina If this is the conversation in question, then you’re at fault. You’re the one who let the conversation drop just after he asked you if you were also a doctor. Not a single chat from you from May to July. How do you explain or justify this?
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Sir Dickson
Sir Dickson@Wizarab10·
She said they should pay her, book flight for her and her crew. All these to raise money for kidney failure? Nawa ooo. This is why I work with @the_beardedsina. He would verify the health issue. Look at the test result and order a fresh one where necessary. He would call the hospital and speak with the doctor. He even drives to the hospital where necessary. He would help schedule appointment among others. I can’t even thank him enough. I don’t know what is happening on IG, but we don’t do that here.
Oku@oku_yungx

I will never understand this. I love money but no be everything be business. Why is it important to charge someone whose husband is sick with kidney failure as an influencer? If the story is legit, all you need do is use your voice to seek help instead of collecting from a broken family. What kind of shit is this?

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Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
FFs, why does everyone write in this cadence these days?
Kelechi DonPido@kmbiamnozie

The most difficult subject in War School was Iran, you know why? No one, even my Professors who were former intelligence operatives couldn’t tell Irans military strategy. Militarily, Iran did what no country has done. The decentralization of it Forces, a well organized a formidable units with its own brain around defense. You can embed the CIA and Mossad as much as you want in Iran, but there’s a place where everything stops. So let me give you a little lesson about Iran, It is Not a country. Not really. More like a living labyrinth, designed not to win wars the way empires do but to outlive them. You see, in the grand theaters of war, where men like Napoleon Bonaparte chased glory and where doctrine is etched into polished marble halls, Iran chose a different scripture entirely. They studied collapse. They watched the fate of men like Saddam Hussein, a towering army, centralized, proud and decapitated in weeks. They watched Libya. They watched Afghanistan. And somewhere in the ashes of those fallen regimes, Iran asked a far more dangerous question: “What survives when the head is cut off?” And so, they removed the head. No single brain. No single nerve center. Instead, a thousand smaller minds, each capable of thought, of violence, of continuation. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is not merely a military force. It is a philosophy with weapons. A hydra. You don’t defeat it, you inconvenience it. Cut one arm, another recalibrates. Silence one commander, ten more adjust without ceremony, without pause. No dramatic funerals in the command chain. No operational paralysis. Just continuity. And then there’s the illusion, the one that keeps intelligence officers awake at night. You can penetrate a system, yes. The Central Intelligence Agency has. The Mossad certainly has. They’ve turned assets, intercepted signals, even reached into places once thought untouchable. But Iran doesn’t build for secrecy alone. It builds for betrayal. Every layer watched by another. Every agent suspected before he proves loyal. Every corridor lined not just with doors but with mirrors. You think you’re inside the system until you realize the system anticipated you long before you arrived. Now, about the dead. Spies, operatives, assets: men and women who stepped into that maze believing tradecraft could save them. Some vanished quietly. Others, not so quietly. Iran has made examples of those it accuses of espionage, broadcasting confessions, staging executions, sending messages carved not in ink but in consequence. But here’s the truth no agency will print: The real number? The real cost? Buried. Because in that world, numbers are not statistics, they’re vulnerabilities. You see, my friend, most nations prepare for war. Iran prepares for endurance. It doesn’t ask, “How do we defeat our enemy?” It asks, “How do we remain when they have exhausted themselves trying?” And that, that is a far more terrifying strategy. Because history has a peculiar habit of remembering not the strongest, but the last one standing.

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Uncle Emeka || YANKEE GADGETS .ng
So I’ve gotten to the stage, I can afford almost anything I need. However I hate the mental Gymnastics and calculations I have to do before any purchase. It’s Exhausting.
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Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
@NickSlick30294 @beatsbymusa @hey_debz Most people agree the beard isn’t flattering, but again…subjectivity. The part we’re wondering about is why you’re crying more than the injured party. Or standing up for the guy who straight up called her a whore.
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brit does it all
brit does it all@britsalterego·
This is completely unprovoked sir and I apologize for that, but your beard looks stupid. And maybe no one’s told you this, or they have and you don’t care. But the Lord put it on my heart rn that I just needed to speak the truth to you brotha. Him who so trims they facial hair, shall not perish but have no more disparaging words from me. Amen 🙏🏾
𝐒𝐚𝐰𝐲𝐥𝐞@Sawyle_

Peace looks better on me.

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Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
@Chimaforkeeps @yankeeplug_ @FaithOsasf749 That’s not how it works, though. There’s an opportunity cost to whatever you commit funds to. You might have funds to buy a car tomorrow, but are weighing it against the cost of buying a plot of land in Orange Island.
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Ndilika
Ndilika@NdilikaO·
@dammiedammie35 Life has a way of humbling everyone. Glad to hear she has recovered, health first always
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Oyindamola🙄
Oyindamola🙄@dammiedammie35·
Ex-Petroleum Minister, Diezani spotted in UK, fully recovered from canc£r.
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Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
@xKingMikasa @MacXenon54 @aproko_doctor The video had solutions. You’d know this if you had watched it, you lazy clown. Nobody can educate you if you’re unwilling to even read or watch what you’re criticizing
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Oluwole O.O
Oluwole O.O@xKingMikasa·
@MacXenon54 @aproko_doctor So there’s nothing good to him ? When making negative contents He should make positive ones too When talking about the bad side of things, there’s a good side He should talk more about how to avoid, improve Nagative contents with no solution isn’t educative enough
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Dr. Chinonso Egemba
Dr. Chinonso Egemba@aproko_doctor·
This is how the inverter in your house might be poisoning you. Watch before it’s too late.
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Daoptimist⚓🌊🔥✨
Daoptimist⚓🌊🔥✨@GallantDaletian·
The story of Azim Aghajani is a three year saga of international espionage, highstakes smuggling, and a courtroom drama that put Nigeria at the center of a global security crisis. The operation began in the heat of July 2010 at the Tin Can Island Port in Lagos. A French chartered vessel, the MV Everest, docked after a long journey from the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas, with a suspicious detour through Mumbai. Onboard were 13 industrial shipping containers dispatched by the Behineh Trading Company of Tehran. The manifest was carefully crafted to avoid suspicion, listing the cargo as "packages of glass wool and pallets of stone." For months, these containers sat undisturbed in the humid Lagos air. The plan was a round tripping maneuver, the goods would be landed in Nigeria, cleared, and then re exported to Banjul, Gambia. By using Nigeria as a transit hub, the true origin of the cargo Iran would be masked by the time it reached its final destination. The "building materials" sat until late October, when the operatives attempted to move the containers back to the port for re export. However, they didn't know that the Department of State Services (DSS) and Nigerian Customs were already watching. Rumors at the time suggested a high level intelligence tip possibly from Israeli defense sources had alerted Abuja to the "Trojan" nature of the cargo.
Daoptimist⚓🌊🔥✨ tweet mediaDaoptimist⚓🌊🔥✨ tweet media
Defense News Nigeria@DefenseNigeria

Who remembers when an Iranian man, Azim Aghajani, was busted by the DSS for shipping into Nigeria a container load of mortars and military grade weapons. Reports that the DSS has dismantled an Iranian sleeper cell operating in Nigeria, gathering information with possible plans to strike U.S. and other Western targets should come as no surprise. Iranian intelligence activities in Nigeria go way back. Nigeria’s intelligence services are doing much more behind the scenes than the public often realizes.

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Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
@SizweLo Meanwhile Iranian sponsored and aligned militias are active in Iraq, Yemen and Lebanon. They were active in Syria until last year.
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Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
@bigbrovar It’s envy, plain and simple.
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Othell Yarwyck
Othell Yarwyck@bigbrovar·
Bingo. Now we’re getting somewhere. So someone sharing their solar setup is what you call condescension? It was never really about the billions who can’t afford solar, or even the grid. All this false outrage is just because you think solar users are being condescending.
nvarchar🕸️(100)@Viva_asubz

@bigbrovar @sirjaay @PaganTech The problem is you solar guys are condescending about it.

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Pete
Pete@Prymefactor·
@isaaczara_ It’s a one-off challenge. They’re not going to be paying their design staff $10,000 monthly
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