Pounce de León

11.8K posts

Pounce de León

Pounce de León

@ScipioPersicus

Lawyer. Terminal pouncer. Radically center right. Perse delenda est.

Fountain of Youth, FL Katılım Haziran 2015
893 Takip Edilen213 Takipçiler
Pounce de León retweetledi
The Drunk Republican
The Drunk Republican@DrunkRepub·
America First bros when they heard the pilot was rescued
The Drunk Republican tweet media
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Pounce de León
Pounce de León@ScipioPersicus·
@thatjenmonroe This also presumes that most Americans have been presented with a Sinema or Fetterman, counterbalancing a Kent or MTG. Many people on the right (including myself) would vote for the former over the latter.
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jennifertran.eth
jennifertran.eth@JKim_Tran·
@Noahpinion 99 percent of America: 1. We did not. 2. We voted for Trump but didn’t vote for this war and how it is being handled.
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AG
AG@AGHamilton29·
At the time of this post from DropSite (the Soros-funded pro-terror propaganda outlet) promoting a regime lie that we had abandoned our pilot and were trying to kill him, we were in the middle of a successful recovery operation. I hope this wakes people up to the fact that this is all an information war and certain people are actively an daily promoting lies from a terrorist regime and an alternative reality because it better fits the narrative they want people to believe.
Ryan Saavedra@RyanSaavedra

Joe Kent promotes Iranian state propaganda that falsely claims the U.S. is trying to kill the second pilot who went missing in Iran after his F-15 was shot down

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Neil Renic
Neil Renic@NC_Renic·
First they came for the em dash and I did not speak out. Then they came for the Oxford comma…
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Pounce de León
Pounce de León@ScipioPersicus·
@JonahDispatch Largely agree but you’re wrong on “reliance interests” being weighty here. Like in abortion case, unlikely to have concrete reliance interests over the span of a pregnancy.
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Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg@JonahDispatch·
My warm take on birthright citizenship: Wholly defensible to be against it as policy and wholly reasonable to want to reform it in some way. Also intellectually defensible to say that the 14th amendment is being misinterpreted. Doesn't mean I agree, but I don't think it's crazy either. But even if you win that argument, you still need to deal with century+ of precedent and statutory language that codifies it and has created massive reliance interests. I consider it an open question whether Congress can repeal or modify birthright citizenship. I think it is absolutely nuts and dangerous to think a president can repeal it through executive order, and defending the E.O. because you agree with the underlying policy is itself indefensible. That's it. That's my take.
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Nature Unedited
Nature Unedited@NatureUnedited·
This is Africa’s smallest cat and the world’s deadliest. It barely misses and can catch up to a dozen animals in one night
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Amit Segal
Amit Segal@AmitSegal·
“If you had a time machine,” I ask the senior Israeli minister, “and you knew a month ago that this is what would happen, would you still vote in favor of war?” “First of all, yes,” he replies. “You have to understand, this was a cold and calculated gamble. The Iranians were planning to move their entire nuclear and missile industry underground, in a way that would have made it nearly impenetrable. In any case, we would have attacked this year—but with the Americans by our side, there was no dilemma.” “The main achievements of the war are the severe damage to ballistic missiles and their production. This time, after hitting the entire production chain, it will be much harder for them to recover.” “It’s also worth remembering,” the official added, “that for years, the nightmare scenario in Israel was a multi-front war with hundreds of casualties on the home front. Last year, in ‘Rising Lion,’ in 12 days of war against Iran alone, there were 30 fatalities. Now, in a war with three times as many fronts and three times as many enemies, there are 20. What is that if not proof that ‘Rising Lion’ was not in vain—and neither was ‘Roaring Lion’?” The mission to destroy Iran’s ballistic missiles was a game changer, but not in the way Israel expected. Last Friday afternoon, Israel struck a critical part of Iran’s ballistic missile industry—its two largest steel production plants—but to their surprise, found the strike affected far more than their military. Steel facilities sit in a gray area, somewhere between military targets—like missile factories or nuclear sites—and civilian targets, such as water desalination facilities. The Iranian industry is even grayer; there is no part of the economy that the regime has not penetrated. One of the factories was sanctioned by the U.S. in 2018, described as a critical source of funding for the Basij militia. Yet its targeting by Israel was to stop it from producing the metals used in ballistic missiles, not its cashflow. Iran is the largest steel producer in the Middle East and ranks among the top 10 globally. Those two factories alone account for billions of dollars in revenue and about three percent of Iranian GDP. The impact on the economy was a side effect Israel accepted. It now seems that the side effect may have been more powerful than the primary one. According to IDF intelligence, the regime’s political leadership now believes there is no way to repair the war damage; Iran simply lacks sufficient funds. It reportedly has broken the spirit of many in the regime. The assessment is that, given a prolonged economic recovery after the war that will inevitably consume the vast majority of state budgets, massive protests will erupt. It appears that Trump is reading the same intelligence, which may explain why the threats in his ultimatums have shifted from military targets to the gray area of civilian/military infrastructure, specifically Iran’s energy and oil facilities. Still, as the minister told me regarding regime change at the outset of the war, “there were more optimistic and less optimistic assessments, but no one could guarantee that while bombs were falling on Tehran, the masses would take to the streets. There is no doubt that the war has brought the regime closer to its end—but I cannot tell you whether that will happen before Trump finishes his term, or before Netanyahu finishes his.” To read the rest of today's newsletter click the link below. open.substack.com/pub/amitsegal/…
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🐺
🐺@LeighWolf·
There is no war in the history of humanity where one side has inflicted such catastrophic losses on an opponent with so few losses of their own. Imagine killing Hitler, Himmler, Goring and Himmler, destroying the entire luftwaffe and all U boats by the end of 1941. It’s a level of effectiveness in war fighting that was not thought possible until it happened. Calling it a failure is so unbelievably detached from reality one can’t help but wonder if there’s external forces driving these people to post such lunacy. No one can know where it goes from here, but up to this point, it’s arguably the single most successful military campaign ever in terms of damage inflicted versus damage sustained.
Dan Helmer@HelmerVA

Talked to @politico about this reckless, tragic war and the American servicemembers who will ultimately pay the price for this Administration's failure.

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Noah Smith 🐇🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
Every internet space goes the same way. For a while it's all cross-cultural friendship and jokes and fun new stuff to discover. Then the rightists and the leftists invade and it becomes the Battle of Stalingrad. Then the normies leave in disgust.
Gearoid Reidy リーディー・ガロウド@GearoidReidy

The AI translation-enabled discovery of Japanese Twitter is the greatest thing to happen to this platform for years, as BBQ memes built bridges across the Pacific. But will the internet's last great hidden corner survive contact with the West? My latest: bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…

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Batya Ungar-Sargon
Batya Ungar-Sargon@bungarsargon·
Ghazali wasn’t a man driven mad by grief. He was a man who was in the family business—terrorism. He spent months researching how to harm as many Jews as possible, then attacked his American neighbors. He desperately wanted to be a martyr—like his brothers. Which apparently makes him someone the American Left and the liberal media feels the need to cover for, explain, and justify.
Batya Ungar-Sargon@bungarsargon

The Liberal Media and the Anti-Israel Left and far Right Cast the Michigan Synagogue Terrorist as a Grief-Stricken Victim. Actually, He Was in the Family Business: Hezbollah batyaus.substack.com/p/the-media-ca…

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Habeas Corpus Linguistics
Habeas Corpus Linguistics@HabCorpLinguist·
@ScipioPersicus I know who the Menashi clerks are, but the Lagoa surge is strange to me. Haven’t seen a single person tweet to go vote for her (although I have seen for Grant, Nelson, Branch, etc.).
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