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@angloserb @hajmus2009 It was Christian, but you can’t really box it into Catholic or Orthodox. It was its own distinct version of Christianity, flourishing before those denominations were even defined the way we know them today.
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@IstrianMario @q_slavic 5/5
We share the same roots and culture. We don’t have to agree on everything politically, or even on the war, to a reasonable extent. Debate is part of a healthy society as long as we respect the nuances. We have way more in common than we tend to think.
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@IstrianMario @q_slavic 4/5
Most of the hate you see online is just radical propaganda or bots meant to create division for a political agenda. In reality, an ordinary Serb family wants the exact same things as a Croat or Bosniak family. When we actually hang out, we understand each other perfectly.
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@Jedinoistina @EXECUTI0NERR @xruiztru this is a bit like saying American and British English are different.the core grammar and vocabulary are over 95% identical,based on the Shtokavian dialect.speakers have 100% mutual intelligibility. Serbs use Latin script daily, and historically, Croats used Cyrillic (Bosančica).
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It's not. Croatian and Serbian languages have different grammars, different vocabularies, different spellings and different institutions.
They don't even use the same alphabet because Croatian language doesn't use Cyrillic script (most of Croats don't even know Cyrillic). There are different intl. codes for Croatian and Serbian languages. Not to mention different histories and influences.
Not even dialects are the same since Serbian language doesn't have Kajkavian and Chakavian dialects, just like Srbs don't use ikavian Shtokavian dialect, while Croatian language doesn't have Torlakian dialect at all.




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Another Trump Team Embarrassment
🇺🇸 DHS Counterterrorism Official Julia Varvaro Under Investigation Over 'Sugar Daddy' Complaint
Varvaro, 29, Trump's Deputy Assistant Secretary for Counterterrorism, is facing a formal DHS Inspector General complaint after a man claims he spent $40,000 in three months on luxury trips and Cartier jewelry, and that she told him her collection was "TROPHIES from her sugar daddies."
She allegedly told him she was "above being tested" when he warned the arrangement could jeopardize her Top Secret clearance, and texted from a Homeland Security conference: "They call me Secretary. I like it... I'm the boss princess."
A former CIA officer is now asking how a FULL BACKGROUND INVESTIGATION missed any of this.
The administration that promised to hire only the best is currently investigating its own counterterrorism office. You cannot make this up.
All Credit to the DailyMail and their team for the story and images. Especially, SHAWN COHEN, US SENIOR REPORTER




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@KingBobIIV @NoodlesTech When you steal it, it's free? No wonder rhe EU is a shitehole. You're all trained now, aren't you? The Brits used to have manners...
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Seeing a clear divide between Americans and British on this matter.
The majority of British, me included, feel that they "bought and paid for a ticket, which included the wine, nobody died, stiff upper lip, waste not want not, anyone want to swap bubbley for the red?"
And the Americans that feel that nicking a few bottles of vino is more of a crime than the assassination attempt.
Matt Wallace@MattWallace888
The President almost just got assassinated and members of the media are using the opportunity to steal bottles of wine. You don’t hate them enough!
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@Nasdad_TO @donnelly_b It is kind of isolated. How are the job perspectives there?
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@donnelly_b My main deterrent to living in Halifax is the high income taxes—Nova Scotia ranks among the highest in Canada for provincial income tax (second only to Quebec in many comparisons, especially for middle and higher earners).
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@HRAnn17 Brutalism aesthetics.
Now look at the city of Novi Sad, everything is different there.
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@inickdc @2shotsthrufranz @ijankovicbre You don't know the difference between Bosniak & Bosnian. You have no idea what you're talking about. All of us who speak the same language can get along and deal with our shit between us without foreigners telling us what to do and think. Thank you for your interest but no thanks
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It is not my fault that your mother did not invest the time to cultivate you, and that you now rely on AI as your sole source of writing. Incredibly unfortunate for you. It is not too late. Since you missed it in third grade, now is the time to recover those writing skills. Would you like me to translate this into the Serbian Cyrillic?
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Nice try—but Bosnia and Herzegovina isn’t a “pile of parts,” it’s one country, full stop; its internal divisions don’t make new states any more than rooms make separate houses, and it belongs to all its people—Bosniaks and Herzegovinians—every single day, not just when it’s convenient to pretend otherwise. No, I specifically did not want to say Serbs and Croats. Bosniaks and Herzegovinians, pet.
Boško Mihajlović@LeGrand_Vizir
Bosna i Hercegovina nema vlastitu teritoriju. Čine ju prosti zbir teritorija Federacije BiH i Republike Srpske,što dalje implicira da su na teritoriji BiH nastale/postoje 3 države. Kad smo već kod južne interkonekcije. Jutrić, kafica ☕ 🫖 ☀️ P.S. Ovo nije politički tvit.
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@2shotsthrufranz @ijankovicbre @inickdc I mean the long ass meaningless and senseless replies surely looks like AI.
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Bosnians, Croatians and Kosovars paid for 47 years into the well-respected Yugoslav National Army (JNA) to keep them safe, only for that Europe’s fourth-largest army to turn so abhorrently and violently against them.
Serbia never reckoned with its past.
СНСД@SNSDDodik
Република Српска је суштински угрожена војним савезом Хрватске, Албаније и самопроглашеног Косова. То је савез против српског народа и његов циљ је угрожавање безбједности Срба. Војска Србије је респектабилна сила у региону и она гарантује мир и стабилност српском народу. @MiloradDodik sn.rs/ogrhs
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No credible university in this world is going to teach the content that you proposed. In fact, they would laugh at you including university of Belgrade.
Your framing only works if you flatten the history, law, and sequence of events into a single, convenient slogan—and that’s precisely where it breaks down. Republika Srpska did not emerge as a neutral expression of self-determination; it was constituted within the internationally recognized state of Bosnia and Herzegovina during an armed conflict and subsequently embedded as an internal entity through the Dayton Agreement, which explicitly preserved Bosnia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
By contrast, Kosovo followed a trajectory marked by the revocation of its autonomy, systemic repression, and ultimately international administration under United Nations auspices after the Kosovo War. Its declaration of independence did not arise from an entity constitutionally guaranteed inside another state, but from a prolonged international process responding to conflict, displacement, and governance breakdown.
So no—the frameworks are not “literally the same.” One is an internal constitutional unit whose status is defined by a peace agreement that forbids secession; the other is a case shaped by international intervention, transitional administration, and contested but partially recognized statehood. Conflating them ignores the legal architecture, the chronology, and the international context that differentiate the two.
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