GoreGlass
17 posts


Steve Witkoff:
"Let me say this, because I forgot this small little detail. In that first meeting, both the Iranian negotiators said to us directly, with no shame, that they controlled 460 kilograms of 60% and they’re aware that that could make 11 nuclear bombs, and that was the beginning of their negotiating stance."
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@EricLDaugh Globalists hate him.
He's got a clear path with 170 billion budget and 32,000 agents coming online to do it.
This will be an epic chapter in the history books.
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🚨 HOLY CRAP! President Trump is now posting that we only have two options
"Deport every single 3rd world migrant, illegal alien and America hating Visa holder..."
"...or surrender your nation the way the UK have, and watch your society collapse in the coming years."
I bet Stephen Miller loves reading this. IT'S TIME TO SAVE AMERICA! @WarlordDilley

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@DiggingInTheDi1 @EricLDaugh If you haven’t figured it out yet, he won’t
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@EricLDaugh He talks a great game
But we're still wondering when he'll deliver
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@attackdogX @EricLDaugh Then stop hiring them and using their labour….
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@celsopedrosaa @NASASolarSystem @grok Hey I’m retarded and need an ai to research for me I ask grok everything, even “is it’s true that wiping your ass cleans the shit off it “
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@NASASolarSystem @grok can you speculate on what hardware does Hirise as a multi-billion device have, against the ones amateurs use to generate such images from Earth? Would there be more 'optimal' configs (not only hardware/software but also positioning)that could yield better images?How likely?
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❓Why so blurry❓
Lots of reasons…but in short, it’s not what these spacecraft were designed to do. As comet 3I/ATLAS swooped by, we jumped on the opportunity to turn our instruments its way and see what we could get. Take HiRISE as an example.👇
The left is what it was designed to take: images of the Martian surface which is bright, close, and stable. The right is what it was able to capture of the faint, distant, fast-moving comet 3I/ATLAS. True, it’s not magazine cover material – but it is very useful scientifically!


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@BasedOptimist @RealKevinNoel How much lead paint did you eat as a child?
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Before Vincent Battiloro ran down Maria Niotis and Isabella Salas with his SUV. On livestream he said, "Whenever Maria sees the pizza guy come. Better think of Charlie Kirk, for making fun of his f*kin death. You stupid-ass clown. Just remember that."
New York Post@nypost
Teen girls allegedly killed by NJ ‘stalker’ driver remembered as hard-working theater buff, aspiring cosmetologist trib.al/NN21jYs
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@poxaclypse @RealKevinNoel The left has been calling the right Nazis for a decade, maybe sit this one out champ.
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@Shayan86 We invaded Iraq over less
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This satellite image of El Salvador's maximum security prison, known as CECOT, where the Trump administration has been sending deportees, has gone viral with claims that it shows a pile of bodies and a stream of blood inside the prison.
My colleague Richard Irvine-Brown and I have been looking at satellite images of the prison to see whether there's any proof for these claims.
First of all, using Google Earth's historical imagery feature shows the image that's gone viral is from March 2024, the latest available on Google, and before Trump became president or US deportations to the facility began.
It's clear from Google's historical imagery that the specific area of the prison we're looking at has seen construction and development since the prison officially opened in January 2023. We can clearly see the addition of two small buildings in the top right corner of that section.
Crucially, we simply can't tell with any degree of certainty what the dark patch or the pile are. It's entirely possible that the patch is mud or dust rather than blood, and the pile could be construction material. It could also be a food preparation area.
This isn't to say bad things may not be happening to inmates at CECOT. In fact, there's quite a lot of reporting about rough conditions inmates face at the facility without proper access to due process.
But jumping to conclusions about bodies and blood, based on one grainy image, is not how open source analysis of satellite imagery works, particularly when there's not enough evidence.
In short, analysis of areas where public access is limited, like a maximum security prison, is not straightforward or simple. Open source investigators do use satellite imagery to detect human rights abuses or possible illegal activites inside such facilities, for instance, in the case of Uyghur detention camps in China's Xinjiang province.
But making outlandish statements that lack evidence does not help anyone, particularly when such claims go viral and many believe them to be true.



Anonymous@YourAnonCentral
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