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@bnsolava

kata tidak hanya kata diam adalah kata marah adalah kata cinta..? satu-satunya yang tidak terdefinisi oleh kata

Ketapang, Indonesia Katılım Ekim 2014
129 Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler
Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@akunbolabola @JS_Khairen Bahkan di akhir hidupnya Bunda Khadijah hanya minta sorban suaminya untuk dijadikan kafan. Itupun dia minta dengan malu-malu.
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Mojtaba Arbelei 🇵🇸 ⚽
Khadijah r.a dibilang feminis tapi disuruh mengamalkan amalan Khadijah r.a ga mau
riell@urrhoneybby

@lilaccountz Enggak kak, bahkan khadijah istri rosul aja feminist. Dia bekerja yg dimana saat itu banyak stigma “bekerja hanya untuk laki”. Bahkan banyak kok pr yg ikut perang, ahli strategi, banyak jg wanita” islam yg tercatat dlm sejarah & berpengaruh misal : ratu otoman ‘hurem’

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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@desmondwira Cara mudah identifikasi trend pakai apa pak.? Saya selama ini pakai moving average
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Desmond Wira
Desmond Wira@desmondwira·
Trading lebih mudah = searah trend Berenang melawan arus lebih susah kan. Lebih gampang berenang searah arus Identifikasi trend utama dan lakukan open posisi sesuai dengan trend tersebut
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@Ayong_ @Dospemz @ridwanhr Aman aja sih bang. Ga kaya ga miskin juga. Memang jauh dari pusat kota tapi fasilitas umum udah cukup baik, sekolah sampai SMA ada, listrik 24jam sinyal 24jam. Jalan aja yg kurang baik kondisinya.
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@Dospemz @ridwanhr Elpiji 3kg 45rb..tapi yg lain normal sih telur 2500 per biji, beras yg premium 19rb /kg, Mie ayam 30rb.
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@Dospemz @ridwanhr Emang harus naik bang. Negara ga kuat nahan subsidi mau gimana lagi. Btw kami udah 3 tahun pertalite 15rb.
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Desmond Wira
Desmond Wira@desmondwira·
Beberapa indikator Analisis Teknikal: 1.Indikator Trend: ✅ Moving Average ✅ MACD ✅ ADX ✅ Parabolic SAR 2.Indikator Volume: ✅ Chaikin Oscillator ✅ Volume ROC 3.Indikator Volatilitas: ✅ ATR ✅ Bollinger Bands ✅ Standard Deviation 4.Indikator Momentum: ✅ RSI ✅ CCI ✅ Stochastic Itulah secara garis besar kegunaan masing-masing indikator. Pilih yang paling cocok untukmu. Mana favoritmu?
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Anwar Ibrahim
Anwar Ibrahim@anwaribrahim·
Malaysia dan Indonesia sebagai dua negara bersaudara tampil seiring, memperkukuh kerjasama strategik serta mempergiat ikhtiar diplomasi, sambil memastikan kelangsungan rantaian bekalan dan laluan perdagangan terus terpelihara. Kesepakatan ini menzahirkan kepimpinan yang tegas dan berprinsip dalam mendepani ketidaktentuan global, khususnya konflik Asia Barat yang mengoncang ekonomi dunia serta keselamatan tenaga. 🇲🇾🤝🇮🇩 #MalaysiaMADANI #DiplomasiMADANI #YakinMADANI
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MVR💔😈
MVR💔😈@BIG_MVR·
Bayern vs Chelsea. 2012 UEFA Champions League Final
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@desmondwira Sudah saatnya diverifikasi pangan lokal diterapkan. Banyak potensi pangan asli lokal yang belum optimal dimanfaatkan. Ketergantungan pada beras sebagai sumber pangan utama harus dikurangi.
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Tansu Yegen
Tansu Yegen@TansuYegen·
Bosnian players struggled hard to guard China’s 2.26 meter tall star Zhang Ziyu 😮🏀
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@spectatorindex Trum sedang mengadu antara kekuatan politik yang ada di Iran. Jika parlemen bernegosiasi tanpa melibatkan Supreme Leader ataupun IRGC. Ketua parlemen akan menjadi target IRGC dan ini akan menciptakan krisis politik di dari dalam. Sekian pandangan dari analis abal-abal.
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The Spectator Index
The Spectator Index@spectatorindex·
BREAKING: Trump administration is 'quietly weighing Iran’s parliament speaker as a potential partner — and even a future leader', according to Politico report.
The Spectator Index tweet media
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@KeiSavourie Lah aslinya teguh Hidayat orang kaya, dia seorang fund manager. Kalimat dia sepertinya untuk sarkas saja
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Coach Kei
Coach Kei@KeiSavourie·
Mungkin cowoknya keliatan pelit dan kurang tanggung jawab, udah tau gaji kecil malah nikahin anak orang terus punya anak pula. Patriarki pula. Tapi inget, ceweknya dari sejak awal punya kuasa untuk menolak. Tapi dia dengan sukarela tetep nikah juga meski udah tau cowoknya gaji kecil dan patriarki. Dan tetap nurut sama keinginan suami ketika disuruh gak usah kerja (meskipun mungkin terpaksa). Ingat, dalam cinta gak ada namanya korban. Yang ada hanyalah sukarelawan. Jangan menyalahkan, karena semua pihak ikut berperan. Setiap pilihan dalam hidup ada konsekuensinya.
Mbak kun@empty__core

Kalau menurut kalian bagaimana guys?

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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
JUST IN: President Trump threatened to destroy Iran’s power grid. Iran retaliated & responded by threatening to destroy the Gulf’s water supply. The 48-hour ultimatum just became a mutual hostage crisis where the hostages are not soldiers. They are 90 million Iranians who need electricity and tens of millions of Gulf residents who need desalinated seawater to drink. Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi and military officials warned through Tasnim that any US strike on Iranian power plants will trigger immediate attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure and desalination facilities. This is not about oil. Kuwait gets 90 percent of its drinking water from desalination. Qatar gets nearly 99 percent. Bahrain 85 percent. Saudi Arabia 70 percent. The UAE 42 percent. The Gulf produces 40 percent of the world’s desalinated water through 400 facilities, with 90 percent of output concentrated in approximately 56 large coastal plants sitting on shorelines within 350 kilometres of Iranian launch positions. These are not hardened military installations. They are open-air industrial complexes powered by fossil fuels, processing seawater into the liquid that comes out of taps in Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Doha, and Kuwait City. A single cruise missile into the Jubail desalination complex in Saudi Arabia, the largest in the world, threatens water supply to the capital. There are no wells under Riyadh sufficient to replace it. There are no rivers. There is desalinated seawater from the coast or there is evacuation. The precedent already exists. On March 7, strikes damaged a desalination plant on Iran’s Qeshm Island, cutting water to 30 villages. An Iranian drone struck a Bahraini facility the following day. The infrastructure has already been hit from both sides. What Iran is now threatening is not a first strike on water. It is an escalation of targeting that has already begun, calibrated to match whatever the United States does to Iranian civilian power generation. This is the escalation ladder that has no rungs left. Trump’s 48-hour ultimatum threatens to plunge Iran into darkness. Iran’s counter threatens to cut water to populations that have no natural freshwater alternative. The humanitarian math is symmetrical and devastating on both sides. Iranian hospitals lose power. Gulf hospitals lose water. Both outcomes produce mass civilian harm within days. Neither side can execute its threat without triggering the other’s response. The Gulf states that co-signed the 23-nation Hormuz statement calling on Iran to cease hostilities are now the states whose water supply Iran has explicitly identified as a retaliatory target. Three of the statement’s signatories, Bahrain, the UAE, and the host country itself, the UAE, depend on desalination for the majority of their drinking water. They signed a document condemning Iran. Iran responded by naming the infrastructure that keeps their citizens alive. The 48-hour clock is running toward March 23. If it expires and Trump strikes power plants, the cascade is not hypothetical. Iran hits desalination. Gulf water supplies collapse within days. Millions of people in the world’s wealthiest per capita nations face a water emergency that no amount of oil revenue can fix because the plants that make the water run on the electricity that comes from the power grid that Iran will target in return. The destruction is circular. Each side’s retaliation enables the other’s next strike. Oil gets the headlines. Helium gets nothing. Water gets less. But water is the threat that turns a military confrontation into a civilisational emergency. You can survive without oil. You can survive without helium. You cannot survive without water. And 48 hours from now, the survival calculation may no longer be theoretical. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet mediaShanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

Kuwait has eight desalination plants producing over 2.2 million cubic metres of drinking water per day. They supply roughly 90 percent of the country’s drinking water. They sit on the coastline. They cannot be moved. They cannot be hidden. And Iran has already demonstrated it considers them legitimate targets. On March 8th, an Iranian drone struck a desalination facility in Bahrain. The Bahrain Interior Ministry and Electricity and Water Authority both confirmed the attack. Material damage. No supply disruption. The plant kept running. That was not a failure. That was a rehearsal. The strike told every IRGC provincial commander between Bushehr and Bandar Abbas that coastal water infrastructure is inside the approved targeting envelope. It told them before Larijani was killed. Before Soleimani was killed. Before Israel vowed to hunt Mojtaba. Before every Gulf state publicly demanded that Washington finish Iran for good. Before the IRGC had any reason to escalate beyond calibration. Now they have every reason. In the eighteen days since March 8, the Mosaic Doctrine’s provincial commands have watched their senior leadership systematically eliminated. Larijani. The Basij commander. Multiple unverified reports of other high-ranking figures killed in overnight strikes. Israel’s IDF spokesman has declared on the record that Mojtaba will be pursued, found, and neutralised. The six Gulf states whose desalination plants supply their populations have collectively told Washington to keep bombing. Provincial commanders are autonomous. They are also human. Men watching their chain of command incinerated while neighbouring countries demand their annihilation do not become more restrained. They reach for the highest-consequence target still within range. And the highest-consequence target in the entire Gulf theatre is not an airport, not a fuel depot, not a military base. It is a desalination membrane. The Gulf holds 40 to 50 percent of global desalination capacity. Kuwait has no river. No accessible aquifer at scale. No rainfall harvest system. Annual precipitation averages less than 120 millimetres. Bahrain is identical. Qatar marginally better but still critically dependent. UAE and Saudi Arabia run massive coastal plants co-located with power generation. Air defenses intercept 90 to 96 percent of incoming missiles and drones. Those rates are extraordinary. They also mean that of every hundred projectiles launched, four to ten arrive. A missed interception on a runway diverts flights for hours. A missed interception on a desalination intake pipe cuts drinking water to a city for weeks. The consequence asymmetry is not linear. It is existential. You can ration fuel. Sri Lanka just stacked five systems in eight days to prove it. You can stretch fertiliser through a planting season and absorb the yield losses months later. You cannot ration drinking water for millions of people in 45-degree Gulf summer heat for more than days before a humanitarian catastrophe begins that no military response can reverse. Desalination plants take years to build. They cannot be hardened against ballistic missiles without prohibitive cost. The populations they serve have no alternative source. And the IRGC commands that have already struck one plant now operate under conditions of maximum rage, minimum restraint, and standing orders that no dead leader needs to reauthorise. The Gulf states demanding Iran’s destruction are the same states whose populations drink from fixed coastal targets that Iran has already hit once and has no remaining institutional reason not to hit again. The nitrogen feeds the field over months. The water feeds the body over days. The strait and the doctrine threaten both. And the body breaks first. Full analysis: open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@Sean66274201 @archeohistories Nothing lasts forever, Rome collapsed, Persia collapsed, the Ottoman Empire collapsed, and in turn, America will also experience the same thing. It's just a matter of time.
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Sean
Sean@Sean66274201·
@archeohistories Ya know, I used to really enjoy your postings, but you have become way too politicized. You fail to recognize that the US has the power to turn Iran into a glass factory. There is no "we will close the straight of Hormuz" option here. The camel jockey mullahs are finished!!
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Prianto retweetledi
Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
When the Strait of Hormuz closes, you don’t need to be a military analyst to understand what just happened. You only need to understand what the world runs on. Oil. Gas. Shipping lanes. Insurance rates. Container schedules. Energy prices that decide whether factories hum or go dark, whether households heat or freeze, whether governments fall or survive. This is why serious analysts have been saying for years that Hormuz is not a “threat” Iran invented for propaganda; it is a structural red line that the U.S. and its allies kept treating like a bluff because they could not imagine a regional actor actually pulling the lever that exposes a vulnerability: dependence. And this is why what we are watching now is a massive U.S. miscalculation that will be studied later the way the Iraq invasion is studied today, with the same disbelief that decision-makers could be so arrogant, so blind, and so certain that the other side would fold. Because Washington didn’t only miscalculate Iran’s will. It miscalculated geography, logistics, and blowback. It miscalculated the fact that the U.S. empire in the Middle East is not a fortress; it is a web of exposed arteries: bases scattered across Gulf monarchies, troops housed in predictable locations, air defenses that are expensive and finite, radars and communications nodes that can be degraded, and a regional order that can be shaken with one choke point. You can see the arrogance in the assumptions. For years, Iran warned that if its survival is threatened—if the U.S. and Israel push the conflict into an existential zone—Hormuz becomes part of the battlefield. Washington heard that and filed it under “Iranian theatrics,” because the American political class is addicted to the idea that their enemies always bluff, while they alone possess the right to act. But Iran was not bluffing. Iran was describing the rules of an environment where deterrence is the only language that keeps you alive. Hormuz was always the red line The Strait of Hormuz is the world economy’s pressure point, and the fact that it remained open for years was not proof of Western strength. It was proof that Iran understood escalation control, because keeping Hormuz open—even while under sanctions, sabotage, assassinations, and constant threats—was Iran’s way of signaling restraint. The West interpreted that restraint as weakness. That’s the miscalculation. Washington assumed Iran would keep absorbing blows, keep taking “limited strikes,” keep responding in contained ways, because Washington has lived for decades inside a fantasy where escalation is something the U.S. controls. But in a real war environment, you don’t get to decide the boundaries alone. The other side gets a vote. And Iran’s vote is written in the geography of the Gulf. Iran’s “Samson option” - the phrase “Samson option” not to be dramatic, but to describe the logic of a state pushed into a corner: if the enemy wants you neutralized, disarmed, and humiliated, you don’t respond only with missiles; you respond with the full spectrum of leverage you possess: military, diplomatic, economic, and psychological. Iran’s leverage is not limited to striking targets. It includes making the war economically unbearable for everyone who enabled it. It includes turning a regional conflict into a global cost spiral. It includes demonstrating that the “free flow of energy” is not a natural law; it is a contingent privilege that can evaporate when a state is pushed past its red lines. This is what the West still struggles to internalize. It thinks deterrence is only about bombs and bases. Iran thinks deterrence is about making aggression unaffordable. And Hormuz is how you make it unaffordable. © Kevork Almassian. a Syrian geopolitical analyst and the founder of Syriana Analysis #archaeohistories
Archaeo - Histories tweet media
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@RWWReborn Mossad CIA intelejen mereka bisa membunuh seorang presiden negara musuh. Lah ini nyiram air keras ke warga sendiri kocak. Ketahuan pula tertangkap cctv intel apaan
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Random Warfare Worldwide
Random Warfare Worldwide@RWWReborn·
Jangan sebut oknum, para pelaku tindak kejahatan ini merupakan PRAJURIT TNI AKTIF dari Badan Intelijen Strategis (BAIS) TNI. 3 orang PERWIRA dan 1 orang BINTARA dari 2 matra, TNI AL dan TNI AU, NDP berpangkat Kapten, SL dan BHW berpangkat Letnan Satu dan ES berpangkat Sersan Dua. Penangkapan para pelaku, walaupun anggota aktif TNI, juga sepatutnya mendapatkan "pengawalan" terkait keberlanjutan kasusnya, dikawal oleh masyarakat. Kita juga tidak boleh LUPA bahwa kejahatan ini KEMUNGKINAN BESAR memiliki DALANG, otak dari operasi ini, itu juga harus diungkap secara tuntas.
Kompas.com@kompascom

Sebanyak empat prajurit Tentara Nasional Indonesia (TNI) terlibat dalam aksi penyiraman air keras terhadap Wakil Koordinator KontraS, Andrie Yunus. Baca selengkapnya 👇 nasional.kompas.com/read/2026/03/1… ~LL #AndrieYunus #PenyiramanAirKeras

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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@qrivasi pernah kehilangan dompet pas kuliah isinya 700rb. Setelah sampai kampus dia nanya kamu knp, aku bilang kehilangan dompet. Setelah sampai rumah ternyata dia memasukan uang 200rb ke dalam tas tanpa sepengetahuanku. Terimakasih Sherly Oktariyanti, semoga kebaikan selalu bersamamu.
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Prianto
Prianto@bnsolava·
@RebeccaFaniaA @JS_Khairen Lebaran memang untuk mereka yang benar-benar berjuang selama ramadhan, jadi bukan untuk semua orang. Puasa aja kagak mana mungkin lebaran jadi berkesan.
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RebeccaFA
RebeccaFA@RebeccaFaniaA·
Lebaran hanyalah ceremonial maaf-maafan. Yang jahat akan tetap jahat, yang munafik akan tetap munafik.
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