Encyaus

7.8K posts

Encyaus

Encyaus

@encyaus

Katılım Temmuz 2021
748 Takip Edilen39 Takipçiler
Han Cholo
Han Cholo@Hwyte_boi·
@Partisan_12 This guy is just gobbling up the bullshit narrative. What a fucking moron he is those guys accidentally bombed their own people, admittedly by accident, but it was their own incompetence that killed those kids. It wasn’t the United States or Israel you guys are fucking idiots.
English
1
0
3
160
The Resonance
The Resonance@Partisan_12·
🤡NATASHA: The strikes by Israel on military targets is lawful. MATTHEW: 108 school Girls killed, that's not a military target, is it? 🤡NATASHA: we need to be very careful about repeating Iranian state TV propaganda. MATTHEW: And be careful about dismissing reports, given past Gaza death toll disputes later acknowledged as true.
English
536
5.8K
32.5K
1.1M
Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
BERNIE SANDERS: Do vaccines cause autism? BHATTACHARYA: I do not believe the measles vaccine causes autism. SANDERS: No. I didn’t ask about measles. Do vaccines cause autism? BHATTACHARYA: I have not seen a study showing any vaccine causes autism. Read that again. That wasn’t a “yes.” That was years of settled science being tap-danced around on national television.
English
26
291
1.4K
96.4K
Anthony Balducci
Anthony Balducci@AnthonyBalducc5·
@ThatchEffendi I don't believe you can identify the authenticity and origins of this uniform even with your super-vision. But whether the uniform is real or fake has no relevance.
English
1
0
0
2K
Alexander Thatcher
Alexander Thatcher@ThatchEffendi·
This is an Allgemeine SS uniform, meaning a uniform belonging to someone who served in the SS outside of combat. This was not the uniform of some idiot in 1st SS Panzer who got turned into a pincushion by a PPSH-41 outside Kharkiv. This is the uniform of a man involved in the logistics of the Holocaust. You know who knows that? This guy.
StopAntisemitism@StopAntisemites

Athens, GA - male dressed in a Nazi uniform was spotted walking around last night.

English
878
4.9K
98.5K
8.7M
Wade Blackell
Wade Blackell@WBlackell·
Michigan church shooter was a repeat Democrat donor with a "stop" Trump sign on his property.
Wade Blackell tweet media
English
2
0
2
138
Ross Ulbricht
Ross Ulbricht@RealRossU·
Hey @KamalaHarris, You called me "the fentanyl dealer" in your new book and attacked President Trump for freeing me after more than *ELEVEN* years in prison. Yet, I wasn't prosecuted for dealing drugs myself and fentanyl wasn't part of my charges. The truth has never mattered to you. The goal is just to make me and President Trump look bad at all cost, isn't it? Don't be a sore loser, Kamala.
English
3.4K
7.8K
83.5K
5M
Encyaus
Encyaus@encyaus·
@TabulaStellar @levelsio He didn't include communism because hate/violence isn’t a core part of their ideology, unlike nazism and fascism
English
0
0
0
14
Nova Empirica
Nova Empirica@TabulaStellar·
@levelsio I like how he didn't include communism even though it has by far the higher bodycount, thus making the perfect case for why he's wrong. He just wants to ban speech he disagrees with and but doesn't care if others disagree with his speech.
English
1
0
2
663
@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Absolutely not But it's telling a Singaporean would say this The US is a beacon of free speech exactly because it protects ANY speech (with only one exception: incitement to violence is not allowed) Free speech (even if you disagree with it) should be protected because if you start picking and choosing what is allowed or not, you end up in a slippery slope of censorship And we had that since 2016-2013 with the left in both US and Europe, we still see A LOT of that now in the UK and Germany, and now the right is showing some signs of that even in the US It's hard to be a free speech absolutist in this quite unstable time but it's the fundamental basic of a free society where everyone can do whatever the fuck they want as long as it doesn't restrict someone else's freedom We have to defend it (And no pedophilia isn't free speech, but bringing in the "protect the children" argument is ALWAYS the way governments try to pass laws to snoop on people's private data (see ChatControl in Europe now) and censor)
Alvin De Cruz@decruz

@levelsio There's some speech that's not worth defending. Nazism/fascism. Pedophilia.

English
74
26
770
133.8K
Dylan Allman
Dylan Allman@dylanmallman·
This makes his case worse, not better. He was President. It was his FBI director. His administration. His security apparatus. If federal agents were in that crowd and things spiraled, that’s still on him. If you wanted a mob to lean hard enough on Congress to stop the certification while keeping your own hands technically clean, this is exactly how you’d do it. Stir up the crowd, let chaos flare, blame someone else, then try to move behind the scenes while everyone’s distracted. And that’s the part people miss. January 6 wasn’t the coup. It was the last move in a months-long coup attempt already underway. Trump leaned on state officials to flip outcomes. He called Georgia’s secretary of state and asked to “find 11,780 votes.” He pressed Arizona’s Rusty Bowers to throw out certified results. His operatives organized false electors in seven states and sent fake certificates to Washington. Inside the government he tried to weaponize the Justice Department. Acting leadership refused to sign a letter falsely declaring the election corrupt, so he moved to install Jeffrey Clark as acting attorney general until senior DOJ officials threatened mass resignation. His team circulated draft executive orders to seize voting machines through the Pentagon or DHS and to appoint a special counsel for “fraud.” He had a war room at the Willard coordinating objections with members of Congress. The Eastman plan spelled out how the Vice President could refuse to count certified votes and kick the election back to state legislatures for a ten-day “audit.” Pence wasn’t just told to do it, he was begged. When he refused, Trump sicced the mob on him. People in the crowd chanted to hang Mike Pence. And Trump knew exactly what he was unleashing. He told them Pence “didn’t have the courage,” effectively painting a target on his own Vice President and hoping the threat would tip the scales. The goal was delay, confusion, and just enough procedural chaos for state politicians to swap in those false slates. The mob at the Capitol was the pressure valve. A show of force to intimidate Congress into delay while Trump and his allies scrambled to make phone calls, draft orders, legal memos, and a direct attempt to bend institutions to keep power after knowingly losing the election. He let it drag on for more than two hours after the Capitol was breached, brushing off pleas to act while the mob did the work he needed. Only when it was clear the plan had failed did he step in with a weak call for peace. For all the noise, they never had the evidence. Sixty-plus court cases, every single one collapsed. State audits, recounts, hand counts... nothing. Trump’s own DHS, his own AG, his own appointed judges all said the fraud claims didn’t hold water. Most of the cases were so empty they weren’t even heard on the merits. The filings were padded with conspiracy theories, hearsay, and outright nonsense that couldn’t survive five minutes in front of a judge. That vacuum of proof didn’t slow them down, it freed them. The absence of evidence was irrelevant, because the strategy was never about law, it was about power. If the courts wouldn’t hand it to him, if the states wouldn’t invent it, if the DOJ wouldn’t sign it, then pressure, delay, and brute force were the fallback. That’s why the endless focus on the riot itself is a gift to him. It keeps the public staring at the chaos in the streets instead of the conspiracy in the offices. It lets people debate costumes and barricades while forgetting that the real attempt to overturn the election happened in conference calls, legal memos, and back rooms. Trump knew he lost. His lawyers told him. His AG told him. His cybersecurity chief told him. His own family told him. Court after court slammed the door in his face. He admitted as much many times in private. Trump knew exactly what he was doing. January 6 was his last throw of the dice, and if he really did seed that crowd with federal agents, it only makes the picture clearer. And if he didn’t, it still worked according to his plan. The chaos fell right into his hands. This isn’t an exoneration.
Dylan Allman tweet media
English
43
42
244
19.6K
Mrs Malindo
Mrs Malindo@MrsMalindo·
@OlgaNYC1211 @RealRossU @KamalaHarris Perhaps you should learn how to read and understand English before you comment here. Show us the part in the book where it says: fentanyl or dealer.
English
4
0
7
3.3K
Encyaus
Encyaus@encyaus·
@john_yacks @AGPamBondi They'll be fine considering the case was brought by an attorney who has never prosecuted a criminal case and was told by prosecutors there's no probable cause
English
0
0
0
6
John Michael
John Michael@john_yacks·
@AGPamBondi Is there anyone taking bets on how the Biden appointed judge is going to handle this case?????
English
2
0
1
95
Attorney General Pamela Bondi
No one is above the law. Today’s indictment reflects this Department of Justice’s commitment to holding those who abuse positions of power accountable for misleading the American people. We will follow the facts in this case.
English
15.6K
10.7K
67.4K
8.2M
wannercashcow
wannercashcow@wannercashcow·
Want to get ElevenLabs for 98.88% cheaper? (not joking) Comment "11" and I'll send it to you! Must be following so I can DM you
wannercashcow tweet media
English
2.6K
46
1.1K
141.5K
Encyaus
Encyaus@encyaus·
@michaelaubry @levelsio Sure, I've just seen too many people fall for the exact same NY post bait. doesn't look like the USA is too far behind, happy to arrest and revoke visas for people just attending protests
English
0
0
1
14
Michael Aubry
Michael Aubry@michaelaubry·
@encyaus @levelsio Ok so the point I’m making is it does happen 1 or 1,000s the fact that some one is being arrested for words is crazy My argument is that there’s tension in the USA but at least no one is getting arrested
English
2
0
1
139
@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
It's kinda sad (but expected) when the right is in power (culturally and politically) now they just do same stuff as the left did 10 years ago with cancelling and limiting free speech I was hoping they'd be smarter than that and defended everyone's right to speech even if they said dumb shit Personally I defend anyone to say whatever they want as long as it's not incitement to violence (which is the US consitutional definition of free speech) It shows maybe we need a real freedom movement, not left or right, kinda like Javier Milei, so I guess I've become libertarian?
English
455
58
2.5K
244.6K
Encyaus
Encyaus@encyaus·
@michaelaubry @levelsio Yes & once again, a partisan news outlet saying something doesn't make it true. "30 people a day" include people that are also arrested for incitement, harassment & threats. I haven't denied anything, this is the first I've actually heard of the Graham Linehan situation
English
1
0
0
37
Encyaus
Encyaus@encyaus·
@michaelaubry @levelsio This is a prime example of why you shouldn't blindly believe what people say on a podcast. There isn't anything to support the statement that thousand of people have been given prison sentences for non violent social media posts. Most of them were incitement or harrassment
English
1
0
0
27
Encyaus
Encyaus@encyaus·
@michaelaubry @levelsio First guy was arrested so they could interview him then then released with no actual charges. The second guy was posting death threats to the PM. Seems pretty standard across the board
English
1
0
0
35
Michael Aubry
Michael Aubry@michaelaubry·
@levelsio No one is getting arrested. The real issue in regards to free speech is in the UK for arresting people To expose them to employers is harsh and a bit hypocritical, but for the employers to choose not to work with people who think this way is reasonable
English
1
0
2
460