Eugah Nai

67.2K posts

Eugah Nai

Eugah Nai

@eugah

Taker of piss. Vatnikophobe. NAFO Fella.🇬🇪🇺🇦🇲🇩🇦🇲. Veritas Vincit. Bonk ‘em all! Dieu reconnaîtra les siens.

Midtown, Manhattan Katılım Ekim 2011
4.1K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
Eugah Nai
Eugah Nai@eugah·
@Jerusalem_Post So Trump’s Abraham Accord Fallback effort—designed in part to assuage Netanyahu’s butthurt over his concessions to Iran on HEU, monetizing of Hormuz transit and their ballistic missile program—is also a failure? Who’d a thunk?
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The Jerusalem Post
The Jerusalem Post@Jerusalem_Post·
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman privately told evangelical leader and Trump ally Mike Evans that he was ready to recognize Israel “today,” but that his father, King Salman, remained the obstacle. jpost.com/middle-east/ar…
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Eugah Nai
Eugah Nai@eugah·
@ByronYork If the Strait remains closed into July, big consequences are on tap for the US and for the world.
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Byron York
Byron York@ByronYork·
Trump often promises quick negotiations, but the fact is, the Iranians are slow movers. Especially so after the assassinations of Khamenei and others. Senior administration official: "It is quite shocking the length to which they are going to ensure that the Supreme Leader is never in a vulnerable spot. They're practically communicating by [carrier] pigeon at this point, and that does make it hard for them to make decisions." washingtonexaminer.com/daily-memo/458…
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Elephant Signal 🐘🇺🇸
Elephant Signal 🐘🇺🇸@ElephantSignal·
🚨 BREAKING: President Trump just CRUSHED any chance of another Obama-style Iran Nuclear Disaster! 🔥 Trump confirms: NO rushed weak deal, full blockade stays locked in until Iran fully complies and verifies—no nukes, no games. Time is on AMERICA'S side! Obama's giveaway handed Iran a fast-track to the bomb. Trump is flipping the script with MAXIMUM PRESSURE and real strength. This is America First in action—peace through strength, not weakness. The Middle East is watching, and Trump's even leaving the door open for real change via the Abraham Accords. Do you stand with Trump's no-nonsense approach on Iran? A. YES B. NO Watch👇 and Drop your thoughts👇!
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Under Secretary of State Jacob S. Helberg
You have absolutely no idea of what you’re talking about. The whole point of Pax Silica is to partner with countries who are good at doing different things because everyone wins from a secure supply chain. It’s also a fundamentally a capitalist project (this might be foreign to you) that’s a lot more about partnerships between private companies than it is about government programs. We never said our goal was to maintain diplomatic immunity. Our position has always been that markets and investors need certainty and predictability in order to deploy large pools of capital over a 5-10 year time horizon. Any half decent investor will happily validate this. That viewpoint was taken out of context and turned on its head by the press to suggest we were seeking diplomatic immunity which is patently untrue. Oh and by the way, the agreement is posted online for anyone to look up and read for themselves. The U.S. is home to the world’s largest technology companies—a fact I’m sure deeply irritates you. The idea that being part of their supply chain is “subservience” is an ignorant loser mentality. Is TSMC a subservient company?? Anyone who knows anything about tech understands they are one of the world’s most important (and valuable) companies—and also an integral part of America’s (and the world’s) supply chains.
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

This is pretty insane: the U.S. just tried to literally re-colonize part of the Philippines. They did so under the so-called "Pax Silica" initiative, the brainchild of - surprise, surprise - an ex-Palantir guy named Jacob Helberg who now runs U.S. economic "diplomacy" from the State Department. It's causing a big outcry in the Philippines, which is quite a feat given this is by far the most US-friendly country in Southeast Asia. If you're the US and you're getting the Marcos administration - of all governments - to push back on sovereignty, you've really overplayed your hand. What is the "Pax Silica" initiative? In a nutshell it's about the US getting other countries to commit to restructuring their AI tech infrastructure around a US-led stack. It's basically vendor lock-in: you hand over your critical minerals, align your export controls with Washington's, regulate AI the way America wants, and in return you get to be a US "trusted partner," whatever that means these days. In essence, let's not kid ourselves, it's all about China: this is the US's initiative to "win the AI race" by getting other countries to contractually commit to keeping China out of their tech supply chains. When you can't preserve your lead through innovation, you seek to lock countries in contractually. For instance as a country, this would mean telling Huawei they can't sell you AI chips, and telling Chinese firms they can't invest in your data centers - even if they're better and cheaper. It's not about choosing the best technology, it's about choosing the right flag. But in this instance, the US went much further still: they literally tried to carve out 4,000 acres of Philippine territory (in New Clark City, 60 miles north of Manila) to be governed under US common law with diplomatic immunity - the first arrangement of its kind anywhere in the modern world. This is according to the WSJ who ran the story last month (wsj.com/world/asia/u-s…) as if it was a done deal (it wasn't). Heard about the "French concession" or "British concession" in China during the century of humiliation? Same thing: the US basically asked for an "American concession" in the Philippines. Unsurprisingly, there was quite a bit of backlash in the country with for instance the Peasant Movement of the Philippines (KMP) calling it a “massive sellout” of the country’s land, minerals, and sovereignty (punto.com.ph/us-led-pax-sil…). So much so that the Philippines' government - namely Joshua Bingcang, president and chief executive of the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) - issued a statement saying that the Philippines had rejected US proposals that would place the project beyond local jurisdiction (asianews.network/philippines-re…). Note, by the way, this delicious irony: the BCDA is the government agency that was created in 1992 specifically to convert former US military bases at Clark and Subic Bay after the Philippines spent decades negotiating their closure. New Clark City - where the Pax Silica's hub would go - is built on the old Clark Air Base. So the agency whose entire reason for existing is to turn former American colonial territory (i.e. US military bases) into sovereign Philippine land is the one now being asked to hand part of that very same land back under US jurisdiction (and, apparently, declined). Of course though, blocking this specific jurisdiction grab doesn't change the bigger picture. The Philippines is still a Pax Silica signatory, and Pax Silica itself is structurally neocolonial: you supply the cheap labor and raw materials, align your export controls and regulations with Washington's, cut yourself off from the world's rising technological powerhouse - and in exchange you get assembly jobs and the privilege of getting a pat on the head and being called a "trusted partner." They dropped the most cartoonishly colonial demand - governing Philippine soil under US law - but the underlying architecture is the same: you serve America's supply chain, on America's terms, and you relinquish your sovereign right to trade with whoever offers the best deal.

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Julen Bollain
Julen Bollain@JulenBollain·
Trump diciendo que si estás en guerra con otro país no tienes por qué celebrar elecciones. ¿Os suena de algo? El manual del dictador. Declaras una guerra, suspendes las urnas y encima lo llamas patriotismo.
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Eugah Nai
Eugah Nai@eugah·
@guypbenson Not by a long shot is KBJ the most politically-entangled justice on SCOTUS.
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Amit Segal
Amit Segal@AmitSegal·
The bill for American action has arrived at the Saudi door. Last night, Donald Trump reportedly demanded that in exchange for finalizing the current ceasefire deal with Iran—the one desperately needed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz—the Gulf states would have to pay a massive premium: immediate normalization with Israel. According to my sources, the ultimatum was met with literal silence. The Arab leaders were so thoroughly stunned by the audacity of the request that Trump actually had to break the silence with a follow-up: “Are you still there?” For months, we have watched a narrative form: Israel deceived the United States into a disastrous war that only empowered Iran. This narrative ignores multiple factors, including but not limited to the fact that it was Trump’s choice, Trump did not follow the Israeli plan, and—perhaps most of all—the presence of another major player calling for war: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. In late February, The Washington Post reported that the decision to go to war had been reached after encouragement from two key allies: Israel and Saudi Arabia. Throughout the war, they reinforced this support. A few weeks later, when Trump was claiming that the war would be over in a few days, The New York Times reported that both nations heavily encouraged a continuation of the conflict. Prince Mohammed reportedly argued that the United States should consider putting troops in Iran to seize energy infrastructure and force the government out of power. But things have changed. The Saudis never expected to put their core energy infrastructure on the line for this conflict, assuming a covert nod to Washington would yield a painless destruction of the Iranian threat. Instead, the smoking ruins of the Ras Tanura refinery, a staggering $33.5 billion first-quarter deficit, and a hull-to-hull backup in the Strait of Hormuz served as a brutal awakening. With the United Arab Emirates stepping aggressively into the vacuum—gladly absorbing the role of America’s primary, hardline Gulf ally—Riyadh is executing a frantic tactical retreat. For the past month and a half, MBS has been beating a different drum: diplomacy. “Okay,” said Trump last night, but constantly shifting positions comes with a cost: normalization. This is about far more than Trump extracting a quick return on investment. By demanding normalization as the price for a ceasefire, he is forcing the Saudis to grab Israel’s other arm to physically restrain Jerusalem from striking Iran alone. It underscores a truth that Trump understood and Obama never did: the most effective way to control Israel isn’t to push them away, but to wrap them in a bear hug. By locking Jerusalem into a close alliance, Washington doesn’t just protect them—it places its hand directly over the Israeli trigger finger. Washington needs its hand over that trigger because Israel has little incentive to hold back when the current deal appears to leave Iran in a stronger position than before. That is the Iranian impression as well. In The Art of the Deal, Trump writes: “The worst thing you can possibly do in a deal is seem desperate to make it. That makes the other guy smell blood, and then you’re dead.” Sensing American eagerness for a diplomatic off-ramp, Tehran has smelled exactly that, aggressively upping its demands before any Memorandum of Understanding can be printed. Despite draft stipulations requiring a return to free transit, the IRGC is leveraging its tactical position to normalize a permanent, permission-based transit regime in the Strait of Hormuz—boasting that 33 commercial vessels were forced to register and coordinate with the IRGC Navy in a single 24-hour window. Meanwhile, Iran has flatly rejected a Pakistani compromise to defer unresolved issues, flipping the entire sequencing of the talks by refusing any nuclear-related commitments or stockpiling concessions at this stage. Instead, an emboldened Tehran is demanding immediate economic rewards, including the unfreezing of blocked assets, while conditioning the entire agreement on an “all fronts” ceasefire that would effectively force Washington to strip Israel of its freedom of action against Hezbollah in Lebanon. At the end of the devastating Iran-Iraq War, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini famously declared that accepting peace was like “drinking a poison chalice.” Today, his successor’s successor, Mojtaba Khamenei, is facing no such bitter brew. Instead, Benjamin Netanyahu is being asked to swallow the fatal mixture this time around. Much to his relief, Donald Trump is trying to mix in a Saudi sweetener to help the medicine go down.
Amit Segal tweet media
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Eugah Nai
Eugah Nai@eugah·
@rich_goldberg All that’s required is for it to actually happen.🤪🤪🤪🤪🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂!
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Richard Goldberg
Richard Goldberg@rich_goldberg·
The countries Trump is pushing to join the Abraham Accords are the very same countries pressuring him not to return to Project Freedom and instead pursue a deal with Iran. His response then seems rather fair. Indeed, it would be historic and a massive strategic loss for Iran.
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Rep. Don Bacon 🇺🇸✈️🏍️⭐️🎖️
I visited the Paneriai Forest where the Nazis murdered almost 100,000 Jews outside of Vilnius. The Nazis killed 97% of the Jews who lived in Lithuania. Most were shot in large pits in the forest. Barbarity in its worst form. Never forget, never again. @HolocaustMuseum
Rep. Don Bacon 🇺🇸✈️🏍️⭐️🎖️ tweet mediaRep. Don Bacon 🇺🇸✈️🏍️⭐️🎖️ tweet mediaRep. Don Bacon 🇺🇸✈️🏍️⭐️🎖️ tweet mediaRep. Don Bacon 🇺🇸✈️🏍️⭐️🎖️ tweet media
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🇺🇸 The FJC 🇺🇸
Trump turned down a $10 billion dollar settlement from the IRS for illegally leaking his tax returns. Instead of accepting the money, he chose to defer and have the US government create a fund of $1.776 billion for those who suffered as he did. The claim was made under valid US laws. Any other president like Obama or Biden would have taken the money and run. Trump not only put America First, he put AMERICANS first, over himself.
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Turnbull
Turnbull@cturnbull1968·
Almost bought a new Porsche today. We got 95% of the deal done but couldn’t agree on a price, exact model, color or accessories.
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Bruce Pearl
Bruce Pearl@coachbrucepearl·
Trust our President Today he said “after all the work done by the United States to try and pull this very complex puzzle together, it should be mandatory that all of these Countries, at a minimum, simultaneously, sign onto the Abraham Accords" Let him work timesofisrael.com/trump-says-man…
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Jeff Leach
Jeff Leach@leachfortexas·
This is Adam Hoffman. He repeatedly raped a Texas boy — for nearly three years — dozens and dozens of times. Tomorrow morning, May 25th 2026, he will be released from McLennan County Jail after spending just a few weeks there. He will not be required to register as a sex offender. And very soon he’ll be allowed to practice law again. A real and dangerous predator — a present threat to Texas children — will be as free as you and me. A slap on his wrist and a spit in the face to his victim. Why?! How?! Because that’s the deal he made with Ken Paxton. Vote accordingly.
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Suzie rizzio
Suzie rizzio@Suzierizzo1·
Who agrees with James? 👇👇
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Chris
Chris@chriswithans·
Cornyn is nothing like Tillis or Cassidy. He’ll probably lose tomorrow but if he wins, it’ll be because he’s handled himself much better than any other primaried senator or Congressman. I personally never understood the hate he gets. That said, no one is entitled to a seat so it’s not like Paxton was breaking the law by running in a primary. And “nice guy” Hunt ran in the primary too! Massie had to go. Cassidy was way out of step with his state. But if Cornyn does win, it’s just a couple of Senate votes difference between him and Paxton over this coming term.
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Mosab Hassan Yousef
Mosab Hassan Yousef@MosabHasanYOSEF·
A joint U.S.-Israeli special forces operation to extract Iran’s highly enriched uranium from Isfahan would be the perfect off-ramp: neutralize the nuclear threat, flip the script on the regime, and hand Trump a decisive strategic victory. High risk, historic reward. The move nobody sees coming.
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