Since last night, first responders and all necessary services have been working wherever needed. As of now, at least 83 people have been confirmed injured since midnight. Tragically, there are fatalities. My condolences to the families and loved ones.
It was a heavy attack – 90 missiles of various types, many of them ballistic missiles – 36 in total. There were 600 drones. Unfortunately, not all of the ballistic missiles were intercepted – the largest number of hits was in Kyiv. Kyiv was the primary target of this Russian attack.
Putin can’t even pronounce the word “hurrah” clearly anymore – slurs and mumbles – yet he is still vanquishing residential buildings with his missiles. Launched three Russian missiles against a water supply facility. Burned down a market. Damaged dozens of residential buildings. Hit several ordinary schools. Launched his “Oreshnik” against Bila Tserkva. They really are unhinged.
It is important that this does not pass without consequences for Russia. Today, everyone in the world who will not stay silent and chooses to help Ukraine is a defender of life. It is critically important to continue working to secure air defense for Ukraine, especially anti-ballistic capabilities.
We are doing our best to achieve peace and protect people – everything. It is important that Ukraine is not alone. Decisions are needed – from the United States, from Europe and others – to make that old “Oreshnik” in Moscow finally utter the word “peace.”
En mi visita a Ucrania hace unos meses entendí que estos ataques solo logran que los ucranianos se convenzan aún más de la necesidad de resistir. Hoy mismo van a empezar a reconstruir mientras mandan a Putin a la mierda
¿Se han dado cuenta de que todas las dictaduras son anticiencia y basadas en creencias filosóficas, mientras que todo gobierno que tome en cuenta la ciencia, los hechos y los datos tiende más frecuentemente a la democracia y el progreso?
El cáncer es un misterio de lo que nos depara la vida o la muerte que echa las cartas cada día.
Estoy hospitalizado bajo riesgo de infección y desnutrición graves, pero decidido a vivir para contar nuestro Mexico.
Gracias, @Tu_IMSS !
La 4t estira la liga y EEUU responde: irá tras los narcotraficantes si no lo hace el gobierno mexicano. La cuestión no es la soberanía sino el narcotráfico en el país y que @Claudiashein lo proteja.
#ElTemaEsRocha
Rome didn't conquer the Mediterranean because they were the best fighters.
They lost battles constantly. Hannibal humiliated them for 15 years. The Gauls sacked their city. The Parthians annihilated entire armies.
So how did a muddy village on a river end up ruling from Scotland to Syria for 500+ years?
The answer is one of history's most underrated superpowers: Rome refused to lose.
Here's what actually made them unstoppable:
1. They turned defeat into a feature, not a bug. After Cannae, Rome lost 50,000+ men in a single afternoon. Any other state would have sued for peace. The Senate banned the word "peace," refused to ransom prisoners, and raised new legions from teenagers and freed slaves. Hannibal won the battle. Rome won the war by simply not stopping.
2. Citizenship was their secret weapon. Every empire before Rome treated conquered peoples as subjects to be milked. Rome did something insane: they offered citizenship. Beat us? You're now us. A Spaniard, a Gaul, a North African could literally become emperor. By the 2nd century AD, the man wearing the purple was Trajan, born in Spain.
3. They were obsessive copycats. Roman swords? Stolen from the Spanish. Naval tactics? Reverse-engineered from a wrecked Carthaginian ship. Siege engines? Greek. Cavalry? Numidian. Their genius wasn't invention. It was the ego-free willingness to look at an enemy and say "that's better than what we have, take it."
4. Roads weren't for travel. They were for terror. 50,000 miles of paved road meant a legion could appear at your gates faster than rumor of their march. Rebellion in Britain? Troops from the Rhine in weeks. The roads were the original internet, and Rome controlled the servers.
5. They industrialized war. While enemies fielded brave warriors, Rome fielded engineers with swords. Standardized equipment. Standardized camps every single night. Standardized rations. A legionary in Syria fought identically to one in Britain. They weren't an army. They were a system.
6. They were patient in a way moderns can't comprehend. The Punic Wars lasted 118 years. Rome simply outlived its enemies. Carthage had to win every war. Rome only had to win the last one.
The lesson buried in all of this:
Empires aren't built by the strongest punch. They're built by the side that gets knocked down, stands up, copies what hit them, and keeps walking forward for 700 years.
Rome wasn't the best.
Rome was the most relentless.