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sam ch

@samiii1

Katılım Haziran 2009
3.9K Takip Edilen953 Takipçiler
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
“במקום שאין אנשים, השתדל להיות איש” which translates to “In a place where there are no men, strive to be a man.” This proverb is often attributed to Rabbi Hillel, an important figure in Jewish history. The proverb essentially means that in situations where there is a lack of leadership, morality, or courage, one should step up and exhibit these qualities. It calls for taking responsibility and acting ethically, especially in challenging circumstances or when others are failing to do so.
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Memento L'chaim
Memento L'chaim@jew4youtoo·
@samiii1 @ConceptualJames This isn't a trick question, I'll try one more time. If everyone in society refused to take their adult children to the authorities, if they had specifically hurt many many people in the worst ways imaginable. Would this society be better off or worse off?
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James Lindsay, anti-Communist
James Lindsay, anti-Communist@ConceptualJames·
Found this little Communist meme. Material conditions determine human nature = Marxism "Structural" conditions determine human nature = Woke (same thing) National conditions determine human nature = Fascism Racial conditions determine human nature = Nazism All totalitarian projects seek to seize the means of production of whatever it is they believe determines human nature. That means all totalitarian projects are geared towards seizing the means of production of human nature itself. Let that sink in. It might start in a profound error about human nature, but it ends in unbelievable evil every time. This is the reason.
James Lindsay, anti-Communist tweet media
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@jew4youtoo @ConceptualJames In the opposite case, yes, I would turn them in. But it also depends on the nature of the state: if the state itself is deeply immoral, uses torture, or denies a fair trial, then handing someone over is not a morally simple act
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@jew4youtoo @ConceptualJames If it were my child, and they were very young, and no one had been harmed, then no, my first duty would be to correct and guide them as a parent, not to hand them over to the police.
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@jew4youtoo @ConceptualJames 1-It depends on how wrong or illegal the act is, you can’t really predict how you’ll react in that situation. But I wouldn’t rule out turning them in to the police. Still you shouldn’t let worst-case scenarios override the natural inclination to favor those who r close to u. 2-No
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Memento L'chaim
Memento L'chaim@jew4youtoo·
@samiii1 @ConceptualJames Here is a scenario: 1. If a family member did something truly wicked and illegal, something you find immoral and horrible, would you help them escape the country or would you turn them in to the police? 2. Should you be charged for their crime, regardless of your decision in 1?
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Dagbreker
Dagbreker@DieDagbreker·
@samiii1 @jew4youtoo @ConceptualJames They will call that fascism. That's why nobody will answer you. As, it will directly link to nationalism. Remember, you're talking to people who see these qualities through a blank slatist lens where human capital, fungible units, is seen as a Liberal right.
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@jew4youtoo @ConceptualJames you forgot the strongest one, Humans are tribal and we tend to favor the ones closer to us (family, friends, ethnic group....)
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Memento L'chaim
Memento L'chaim@jew4youtoo·
@ConceptualJames Human nature is inalienable. Societies must not try to seize it, But work along with it. > Meritocracy > Free Markets > Capitalism > Individualism > etc.. All methods of accepting human nature as-is and the inherent objective truths that exists for all individuals.
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@FelliAshako @ecrevix @Valen10Francois quoi le Parti de Dieu laisserait CMA-CGM, propriété de Rodolphe Saadé qui accompagnait le président de la République, remporter le marché des porte-conteneurs au port de Beyrouth. » Pas compliqué à trouver
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@FelliAshako @ecrevix @Valen10Francois « L’été 2020, peu après l’explosion du port de Beyrouth, un deal avait été discrètement passé entre la France et le Hezbollah au terme duquel Emmanuel Macron ne parlerait pas lors de ses déplacements au Liban des armes du Hezbollah en échange de 1/2
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@88mxn @Agamemnonuwa If you want to talk about stubborn things, look at human nature: it is fundamentally tribal, not universalist. Your “solution” is an intellectual projection, but the reality of intergroup dominance is the only force that truly persists. The facts are on my side, not yours
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@88mxn @Agamemnonuwa My view is closer to tribal realism: in entrenched conflicts, actors prioritize survival, power, and relative advantage, not abstract principles. Expecting otherwise isn’t a credible assumption
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@88mxn @Agamemnonuwa You’re still interpreting this through a universalist lens where both sides are assumed to be working toward a stable compromise. I don’t think that reflects the reality of this kind of conflict. 1/2
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@88mxn @Agamemnonuwa Any concession will be used as a foundation for more pressure and further demands. This has already been tried and each time, the situation only worsened. As Einstein is often quoted, doing the same thing over and over again while expecting a different result is a form of madness
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Thaali 🌜 سوبر KSA
Archaeology acknowledges the presence of Arab and Hebrew peoples in Jerusalem and Samaria… and there is no solution to this dilemma except Edward Said’s proposal that a temporary two-state solution (which would inevitably lead to a one-state solution) would serve as a temporary framework for historical complexities (with the possibility of later establishing a confederal arrangement after the two-state phase, ensuring security and economic integration in shekels and population cohesion). This is because Arabs and Hebrews are peoples that do not easily submit or concede throughout history; therefore, a two-state solution ultimately leads to a single state (in which Jews would retain specific ministries and institutions), resembling Lebanon in structure. It should also be noted that Arabs consider Israel an extension of Western culture rather than a Semitic or Eastern one. Hence, educational, linguistic, and historical narratives across the region must be revised to foster solidarity under a unified framework.
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@strxwmxn @grok @History__Speaks Modern Jews descend from the ancient Jews of Judah (Yehudim); this is largely a semantic distinction. Judaism clearly evolved after the Temple’s destruction and the exiles, but continuity with ancient Judah is well‑attested
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Strxwmxn
Strxwmxn@strxwmxn·
@grok @History__Speaks Hey @grok, what do you make of this extraordinary statement: “The people who spoke Hebrew colloquially - the peoples of the Ancient Kingdoms of Judah and Israel - were not Jews but polytheists who worshipped Yahweh among other Gods.”
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@DanTalks1 Not all of them
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy

Food for thought. Welcome to the New Great Game: the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is not an outburst, it is a long‑planned move on a board Washington has been studying for decades. Donald Trump’s Iran gamble is being judged against the wrong baseline. Nobody serious expected regime change by airstrike; the bet of Operation Epic Fury was narrow but brutal, halt Iran’s march to a bomb, break the infrastructure that threatens Americans and allies, restore deterrence and, by closing Hormuz, demonstrate that even in a “multipolar” age the United States can still reach for the world’s most strategic chokepoint. The question is not whether Iran looks worse than in peacetime, but whether it is weaker than the Iran we were otherwise on track to face: near‑weapons‑grade enrichment, hardened sites, ICBMs a tested weapon within a year, and implicitly backed by China. Against that counterfactual, a regime that has lost senior commanders, core nuclear facilities and major war‑making capacity has not “emerged stronger”. Nor did this war suddenly hand power to the IRGC. The Guards have run Iran for years; the conflict stripped away the clerical façade and killed many of their most capable officers. They are not true religious believers but calculating military men, interested in power, money and survival more than theology. Such men can be negotiated with, if the terms strip away their most dangerous options. A discredited IRGC with degraded capabilities and no viable nuclear path is weaker than the old clerical‑IRGC hybrid with a bomb option. This looks less like a revolutionary vanguard and more like a brittle military dictatorship. Venezuela shows why this is not neo‑conservatism in disguise. There, Washington helped force Nicolás Maduro from power with sanctions, isolation and support for the opposition, but it did not send Marines into Caracas or attempt to remake the country in America’s image. The objective was pressure and transition, not permanent US stewardship. The same bounded playbook now applies to Iran: maximum economic and military pressure to fracture the regime from within, not an occupation or bayonet‑installed government. Seen from that perspective, Hormuz is not a shocking improvisation but the central artery in a strategy that has been war gamed out : use control of sea‑lanes and finance to punish Iran first, but also to remind China and Europe that their growth models still depend on flows Washington can disrupt. What cannot be allowed is for this world to turn Iran into a Chinese staging point on the Gulf. The endgame in this first round of the New Great Game is narrow and knowable: no enrichment, real caps on missile reconstitution, no Chinese forward base, no open chequebook for terror, and enough sustained pressure that when the Iranian people finally move, they are pushing against a weakened security state rather than a confident nuclear one. The world has changed; Iran has lost the war, Pax Americana is dead. Trump’s national security doctrine, coercion without occupation, leverage without crusades, is the planned successor, and the Strait of Hormuz is its chosen proving ground. Is the Strait of Malacca next? Why should investors care? Because if this strategy succeeds, it removes a looming nuclear breakout risk, curtails state‑sponsored terrorism, re‑establishes a credible fear of US hard power and, for a time, compresses the geopolitical risk premium that has hung over energy, shipping and global equities for a generation. It offers the possibility, however briefly, of a peace dividend: lower volatility, higher investment and a world that, for a moment, rhymes with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War. In that window, capital will scramble to reprice assets that assumed perpetual Middle Eastern and Nuclear escalation. The New Great Game is not just about guns and chokepoints; it is about who captures that re‑rating.

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Dandalf
Dandalf@DanTalks1·
"Ironically, things would be easier if Trump hadn't achieved "regime change"." Finance people talking about war is now becoming a meme to me. This can't be real man.
Peter Berezin@PeterBerezinBCA

There is probably a power vacuum in Iran. The way you become a strongman in that setting is by sounding tough. Agreeing to talk to JD after the US bombed your country does not sound tough. Ironically, things would be easier if Trump hadn't achieved "regime change".

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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@UlrichFm Je pense qu’il ciblait les absolutistes des deux camps. Pas forcément, uniquement la gauche. Le tribalisme va aussi à l’encontre de l’individualisme absolutiste libertarien.
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Ulrich
Ulrich@UlrichFm·
Lee Kuan Yew était pragmatique, et un dirigeant pragmatique qui accepte la nature humaine sans chercher à la changer est bien plus libéral et humaniste qu'un constructiviste occidental, véritable petit dictateur en herbe. L'ethnie, la tribu, la religion ne sont pas des constructions sociales arbitraires qu'on peut déconstruire et remodeler à volonté par la loi positive ou l'ingénierie sociale. Ce sont des réalités humaines profondes, les premiers socles de certitude dans le rapport à l'autre, antérieurs à toute institution politique. Le modèle occidental a cru pouvoir effacer ces déterminismes par la force de la loi. Tout ce qu'il a réussi à faire, c'est dissoudre les fondements qui permettent de solidifier la société et de permettre aux individus de vivre ensemble. Ce que les constructivistes s'acharnent à faire, c'est finalement détruire l'ordre spontané et libéral qui émane organiquement des interactions individuelles. Sans ce socle, sans cette infrastructure spontanée, une société libre ne peut ni émerger ni perdurer. Finalement, c'est relativement logique. Si l'étatiste, le socialiste et le constructiviste détestent le marché libre et ce qu'il peut créer, ils doivent tout autant détester les institutions spontanées qui échappent à leur contrôle. C'est donc bien l'ordre libéral et humaniste dans son ensemble qu'ils rejettent, pas uniquement son aspect économique et financier.
Ronit Pereira@Ronitper

“The problem with the Western model is that it ignores the fact that people are essentially tribal." - Lee Kuan Yew (Father of Singapore)

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Milton Friedman Quotes
Milton Friedman Quotes@MiltonFriedmanW·
“We will not solve our problem by electing the right people. We will only solve our problem by making it politically profitable for the wrong people to do the right thing.” — Milton Friedman
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@shevereshtus On les appelle les “juges rouges” en France. La pensée gauchiste et marxiste a infiltré la justice et essaie systématiquement de minimiser l’antisémitisme musulman
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@GadSaad « The basic principle of altruism—the absolute—requires that man live for others; it demands that man sacrifice himself to others... in other words, the destruction of all those ‘selves’ which make up our world. » – Ayn Rand
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sam ch
sam ch@samiii1·
@DanTalks1 I would say the sweet spot isn’t absolute tribalism or absolute individualism (Rand-style). It’s hierarchical: strong individual rights inside the tribe, tribal priority & realism outside against rivals.
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Dandalf
Dandalf@DanTalks1·
@samiii1 You can go through and read all my refutations and arguments on this stuff
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Dandalf
Dandalf@DanTalks1·
Nothing turns a "free-market libertarian" into a Dandalf style ruthless neo-mercantilist tribal power maximalist like telling our enemies they should abide by libertarian ideology and become libertarians themselves. "China should just buy oil from the US, what's the issue?" "Why would China want to do that man, what do you mean, that would make them reliant on the US, of course they should have a varied source of key energy materials. Not relying on their main geo-pol competitor" "Should we do the same?" "No we should embrace free market globalism and allow China to operate freely in our markets with impunity because thats the best thing for us."
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