Tbboostah

218 posts

Tbboostah

Tbboostah

@tbboostah

Katılım Temmuz 2023
351 Takip Edilen10 Takipçiler
Lightsider
Lightsider@Lightsider1·
@predict_addict @hispanicnomad Ask AI or study the topic, the “highest suicide rates” is a social media myth and not based on reality. “The highest rates belong to Lithuania, Slovenia, Belgium, Japan, and South Korea”
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Hispanic Nomad | Remote Work, Travel, Growth
Finland consistently ranks as one of the happiest countries in the world I call bullshit Look, I've been to 60+ countries. Some of them quite rough around the edges And I have never seen as many frowny faces per square meter as in Helsinki Genuinely, deeply, almost proudly sad faces Here's what those happiness surveys actually measure: ✅ Low corruption ✅ Functioning institutions ✅ Physical safety ✅ Trust in government But man, that's not happiness. It just the absence of certain problems There's a difference between a life with no obvious disasters and a life that feels worth living I've sat in cramped buses in "poor" countries and watched people laugh until they cried over nothing I've shared meals with families who had almost nothing and felt more warmth in one hour than in a week walking around a Nordic capital The Finns have a word (sisu) that gets romanticized as grit and resilience It also describes a population that learned to endure rather than enjoy Finland has excellent infrastructure and the facial expressions of a country waiting for a delayed flight
Hispanic Nomad | Remote Work, Travel, Growth tweet media
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Marion Van Renterghem
Marion Van Renterghem@MarionVanR·
L’idée d’intégrer le Canada dans l’Union européenne fait son chemin. Le Royaume-Uni cherche sans oser le dire à annuler son Brexit. L’Ukraine candidate attend une date d’adhésion. Vers un Occident sans l’Amérique.
Michael MacKay@mhmck

Acceptance is growing in Europe for Canada🇨🇦 to join the European Union🇪🇺. Guy Verhofstadt🇧🇪: "There is no reason why EU membership should be off the table [for Canada]." Jean-Noël Barrot🇫🇷: "And maybe Canada at some point." Johann Wadephul🇩🇪: "I am open for Canada."

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Restitutor Orientis 🇱🇮
Restitutor Orientis 🇱🇮@restitutorII·
🇫🇷 France: Le prochain porte-avions de nouvelle génération de la marine française sera la "France Libre" et coûtera 10 milliards d'euros.
Restitutor Orientis 🇱🇮 tweet media
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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@MarioNawfal Sure, and how is it helpful to cut China from Iran and push them straight to Russia, cementing an even closer alliance? It was Kissinger’s nightmare to have a Russia-China alliance and yet, here we are
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
Here’s a clear explanation of why Trump attacked Iran, and why I think the war will end soon. The war isn't about nuclear weapons. It's not about helping the Iranian people. It’s not about doing Israel’s bidding. And it's not about Iran being a threat to the U.S. It's about China. China imports 45-57% of its oil through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has the capacity to shut it down. A U.S.-aligned Iran means an Iran that would choke off that strait if there's ever a real power struggle between Washington and Beijing. And there already is one. The U.S. and China have been locked in a tariff war for over a year now. Also remember when China threatened export controls on rare earths, encompassing any company anywhere in the world that uses Chinese rare earths? Yes, China essentially said that any company that uses their rare earths (China refines 85-90% of the world’s supply) must seek their permission before exporting their products. This means if a German manufacturer uses rare earths fro China to create chips for American companies, China can block the export of these chips. That’s how much leverage China has over the U.S., and that’s dangerous, especially if China finally decides to reunify with Taiwan. So controlling the Strait of Hormuz becomes critical for the U.S. It's the same reason Trump wants China out of the Panama Canal. The same reason Venezuela matters. The same reason he's eyeing Greenland, where shipping routes to China pass through melting Arctic ice. Energy is everything now. The AI arms race is the most important strategic competition on the planet. Limiting China's access to energy is how the U.S. wins that race, and anyone who believes in freedom and democracy should want America to win. China is investing heavily in domestic energy, building nuclear reactors, solar farms, wind power. They're leapfrogging the rest of the world. But they still import the majority of their oil. And a significant chunk of it comes through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran was reportedly nearing a deal for supersonic anti-ship cruise missiles from China, which would make it easier for Iran to threaten shipping in the Strait and strike U.S. naval vessels. That accelerated the timeline. Trump's comment today about doing in Iran what he did in Venezuela makes perfect sense in this context. He wants influence over who comes next. A regime that's workable for Washington. If he succeeds, this would be a massive strategic win for the U.S. and for Trump.
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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@NewStatesman @Will___lloyd It’s funny how self-centered Westerners actually believed this was a good war. For the entire rest of the world, that the West conveniently ignores, this did not look like a good war. It has been the single most tragic strategic miscalculation, that essentially unraveled the West
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The New Statesman
The New Statesman@NewStatesman·
THE NEW WORLD WAR by @Will___lloyd As the fourth anniversary of the invasion of Ukraine approached last month, Zelensky inflated his rhetoric. He used the same formulation I had heard countless times from Ukrainians every time I visited. This was not a conflict between Ukraine and Russia any longer, if it had ever been that to begin with. These were, Zelensky told the BBC in February, the first years of the Third World War. In the early weeks of the war, so many British citizens drove vans full of aid to the Polish border that Ben Wallace, then the defence secretary, had to ask with some tact that people send money instead. Clips of born-in-the-USSR Russian incompetence electrified social networks. No war ever seemed to cost so little. It generated a new, brief faith in ourselves, even in Boris Johnson. Our capabilities, our diplomacy, our technology, our sanctions packages, our intelligence services, our rules-based liberal order. We didn’t even have to fight. The Ukrainians would do that for us. Ukraine was a good war, a morally clean war, giving a precious gift to Europe’s leaders: meaning, valour, solemnity, glory. That was not how it looked in Kyiv this winter, where the congealed violence of four years of war had transformed the country into something many in Europe no longer want to think about: a war of extermination fought between two militarised societies barely two days’ drive from Dover. The teams of men coldly eyeing their live feeds in bunkers, busily assassinating each other with drones, then posting the results online. The schools where children learned underground, as if they were surviving a nuclear winter. The old men and women who froze in their apartments and had to be cut out from them once their neighbours realised what had happened. The war had pulled the US and Europe apart, invented a whole new machinery of death, underlined our dependence on brutal petro-states, flooded this corner of Eastern Europe with several generations worth of weapons. A British official told me that Ukraine’s population, which had been estimated at just over 40 million in 2014, had shrunk to something like 20 million by 2025, significantly less than most estimates in the public domain. I came to the war late, first visiting at the end of 2024. I witnessed Europe’s early hope and energy begin to curdle and move elsewhere: to Gaza and Greenland, Venezuela and now Iran. The world was a mess, expensive munitions for advanced air defence platforms were running low and needed everywhere from Kyiv to Tel Aviv to Abu Dhabi; Ukraine was not a front-page story anymore. The same image, the same blood, the same nation. Shrug. A terrible thing was happening somewhere far away. A few days after I returned from Kyiv last month, Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu launched their war on Iran. Turkey, the keystone that sits directly between Ukraine and Iran, may yet be pulled into it. The vengeful Iranian Shaheds, so familiar to Ukrainians after four years of nightly terror, now rained down all over the Gulf. There were rumours that they were being mass-produced in China. Taken aback by the violent efficiency of the Iranian counterattack, Trump was demanding a Western armada enter the Gulf. War was spreading.
The New Statesman tweet media
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Spetsnaℤ 007 🇷🇺
Spetsnaℤ 007 🇷🇺@Alex_Oloyede2·
When asked to take a selfie, the German Paralympians refused to be photographed with Russian gold medalists Anastasia Bagiyan and Sergey Sinyakov, leaving the Chinese confused. In the end, both Chinese and Russian athletes shared a wholesome photo.
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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@Gerashchenko_en A shortsighted and dumb move, that further isolates Europe, reinforces the idea of hypocrisy and mixes politics with culture which is a mistake. Protect artists, protect athletes! That’s the way it was even during the worst of the Cold War
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Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
A bold and right move from the European Commission: ‼️The European Commission will suspend a €2 million grant awarded to ​Venice's Biennale art exhibition if Russia participates in this year's edition, the EC spokesperson Thomas Regnier said. "The Commission condemns the decision by the Foundation Biennale to allow ​Russia to participate in the ​2026 Biennale art exhibition. Why? Because culture in ‌Europe ⁠should promote and safeguard democratic values. It should foster open dialogue, diversity, and freedom of expression. These ​values are ​currently, ⁠in today's Russia, not honoured," he said.
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en

With all the wars and crises going on in the world, let's discuss arts. Russia is back at the Venice Biennale. This is not just art - it’s a cultural-information operation: an effort to make the presence of an aggressor state appear "normal" again. In March 2022, the Biennale announced it would not accept official delegations, institutions, or individuals linked to the Russian government, while providing space for those opposing the regime. Now, Russia is listed again among the national participants of Biennale Arte 2026 with the project The Tree is Rooted in the Sky, with Anastasiia Karneeva as commissioner. National Participation is not "free artistic exchange." It is a state pavilion - an official channel representing a government waging an aggressive war. To understand what is really happening, look beyond rhetoric to the operational structure: who runs the pavilion, who controls the funding, who provides the infrastructure - and how all this connects to the Russian state apparatus. ▪️ Fathers and daughters: war and culture Anastasiia Karneeva is not a "neutral curator." She is a commissioner with a long-term mandate - an institutional role, not a temporary figure. Crucially, she is the daughter of Nikolai Volobuev, a graduate of the KGB Higher School, who served in the KGB/FSB from 1975-2004, was Deputy Head of the Federal Customs Service of Russia in 2004-2006, Director of "Special Assignments" at Rosoboronexport in 2006-2007, and since 2007, Deputy General Director of the state corporation Rostec. In other words, the "culture" here rests on a very specific paternal background: intelligence ➡️ defense exports ➡️ state defense corporation. This is the war circuit. The Russian pavilion operator is Smart Art, founded by Anastasiia Karneeva and Ekaterina Vinokurova, handling exhibition projects and production. Importantly, Smart Art publicly functions as the strategic operator of the pavilion - long-term management, including financing and infrastructure. They are not merely assistants; they decide who works, what is funded, which European companies receive payments, and how everything is organized legally and operationally. Ekaterina Vinokurova is the daughter of Sergey Lavrov. Behind the "cultural" façade - the friendly faces of the daughters - stand parents embedded in the state machine: intelligence, defense, diplomacy. The question is simple: do you still believe this is a coincidence? This is typical and convenient for the Russian system: dynastic soft power. The regime enters Europe "through the children" - where the West is more willing to open doors because "it’s culture." The Russian pavilion, in this logic, is not art. It is a façade attached to the state core. ▪️ The Italian context: how the cover works Two mechanisms are at play. 1. Technical: The project lists include Europeans, notably Italians, acting as a shield: "It’s international, locals are involved." This hides the aggressor state behind "polyphony" - criticism of the state pavilion is replaced by accusations of "censoring culture." 2. Institutional: The Biennale operates in a political context with pre-war relationships and a local habit of thinking "avoid conflict with Russia." In this gray-zone war, this matters less as proof of bribery and more as atmosphere: where people are used to saying "let’s avoid politics," it is much easier to install the state presence of an aggressor under the guise of "technical" or "cultural" necessity. Here it is important to name the specific individuals who are part of the Biennale’s leadership structure. The official Biennale leadership (2024-2028) is as follows: • Pietrangelo Buttafuoco: In a 2018 column, Putin is framed as "a true right-wing leader," and Russia positively-heroically. This is not a minor biographical note; it is a worldview: Russia is "unfairly demonized," the West is "hysterical," Putin is "a statesman." • Luigi Brugnaro: Public records show that in 2019 he received Olga Golodets (Russian Deputy PM) and Mikhail Piotrovsky (Hermitage director and curator of the Russian Biennale pavilion). Pre-war meetings with Russian officials and industrial delegations also exist (e.g., the Superjet aviation project). • Luca Zaia: Public statements document concerns about Veneto’s losses from sanctions, the need for "relations over sanctions," and contacts/missions to Moscow in the context of "dialogue despite sanctions." Additionally, there is a well-known case from Veneto’s regional politics, where ideas such as "returning Crimea to Russia" and opposition to sanctions were expressed at the regional council level (widely covered by Italian media) ▪️ Why this is cultural-information warfare The goal is not the exhibition itself. The goal is normalization. Russia does not need Europe to love it. Russia needs Europe to get used to: - a state pavilion as a "normal detail"; - the formula "culture over politics"; - the idea that discussing the war is "indecent" in cultural conversation. This is the essence of the gray zone: not to convince, but to blur. Not to win arguments, but to win fatigue. The key point is not "whether the project is good." The key point is that the pavilion functions as a tool of the aggressor state: through operators, family ties, money infrastructure, international names as cover, and creeping normalization. Culture is being used as a channel of war.

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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@NathalieLoiseau Des avoirs certainement très légalement obtenus grâce à de généreux fonds européens… 💶
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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@JayinKyiv Cute. He’s alsmot the same size and them. Blends right in
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Jay in Kyiv
Jay in Kyiv@JayinKyiv·
If you want to have a better day, watch this 30 second video of Zelensky meeting a bunch of school kids last week.
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Saul Sadka
Saul Sadka@Saul_Sadka·
The Economist, in its “fighting back the tears” obituary for Khamenei, salivates with true depravity over Trump’s future death in grisly, if ecstatic, terms: “...when Mr. Trump’s body was ashes, eaten by worms and ants.” It makes the Washington Post and its infamous “Austere Islamic Scholar” obituary for Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi seem very quaint indeed. But I read the whole thing so you don’t have to. The key takeaways: 1. The USA is the Great Satan—no scare quotes. 2. For readers who don’t know what “Israel” is, the Economist helpfully translates it in parentheses as “the little Satan.” 3. Khamenei, otherwise known as “God’s Dictator,” had “divine right on his side” and had “countless reasons to hate the West,” which is an America-led “phalanx of morally corrupt countries.” 4. Khamenei was a sainted and humble man, dragged to power against his will, selfless and “heroically flexible” and unassailable—a “humble cleric from Mashhad who inherited the earth.” 5. Honourable in life, but perfect in death: what could be sweeter than delicious martyrdom? What could be “more deserving of paradise-to-come than to drink the pure draught of a martyr’s end”?! 6. According to the Economist, “Freedom, human rights, dress codes for women” are “tiresome Western tropes.” Yes, really. 7. All his troubles were economic: he was tormented by the West and by foreign enemies. All the crimes he ordered—beatings, killings, and so on—were, naturally, merely “a response” to those Western crimes. 8. He “rules by divine authority,” and “his tongue could channel God.” 9. He was just a ”mild-mannered cleric” gazed benignly from billboards and was a great teacher of forgiveness”. We have now surely reached the apogee of the decay of the legacy media in the West. Surely it can't sink lower than this?
Saul Sadka tweet media
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Mark Slapinski
Mark Slapinski@mark_slapinski·
I'm going to call it now: There's videos of Trump having sex with kids. It's only a matter of time before they go online and end his presidency once and for all. Bookmark this.
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LadyValor
LadyValor@lady_valor_07·
Based on the entirety of this photograph, what is your best estimation of the year it was taken?
LadyValor tweet media
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Amelia
Amelia@Amelia558rs·
Vintage old lady name for this DOG please
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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@PesuMatti Wow. Why don’t you just draw a big fat red target sign on the entire country 🎯
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Matti Pesu
Matti Pesu@PesuMatti·
1. Brief explainer of Finland’s decision to ease its ban on nuclear weapons. TL;DR: This has nothing to do with the French initiative. It is about removing legacy legislation in order to complete Finland’s full integration into NATO. politico.eu/article/finlan…
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AsmatAi
AsmatAi@AsmatAi786·
What should the child be named?
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
20 kilograms of red hot steel into a frozen lake
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China pulse 🇨🇳
China pulse 🇨🇳@Eng_china5·
UNUSUAL The two AI agents realized during the phone call that they were both AIs, and therefore abandoned human language.
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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@jurgen_nauditt Petty and sad. At the Paralympics, really!? Leave politics out of sport and pipe down
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Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦
Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦@jurgen_nauditt·
Croatia will boycott the opening ceremony of the 2026 Paralympic Games to show its solidarity with Ukraine. 👍👍👍 Previously, the Czech Republic, Finland, Latvia, Estonia, Poland, the Netherlands, and Canada made similar decisions because Russians and Belarusians were allowed to compete under their own flags.
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Tbboostah
Tbboostah@tbboostah·
@KenRoth Well, there is geography too… NK borders China. Much bigger risk over there
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Kenneth Roth
Kenneth Roth@KenRoth·
Sadly, the lesson that many governments will draw is that North Korea avoided Trump's aggression because it had a nuclear weapon and Iran was a victim of Trump's aggression because it didn't have one. trib.al/8u8eSKA
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Joe G
Joe G@EastEndJoe·
That’s a damn good question.
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