
A man in a congressional office building was asked, “America first or Israel first?” He replied: "Israel First"
Chineseroommania#Z!0MUSTD13
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@victimsofz66265
Zionism is the root of all evil in the modern age……destroy the narrative of Zionist jewish victimhood exceptionalism

A man in a congressional office building was asked, “America first or Israel first?” He replied: "Israel First"

Reminder that if you support Palestine, you are siding with 2 billion Muslims, neo-Nazis and communists against 16 million Jews. You are not supporting an oppressed minority, you’re siding with the oppressive majority.

Tbh Israeli-citizen Arabs really need to lock in and turn out more I am sure there are various pressures preventing them from voting, but they're well over 20% of the population but the Arab parties got 10.7% of votes (and Arab voters were only ~12.5% of the electorate)



🦔New Bloomberg reporting reveals SoftBank has committed roughly $60 billion to OpenAI, and internal advisors who questioned the size of the bet say founder Masayoshi Son shut them down. Former SoftBank insider Habib Imam described the position as "a bet on a worldview about AGI" and added "you can't hedge a worldview." To fund the commitment, SoftBank sold its remaining Nvidia stake, took out a $40 billion bridge facility, and layered a margin loan on top, all costing around 8% interest. SoftBank's last bet of this scale was WeWork, which imploded in 2019. Insiders also told Bloomberg they worry OpenAI is losing technical ground to Anthropic. My Take Son shut down internal disagreement on WeWork before that one collapsed, and the Bloomberg piece describes the same dynamic playing out on a position 15 times larger. Son built his career on contrarian bets that worked, and the Alibaba return covered a lot of subsequent mistakes. The OpenAI position cannot get covered the same way, because no future windfall fits inside the same fund timeline. The way this is financed is certainly not great in my eyes. SoftBank borrowed against its OpenAI shares to buy more OpenAI shares, paying 8% interest on a private asset with no public price discovery and no short sellers to test the valuation. That works while OpenAI keeps marking up at each private round, and collapses fast if the next round comes in flat. OpenAI's projected $14 billion loss in 2026, the token economics pressure on enterprise customers, and the IPO complications I have written about all week are the kind of catalysts that test private valuations. SoftBank does not need OpenAI to fail. SoftBank just needs the next round to disappoint, and the margin numbers get ugly. Hedgie🤗 bloomberg.com/news/features/…

Choking back tears, Michigan US Senate candidate Haley Stevens exclaims, "ISRAEL COMES TO ME IN MY DREAMS!"




🟣 A Must See/Listen Debate between John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt on one side, and Mike Pompeo and Victoria Nuland on the other side. (Sound Problem Corrected) This debate is part of the Munk Debates series, which was held last Wednesday, May 20, 2026, in Toronto, Canada, under the title "America's Foreign Wars." 📷 About the Debate John Quincy Adams’s 1821 warning that America “goes not abroad in search of monsters to destroy” remains the touchstone for modern advocates of foreign policy restraint. This school of thought argues that decades of overextension and “global policing” have eroded domestic prosperity, destabilized the world, and allowed foreign actors to exert undue influence over domestic politics. From this perspective, prolonged interventions have yielded diminishing strategic returns while compromising national security and unity. Conversely, liberal interventionists argue that active U.S. engagement with the world is the bedrock of global order. They maintain that American leadership secures vital trade routes, promotes economic prosperity, and prevents bad actors from exploiting power vacuums. As the world’s preeminent democracy, they contend that the U.S. bears a unique responsibility to underwrite global stability; without it, the rules-based international system—and the eighty years of peace it has provided—will disintegrate. 📷Arguing in favour of the motion were two of the world’s leading proponents of U.S. foreign policy restraint: John Mearsheimer, the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago and Stephen Walt, Professor of International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School. munkdebates.com/debates/foreig… youtu.be/ZfagSRczSeg?si…

Mao Zedong, the man who staged a communist Revolution and rescued China from foreign invasions and exploitatios, was so obsessed with communism that he wanted China to become a pure communist state. To this end, he enacted economic policies that were so bad that 15-45 million Chinese died of starvation.

Tom Hardy was fired from MobLand 'after enraging co-star Helen Mirren' with his 'arrogant on-set behaviour' trib.al/Pc9V6jH


It has been apparent to me for quite a while that Pakistan as a mediator is more than problematic. Their animosity towards Israel is long standing. It is undeniable that Iranian military aircraft are being housed on Pakistani air bases and past rhetoric from the highest Pakistani officials against Israel is disturbing. As to the defense minister’s comments about the Abraham Accords, saying that Pakistan would never join because they don’t trust Israel: The clip may be a year old, but I fear the sentiment is fresh. In that regard, it is imperative that Pakistan give an answer now to President Trump’s call to join the Abraham Accords.



haha castro was a frankfurt school conspiracy guy





