Matt Robare

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Matt Robare

Matt Robare

@MattRobare

Sic Semper Tyrannis

Jamaica Plain, MA Entrou em Mayıs 2009
2.8K Seguindo1.5K Seguidores
Matt Robare
Matt Robare@MattRobare·
@the_transit_guy I've always thought West Virginia would make a great backdrop for Tuscan-style hilltown urbanism. Instead we get Dollar General and double wides.
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Hayden
Hayden@the_transit_guy·
It will never not be funny to me that this is pedestrian experience of the second most Italian-American municipality in the United States. Im not looking for Cinque Terre but how about something better than this?
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Open New York
Open New York@OpenNYForAll·
Since 1966, historic districts have steadily expanded to cover much of Lower Manhattan. As more areas are covered, new housing is effectively banned there, driving displacement and higher rents.
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Matt Robare
Matt Robare@MattRobare·
@JonahDispatch Republicans lost all self-respect when they didn't vote to convict him after he tried to kill them in 2021.
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Avi Shpayer
Avi Shpayer@AviShpayer·
@just_whatever @sarcasm We barely have enough flower left. The rockets also don’t give us enough time to let the dough rise. So we end up with these. We make them in a hurry 😔
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Michael Elgort
Michael Elgort@just_whatever·
Breaking: reports of mass bread shortages across Israel Bread shelves are all empty. That’s a very significant development I will dig deeper into that matter and will let you know what happened. Stay tuned
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Edward Feser
Edward Feser@FeserEdward·
Nobody had such a fear, including clowns like this, until a month ago. Even since then, the "fear" is pure playacting. Iran has never posed a nuclear threat to the U.S. homeland and was nowhere close to being one. This is "Stay locked down, do you wanna kill grandma?" level stuff
SSGT Homestead@SSGT72

@Hotbuffalo27 @0hour1 Do you think 350,000,000 Americans should have lived in fear of being vaporized by Iranian nukes?

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Mambo Italiano
Mambo Italiano@mamboitaliano__·
It’s Easter!!! The unique beauty of the celebration in Greece 🇬🇷✨
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Matt Robare
Matt Robare@MattRobare·
Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go!
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Edward Luce
Edward Luce@EdwardGLuce·
@marcthiessen Marc, Nato's purpose is not hard to understand; mutual self-defence. That obviously doesn't cover reckless wars of choice on which other members haven't been consulted & would never have advised.
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Marc Thiessen 🇺🇸❤️🇺🇦🇹🇼🇮🇱
So many longtime NATO supporters saying the same thing right now. I helped bring Poland, Hungary and Czech Republic into NATO. But denying us basing and overflight is inexcusable, as is their failure to help with Strait of Hormuz. No one asking them to bomb Iran, just let us use our bases and help escort ships. If they can’t do that, NATO has no purpose.
Clifford D. May@CliffordDMay

I'm pro-NATO. But I can't think of a single argument to refute what @MsMelChen says here. Not one. If others can, please weigh in.

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Matt Robare
Matt Robare@MattRobare·
I realize LKY never had to deal with a free and fair election, but they're kind of a big deal in democracies.
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Matt Robare
Matt Robare@MattRobare·
And if Lee Kuan Yew was surprised by the US withdrawl from Vietnam in 1973, which Nixon had announced in 1969, and that a democracy would not keep doing something that its voters disliked then if he was an idiot and not the genius his fans make him out to be.
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Matt Robare
Matt Robare@MattRobare·
Again: Trump spent months insulting and threatening NATO members with invasion and annexation. Not to mention unilaterally canceling their weapons purchases and shutting down their ability to use weapons they already bought. Then, when Trump decided on a whim to attack Iran, he
Melissa Chen@MsMelChen

May I offer a different perspective on the whole transatlantic family feud brewing over NATO. Europeans are furious at what they call American unilateralism and "wars of choice," while Americans are done subsidizing allies who won't lift a finger when Washington actually needs them. Given all the sentimentality and historical baggage, there’s been a lot of bad blood and high grade insults thrown both ways. A lot of pride here is at stake. But given that I am not American or European, what I can provide is an Asian perspective. The whole thing looks very different as there are no blood ties or cultural nostalgia to pull me either way. Because of distance, the default Asian lens on America has always been colder, clearer, and far more pragmatic than the European one. Asians have never lived under the illusion that their relationship to the US is one based on shared values. If they ever did, the illusion was shattered during the Cold War. Instead, Asian nations saw the relationship to America as a cold, interest-driven bargain in a dangerous neighborhood full of communists, insurgents, and bigger powers. Fast forward to today, and this lesson still holds. Japan, South Korea, the Philippines, Vietnam, Singapore and Indonesia all partner with America because their interests (not values) align - especially when it comes to countering China. These nations have reasons to be alarmed about Beijing's ambitions in the South China Sea, around Taiwan, and across the Indo-Pacific. They don't need lectures about democracy or liberal international order to see the value in US forward presence, intelligence sharing, tech transfers, and security guarantees. It's a straight-up transactional deal: the US keeps the sea lanes open and the PLA at bay. Meanwhile, Asian nations host your bases, buy your weapons, and join your alliances (Quad, AUKUS, etc.). When interests diverge, they adjust pragmatically, without the drama and meltdown. Probably not many in the West know this, but one of the forces that shaped this attitude was the US pullout of Vietnam and the rest of America’s Cold War shenanigans. Lee Kuan Yew was one of America’s loudest cheerleaders in Southeast Asia. In 1967 he flew to Washington, testified to Congress, and begged Lyndon Johnson (and later Nixon) not to cut and run in Vietnam. He warned that a hasty US exit would trigger the dominoes - Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and then pressure on the rest of Southeast Asia. Singapore became a logistical hub, providing a haven for US troops on R&R, oil refineries supplying the American war machine, and Lockheed servicing aircraft. At one point, US military-related spending made up 15% of Singapore’s entire GDP. Singapore didn’t support the war because it loved American democracy but because it kept the communists tied up and bought Southeast Asia time to build up its own economy and military. Then came the pullout - the Paris Accords in 1973 and then Saigon falls in 1975. Despite all the lobbying, despite the blood and resources America had spent, domestic politics in the US (the anti-war movement, Congress, Vietnam syndrome etc.) ended it. LKY watched in disbelief as the superpower that had promised to hold the line simply walked away. The lesson was that American commitments are real only as long as they serve American interests and American voters don’t get tired. It’s a brutal one to internalize. LKY was disappointed and noted American “unreliability” but Singapore didn’t collapse into panic or anti-Americanism. They just recalibrated and kept pursuing pragmatism by building its own deterrent, diversifying partners, and later offered the US naval logistics access (Sembawang port) when the Philippines kicked them out of Subic Bay in the early 1990s. Malaysia drew the same conclusion. The Tunku was pro-Western and anti-communist early on, but Malaysia never joined SEATO and pushed ZOPFAN (Zone of Peace, Freedom and Neutrality) instead. When the British announced their East-of-Suez withdrawal in 1968 and Nixon’s Doctrine (1969) told Asians “you defend yourselves first, we’ll just help,” Kuala Lumpur accelerated its neutralist tilt. The message was clear - don’t count on Washington to bleed indefinitely for distant allies. South Korea is similarly pragmatic but it operates under far higher stakes due to baggage from the Korean War and the ongoing North Korean threat. American intervention literally saved the South from conquest, resulting in a bond that is forged in blood. While South Korea had to learn the same lessons - that the American umbrella isn’t permanent, sharing a border with a nuclear-armed adversary forces tighter coupling with Washington. The reverberations of Nixon’s 1973 opening to Beijing cannot be understated. It shocked the entire region that America, the great anti-communist crusader, suddenly would cozy up to Mao to counter the Soviets. If Washington could flip on core principles when interests demanded it, why should smaller states pretend the relationship was about anything deeper? The core Asian critique of the European approach to dealing with America is that it is entirely bound up in moral values and civilizational kinship. This means that every disagreement feels like a betrayal and breeds resentment on both sides. Because Europe is so hyped up on abstract values, it makes NATO feel like a sacred club that America is disrespecting. Asia's interest-based lens sees alliances as tools - useful until they're not. Maybe Europe thinks the Asian approach is cynical but the irony is that this is actually what keeps Indo-Pacific partners far more reliable counterweights to China than many NATO members ever were against Russia.

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Jeremy Wayne Tate
Jeremy Wayne Tate@JeremyTate41·
Easter celebrations in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
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