ojmc624

17.1K posts

ojmc624 banner
ojmc624

ojmc624

@ColtsMagic624

Nowhere USA เข้าร่วม Şubat 2010
400 กำลังติดตาม85 ผู้ติดตาม
ojmc624 รีทวีตแล้ว
BRICS News
BRICS News@BRICSinfo·
JUST IN: 🇺🇸🇮🇷 United States sent guns to Iranian protesters through the Kurds. "We sent guns to the protesters, a lot of them," President Trump told me. "And I think the Kurds took the guns."
English
275
744
3.8K
228.9K
War Monitor
War Monitor@WarMonitors·
WHAAT🤣🤣🤣
War Monitor tweet media
English
276
1K
12.7K
1.1M
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@shadi_barham @academic_la To your first two points, I sincerely hope that you’re wrong but fear very much that you’re exactly right 🤦🏽‍♂️
English
0
0
0
15
Shadi Barham
Shadi Barham@shadi_barham·
@ColtsMagic624 @academic_la 2SS is dead at this point, and Israel just took its final plunge like Apartheid South Africa did in ‘86. Just with way worse odds because Iran, Yemen, Iraq, Lebanon, and Palestine are a much stronger foe than what South Africa faced. Iran and Iraq will basically be…
English
2
0
1
64
Shaiel Ben-Ephraim
Shaiel Ben-Ephraim@academic_la·
The US is preparing to destroy Iranian infrastructure. His Secretary of Defense, who was selected due to his enthusiasm for war crimes is briefing him that it is perfectly legal and justified: 1) Trump publicly embraced this rationale, threatening to bomb Iran "back to the stone ages" and posting a 48-hour ultimatum to open Hormuz or face escalation. 2) On Thursday, the U.S. struck a bridge connecting Tehran to Karaj, killing at least 13 people, with officials claiming it could be used to transport missiles and drones. So the process has already started but it is expected to get much worse. 3) Real experts warn it is not lawful to strike infrastructure merely to pressure an adversary into negotiations or send political signals. Strikes must demonstrably provide concrete military advantage, use the least destructive feasible method, and avoid excessive civilian harm. 4) That includes hitting nuclear plants. Rubio has acknowledged Iran is not currently enriching uranium, undermining the specific rationale that hitting power plants would halt the nuclear program. Therefore it would be highly dangerous, illegal and irresponsible with no military upside. 5) Targeting desalination plants is considered even more legally fraught. The 1949 Geneva Convention explicitly protects facilities vital to civilian survival, including access to water. 6) Gulf state partners have directly expressed fears to U.S. officials that striking Iran's power infrastructure could provoke Iranian retaliation against their own energy facilities, not a hypothetical concern, given that Iran already struck a Qatari gas field after Israel hit an Iranian one, and Kuwait accused Iran of attacking a desalination plant on Friday. 7) Human rights groups warn that power infrastructure is the backbone of hospitals, water systems, and basic civilian services. One Iran analyst warned the bombing risks degrading "not just the regime, but the nation." Just a month ago Trump vowed to "Make Iran Great Again," and three months ago he pledged that "help is on its way" to Iranians suffering under the regime. Now he is ready to destroy their country and their lives.
English
26
126
413
19.2K
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@shadi_barham @academic_la Ahhhh & then you have Iran’s more formal sphere of influence—Iran, Bahrain, Yemen, eastern Iraq (perhaps Qatar and whatever will be left of Palestine)? Barring catastrophe, Israel isn’t disappearing (nor would I advocate for it to disappear). Back to 67 borders + 2 state solution
English
1
0
1
191
Shadi Barham
Shadi Barham@shadi_barham·
@ColtsMagic624 @academic_la I’m a bit more bullish than most on Israel’s downfall being imminent. I don’t know how exactly it disintegrates, but it will. I don’t see any scenario where Iran doesn’t kick out the monarchy from Bahrain and annexes it by the end of the war, or as a part of the peace deal.
English
1
0
0
130
ojmc624 รีทวีตแล้ว
Ryan Grim
Ryan Grim@ryangrim·
Whatever you think of Trump trying to deport these two Iranian women (how will he even get them there?) we can all agree this is not the behavior of a confident man. A military that feels good about its war effort does not need to turn its attention to the random (supposed) grand niece of a guy they assassinated in a drone strike 6 years ago. This is the behavior of losers and cowards and that’s an objective observation, not a judgment.
English
375
1.3K
7.5K
180.8K
Shadi Barham
Shadi Barham@shadi_barham·
@ColtsMagic624 @academic_la In the case of Israel and Bahrain, they’d know be the decisively Second World-aligned Palestine and Bahrain province of Iran, so that’s definitely not nothing. But yeah, Taiwan is the big deal.
English
1
0
0
62
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@shadi_barham @academic_la In my mind, much more likely for us to be in a bipolar world where we control western hemisphere and China controls Asia/EasternEurope/australia. With Western Europe & Middle East strategically aligning with both depending on the issue. World was safer in Cold War type polarity.
English
0
0
0
12
Shadi Barham
Shadi Barham@shadi_barham·
@ColtsMagic624 @academic_la Even for the US’ sake. China will eventually fall off, and when it does, we could be looking at an eventual non-polar world, especially as post-oil takes out Russia. If anyone likes uni-polarity (I hate it), the US would be well situated to return to that position…
English
2
0
1
14
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@shadi_barham @academic_la then the US will be fine. Also incredibly positioned between 2 huge oceans, mineral rich, fresh water, abundant farmland, oil/gas rich, & still most entrepreneurial. If anything, Strait issues exposed MANY major economies. I suspect S.Korea/Japan will get a vulnerability discount
English
1
0
1
18
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@shadi_barham @academic_la Why do you think I won’t stop buying gold! lol hey man, you’re not wrong. But a military more powerful than the next 10 combined will get you a long way. And unless some major powers actually come together for an alternative monetary system based on something other than usd,
English
1
0
1
22
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@shadi_barham @academic_la Monetary policy (inflationary) meet AI (the most deflationary force we’ve ever seen) 🫱🏽‍🫲🏾
English
2
0
1
15
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@shadi_barham @academic_la Inflation rampant? Sure, here’s some more $$$. Soon US will nationalize portions of its AI national champions and force dividends down to citizens in the form of universal basic income.
English
0
0
0
11
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@DropSiteNews Ahhh more fruits of American involvement in the Middle East, I see. I hate nearly every fucking thing about our foreign policy.
English
0
0
0
99
Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
🇸🇾 REPORT | A New York Times investigation found that abductions of women and girls from Syria’s Alawite minority are far more widespread and brutal than authorities have acknowledged. ▫️While the government officially acknowledged only one "real" case, the Times verified the kidnappings of 13 Alawite women and girls and received reports of scores more. ▫️ Survivors reported being grabbed off the street in broad daylight, held in filthy conditions, beaten, and subjected to sexual violence. Five of the verified victims were raped, and two returned home pregnant. ▫️ Captors often explicitly targeted victims for being Alawite, at times citing extremist views that deem the minority "permissible to rob and rape". Other cases involved purely criminal extortion, with one family paying a $17,000 ransom for a relative who was never released.  ▫️Families and rights groups say many cases remain uninvestigated, pointing to a pattern of denial and limited accountability despite mounting evidence.
Drop Site tweet media
Syria Justice Archive@SyJusticeArc

📰 A New York Times investigation found that abductions of women and girls from Syria’s Alawite minority were more common, and more brutal, than the government has acknowledged By @NYTBen A 16-year-old girl left her home in northwest Syria last May to visit a shop and disappeared. Weeks later, an anonymous stranger phoned her distraught family and said that he had the teenager and would let her go if they paid thousands of dollars in ransom, according to four people involved in her case. The family paid the ransom and the girl returned in August, more than 100 days after she had been kidnapped. She told confidants that she had been held in a dank basement and was regularly drugged and raped by strangers, the four people said. A medical exam turned up yet another shock: She came home pregnant. Since rebels ousted the dictator Bashar al-Assad in late 2024, panicked families and activists trying to help have regularly sounded the alarm on social media that women and girls from Syria’s Alawite minority have mysteriously disappeared or been kidnapped. Many fear that their sect is being targeted as retribution for the brutality of Mr. al-Assad, who also belongs to the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite. The government has denied that Alawite women and girls are being targeted by kidnappers, saying that it has confirmed only one such case. But a New York Times investigation based on dozens of interviews with Alawites who say they were kidnapped, their relatives and others involved in their cases found that these abductions have been common and often brutal. The Times verified the kidnappings of 13 Alawite women and girls, in addition to one man and one boy. Five said they had been raped. Two came home pregnant. The family of one woman said it sent $17,000 to kidnappers who never released her, and provided screenshots of ransom demands and the money transfers. A 24-year-old said she had been held for three weeks in a filthy room where men raped her, beat her, shaved her head and eyebrows and cut her with razor blades. Her relatives also paid the kidnappers and in this case secured her release, according to four people involved in her case. Syrian activists say they know of scores of such kidnappings but details are difficult to confirm because victims and their families are too scared to talk. Most people who spoke with the Times did so on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals from the government or the kidnappers. The Times is not identifying most of those who were kidnapped for the same reason. The Times corroborated accounts from people who had been kidnapped and their relatives, as well as through social media posts announcing when they were taken and returned, ransom messages sent by kidnappers and interviews with medical and aid workers who spoke with the abductees after their release. The kidnappings took place against a backdrop of deep distrust between the Alawites, who make up about one-tenth of Syria’s population, and the new government. Mr. al-Assad relied heavily on his sect in his military and security services while in power. That led many of the Sunni Muslim former rebels who now run Syria to associate the Alawites with the ousted regime. Last March, that anger fueled days of sectarian violence in northwestern Syria that left about 1,400 people dead, according to a U.N. investigation. The inquiry found that some government security forces had participated in the killing, leaving many Alawites afraid of them. Many of the kidnapped women and girls, along with their relatives, said the government had failed to take their cases seriously. nytimes.com/2026/04/03/wor…

English
35
248
775
120.8K
ojmc624 รีทวีตแล้ว
Musafir
Musafir@MusafirNafar·
🚨Leaked video shows Iranian police assaulting women. Oh wait—it’s 🇮🇱Israeli soldiers assaulting a Palestinian girl and tearing off her hijab in the occupied territories
English
843
15.9K
45.1K
971K
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@DropSiteNews And my sister is as beautiful as ever. God bless you. Christian 🫱🏽‍🫲🏾 Muslim
English
0
0
9
370
Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
🇵🇸 Doha Al-Saifi was a 33-year-old mother of four, with a bachelor’s degree in media from Al-Aqsa University. She lived in Gaza’s Al-Zaytoun neighborhood but was displaced to the Al-Arqam school, where many displaced families like Doha’s had taken refuge. In April 2025, families had gathered for Eid al-Fitr holiday when Israel bombed the school killing three of her four children: Rital (13), Noor (10), and Osama (4). Her sister was also killed. Doha survived, but with devastating injuries. She fell into a coma and suffered severe facial trauma, including the loss of her lower jaw bone, requiring multiple surgeries and medical evacuation outside Gaza for specialized treatment unavailable there. Since recovering, she has spoken publicly about what happened—using social media and interviews to document her story and call for the protection of civilians in Gaza. Yesterday, on the one-year anniversary of her children’s deaths, she shared the attached video. Follow her at the link below.
English
86
2.6K
5.8K
105.3K
ojmc624
ojmc624@ColtsMagic624·
@mercedesschlapp Maybe you should Schlapp yourself a few times — maybe the brain will start working better that way.
English
0
0
0
4
Mercedes Schlapp
Mercedes Schlapp@mercedesschlapp·
The Iranian people want freedom—and their regime is willing to blind them to stop it.
English
480
1.4K
6.6K
409.9K
ojmc624 รีทวีตแล้ว
barbarism critic
barbarism critic@barbarismcrit·
I’m crying this is so accurate
English
89
723
8.5K
313.5K