Dan Burnett

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Dan Burnett

Dan Burnett

@RocCityBuilt

Electrical engineer. Delaware County NY Pro work, anti grifter.

All around New York เข้าร่วม Ekim 2012
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
Want to understand what changed in America leading to Trump? Here you go. Start with Concrete Economics & go clockwise.
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@Malinowski Why couldn’t we base them in Israel, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan? Nothing special about Europe.
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@McFaul The attack was a on all NATO countries too. For example, 67 UK nationals were killed on 9/11. That made it their fight too.
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Michael McFaul
Michael McFaul@McFaul·
Soldiers from NATO countries died next to American soldiers in Afghanistan even though no other NATO country was attacked by Al Qaeda or the Taliban. That is not my definition of “freeloading.” That is my definition of sacrifice in defense of common values.
Melissa Chen@MsMelChen

Let’s be real here. Europe has spent decades freeloading on American security. Even now, with every NATO member finally hitting the 2% GDP target in 2025. But beyond the financial contributions, the real rupture is philosophical and the Iran crisis has shown a spotlight on it. Europe worships process. Endless committees, consultations, and “predictability.” Macron actually calls it a virtue. For Trump, this is paralysis as his style is to articulate a threat, fix a target, and act. The Americans are men of conviction and purpose. Europe on the other hand lives by bureaucratic liturgy and in high-minded abstractions. Sure, Americans might make mistakes when acting. But Europe never considers what the costs of not acting actually are. Just look at how their nations are doing on various fronts, especially on the border crisis, and you see the same cancerous rot that undergirds their foreign policy approach play out domestically. It's the same problem on a different scale. Iran is currently holding the Strait of Hormuz hostage, choking 20% of global oil and spiking prices past $100 a barrel. Meanwhile, the regime is bleeding from strikes, its nuclear ambitions are still alive despite degraded capability, and its proxies are firing missiles at allies and oil tankers. If this isn’t a clear and present danger to the global economy - of which Europe is a part - then I don’t know what is. Yet when Washington asked to use European bases to finish the job - bases the US has defended for generations, the response was hesitation and hand-wringing. The US did strike from RAF Fairford, but only after warnings that British soil could become a “legitimate target.” If you cannot agree that a theocratic regime with eschatological ambitions who have shown no restraint in hitting out at Gulf countries and threatening the world’s energy jugular is an enemy worth confronting, then what, exactly, are we allies about? Europe loves to preen about being tough on Russia. They issue condemnations and speeches and slap sanctions that hardly work to cripple the Russian economy. Now here was a chance to do something concrete: let the Americans use the bases they already pay for, help clear the Strait, and actually degrade the Iranian war machine that arms Moscow’s proxies. Turmp didn’t ask for boots on the ground or any kind of more offensive action. All he wanted was permission to operate from the infrastructure America has underwritten for decades. They couldn’t even manage that. So can you blame the Americans for seeing NATO for what it is? A paper-tiger alliance that expects Washington to bleed and pay while Brussels and London convenes and deliberates. If Europe refuses to treat Iran as the threat it is while happily letting American power keep the Strait open and the lights on, then the alliance is already dead. Trump is simply stating the obvious and the Americans are becoming very reluctant to subsidize the European delusion any longer.

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Robert Pondiscio
Robert Pondiscio@rpondiscio·
When we are young, we are often jealous of people who are smarter, more brave, talented, and accomplished than we are capable of becoming. As we age, and if we are wise, we are simply grateful for them.
Sunny@sunnyright

Victor Glover (pilot of Artemis II) was already a spacecraft pilot for SpaceX Crew-1. He is a naval captain who has had his naval aviator wings for 25 years. He has three (3) masters degrees, including in flight test engineering and systems engineering. He's been a test pilot since 2007. He has thousands of flight hours.

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📸🔭Brandon Berkoff🚀✨
I’m not asking you, I’m telling you. Take a moment and listen to this 81 second response from Victor Glover after being asked if he had any thoughts leading up to Easter. I don’t quite think it can be overstated how perfect this crew is for the job.
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@academic_la Option two is the best. Destroying the evil people who run the regime is the best idea
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Shaiel Ben-Ephraim
Shaiel Ben-Ephraim@academic_la·
The IDF has informed the Israeli cabinet that the air war has reached the limits of its effectiveness in its current form of focusing on military targets. Ron Ben Yishai, Israel's premier military analyst says Israel is considering two paths: 1) Gradual infrastructure degradation. The progressive destruction of bridges, power stations, and transport links to make the regime unable to provide basic services. The downside: it takes time, allows adaptation, and lets Iran continue disrupting oil markets and striking Israel meanwhile. 2) The "Dahiya Doctrine": Ben-Yishai's preferred recommendation. This involves pre-warning civilians to evacuate specific neighborhoods in Tehran, particularly those housing families of senior regime officials and Revolutionary Guard commanders, then completely flattening those areas from the air. He argues making senior IRGC commanders personally homeless and displaced would, in his view, make them far less willing to reject Trump's ceasefire offers. Neither of these options will work. But they are both based on the intentional and massive commitment of war crimes.
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
Nope. That is how we got in trouble before WW2. The public is unaware of dangers and understandably wishes to avoid conflict. A leader has to do what he has to do to keep the country safe even if the public may not be with him. If the war is won and Iran is freed and we stay safe the public will come around.
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Art Vandelay
Art Vandelay@LJS527·
I would have preferred that, to be clear. I dont think the President should be getting the country involved in wars without authorization from Congress, save for very limited operations / emergency circumstances where time is of the essence. But even then, the President should go back to Congress ASAP and explain.
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Art Vandelay
Art Vandelay@LJS527·
Hindsight is always 20/20 but it would have been a good idea to build a coalition before attacking Iran. I don't think that's a controversial opinion!
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Mike
Mike@Doranimated·
Bloomberg reports that the US is burning through a large share of its AGM-158 JASSM-ER long-range cruise missiles in the Iran campaign. It is transferring missiles from Pacific stockpiles to CENTCOM and Europe. Pre-war stocks: ~2,300 missiles. Post-war: ~425 may remain available for other contingencies. Over 1,000 have been expended in the opening weeks. The strategy emphasizes standoff strikes to limit risk to pilots and target hardened sites. However, this reduces assets available for deterrence elsewhere, especially in the Indo-Pacific. Lockheed Martin manufactures the system. Rebuilding stocks is projected to take years.
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@memarsadeghi Then they need to get rid of the regime. Until the regime is gone the U.S. needs to weaken it and reduce its ability to attack others.
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Mariam Memarsadeghi
Mariam Memarsadeghi@memarsadeghi·
I am hearing from Iranians who have always been against the Islamic Republic, always pro-US, and pro-war on the regime. They are angry about Trump targeting what they deem civilian infrastructure and economic lifeblood for rebuilding Iran.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Victor Glover failed an engineering class his sophomore year of college. His dad talked him out of joining the Navy SEALs and told him an engineering degree and pilot wings might make him an astronaut someday. Right now Glover is somewhere between the Earth and the Moon. He grew up in Pomona, California. Played quarterback in high school, wrestled well enough to place sixth at the state championship, won Athlete of the Year. Went to Cal Poly for engineering and played both sports at the college level. He got his Navy wings in 2001 and started flying F/A-18 fighter jets off aircraft carriers. His squadron deployed on the USS John F. Kennedy to fight in Iraq, the carrier’s final deployment ever. Twenty-four combat missions. His commanding officer gave him the callsign “Ike,” short for “I Know Everything.” He became a test pilot at Edwards Air Force Base and over his career flew more than 40 types of aircraft, 3,000 hours in the air, everything from a Korean War-era Soviet MiG-15 to the Goodyear blimp. More than 400 landings on a moving carrier deck. He earned three master’s degrees in three years. He once told Cal Poly’s president that the hardest thing he ever chose to do was walk in space. The second hardest was wrestling practice. He applied to NASA in 2009 and got rejected. Applied again in 2013 while working in the U.S. Senate for John McCain. NASA’s head of flight crew operations called him. He missed the call. Frantically dialed back. Eight people got in that year out of more than 6,000 applicants. NASA put him in the pilot seat for the first operational SpaceX Crew Dragon flight in 2020. He spent 168 days on the International Space Station and walked in space four times. Last June he went back to Cal Poly to accept an honorary doctorate. His wife Dionna and their oldest daughter Genesis both walked across the stage at the same ceremony to pick up their own degrees. Three days ago Glover launched from Kennedy Space Center. The crew will fly past the far side of the Moon on Monday and travel about 252,000 miles from home, breaking a distance record that Apollo 13 set fifty-six years ago. They come back at roughly 25,000 mph. He has four daughters. His callsign is still Ike.
RedWave Press@RedWavePress

NASA pilot Victor Glover CLAPS back after being asked what it means to be the first black man to visit the moon: “It’s the story of humanity, not black history, not women’s history, but that it becomes human history.” “I also HOPE we are pushing the other direction that one day we don’t have to talk about these first. That one day, this is just—and listen to this—that this is the human history.”

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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@gerardtbaker They don’t even want to deal with Ukraine and Russia. Their idea of helping Ukraine of flying across the Atlantic and imploring the U.S. to do more.
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Michael Betham
Michael Betham@BethamMichael·
@RocCityBuilt @JohnSimpsonNews Absurd jingoistic nonsense from Dan the Man. The USA only ever attacks weak or impoverished countries much smaller than the USA, and people like Dan feel proud of the turkey-shoot results. Pathetic.
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John Simpson
John Simpson@JohnSimpsonNews·
Truth matters. Pres Trump says ‘Never in the history of warfare has an enemy suffered such clear and devastating large-scale losses in a matter of weeks’. How about Iraq in 2003, Israel’s Arab enemies in 1967, and France in 1940? The difference is, Iran is still resisting — and still persecuting its own citizens.
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@foutaises2022 @JohnSimpsonNews LOL. An airplane being shot down is some huge deal? Jeepers. This is why no one in Europe does anything, ever. Well, except for the Ukrainians who to their credit are willing to defend themselves.
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Senator John Curtis
Senator John Curtis@SenJohnCurtis·
I stand by the President’s actions taken in defense of our national security interests in the Middle East. But we must be clear-eyed about history and the Constitution. While I support maintaining our readiness and replenishing stockpiles, I cannot support funding for further military operations without a formal declaration of war from Congress. deseret.com/opinion/2026/0…
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@GrantrGregory @como8972 @SenJohnCurtis Nope. It's not a declaration of war and he doesn't need that or a declaration of war. Entire wars have been fought without either. If you think he does then take him to court and get a court to issue an injunction ending the war. Good luck!
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Dan Burnett
Dan Burnett@RocCityBuilt·
@iranidaturan Don’t know if this is true or workable but an interesting take.
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Ida Turan 🇮🇷 ایده توران
The main problem with most people analyzing Trump’s posts on Iran ( the whole "bring Iran back to the stone age" thing) is that they completely miss who his real audience is. Trump knows exactly what he’s doing. He understands his target perfectly and he knows precisely which words will hit them the way he wants. Those who have never lived in Iran often don't know how the regime really works. First of all, the country is effectively being run by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. But contrary to what a lot of people think, the IRGC is not one big bloc of brainwashed jihadi fanatics all waiting for the Mahdi and ready to burn everything down. Of course the hardliners are the regime’s most visible and aggressive foot soldiers, they’re the ones on the front lines. Yes, threatening them with returning Iran to stone ages doesn't work. They have already sworn to do it. They don’t care. The real power, however, sits behind the scenes and uses these Muslim fanatics for very practical, mostly economic purposes. The Revolutionary Guards are rotten with corruption. Everyone in Iran has seen their double life with their own eyes: in public they preach strict Islamic values and play the role of pious revolutionaries, death to America and all, while their children live in luxury villas in Dubai, got their US citizenship, drive supercars, and party like Dan Bilzerian. For every dollar spent on terrorism, proxies, and wars, a massive portion quietly disappears into their own pockets, properties, businesses, foreign accounts. The Islamic Revolution itself was never truly about pure faith for the men at the top. It was driven by deep resentment toward the Shah, his power, his modernization, his wealth, his popularity, his relationship with the west, the respect he was receiving. They didn't really have problem with power and wealth, they wanted it for themselves. Pretty much like any other communist revolution. Islam was simply the most effective tool to brainwash and mobilize a loyal army of radical followers willing to exert extreme force and violence. And this is the crucial part today: it used to be Khamenei and Larijani who managed and mobilized those hardline jihadis, mostly poor, angry people from the margins. They were the ones keeping them fired up and under control. But those days are mostly over. Now the main figure left is Ghalibaf ( beside Khamenei cardboard) And he is notoriously corrupt. His own children live lavish lives abroad, and every Iranian knows his “Islamist” act is just that, an act. The jihadis and Basijis see it clearly; they feel deeply betrayed and played. Still, Qalibaf and his inner circle have built such an enormous, powerful, and insanely wealthy empire inside Iran that they know one thing for certain: if Trump hits the infrastructure, this whole system collapses, all their stolen wealth will turn to nothing overnight. These are Trump’s real audience. These are the ones who actually hold power. And what @POTUS quietly telling them is very simple: for your own sake, get control of those crazy hardline jihadis before it’s too late. My own read on it isTrump is gently steering them toward an internal coup inside the IRGC, one where Ghalibaf’s faction quietly sidelines or removes anyone who refuses to fall in line. The good thing is, oppression forces ( responsible for killing protesters in the streets) are among those groups. Let’s be patient and optimistic, I trust the three leaders: President Trump, @netanyahu and @PahlaviReza. They are strategists and they fully know what they are dealing with. Let me know what you think! #JavidShah‌‌‌‌‌ #IranWar
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