andy at the cofa tree 🌳

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andy at the cofa tree 🌳

andy at the cofa tree 🌳

@TheCofaTree

Caressing a Neolithic henge monument.

join a union เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2010
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andy at the cofa tree 🌳
andy at the cofa tree 🌳@TheCofaTree·
Occult history of Coventry Blitz, feat. vanishing cats, secret societies, haunted cathedrals and prophetic dreams. wp.me/p5OZq0-7I
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Fifty Shades of Whey
Fifty Shades of Whey@davenewworld_2·
Why is AI being used as a mass murder machine to satisfy the irrational desires of extremist warmongers who are in a death cult... instead of being used as a neutral peacemaking technology that vetoes the irrational desires of extremist warmongers who are in a death cult?
Fifty Shades of Whey tweet mediaFifty Shades of Whey tweet mediaFifty Shades of Whey tweet mediaFifty Shades of Whey tweet media
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Samplo Corvodina of Streatham
Today is the day. Eric Cantona's kung-fu kick becomes closer in time to the assassination of JFK than the present day. We are, without any shadow of a doubt, #HurtlingTowardsDeath.
Samplo Corvodina of Streatham tweet media
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Furkan Gözükara
Furkan Gözükara@FurkanGozukara·
Terrifying reality check. An Al Jazeera reporter exposes how Washington and Tel Aviv are intentionally starving Yemen. Under a brutal US backed economic blockade, the country faces a massive humanitarian catastrophe just for standing up to the Zionist regime.
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Saul Staniforth
Saul Staniforth@SaulStaniforth·
Always worth digging up from the archives whenever the right wing press are going after someone on the left. How Mick Lynch handled the media.
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andy at the cofa tree 🌳 รีทวีตแล้ว
onion person
onion person@CantEverDie·
it’s wild that before this admin if you said that this was the point of US foreign policy you’d be called a conspiracy theoriest, so it’s nice they do just finally admit this was always the case now
Acyn@Acyn

Watters: How does taking out a dictator in Venezuela help the average American? Vance: It means is we are going to be able to control the incredible natural resources of Venezuela

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Chłoddy
Chłoddy@OfSymbols·
Once I sympathised with British journalists stuck between honesty and the Israeli lobby threatening their job. But seeing their peers put their bodies on the line, watching them die, be murdered by Israel. Its evaporated that sympathy. Nothing but contempt for the cowards now.
Sky News@SkyNews

BREAKING: Three people have been killed, including two journalists, after an Israeli strike on a media car in southern Lebanon. The Israeli military have said those killed worked for Hezbollah affiliated channels. Live updates: trib.al/zwq2QxL

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ирис
ирис@saltwatermp3·
I hate you blue light I hate you infinite scroll I hate you ai customer support I hate you onedrive I hate you no usb port I hate you two factor authentication I hate you accept all cookies I hate you autoplay I hate you subscription I hate you buy more storage I hate you
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andy at the cofa tree 🌳 รีทวีตแล้ว
Muhammad Shehada
Muhammad Shehada@muhammadshehad2·
To those who can't believe Israel would torture a baby, here's an Israeli soldier admitting his commander grabbed a random 4-year-old, broke his arm at the elbow & his leg, then stomped on his stomach 3 times "These kids need to be killed from the day they're born" he bragged👇
Muhammad Shehada tweet media
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Arnaud Bertrand
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand·
This is stunning: it looks like Iran degraded American military bases into unusability across an entire theater, simultaneously. As far as I know, no other U.S. adversary has achieved that, ever. This is directly reported in the NYT (nytimes.com/2026/03/25/us/…): they write that Iran has rendered "many of the 13 military bases in the region used by American troops [...] all but uninhabitable." As the article describes, "there were close to 40,000 U.S. troops in the region when the war started, and Central Command has dispersed thousands of them, some to as far away as Europe." Those troops that do remain are "not on their original bases" but have been "relocated to hotels and office spaces throughout the region." Genuinely incredible.
Arnaud Bertrand tweet media
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

I don't think people realize just how extraordinary what we're witnessing with Iran is. I was arguing with a dear journalist friend of mine yesterday who was telling me that Iran was winning, yes, but only on the strategic level, not tactically. The type of thing a skinny kid getting stuffed in lockers in highschool tells himself to make himself feel better: "These people will BEG to work for me in ten years. Everyone knows jocks peak in highschool. They'll literally beg." 😏 I think that's precisely wrong, and that's what makes the Iran war different. As of now, Iran is in fact holding its own tactically too. Think about other U.S. wars of aggression these past few decades. Take Vietnam, Afghanistan, Libya, Iraq, Serbia, etc. (the list is unfortunately very long). The pattern was roughly always the same with an immense power differential between aggressor and victim. These wars were, by and large, imperial: the empire attempting to crush a much weaker people whose only realistic recourse was guerrilla resistance. And that is when they actually had the will to resist: some - like Libya - barely even bothered, just resigning themselves to their fate (despite being, at the time, the richest country in Africa). As spectators of these wars, if you had any moral sense, the dominant emotion was a kind of helpless disgust: you were watching a giant stomp through someone else's house. Sure, the U.S. actually lost many - if not most - of these wars, famously replacing the Taliban with the Taliban or being expelled with their tail between their legs from Vietnam, but the power differential was no less real for it. It's just that power doesn't always guarantee victory: sometimes the giant can't kill everyone, and eventually tires of trying. But the “victories” won this way were always pyrrhic at best: the people endured, yes, but what they were left with was a country in ashes that takes decades to rebuild. Meanwhile, in the grand scheme of things, the giant walked away with little more than a bruised ego. Iran is - remarkably - proving to be an entirely different beast: when others were merely surviving a giant, Iran appears to be able to compete with one. What just happened over the past 48 hours is the best illustration of this. You had the President of the United States issue a formal ultimatum: reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours or we "obliterate" your power grid. Iran's response was essentially: we dare you, if you do this we'll make all your Gulf allies uninhabitable within a week. And, as we saw, Trump backed down: pretexting non-existent "VERY GOOD AND PRODUCTIVE CONVERSATIONS" with Iran, he said his ultimatum no-longer applied (or, rather, became 5 days). Adding he now envisaged the Strait of Hormuz being “jointly controlled by me and the Ayatollah.” To the amusement of Iran’s diplomacy (x.com/IraninSA/statu…). That, folks, is a textbook tactical victory. It is, remarkably, Iran demonstrating in this instance that it had escalation dominance over the United States of America. That is, the ability to credibly threaten consequences so severe that the US - for perhaps the first time since the Cold War - found it preferable to stand down. That's no skinny kid being locked in a locker dreaming of revenge fantasies. That's the kid grabbing the bully's wrist mid-shove and watching his face change. And it's not the only tactical victory in this war so far. Take the episode over the Israeli attack on Iran's South Pars gas facility. Iran had warned that if that happened U.S. allies in the region - including Israel - would face a symmetrical response. And they delivered: famously devastating Qatar's Ras Laffan facility - which produced roughly 20% of global LNG supply - and leading, according to Qatar themselves, to a $20 billion loss of annual revenue for the next 5 years (oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-…). Not only that but they also managed to hit Israel's Haifa refinery (aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/19…), one of the country's most strategic and protected sites. The result was Trump distancing himself from the South Pars attack, saying that Israel had "violently lashed out" unilaterally and that "NO MORE ATTACKS WILL BE MADE BY ISRAEL pertaining to this extremely important and valuable South Pars Field." Israel then said it wouldn't strike Iran energy sites anymore (bloomberg.com/news/articles/…). From where I stand, that's another tactical victory. It is, at least, Iran demonstrating that is can fight back **symmetrically** against the U.S. and its allies. Not through asymmetric resistance with IEDs hidden in the roadside or traps hidden in the jungle, but eye for eye, and against some of the most heavily protected sites on the U.S.'s side. That's qualitatively different from any other adversaries the U.S. has directly fought in recent wars. There's plenty more, such as the pretty relevant fact that Iran has gained control of the single most strategic energy chokepoint on earth and the U.S. is finding it impossible to break that control. To the point where Trump has been reduced to publicly begging China - of all countries - for help, which given Trump's ego mustn't have been easy to do. Only to be told no. By China. And by everyone else he asked. This is the topic of my latest article: how this is, in fact, the first genuine "multipolar war." First, in the narrow sense: because Iran is revealing itself to be a genuine pole of power - not a superpower, but an actor that cannot be submitted, which is all multipolarity is. And second, because the war itself is accelerating multipolarity everywhere else: the U.S. has never been more isolated, never looked weaker and its security guarantees have never been more hollow. In my article I lay out the full scoreboard - military, economic, political - and explain why this war has already changed the world, regardless of how it ends. Enjoy the read here: open.substack.com/pub/arnaudbert…

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Flying_Rodent
Flying_Rodent@flying_rodent·
Bizarre here. *Of course* it looks really bad that McSweeney’s phone unfortunately went missing at the height of the Mandelson/Epstein scandal. Not least because it *still* isn’t clear what Peter’s actual job was, and what his role in Labour was between 2018 and 2025.
Sky News@SkyNews

McSweeney phone theft conspiracy theories - it's the job of journalists to seek the truth trib.al/WeSmi7f

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RJ Moreau 🇧🇹
RJ Moreau 🇧🇹@toxictiramisu·
UNICEF's Belgian HQ was tied to a child abuse network: its director was arrested for running a CP studio in the basement of the building housing UNICEF offices, using UNICEF's computers to serve a client list w/ highly placed figures. The police later shut down the investigation.
RJ Moreau 🇧🇹 tweet mediaRJ Moreau 🇧🇹 tweet media
RJ Moreau 🇧🇹@toxictiramisu

In 2006, a respected UNICEF consultant accused the Australian OTO of running a pɘd·philɘ ring that kidnapped children for murder & ritual abuse, using trauma-based mind control to silence victims, protected by senior police & politicians. Her claims were buried/never investigated

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