Lisa Mojica 🇵🇸🇿🇦🇳🇦🇺🇾

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Lisa Mojica 🇵🇸🇿🇦🇳🇦🇺🇾

Lisa Mojica 🇵🇸🇿🇦🇳🇦🇺🇾

@ELYSIANFEELS

Creator 🪡 Grower 🌿 Steward 🏜️ Canities subita 👩🏼‍🦳

Oceanside,Lost Sierra CA Sumali Ağustos 2009
1.2K Sinusundan1.5K Mga Tagasunod
Lisa Mojica 🇵🇸🇿🇦🇳🇦🇺🇾 nag-retweet
Peter Daou
Peter Daou@peterdaou·
POLL: What is the likelihood nuclear weapons will be used in 2026?
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Lisa Mojica 🇵🇸🇿🇦🇳🇦🇺🇾
Fitzpatrick district is a stones throw from Independence Hall . Calling for draconian censorship. He would have been considered a traitor by the founding fathers
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Ryan Grim
Ryan Grim@ryangrim·
From @KatAbughazaleh's issues page: "There is no acceptable scenario that leaves Hamas in charge of the Gaza Strip." And: "The State Department must work with the National Democratic Institute, the National Endowment for Democracy, and other foreign capacity-building entities to aid in the reconstruction of Palestine’s civic institutions, in partnership with the United Nations." Palestinian factions in general would view these as intolerable violations of Palestinian sovereignty. Hamas, however, has agreed to give up power in the event of a transition to a democratically elected Palestinian governing force, though not one that works with National Endowment for Democracy (a CIA offshoot).
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Nathan Thompson@nathanlthompson

Kat Abughazaleh's foreign policy platform, if you look beyond her pro-Palestine soundbites, is basically State Department pablum. The platform still calls to defend Taiwan's "internationally recognized status as a state". Recognized by who??

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ASHES of POMPEII
ASHES of POMPEII@Ashesof_Pompeii·
The escalation trap is a specific kind of strategic suicide: it occurs when a hyper-power, drunk on its own conventional invincibility, picks a fight with a nation that has spent decades weaponizing its own vulnerability. The trap is not that the strong side loses a battle; it is that the strong side wins every battle and still loses the war because it fundamentally misread the enemy’s capacity to inflict pain. The United States, viewing itself as an untouchable god of war, assumed Iran was a paper tiger ready to fold under "maximum pressure." Instead, Washington walked into a room full of explosives and lit a match, surprised to find that the fire burned both ways. The historical precedent is Vietnam. The U.S. entered that war believing its industrial output and air superiority were decisive factors. It treated the conflict as a math problem where American firepower multiplied by time equaled victory. North Vietnam, however, possessed a resilience that defied American calculus. They did not need to defeat the U.S. military in the field; they only needed to survive long enough for the American public to lose the will to continue. Every escalation by Washington, from bombing campaigns to troop surges, was met not with collapse, but with a hardened resolve that turned American strength into a liability. The U.S. became trapped by its own momentum, unable to stop escalating without admitting defeat, yet unable to escalate enough to break an enemy that viewed survival as victory. Today, the war between the United States and Iran is exposing the same fatal flaw in real-time. The Trump administration, operating on the assumption that Iran’s regime was fragile and desperate to avoid direct confrontation, initiated a campaign of strikes intended to decapitate the leadership and crush nuclear ambitions. The expectation was a quick, surgical display of dominance. The reality has been an (unsurprising) shock to the system. Iran did not fold. Instead, it unleashed a missile and drone arsenal far more sophisticated, numerous, and accurate than U.S. intelligence had predicted. These were not the ragtag weapons of a failing state; they were a coordinated, high-volume barrage that overwhelmed defense systems and struck with precision. The damage has been tangible and severe. U.S. bases across the Middle East, previously considered safe havens, have taken direct hits, resulting in significant casualties and infrastructure destruction that Washington struggled to downplay. Simultaneously, Israel, the U.S.’s primary regional ally, has faced unprecedented bombardment, stretching its Iron Dome to the breaking point and forcing a realization that its own deterrence had been overestimated. Crucially, the threat to close the Strait of Hormuz looms not as a bluff, but as an imminent lever of global economic strangulation. Iran has made it clear that if pushed to the brink, it will choke the world’s oil supply, turning a regional war into a global depression. This capability adds a layer of complexity that brute force cannot solve. The U.S. can sink ships, but it cannot instantly reopen a choked artery of the global economy without catastrophic cost. The conclusion is not a vague hope for diplomacy, but a grim acknowledgment of a strategic blunder. The escalation trap has snapped shut because the U.S. assumed it could control the intensity of the conflict. It cannot. Iran has demonstrated that it possesses both the will and the way to make the cost of victory prohibitively high. The U.S. is now stuck in a war against an adversary that does not need to win militarily to succeed; it only needs to ensure that the price of continuing becomes too high for Washington to bear. The "all-powerful" nation finds itself bleeding from bases it thought were secure, facing an enemy it thought was broken, and realizing too late that some traps are designed specifically for those who think they are too strong to be caught. One of the enduring consequences of this disaster will be the hard, bitter pill of geopolitical humility America must now swallow. For decades, Washington operated under the comforting delusion that smaller nations were merely pieces on a chessboard, moving only when the superpower allowed it. This conflict has shattered that illusion, forcing a reluctant acknowledgment that other nations possess genuine agency. Iran has demonstrated that it is not a puppet waiting for strings to be pulled, but an independent actor with its own red lines, strategies, and capacity to dictate terms. While not wholly true, the U.S. has long assumed that its will is synonymous with destiny. No more. In trying to prove its dominance, America has inadvertently proven the autonomy of its adversaries, revealing a world where the "unipolar moment" is dead, and where even the mightiest hegemon can be checkmated by a skillful player operating with resolve. See on Substack 👇👇👇
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THEEAudacity
THEEAudacity@ArrogantNBlack·
These are not DOGE “kids”. These are fully functioning grown men with agency. They made a choice to serve in a capacity to remove jobs, contracts, and services for anyone not white! They were highly unqualified and the very definition of handpicked, merit-less, and privileged.
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Jeff Berardelli
Jeff Berardelli@WeatherProf·
A follow up from yesterday's post on the historic heat dome expected next week. New Euro has a 3.5 Sigma max (3.5 standard deviations from the mean). To keep it simple that's like... alot... alot. Like slim to no chance it happens based on our historic record, which is admitedly limited. But even so it goes to show you how rare the upcoming event will be, not just in terms of intensity - I am even more impressed by how broad it is and how long-lived. We are witnessing history here... but also witnessing our present and future as EVERY heat wave s now made stronger, larger, more intense, and more likely by a warmed globe, simply because the baseline has warmed dramatically.
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Jeff Berardelli@WeatherProf

Absurd heat! Despite our best efforts, the monster heat dome is bound to be "undersold" by the meteorology community. Why? Because intensity like this is almost never seen. This thing has the potential to be Epic for Mid-March, and not in a good way. The magenta is where this ridge is forecast (Euro) to be the most intense on record for the day. It's not the size of a city or a state, is literally the majority of the American West. The March record for Palm Springs is 104. For Phoenix it is 100. The National Blend of models has numbers between 105-110 late next week for these two locations. If that happens, we break March surface temp records by absurd margins. And... 1/

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Drop Site
Drop Site@DropSiteNews·
🚨 Urgent warning circulated on IRGC-affiliated Telegram channels targeting U.S. tech firms in the Gulf “An urgent warning to employees of several major U.S. technology companies in the Persian Gulf region: immediately evacuate your offices. Citizens and residents near these locations are advised to stay away from the surrounding areas. The warning names offices of major technology firms including Qualcomm, Adobe, Dell Technologies, Intel, Apple, Cisco Systems, Palo Alto Networks, Oracle, Salesforce, Amazon (AWS), Microsoft, Google (Alphabet), and IBM in Dubai, Riyadh, Doha, Kuwait City, Manama, and locations in Oman. Employees are instructed to leave their workplaces immediately and avoid gathering near these sites.”
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GenXGirl
GenXGirl@GenXGirl1994·
Trump’s Kentucky Shit Show So Trump goes to Kentucky to rally against Thomas Massie. During the event, a supporter faints. Trump responds by asking the rally ppl to play Ave Maria, a funeral song 12hrs later, betting site, Kalshi, reports a 15-point increase for a Massie win
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