mabellgottheillcommunication

6K posts

mabellgottheillcommunication

mabellgottheillcommunication

@marksplainitall

شامل ہوئے Eylül 2022
346 فالونگ56 فالوورز
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@mattyglesias @AlecMacGillis Comprehend does a lot of work here. Most adults can process the English in a NYT article, even if they have to google a stray word for pure vocab deficits. The real exclusion is polisci nerd lingo eg tossed off references to “Friedman” meaning Milton or Tom depending on context.
English
1
0
0
224
Matthew Yglesias
Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesias·
If you have the basic skills to participate in the discourse at all — like you can read and comprehend a New York Times article in order to complain about it — you’re in a weird, out of touch, elite bubble. slowboring.com/p/in-defense-o…
Matthew Yglesias tweet media
English
149
345
3.7K
842.1K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@yashar You’re talking past the fundamental issue: the diaspora is led by boomers who remember pre-79 Iran & are still stuck in their trauma from the 80s. That’s why they are easy marks for all neocons & Trump. Their coming of age in U.S. politics was 1984. Pahlavi is their avatar.
English
0
0
0
18
Yashar Ali 🐘
Yashar Ali 🐘@yashar·
When did the White House make any other promise, though? And this isn’t directed at Kaveh, but again, when people call on outside engineered regime change — and when they lose all their negotiating power by publicly engaging in this kind of embarrassingly effusive, sycophantic praise, “thank you Trump, thank you Bibi,” singing pop songs about Bibi Netanyahu, calling Lindsey Graham “Amoo Lindsey” — what did people expect? You gave up control. By asking for their endorsement and support, as some of Pahlavi’s staff has, you give up control. Iranians outside Iran, particularly in the USA, tend not to engage in civic life as much as other diasporas; as a result, they tend not to be politically sophisticated. I’ve seen this play out time and time again.
Kaveh Shahrooz کاوه شهروز@kshahrooz

I don't think I've been shy about criticizing Pahlavi. But the White House's position that an IRGC figure is preferable to Pahlavi (or an opposition coalition that includes Pahlavi) is a real betrayal of Iranian people who thought America had their back.

English
10
12
108
17.4K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@louklein1 @iamrahstradamus He’s putting up 20 a game without a pg and he can’t shoot 3s yet (but he is a lock to make 35+% next year). Add that to his clearly proven defensive versatility then give him back Kyrie & Lively a replacement level pg & see what he does. Oh and he just turned 19. Very stupid take
English
1
0
0
14
Raheem Palmer
Raheem Palmer@iamrahstradamus·
I actually think the NBA has a cultural problem. It’s largely seen as a black league even with the best players being foreign now and large parts of Americans simply can’t identify with the NBA the way they can college.
IncognegroNeville 🇯🇲🇺🇸@FormerlyCBM

@iamrahstradamus It's the only league where a certain political segment hates because reasons, and some of its "fans" also hate watch it. Weird.

English
31
1
37
28.7K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@holl6948 @2kAgain Is 62% TS% inefficient in your mind? 30th overall in the NBA is inefficient when also making almost 150 3s is extremely efficient in the real world.
English
0
0
0
38
Reese Holland
Reese Holland @holl6948·
@2kAgain He’s 7’4 he should not be shooting same efficiency as Luka Doncic, which is not highly efficient to begin with.
English
4
0
2
1.3K
Irrational Spurs Fan
It’s so funny because at the start of the season Nick Wright said if Wemby averages an efficient 25 PPG and is by far and away the best defensive player in the world that would make him the best player in the league Exactly that is happening and he’s completely changed his mind
First Things First@FTFonFS1

.@getnickwright: “I just don't think Wemby can be, right now, the best player in the world." @Chris_Broussard: “What can’t Wemby do offensively?” Nick: “Consistently score 30 points.” Brou: “His team doesn’t ask him to do that. That doesn’t mean he couldn’t.”

English
16
33
557
28K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@MarzTalksSports Your hot take is dumb. A better hot take is that it’s a nice to have and not in the top 5 most important skills for any player over 6’10”, but there are many examples in the league right now that prove it can be extremely valuable situationally.
English
1
0
0
179
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@SeanWes29063543 @florida_sophia Roar so mad!! “Dates to” was poor phrasing “often used” would be better. Honestly I recall its use much more frequently wrt Cold War instances eg NK & pol pot but yes I posted the Wiki link you’re throwing at me congrats dunk accomplished. Tankies are still awful, evil morons.
English
0
0
0
18
Sophie Fullerton
Sophie Fullerton@florida_sophia·
I believe there is a fetishization aspect of these western leftist human safari tours to authoritarian regimes that should not be overlooked. From Venezuela, Iran to now Cuba, western leftists enter these spaces in a privileged bubble, often staying in luxury hotels while being chauffeured around by government minders who only show the best of the country and introduce them to locals who perform an existence the regime wants to showcase. To the western leftist, this only reinforces their already held ideological fantasies of what an “anti-Western or anti-imperialist” utopia is supposed to be, while simultaneously erasing the reality of everyday repression and hardship (something that has been well documented for years). This trip has nothing to do with solidarity or standing with the oppressed, it is simply leftist fantasy play.
Mag Jorge Castro🇨🇺@MagJorgeCastro

Así se mueven los comunistas extranjeros de vista en #Cuba… como en safari por un parque temático. Luego nos piden resistir en nombre de su criminal ideología… inmorales todo. Foto. Roberto Suárez

English
87
202
821
222.2K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@DoubleDogDerek @TailgateSA @MGRADS lol I guess he and BW can commemorate the annual concession with an actual haircut if they want but that’s up to them. I should add he’s been excellent and super underrated. DH & Castle owe him a lot of thanks for making space for them to grow. NBA is a rough business sometimes.
English
0
0
0
18
GRADS
GRADS@MGRADS·
Dylan Harper isn’t getting the love he should because he’s on a team with Wemby. D Harp gonna make someone real tradeable this offszn or the next.
English
7
3
338
21.6K
Matty
Matty@TailgateSA·
@MGRADS Why trade Fox? He’s a complete pro and will be an excellent off the bench scorer in the next year or two.
English
3
0
0
454
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@MGRADS They won’t trade him until they have to pay Castle & at least one of Castle or DH needs to shoot 37+% from 3 or they can’t let them both start. Yaxel will need a season or two before he’s ready to start & CB will also need to shoot 37+%, but if all 5 do by 2028 they win 90+/16-0.
English
0
0
0
174
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@arash_tehran @MonicaLMarks The massacre in 2017-18 after Mashhad protests were the end of Rouhani. Granted Trump winning (w/ Russia’s active assistance) undermined him first. But these four massacres in the last 8 years are the core of the regime’s legitimacy crisis & hardliners bear full responsibility.
English
0
0
1
77
Arash Azizi آرش عزیزی
I agree with much of this but there are also flaws in it. Quitting JCPOA was indeed height of folly and undermined Rouhani. But Trump DID repeatedly try to talk to Rouhani and Iran in his first admin. According to Rouhani himself, it was the regime core (led by Khamenei) that ruined this prospect. Macron and Abe tried to mediate and Khamenei rebuked them. Rouhani also coincided with Biden for some months and again, it was Tehran which lost the chance for revival of JCPOA (which Biden had promised to do!). Rouhani (whom I happy to have voted for in 2017) was indeed a historic opportunity that the US lost. But Khamenei also had no intention of letting him carry out his project either. We know what he did to Rafsanjani, Khatami and even Ahmadinejad before him
Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش@citrinowicz

The irony of history When Trump decided to withdraw from the nuclear deal, there was an Iranian leader in power, Hassan Rouhani — who, in many ways, resembled the kind of counterpart Washington often hopes to find. He believed in engagement with the West, spoke directly with President Obama, and tried to push the Iranian system from within. Rouhani wasn’t weak. After defeating Ebrahim Raisi in the 2017 election, he was politically strong enough that Khamenei viewed him as a potential threat. Then came the U.S. withdrawal from the deal and the return of sanctions. Iran accelerated its nuclear program, and Rouhani became a convenient scapegoat, blamed for the country’s failures. Over time, the space for pragmatists inside Iran narrowed dramatically. Fast forward to today: Trump appears to be looking again for a “deal partner” in Tehran. This time in figures like Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. But this reflects a similar misunderstanding. Ghalibaf, even if seen as relatively pragmatic by Iran’s current standards, is deeply rooted in the Revolutionary Guard system that now dominates Iranian politics. He is not someone who will fundamentally change Iran, if anything, he represents the system as it is. In effect, U.S. policy since 2018 from exiting the nuclear deal to the current conflict, has helped close the door on the rise of pragmatic actors in Iran. Instead of getting a negotiable partner, Washington may now be facing a system that looks increasingly like a smaller version of North Korea: more rigid, more ideological, and far less open to compromise. #iran

English
30
23
141
155.8K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@citrinowicz The massacre in 2017-18 after Mashhad protests were the end of Rouhani. Granted Trump winning (w/ Russia’s active assistance) undermined him first. But these four massacres in the last 8 years are the core of the regime’s legitimacy crisis & hardliners bear full responsibility.
English
0
0
0
18
Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش
The irony of history When Trump decided to withdraw from the nuclear deal, there was an Iranian leader in power, Hassan Rouhani — who, in many ways, resembled the kind of counterpart Washington often hopes to find. He believed in engagement with the West, spoke directly with President Obama, and tried to push the Iranian system from within. Rouhani wasn’t weak. After defeating Ebrahim Raisi in the 2017 election, he was politically strong enough that Khamenei viewed him as a potential threat. Then came the U.S. withdrawal from the deal and the return of sanctions. Iran accelerated its nuclear program, and Rouhani became a convenient scapegoat, blamed for the country’s failures. Over time, the space for pragmatists inside Iran narrowed dramatically. Fast forward to today: Trump appears to be looking again for a “deal partner” in Tehran. This time in figures like Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. But this reflects a similar misunderstanding. Ghalibaf, even if seen as relatively pragmatic by Iran’s current standards, is deeply rooted in the Revolutionary Guard system that now dominates Iranian politics. He is not someone who will fundamentally change Iran, if anything, he represents the system as it is. In effect, U.S. policy since 2018 from exiting the nuclear deal to the current conflict, has helped close the door on the rise of pragmatic actors in Iran. Instead of getting a negotiable partner, Washington may now be facing a system that looks increasingly like a smaller version of North Korea: more rigid, more ideological, and far less open to compromise. #iran
Dasha Burns@DashaBurns

SCOOP: The Trump administration is quietly weighing Iran’s parliament speaker as a potential partner — and even future leader — as it looks for a diplomatic endgame. An administration official tells me he’s a “hot option,” but says they’re still “testing” multiple candidates. Full story: politico.com/news/2026/03/2… w/ @EliStokols @diana_nerozzi

English
74
296
1.1K
266.9K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@citrinowicz Almost as if it would have been a catastrophe for the Russians to have Iran moderate just as Hillary got elected as POtUS and began confronting Putin much more aggressively than Obama ever had the stomach for, so they ran every GRU play they had to try to prevent her from winning
English
0
0
0
16
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@phl43 The major point that Nasr misses is Russia, Iran & China are now connected & more durably bonded together as a result of the last ~15 years, which elevates the stakes of Iran (& Ukraine) & pushes wiser minds in the U.S. FPe will pivot toward prolonged Cold War style confrontation
English
0
0
0
121
Philippe Lemoine
By the way, by thinking they can exhaust the US and kick it out of the Middle East, Iranian officials seem to be making the same mistake. (This is from Iran's Grand Strategy by Vali Nasr.) They can't because, though Washington's involvement in the Middle East is harmful to the US, the cost is largely invisible to Americans and not sufficient to defeat the various factors that conspire to ensure it will continue to play a major role in the region. The result is that now the US is wreaking havoc on Iran and, even if the Iranians manage to force Trump to TACO, the US won't go anywhere and it won't end US hostility toward Iran.
Philippe Lemoine tweet mediaPhilippe Lemoine tweet mediaPhilippe Lemoine tweet media
Philippe Lemoine@phl43

Once again, people really underestimate how powerful and secure the US is, which is why they keep hoping against all evidence to the contrary that something terrible will befall to Americans because of their foreign policy blunders that will finally make them learn and stop doing stupid shit. But even in the worst case scenario, where Trump orders a ground invasion and it turns into a quagmire that lasts years, Americans will be fine. They will be harmed, but less than almost everyone else, because the US will be relatively insulated from the both the energy shock and the economic slowdown that will result from it since it's a net exporter of energy and is probably the least trade-dependent major economy. Moreover, while the cost will be huge even for Americans, it will be relatively invisible because 1) it will be very diffuse, 2) Americans are so rich that even a much larger cost per capita would still leave them very well-off and 3) people won't really see it for the same kind of reasons that Bastiat explained a long time ago in his parable of the broken window. For the rest of the world, especially some of the poorest people, it will be a different story, but Americans mostly won't feel much. Even the invasion of Iraq, which is widely seen as one of the worst foreign policy blunders in US history and cost the US trillions of dollar, didn't make such a huge difference for Americans. They complain about it and talk about how it was a terrible mistake, but for the average American it was mostly a non-event, for the same reasons I just mentioned. I also don't think it will have the effects some people think on US influence in the world in general and in the Middle East in particular. It's not going to end the role of the dollar and I don't think Gulf states will abandon their alliance with the US either. Where else would they go? It's not as if China was going to protect them from Iran or as if they had a lot of attractive yuan-denominated assets to buy with their earnings from oil and gas exports. To be clear, I don't say that to defend this stupidity or to deny that it will have large costs even for Americans in absolute terms (to say nothing of the effects it will have on the rest of the world), I'm just saying that people are fooling themselves if they think that it will teach Americans a lesson. At best it will be a very short-lived lesson they will forget after a few years because it won't matter much for them.

English
28
25
188
29.2K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@JJ_McCullough The “old man” was installed by England and Russia during WW2, replacing his dad. Leading off with this basic error should clue every reader into how utterly moronic and unqualified you are to comment on this topic.
English
0
0
0
7
J.J. McCullough
J.J. McCullough@JJ_McCullough·
The Pahlavis are really such an illegimate royal family—even by royal family standards. The old man was a military officer who staged a coup and declared himself Shah. The UK made him resign and his son took over, till he was deposed. And now this guy, who left Iran as a kid.
Republicans against Trump@RpsAgainstTrump

Politico: Trump administration officials say Reza Pahlavi, son of Iran’s last Shah, is not being considered as a future leader, citing concerns about his legitimacy in Iran. “Now do you put in Reza Pahlavi? God, no… He grew up outside. That is the last thing you want to install there. That’ll mean chaos,” one official said. Another official said Pahlavi is “not on the table.”

English
456
118
1.1K
177.3K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@yashar I think this overstates one side of the strategy (if you can call it that). And sure Trump himself favors/identifies with that side. But Iran hawks/Rubio go along with it by adding “and if he sucks and fails we get regime change.”
English
0
0
0
17
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@nylaabell Huge spurs fan for 30+ years now. I agree he’s been too thirsty about it. I know he and his PR people want part of his brand to be he cares & tries & gives a shit & that’s all awesome. But eg the KD speech was iconic bc we all knew he cared but he waited until he won to show it.
English
0
0
0
11
nyla
nyla@nylaabell·
Love Wemby but him begging for the MVP is such a bad look. Generational superstars don’t get handed contenders by year 3, but he did. He will win plenty of awards in this league, but campaigning for it in year 3 is crazy work idc
English
349
129
1.5K
491.7K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@BeltsByDan @DJAceNBA It was more euros, Kyrie & Harden than Lebron but it unlocked Curry and Luka (and Kyrie, who rules) so we’re never going back. Gather steps are cool. Kyrie & Luka are generational innovators/talents. You’re stuck in 2016 NBA marketing (and to be fair so are Silver & the owners).
English
0
0
0
39
Belts By Dan
Belts By Dan@BeltsByDan·
@DJAceNBA They adjusted the rules to fit LeBron's game. They can adjust it after he leaves.
English
6
1
1
311
DJ Zullo
DJ Zullo@DJAceNBA·
It’s jarring how many people I know who couldn’t care less about the NBA right now. Was at a brewery last weekend watching the NCAA and it was like pulling teeth trying to get anyone to talk about the league. The NBA has a serious cultural problem with the American sports fan.
English
453
80
1.8K
365.6K
mabellgottheillcommunication
mabellgottheillcommunication@marksplainitall·
@DJAceNBA Will feel different in two months if you try the same experiment. We’re in the haterade phase of the NBA season (basically mid-Jan until play-in) where even hardcore NBA fans just bitch about the league (eg we moved from tanking to “expansion? Eww gross no.” in the last month).
English
0
0
2
131