irreversiblechaos

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irreversiblechaos

irreversiblechaos

@thoughtsofchao2

This machine kills fascists

Tham gia Kasım 2022
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
Five Rules of humanity 1 Everybody has a land and that is where their home is. 2 Every child born is of equal value 3 No child can be born in debt 4 theft is the only crime 5 you can not change or recreate the past only learn from it.
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@365MickeyBlue The elite are generally established Pakeha and those who want to surplant them are generally iwi connected. So the iwi will use Maori to start a war of some form if they have to. If all middle class or poor unite then the Maori will unite with their rich white brothers
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@365MickeyBlue Peter Turchin in short Civils wars are generally about elite over production where those near the top want to be at the top and they promise those at the bottom that they need to fight. The poor rarely rise up by themselves and if they do the elite unite to crush them
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Winston Kodogo
Winston Kodogo@365MickeyBlue·
At what point does the current situation in NZ with the political parties at play, what would be required for actual civil war in NZ? Is it realistic? What would be the first stages of civil disobedience required to move to actual large scale conflict? Who would for the "sides" ?
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Michelle Findlay
Michelle Findlay@Rasberrygrasper·
@kellyenz We should be negotiating with Iran. However, since our idiot decision makers have moved us closer to USA and away from independent foreign policy, this will be difficult, even if requests are made on our behalf by overseas buyers.
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@ukilaw Who funded and backed ISIS and all the other sunni terror groups and who shakes the hand of Jolani the head chopper of Syria. Who is a terrorist anyway.
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Khalid Umar
Khalid Umar@ukilaw·
The riddle I’ll never be able to solve: How did the UK, Italy, Spain, France, Germany, Canada and Australia collectively decide that confronting the world’s biggest state sponsor of terrorism, soon-to-be nuclear Ayatollah, sitting astride the global energy chokepoint, is simply “not their war”? How did the memory, experience, philosophy and logic of a millennium of Western civilisation simply vanish? Is TDS really that deadly a mental disease? Can anyone help decipher this puzzle?
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Kelly Eckhold
Kelly Eckhold@kellyenz·
Yes correct. Whose navy are we going to co-opt to secure our exports into the Gulf?
Yet another commodity guy@tleilax___

Trump is casually proposing one of the biggest strategic own-goals imaginable: NATO more or less done, and any country that wants Persian Gulf crude can go secure it for itself. That is a spectacularly reckless thing for an American president to say. It is a half-drunken invitation to roll the clock back toward the old colonial game, where every great power armed itself around resource access and shipping lanes. The whole reason the U.S.-led order worked is that Washington took the military question off the table for its allies. Europe and East Asia could think about trade, industry, growth, supply chains, and cheap energy. They did not need to wake up every morning thinking about convoy protection, choke points, naval escorts, forward bases, and who might try to cut their oil line. That was the deal, and for all its flaws it was an unbelievably powerful one. Put that burden back on every importing state and you do not get some elegant new realism. You get the old imperial logic creeping back in. The barrel is no longer just a barrel. It comes with freight risk, insurance risk, naval risk, basing risk, and eventually war risk. The whole achievement of the postwar order was that America suppressed a lot of that rivalry by sitting on top of the system and making the security decisions for the wider alliance. The Gulf is particularly ugly terrain for this kind of thinking. The infrastructure is concentrated, the sea lanes are narrow, and much of the population depends on fragile physical systems like desalination. Once states decide energy security is too important to leave to markets, they start looking at places like this in very hard terms. Somewhere in Paris, one of the old colonial ghosts is probably already unfolding a map of the Gulf and reminiscing about protectorates in embarrassingly enthusiastic detail. History is full of great powers making exactly this kind of mistake. The cleanest analogy is Germany after Bismarck. Bismarck built a diplomatic architecture that kept Germany secure and prevented hostile coalitions from forming. Kaiser Wilhelm II inherited that system, got impatient with its constraints, started freelancing, and slowly turned a position of strength into encirclement. He did not lose Germany in one move. He set in motion a process that made Germany less secure with every passing year. There is also an interwar British echo here. Britain remained enormously important, but it no longer wanted to fully bear the burden of policing the wider order it depended on. That did not produce a neat handoff. It produced opportunism, rearmament, and eventually a much nastier bill. And if you want the broadest analogy, it is the breakdown of the old European concert system: once the central restraining architecture weakens, states go back to fleets, blocs, balancing, and military planning around economic survival. What is so deranged about this is that it weakens the U.S. first. America’s edge was never just the size of the Navy. It was that nearly every major industrial power operated inside an American security architecture. Tear that up and over time you get fewer reliable bases, fewer aligned allies, larger independent militaries, more hedging against Washington, and much more room for China and every ambitious regional power. That is how dominant positions are squandered in history: not all at once, but by dismantling the very order that made you dominant in the first place.

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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@kellyenz Enough countries might take the risk when the option is internal collapse.
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Kelly Eckhold
Kelly Eckhold@kellyenz·
@thoughtsofchao2 Pity about the sanctions that the US and Europe would impose on us when we try and get paid.
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Kelvin Cheung
Kelvin Cheung@cheungkarkei·
@thoughtsofchao2 @MsMelChen They’re our main source of trouble but also our main source of civilisation. We’re using the phone and app designed by the US. US has always been one of extremes. But would say the good outweighs the bad by a huge margin
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Melissa Chen
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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The Populist Party
The Populist Party@ThePplPartyUSA·
@VJMPub Nah. They can be Old Norse’s. Odin is not off the table for the whites lol
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VJM Publishing
VJM Publishing@VJMPub·
The problem with your people following a foreign religion is, if you don't like that one religion, you don't have a national religion to fall back on. If Indians don't like Christianity they can simply be Hindus. White people have no such option, just exclusion.
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Patricia Marins
Patricia Marins@pati_marins64·
We’re getting very close to new countries officially joining the US-Israel coalition.
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@GraymanNZ @nzpolice In Wellington I passed 3 cops 2 were woman. I'm 58 and I honestly figured I could take out all 3 in hand to hand. I think they are putting their faith in weapons but I think that's a misplaced faith.
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GraymanNZ
GraymanNZ@GraymanNZ·
What the fk is this? she looks like shes 12yrs old and the firearm is bigger than her! honestly makes me laugh with this fkin DEI crap - front line Dwarfs now! @nzpolice ARE U SERIOUS!
GraymanNZ tweet mediaGraymanNZ tweet media
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@Light42Lime @EerykMcRae After angiogram no blockages so most likely the result of inflammation. I had assumed inflammation even though my Dr didn't. I did a near carnivores diet and ate every inflammation suppliment. My arrhythmia mostly gone and my Dr and cardiologist are confused. 2/2
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@Light42Lime @EerykMcRae I had a similar experience except I stopped at the second jab. Sudden loss of fitness then latter hours long ectopic arrhythmia after exercise. Took 2 years before I got a CT scan appears I had heart inflammation no muscle scarring but severe Atherosclerosis. 1/2
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Eeryk McRae
Eeryk McRae@EerykMcRae·
For those who haven't heard my story with respect to the COVID jabs and how the negative effects of them changed my life permanently. In May and June 2021 I received my first two doses of the Pfizer "vaccine" out of both a sense of compulsion but also naivety. The second dose resulted in a severe adverse reaction in the hours following, including vomiting, a full body fever and shaking. I was bed ridden until the next day. Over the next week or two I experienced tightness in my chest alongside dizziness and fatigue which caught me off guard. I sought medical attention but that amounted to nothing. At this stage, again in my naivety, I had not attributed the lingering side effects to the jab. In December 2021 I received my first (and last) booster shot. This was the straw that broke the camels back. From this point onwards my health began to decline. Employed at the time and through to June 2022 when I was forced to resign, I struggled with severe chest pain and shortness of breath, a combo which rendered a trip to the supermarket almost impossible. I persevered but I became unreliable as a result, especially when additional symptoms such as chronic fatigue, brain fog became consistent, the former often making it difficult to stand or move around without supporting my bodyweight. Following my resignation I spent 2 years investigating what was wrong. New Zealand's health system was anything but helpful, their primary contribution was to gaslight me. Ultimately I took it upon myself to make radical changes in my life and in late 2023 I did exactly that, adopting a strict carnivore diet which eliminated inflammatory foods from my diet. This is how I discovered the "cure" to my symptoms. Whatever harm was done to me by the jabs, related to the inflammation and specifically the impact inflammation has on my brain and pericardum, though other organs do appear to be impacted to a lesser degree. Whilst I've moved away from carnivore as it's no longer a necessity to manage my condition, I am very much managing. It requires discipline but I solved the problem for the most part. The so called "medical profession" chose to gaslight me and ultimately brush me aside, now I live a physically uncomfortable, compromised but manageable life. They lied, people died and frankly I got lucky it wasn't worse.
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@kellyenz Is it a non even if he follows through and destroys their power and energy systems? This would invite Iran to do the same against the countries who allow the US to use their countries for his war. That would be the end of Saudi Arabia.
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Kelly Eckhold
Kelly Eckhold@kellyenz·
Trump's speech was a decided non-event. No path to the end of the war was presented. Indeed it seems we are still in the Groundhog day of "lets see what happens in 3 weeks after we have pounded them some more". There is no exit strategy and no signs of negotiations with key players. Oil is going back up again as the implications become clear.
Kelly Eckhold tweet media
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@NZMAGAMike This is why there is no point trying change management. The only way to achieve change is the total destruction of government and all the ministries. Tear the government to pieces and scatter them to the wind and start again.
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NZ MAGA Mike #MAGAMEMEmarathon
Rhys here - I'm the investigations lead at the Taxpayers' Union. Earlier this year, it was revealed that Health New Zealand was holding compulsory "Karakia" sessions during work hours. But now, our own research has uncovered something even more absurd, this time at the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE). Exposed: MBIE's daily workplace Waiata sessions 🎶🎤 While Kiwi businesses are facing economic uncertainty, the Ministry supposedly responsible for helping businesses has been spending our money on Workplace Waiata – i.e. staff singing sessions in their Wellington offices. And this isn't just a one-off thing: At their swanky Wellington offices, MBIE were hosting 30 minute sessions every work day, every week! MBIE employs 5,892 bureaucrats (it's grown from 4,676 in 2020), literally being paid to sing, clap, poi, and recite Māori proverbs and hymns. According to documents we've unearthed, last year, MBIE bosses attempted to reduce these sessions from daily 30-minute sing-alongs across various floors, to "just" 20 minutes, twice a week. According to email correspondence (obtained under the Official Information Act) one of the reasons for the 'cut back' was concerns about the Workplace Waiata causing noise distraction for others in the office. No kidding! But here's where it gets even more ridiculous... The precious MBIE staffers weren't having a bar of it! They revolted at management for daring to cut back the entitlement. MBIE's CEO was forced into crisis meetings to literally negotiate the waiata schedule! We've unearthed internal emails, chats, strategy documents, and even formal negotiations. Staff wrote an eight page submission demanding that the waiata "entitlement" continue. Staff described the sessions as "taonga" (treasure) and insisted they were essential for "wellbeing" and "capability building." They produced lengthy documents arguing why three sessions per week was the "bare minimum". The bureaucrats claimed that management's instruction to have the sessions during unpaid breaks was "colonial" and "culturally insensitive". They said even "relocating to enclosed rooms" (in order to avoid disrupting other staff in the open offices) was "viewed as symbolic marginalisation" and "hiding the kaupapa". You read that right. The Ministry responsible for making sure New Zealand’s economy works, from businesses and jobs to housing, immigration, and energy, spent months arguing about singing schedules. 📷 That's how woke self-entitled these MBIE staff have become. The "compromise" reached The final compromise and solution? Management eventually agreed through a "cultural negotiation" that the 30-minute sing-along sessions would not be abolished. Instead, they were reduced from five to three 30-minute sessions per week. 📷 Only in the public service could something so ridiculous require this level of executive time, negotiation, and outcome.
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Delilah
Delilah@BFuckinA·
@saltyreigns Why do they want it gone? (Not disagreeing, just curious)
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Malakai ™️
Malakai ™️@saltyreigns·
Make no mistake - this is 100 percent maori led. They have wanted this gone for years and council have used tragedy to kowtow to greedy iwi Because Tauranga was too fucken lazy to vote in their election, we have nobody to represent us.
Malakai ™️ tweet media
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Eeryk McRae
Eeryk McRae@EerykMcRae·
Businesses in New Zealand should be owned and run by New Zealanders for New Zealanders. For too long our focus has been on producing goods for the world, whilst our own people struggle. We've opened up the door to foreign investment and control simply to produce more for the rest of the world, again, whilst our own people struggle. We can't handle such demand so we've flooded our nation with foreigners to aid our production for others whilst again, our own people struggle. Our nation has been leashed and ordered to serve the world whilst our own people struggle. They can claim it provides wealth to this country but I don't see that wealth, nor do you. With what they actually provide New Zealand farmers should rightly be some of the most wealthy people in the world, but they're not and they never will be, because they serve a system, the system does not serve them. This is backwards, the system should serve us. Yes, we must contribute to it, but ultimately it is our interests which should be served. Such a system we do not have, and until we do, we will regress as a nation and as a people. Do not listen to the fear mongering of those serving international finance, what must be done will be difficult but it will shift the trajectory of this nation for the better.
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irreversiblechaos
irreversiblechaos@thoughtsofchao2·
@cheungkarkei @MsMelChen With the way the US acts they are our main source of trouble. It is from the US that DEI come from bought to us by neoliberalism and hyper financial capitalism and individualism
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Kelvin Cheung
Kelvin Cheung@cheungkarkei·
@thoughtsofchao2 @MsMelChen I wouldn’t disagree From the US point of view, the real adversary is China. Not Russia. Russian expansion into Europe is just a problem for Europe.
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