Necro Mancer (Twitter)
@666_mancer: Локация: Клиновое, Краматорский р-н, Донецкая обл. https://twitter.com/neonhandrail/status/1906384697351094404#m
@666_mancer: Локация: Клиновое, Краматорский р-н, Донецкая обл. https://twitter.com/neonhandrail/status/1906384697351094404#m
Ukraine Battle Map (Twitter)
@NOELreports: They say that because they know the US may be listening. Russia has a lot of traitors in its military sending info to the US. Surovikin had no power to use nukes. That’s only Putin who knew it would be the end of him and achieve no purpose. Russia talks about using nukes daily
@NOELreports: They say that because they know the US may be listening. Russia has a lot of traitors in its military sending info to the US. Surovikin had no power to use nukes. That’s only Putin who knew it would be the end of him and achieve no purpose. Russia talks about using nukes daily
Colby Badhwar 🇨🇦🇬🇧 (Twitter)
RT @Sean_Speer: It’s striking how shaken an older cohort of Canadian policy commentators is by Trump’s threats and provocations. I’m speaking particularly of those who came out of age in the era of Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan, Canada-US free trade, and a general shift to market thinking.
For many, it’s almost seems like Trump represents a personal slight. He’s directly challenging their long-held assumptions and it’s hugely destabilizing for them.
The key takeaway though isn’t that everything they believed before three months ago was wrong. Markets are still more efficient than the state at allocating scarce resources. China is still authoritarian. Europe is still sceletoic. Canada is still fundamentally a North American market economy.
Yet many are seemingly prepared to throw all of this orthodoxy away. It’s as if they’ve suddenly forgot that we tried these things before. In fact, the failures of state-directed economic nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s is precisely why they turned to free trade and free markets in the first place.
It’s not going to be easy dealing with Trump for the next four years. By we’ll make it infinitely worse if essentially adopt his wrong ideas ourselves. Those who know better (or knew better) can’t lose their heads.
RT @Sean_Speer: It’s striking how shaken an older cohort of Canadian policy commentators is by Trump’s threats and provocations. I’m speaking particularly of those who came out of age in the era of Brian Mulroney and Ronald Reagan, Canada-US free trade, and a general shift to market thinking.
For many, it’s almost seems like Trump represents a personal slight. He’s directly challenging their long-held assumptions and it’s hugely destabilizing for them.
The key takeaway though isn’t that everything they believed before three months ago was wrong. Markets are still more efficient than the state at allocating scarce resources. China is still authoritarian. Europe is still sceletoic. Canada is still fundamentally a North American market economy.
Yet many are seemingly prepared to throw all of this orthodoxy away. It’s as if they’ve suddenly forgot that we tried these things before. In fact, the failures of state-directed economic nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s is precisely why they turned to free trade and free markets in the first place.
It’s not going to be easy dealing with Trump for the next four years. By we’ll make it infinitely worse if essentially adopt his wrong ideas ourselves. Those who know better (or knew better) can’t lose their heads.
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Colby Badhwar 🇨🇦🇬🇧 (Twitter)
RT @John_A_Ridge: Reading the NYT piece, my impression is it offers a U.S.-centric perspective that misses substantial nuance. There is a general absence of critical context and detail.
Despite this, it illustrates a picture of profoundly inept and aimless U.S. policy and decision making.
RT @John_A_Ridge: Reading the NYT piece, my impression is it offers a U.S.-centric perspective that misses substantial nuance. There is a general absence of critical context and detail.
Despite this, it illustrates a picture of profoundly inept and aimless U.S. policy and decision making.
vxTwitter / fixvx
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Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦 (@IAPonomarenko)
"In mid-April 2022.... American and Ukrainian naval officers were on a routine intelligence-sharing call when something unexpected popped up on their radar screens. According to a former senior U.S. military officer, "The Americans go: 'Oh, that's the Moskva!'…
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Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (Twitter)
Interception of Russian kamikaze drone 'Gerbera' by some new experimental interceptor drone with auto-targeting. By the Main Directorate of Intelligence Ukraine.
Interception of Russian kamikaze drone 'Gerbera' by some new experimental interceptor drone with auto-targeting. By the Main Directorate of Intelligence Ukraine.
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Colby Badhwar 🇨🇦🇬🇧 (Twitter)
🇺🇸🇨🇳 The PLARF fields 1800 MRBMs & IRBMs.
The US Army has received just 590 Talon interceptors for THAAD, by comparison. https://twitter.com/John_A_Ridge/status/1906384296807444816#m
🇺🇸🇨🇳 The PLARF fields 1800 MRBMs & IRBMs.
The US Army has received just 590 Talon interceptors for THAAD, by comparison. https://twitter.com/John_A_Ridge/status/1906384296807444816#m
Necro Mancer (Twitter)
Лучезарный балалаечник Долгополов Владимир Алексеевич 2003 г.р. из Югорска по-доброму отправился убивать в СВОВУ и 23/03/25 жизнерадостно помер от ран в госпитале имени Вишневского
vk.com/wall-45863799_509814 #всрф #потерьнет #груз200
Лучезарный балалаечник Долгополов Владимир Алексеевич 2003 г.р. из Югорска по-доброму отправился убивать в СВОВУ и 23/03/25 жизнерадостно помер от ран в госпитале имени Вишневского
vk.com/wall-45863799_509814 #всрф #потерьнет #груз200
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