Evilphd666

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 weeks ago

AOCIA strikes again.

Let's seem if flattened-bernie gets to Mamdani on easing up language against Pissreal too.

...

Sanders urged his now-protégé to be firm in calling for Democratic leaders to rally behind him but also to more carefully address what he’s said about Israel. ... Sanders, a Brooklyn native, was eager to welcome Mamdani for their first meeting after several phone calls, including a congratulatory one after his primary win. The closest that they’ve come in person before was at Sanders’ October 2019 rally in Queens marking his comeback after a heart attack , which Mamdani used as an early organizing opportunity for his first assembly campaign. side-eye-1 ....

Sanders, who is Jewish, urged Mamdani to be cautious about how he approaches talking about Israel. Both are critics of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel’s handling of its war in Gaza.

Ahead of the trip, Mamdani told business leaders in New York that he would discourage the use of the phrase “globalize the intifada.” Mamdani, who has not used the phrase himself, has said he believes the phrase to be a rallying cry for Palestinian human rights and refused to condemn its use when asked during his primary campaign.

According to the person familiar with their conversation, Sanders told Mamdani he had to do a better job explaining that his criticism is not antisemitic and to not let himself seem like he’s minimizing the fear Jews in New York and elsewhere feel from the threat of hate against them.

Bolding mine. Bernie seems ro have a difficult time sepersting Zionazis from Judiasm. Plenty of Jews in New York have been on the front lines of anti Pissreal Aktion. af Love how Bernie just erases them and their fears and violence against them by acab-3 and Zionazis.

At the end of the day Mamdani is a Democrat. I hope he doesn't turn into another AOCIA.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Also maybe don't down a whole 2L of soda in one go. Probably bad if you do that frequently.

recommends against vendors offering free slushy refills

There we go, there's the lobby.

cap-think How do I stop giving out things that cost a couple pennies, but come across as not a stingy child hating bastard? What if I turn out a study in the media and spin it as a child health issue?

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

What if PR merges with Cuba?

[–] [email protected] 29 points 2 weeks ago

I think he needs to pick a successor. Same with Evo and Maduro. Run sure I guess but there needs to be some continuation plan.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 weeks ago

Europe is going to figure out why Americans can't afford to live.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 weeks ago

What was the line / clip that did it in?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago

NSFW skeletons dug up graves.

NSFW


 

Archive

Falling for the bait

The Israeli F-35s were destroyed in Iranian airspace on the second day of Israeli aggression on Iran, after the regime commanders believed they had severely damaged Iranian air defenses on the first day, Friday.

While the number and usual deployment of Iranian radar batteries can be estimated from open-source and intelligence data, distinguishing real air defenses from decoys remains challenging. These decoys are intended to mislead anti-radiation missiles, cruise missiles, and drones.

During the attacks, Israeli regime forces primarily used drones equipped with electro-optical (EO) and infrared (IR) sensors to strike radar installations. However, once these drones detonate, their sensors are destroyed, leaving operators uncertain whether they eliminated real radar systems or decoys.

Reconnaissance drones and satellites offer insufficient resolution for precise damage assessment. The only reliable verification would require agents on the ground deep inside Iran—a high-risk and unlikely scenario.

Iran has long been known to employ sophisticated military decoys, including radar batteries. These decoys are far more advanced than simple wooden mock-ups; some emit false radar signals to mimic real activity and can cost upwards of $10,000 each.

....

Israeli drones targeted these apparent radar sites, believing they had crippled Iranian defenses and gained air superiority.

This miscalculation proved costly. On subsequent attacks, Israeli fighter jets ventured deeper into Iranian airspace, unaware that functional radar systems had been reactivated. Iranian air defenses surprised the Israeli Air Force by engaging and shooting down several advanced stealth fighters.

Had Iranian forces attempted to down jets on the first night without this element of surprise, their success would have been doubtful. Additionally, any wreckage from early shootdowns would likely have fallen into neighboring Iraq, offering Iran little opportunity for technological study. xibe-check

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moichendaising it-is-happening-again

2027 YES IT'S REAL sicko-hyper

 

Article

Residents gathered at a Montcalm County Board of Commissioners meeting in Stanton Monday evening to voice their support and opposition to a Pride event scheduled to be held at a county park later this month.

The Voices of Flat River Pride Festival was approved earlier this year to rent McCarthy Park in Greenville, and given special permission — along with a disc golf event later in the summer — to rent out all three pavilion facilities at the park. The rental would effectively close the park to public use for one day.

Upon learning of the festival, some community members approached the commission hoping to have commissioners revoke their rental agreement on the grounds that the event’s plans violated an often-overlooked park ordinance. 

“Will there be enough parking? Will the sheriff’s department be able to be there to make sure people don’t park on the street? That’s a dangerous corner there,” one commenter said. “We like our small parks. We don’t want big groups there with loud music.”

"Please, return the park to the taxpayers,” another said.

Those concerns were first aired during public comment at a commission meeting late last month. At Monday’s meeting, they were re-emphasized and echoed by a number of people speaking out against the LGBTQ+ community in general. Some cited Bible verses. Other opponents maintained it was not about the nature of the Pride event, simply safety and rule enforcement.

“The law is the law,” one woman said at the podium.

Supporters maintained that the last-second effort to derail their festival was a targeted attempt against their community. They also advocated that the ordinance in question was supposed to be reviewed and updated every five years, but had not been reviewed nor updated since 2006. They also cited a number of other rental situations that were not subjected to the near-decade-old rules. 

Commissioners eventually rejected the calls to revoke the rental agreement on the grounds that the ordinance is not routinely enforced, and the Flat River Pride group spent months carefully planning for and addressing concerns about parking, crowds, bathroom capacity and noise.

“It wasn’t until last week that we had some constituents that came to us with some big concerns,” District 5 Commissioner Charlie Mahar said. “One of those is the ordinance, which is somewhat valid. However, I do believe it’s not right to enforce an ordinance on one group.”

“To say we are all going to be judged based on a decision we make, I want to be on the right side of that judgement. I won’t ever decide against another human being. It will never happen,” said District 3 Commissioner Adam Petersen, an ordained pastor. “I don’t think there is any need to put anything out there about the Good Book. I think the Good Book speaks for itself. … At the end of the day, I don’t want to meet my maker and say I was discriminatory because some people said you wouldn’t like it.”

Petersen added that variances to ordinances are granted often, and that the Flat River Pride group could apply for a variance and make the entire issue disappear. 

“We grant variances almost monthly in Crystal (Township) that breaks laws. So, if we are going to sit here and say we can’t break laws because it’s in an ordinance, all they need to do is apply for a variance, it will be granted at the next meeting, and all this goes away,” he said. “For people to come up here and say this is ridiculous we are going to be violating an ordinance, I expect to see you here when Crystal Township asks to put their houses six inches from property lines.”

Without action to revoke the rental agreement or amend the ordinance, the festival will go on as scheduled and approved on June 28.


 

No no 3 seconds is all you get. Just trust us bro.

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